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28 May 2013: Long-lasting Kansas tornado

Storm chasing|Bennington, Kansas, photography, storm chasing, tornado, video, wedge|May 28, 2013
Home » blog » Storm chasing » 28 May 2013: Long-lasting Kansas tornado


 
I saw the wedge tornado at Bennington, Kansas, on May 28, but I wasn’t close enough. I would have moved closer had I known it would be on the ground for so long. This was a hard day and a harder lesson.

The mammatus were a sign of the storm’s vigor. Photo by Chris Kridler, ChrisKridler.com

I chased today with Greg Stephens, Dayna Vettese and Brad Rousseau, Mark Robinson and his crewmate Jaclyn Whittal, Scott McPartland, Dave Lewison, Bill Hark and Robert Balogh. Our target was central Kansas, in the Salina area, in a day of many iffy targets for storms.

This target seemed the best of the lot (and the most reachable from our morning position in western Kansas), and conditions seemed more and more favorable as the day went on and we approached the target area near Salina. Storms fired in various targets this day, but this was the whopper, producing a 40-minute wedge tornado that barely moved.

Of course, we didn’t know it would barely move, so some of us had a more distant view than others as we got into position to intercept it. I’m one of those. But since it was my first wedge tornado in 17 years of storm chasing, I still count it as a pretty productive day, especially since no towns were struck.

Note: This post has been updated with information and images from my old Sky Diary site.

Roll over a photo to see its caption, and click on any of the pictures to start a slide show of larger images.

052813-01
As we passed through our target of Salina, we saw cloud towers going up to the north and south. This one looked vigorous. Photo by Chris Kridler, SkyDiary.com, ChrisKridler.com
052813-02
We heard about a tornado-producing cell near Topeka but decided we should stop for the rapidly growing storm in our target area. Photo by Chris Kridler, SkyDiary.com, ChrisKridler.com
052813-03
Bill Hark gets a shot of the windmill and the storm, which was northwest of Salina. We were east of it. Photo by Chris Kridler, SkyDiary.com, ChrisKridler.com
052813-04
We stopped and watched it grow and were treated to a mammatus show. Photo by Chris Kridler, SkyDiary.com, ChrisKridler.com
052813-05
The mammatus were a sign of the storm's vigor. Photo by Chris Kridler, SkyDiary.com, ChrisKridler.com
052813-06
I was happy with the mammatus, but the storm was far from done. Photo by Chris Kridler, SkyDiary.com, ChrisKridler.com
052813-07
The storm sucked in strong inflow. Photo by Chris Kridler, SkyDiary.com, ChrisKridler.com
052813-08
It began to show signs of rotation. Photo by Chris Kridler, SkyDiary.com, ChrisKridler.com
052813-09
The storm put down a snakelike funnel - a brief tornado, as confirmed by other storm chasers. Photo by Chris Kridler, SkyDiary.com, ChrisKridler.com
052813-10
The storm then produced a serious wall cloud. Photo by Chris Kridler, SkyDiary.com, ChrisKridler.com
052813-11
Here's a closer look at the rotating wall cloud. I repositioned farther back, concerned about hail and the storm's motion. Photo by Chris Kridler, SkyDiary.com, ChrisKridler.com
052813-12
The catch: This storm never moved! Those of us who fell back saw a huge tornado in the rain (this image is contrast-enhanced). Photo by Chris Kridler, SkyDiary.com, ChrisKridler.com
052813-13
The tornado kept getting bigger - I regret not getting a little closer. Photo by Chris Kridler, SkyDiary.com, ChrisKridler.com
052813-14
In 17 years of chasing storms, this was my first wedge tornado. I was very concerned it would hit the town of Bennington, but it stayed away from it. Again, this is highly contrast-enhanced. Photo by Chris Kridler, SkyDiary.com, ChrisKridler.com
052813-15
Just when we thought the tornado was done, it emerged again from the rain, incredibly large. Photo by Chris Kridler, SkyDiary.com, ChrisKridler.com
052813-16
Here's a very wide-angle shot of the storm with the tornado, which lasted about 40 minutes. Photo by Chris Kridler, SkyDiary.com, ChrisKridler.com
052813-17
Here's another wide shot of the storm and the rain-wrapped wedge tornado. Photo by Chris Kridler, SkyDiary.com, ChrisKridler.com
052813-18
From farther away, the storm spins over a wheat field. Photo by Chris Kridler, SkyDiary.com, ChrisKridler.com
052813-19
Inflow still flowed into the storm. Photo by Chris Kridler, SkyDiary.com, ChrisKridler.com
052813-20
When it was done, we looked at continuing convection near Salina and called it a day. Photo by Chris Kridler, SkyDiary.com, ChrisKridler.com
April 30, 2021 Chris Kridler

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