Monthly Archives: May 2008

Threat intensifies for Thursday

The Storm Prediction Center has upgraded the severe weather threat to moderate for much of central Kansas, as well as portions of Oklahoma and Nebraska.

SPC meteorologists are warning of a “widespread severe threat” that includes the possibility of “longer-lived strong tornadoes.” Of particular concern to meteorologists at the SPC is west-central Kansas, which makes me think of cities such as Great Bend, Dodge City, Hays - and, yes, Greensburg.

A slight risk encompasses most of the western two-thirds of Kansas, stretching as far east as I-135.

Stay tuned, Kansas, and keep an eye on the sky Thursday afternoon and evening.

Is Mother Nature cooking up a memorable Memorial Day weekend?

No matter what their plans are for this holiday weekend, Kansans better factor in where they can seek shelter if strong storms or even tornadoes threaten. The Storm Prediction Center anticipates strong thunderstorms to be a threat over a large portion of the Great Plains for the next several days.

Kansas features prominently in the storm target from Thursday through Monday, according to the SPC outlook map. Plenty of moisture is in place for the storms to feed on, forecasters warn, so anything that fires up has the potential to become severe.

‘Tornado Army Attacks Kansas’

That was one of the headlines after a record-breaking outbreak in central and western Kansas on this date in 1949. At least 40 tornadoes were reported in Kansas, according to National Weather Service archival information dug up for me by Dick Elder, meteorologist-in-charge at the Wichita office.

Eight tornadoes touched down along an 85-mile track in Gray, Ford, Hodgeman and Pawnee counties. One of those tornadoes hit Rozel, my hometown, and damaged 70 homes on the west side of town in western Pawnee County.

My parents had celebrated their first anniversary only a few days earlier, and were still settling into their farmstead less than three miles east of Rozel on K-156. Mom was pregnant with my oldest brother, who would be born less than two months later. When neighbors called to report the tornado bearing down on Rozel from the southwest, Dad loaded Mom and their hired hand into the car — and raced toward Rozel.

When he was recounting the story years later, he said he’d been told to drive toward a tornado. I guess the thinking was that by the time you reached where the tornado had been, it would have moved elsewhere. Strikes me as bad advice.

They could see the rope tornado as it struck a friend’s farm just southwest of town, ripping trees and outbuildings to shreds. About a mile east of Rozel, their car seemed to hit a wall of wind, Mom told me recently. The windshield wipers stood straight out from the windshield, and no matter how hard Dad pushed on the accelerator the car just wouldn’t move. It seemed like they were in a scene from some live-action cartoon, she said, but there was nothing comical about the conditions.

The winds suddenly “let go,” she said, and they made it to a service station on the east edge of town that had a storm cellar. I grew up hearing about the uncle of one my classmates - then just a boy - sticking his head up out of a ditch in Rozel to see what was happening and being conked in the head by flying debris. I’m still amazed that he lived.

Mom, Dad and the hired hand escaped injury, but they discovered tornado damage when they returned home - including cracks in the concrete foundation suggesting the house had been twisted.

The prevailing thought for decades was that the tornado that hit Rozel curled back to the south as it moved east and hit our farmstead. But given the number of tornadoes recorded in the outbreak, I now suspect it was a different tornado entirely that touched down east of Rozel and hit our farm while my parents and their hired hand were in the storm cellar at Rozel.

No matter which tornado it was, it left its mark on our house - and our family history.

Touching 90 before Memorial Day

The mercury is expected to reach 90 today, and Memorial Day’s still a week away yet. As early as that may seem, it’s a far cry from the earliest date for that temperature in Wichita history.

You’ll have to go all the way back to March for the earliest date to reach 90. On March 19, 1907, the thermometer reached 91.

Fret not, though: despite today’s toasty reading, forecasters say it doesn’t mean spring’s already history. Cooler temperatures are on tap for the rest of the week.

April was one cool month

This past month was the coolest April in 11 years for the continental United States, and fell into the lowest quarter of all Aprils based on records going back to 1895, according to an analysis by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s National Climatic Data Center.

The average April temperature, 51 degrees F, was one degree below the 20th century mean - ranking it the 29th coolest April on record in the U.S.

The average temperature in Wichita was 53.9, 1.4 degrees below average. That’s the third straight month the average temperature was below normal here.

Much ado about - pretty much nothing

Tuesday’s storm threat fizzled into a non-event, with just one tornado and two strong wind events reported - all of them in Texas. The tornado was reported in eastern Texas, where it struck a few trees.

Greg Carbin, warning coordination meteorologist with the Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Okla., sent this photo of a pileus cloud he shot near Norman Tuesday night. These distinctive clouds form when a layer of humid air is thrust upward rapidly by the conditions that form thunderstorms.

pileus.jpg

A long way from home

A couple in Springfield, Mo., found two photographs while doing yard work: photos that belong to Jack and Rayma Redden, who live in Picher, Okla. — 93 miles away.

The Reddens’ home was destroyed when a large tornado shredded a 20-block section of Picher Saturday evening. The Reddens and five relatives huddled in closets and escaped with a few scratches.

Robyn and Alan Bates of Springfield found the photos stuck together back-to-back, wrapped in shredded photo-album plastic and spattered with bits of mud and leaves. One shows the Reddens wearing matching sweaters on Christmas Day 1971, and a young girl holding a doll on Easter 1972.

Other residents in southwest Missouri reported finding canceled checks, photos and other storm-related items from Picher.

This reminds me of ranchers in the Flint Hills of Kansas, who told me they were finding items from Andover in their pastures years after the deadly tornado of April 26, 1991.

The wheat’s coming late

It’s been a cool spring in Kansas - and if you don’t want to take our word for it, believe the wheat.

Only about 19 percent of the state’s wheat crop has now headed, according to the Kansas Agricultural Statistics Service. That’s well below the 61 percent average for this late in the season.

Not surprisingly, the crop’s condition is suffering somewhat. The agency rates 56 percent of the crop as fair, poor or very poor, and only 44 percent as good or excellent.

More severe weather likely for an area that’s seen plenty already

Strong storms - including the threat of more tornadoes - are expected again in southeast Kansas and northeast Oklahoma later today.

The death toll from Saturday’s storms is now up to 23, officials say: 7 in Picher, Okla., 14 in western Missouri just across the border and 2 in Georgia.

The Storm Prediction Center of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has placed the southeast corner of Kansas - along with the eastern half of Oklahoma and portions of Missouri, Texas and Arkansas - in a moderate risk for severe weather.

An area of Kansas essentially east of the Kansas Turnpike is in a slight risk for severe weather.

Sifting through Saturday’s rubble

The death toll from Saturday’s tornadoes is now at least 20, including 7 confirmed at Picher, Okla., and 10 near Racine, Mo.

Teams of meteorologists from the Tulsa office of the National Weather Service are headed to northeast Oklahoma and western Arkansas today to perform storm damage assessments. The Tulsa branch has created a preliminary summary of Saturday’s tornadoes, though it will likely be several days before the exact number is known.

The weather service’s Springfield branch has compiled a summary and maps depicting tornadoes and large hail in southeast Kansas and southwest Missouri. Teams of meteorologists from Springfield will also be assessing damage in Kansas and Missouri today.

Along with several tornadoes, hail as large as softballs was reported with the storms.