Anyone catch Hank getting caught in the middle of that weak tornado a little while ago on channel 9?
Anyone catch Hank getting caught in the middle of that weak tornado a little while ago on channel 9?
Just got out of the storm cellar at my mom's house and we can see the backside of the complex of storms. The electrical display is quite phenomenal, as are the mammatus clouds trailing the formation. It's nice to.see clearing skies to the west.
What was the traffic? It is possible that it was other chasers. The chaser convergence on 3-4 cells can get crazy when that is the only game in town.
There were hundreds of them today camped in the Lawton area and rode up with the storms.
^
How does storm chasing work?
Does Channel 9 and the other stations pay these people?
And some just do it for fun?
Bumping since the storms are out of the viewing area, generally speaking.
A couple of things from today.
1. The HRRR did a poor job overall in predicting the weather today. It couldn’t settle in on a pattern until the storms were already firing. The NAM did a much better job.
2. All the models over emphasized northern okc all the way through until the even started. I suspect that the cloud cover and the late push from the low was the reason for this.
Moving on to tomorrow: the NAM is going nuts with CAPE. Suggesting over 6000 for the okc area. The HRRR and the NAM are wildly different in the storm patterns, but I’m leaning towards the NAM for now as the HRRR has been off lately. Model parameters don’t look half bad for tornadoes. I suspect we’ll need to watch tomorrow carefully.
Yes the TV station chasers are employees and paid. But there are thousands of amateur chasers that are just weather nerds. Many of them are photographers and get paid via streaming and obviously for selling photographs and videos. But that business isn’t very lucrative since the tech is in everyone’s hands now. And unless your video is particularly unique (like getting directly hit by a tornado) you won’t be selling footage to any major outlets since they can just use their network of sister stations.
My understanding is the storm chasers that are shown on the various news stations are paid by the stations. The rest are a mix of people chasing for the fun of it, people looking to make money from taking and selling or licensing pictures/video of the storms, and researchers/meteorologists/students.
Just for the record the high today in OKC was 80. Yes it stayed cloudy until 4 and I do think it helped some it could of been even worse but sometime it don't take much heating to get thing done.
He recently had a newspaper story written about him: https://www.stwnewspress.com/news/lo...42f676f1f.html
Disappointed in the rainfall totals across the state after predictions of 2-3” this week. I think the low out west moved too far north and the cut off low to the east mostly missed OK. Hopefully the low moving up from TX this weekend delivers.
This is a cool site that shows storm chasers all over the US and their live streams. Some are paid some are just doing it for fun, but we like to watch it for the first hand viewing, but you can also tell where the real danger areas are because they will start congregating around the areas with highest chance of forming tornado's.
https://www.severestudios.com/livechase/
Looks like todays event will impact…yet again…the south and southeastern part of the state.
I tried to go fish lake Hefner this morning and the water is so low, I was nervous about backing my trailer right off the end of the ramp to launch the boat. Last time I saw it this low was 9 years ago. We need a bunch of rain right now.
South Metro be ready again starting around 5 pm
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