When Jim Tang, a storm chaser based in Oklahoma City, set out to follow a promising pocket of weather in southwest Nebraska on Monday evening, he didnāt expect to find the tornado of a lifetime.
All he knew was that the signs of a storm were promising.
āI think that's part of the allure of storm chasing for me,ā Tang told Cowboy State Daily. āYou want to give yourself the best chance possible to see something, but at the end of the day, the weather does what it does. Itās unpredictable.ā
The forecast indicated a tornado could touch down, which was enough to get Tang on the road to chase it.
That evening, he witnessedĀ what he calledĀ āa once-in-a-lifetime stormā that surpassed everything heād seen in a decade of storm chasing.Ā It was almost like the tornado was an attention hog, posing for photographs.
āAs a storm chaser, that kind of tornado is your career goal,ā he said. āI had never been on such a long-lived, photogenic tornado before. It was quite astounding.ā
Don't Know Until It Happens
Itās tornado seasonĀ across the Great Plains. The combination of low-hanging summer air and cooler air aloft means the atmosphere is primed to turn storms into funnels of destruction.
Tang was following a series of storms developing over North Platte, Nebraska, when he decided to drive to the vicinity and see what he could see.
Being a storm chaser requires constant monitoring of the weather and atmospheric conditions to pinpoint the right time and place to see a storm, but there are no guarantees.
āAt the beginning of the day, I don't think anyone in the storm chasing community expected anything,ā he said. āI only went to Nebraska because it looked decent. It looked like there might be a storm, and maybe the outside chance of a tornado.ā
Tang hopped in his car and drove south of North Platte, watching the skies as the storm started getting āpretty stoutā overhead. He was cautiously optimistic as he tried to position himself in the best spot to see whatever occurred.
āFirst, there was a little dust whirl,ā he said. āThat was the initial sign. About 10 minutes later, the main tornado started dropping, and I was right next to it.ā
The tornado touched down on empty farmland near Wellfleet, Nebraska. Tang was one of several storm chasers in the vicinity who stopped to capture the terrifying and awe-inspiring spectacle of nature.
āHonestly, it was onceĀ in a lifetime,ā he said. āAs a storm chaser, itās the kind of storm you want to see. Really tall, photogenic, high contrast. Itās rare to see that combination in one storm.ā
Experienced And Dangerous
Cowboy State Daily meteorologist Don Day was in awe of the images and videos of the tornado. He commended Tang and the other storm chasers for their skill and artistry in capturing the incredible storm.
āI think the lighting is the thing that made a lot of those photos so spectacular,ā he said. āIt gave the tornado a lot of contrast. There is a huge reason why so many people have gotten into storm chasing, especially folks trying to capture the moment.
āThe right time, the right place, and the right lighting are critical.ā
Another remarkable thing about the tornado was that it
mostly stayed put. Rather than blazing a trail across southwestern Nebraska, the funnel didnāt move far from where it touched down.
Day said thatās the luck of the draw when it comes to tornadoes.
Most professional storm chasersĀ are experienced enough to assess their risks, but their passion means constantly placing themselves in potential danger.
āYou can observe tornadoes safely, but itās still very dangerous,ā he said. āThere was another tornado that touched down in Nebraska in May that was a mile and a half wide. But it was out in the Sandhills and didnāt hit anything. But people have died chasing storms.ā
As far as tornadoes go, Day agreed that this was one of the best heās ever seen.
āI oohed and aawed at it myself,ā he said. āIf youāre going to have a tornado, thatās the way to have one. It was pretty gorgeous.
Ā The Stats
Rachel Kulik, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service Office in North Platte, said there were actually two tornadoes reported in southern Nebraska on Monday evening.
The smaller tornado only manifested as a landspout, which rotates within but doesnāt descend from the clouds, so what Tang and the other storm chasers saw was the larger of the two.
āThe landspout was an EF-1, and then the regular tornado was an EF-2,ā she said. āThat means the larger tornado was swirling between 111 and 135 mph.ā
āEFā refers to the Enhanced Fujita Scale, which is used to rank the intensity of tornadoes.
Tornadoes that reach EF-5 are swirling at more than 200 mph.
Kulik said the Monday evening tornado moved three miles from where it touched down to where it lifted. Thatās a āpretty smallā amount of ground for a tornado to cover.
āThis tornado was only moving at about 4 miles per hour when it touched down,ā she said.
āIt was moving so slowly that it was pretty much stationary.ā
The cherry on top of Monday eveningās tornado was that it was mostly harmless. Some tornado damage was reported in the communities of Wellfleet and Dickens, but outside of some snapped power lines and fallen trees, Kulik said the storm did not cause widespread destruction.
āBased on the reported damage, the tornado was only 50 yards wide,ā Kulik said. āThatās around half a football field. Luckily, it touched down in a rural area, so there werenāt any houses or buildings it could damage. If you're going to get a tornado, that's where you want to have it.ā
Tang captured āmy favorite photo I have ever takenā as the tornado reached its most violent stage. He described the experience as āone of the most wonderful things Iāve ever seen.ā
āI consider myself very fortunate to have witnessed that, and was really glad it didnāt hit anything,ā he said. āThatās the kind of experience you want as a storm chaser.ā
The best tornado of Tangās career endured for over an hour before losing its momentum and dissipating. But Tang had one more trick up its funnel for the finale.
āThere was a rainbow on the western side of the storm, so I was able to get shots of the rainbow with the tornado,ā he said. āThatās also a pretty rare combination. I was very grateful to be there.āĀ
Andrew Rossi can be reached at arossi@cowboystatedaily.com.





