Thunderstorm development began over the Texas Panhandle and Texas South Plains before I left. Morning storms had stabilized the environment across northwest Oklahoma. What was a rather large target area the night before, became fairly concentrated over southwest Oklahoma. I had made it to near Clinton when the first tornado warnings were issued in the Texas Panhandle. I was a long way off, but the first warned storm seemed like a good initial target. When I reached Elk City just before 3 pm, things had become messy around the storms near Shamrock, Texas and a county or so to the southwest of there. I didn’t even take the time to look at those storms and turned south on Highway 30. I told Doug Speheger that if nothing else, I just needed to get however far enough south that it took for storms to remain discrete.
I stopped around 4:15 pm in the far southwest corner of the state and observed a small supercell that was near Dodson, Texas. It didn’t hold my interest very long and I considered waiting for another storm that was near Childress. That plan was tossed for an impressive storm that had formed to the southwest of Quanah, Texas.
I crossed the Red River and entered the northern edge of the core of the Quanah storm when I reached Highway 287. The next six or seven miles was a little nerve wrecking as the hail size started to increase. I expected some hail, but not what ended up falling. Once again, the glass angel was riding with me and I managed to keep all my glass intact despite being bombed with hail the size of baseballs. I pulled away from the core in Quanah and continued to Chillicothe where I turned north. There was a period of zig-zagging northeast through Odell before I made my first stop. From just east of Odell I could see a nicely structured supercell to the northwest. Radar showed that rotation was increasing, and I knew I had decent road options after I crossed back into Oklahoma.
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Over the next 20 minutes, the storm evolved into an incredible supercell and began producing a tornado near the Red River. I didn’t start seeing the tornado until 5:42 pm. It spent most of its life obscured some by rain and blowing dust. I had an excellent viewing advantage a few miles northeast of Elmer – until hail started falling again. I was surprised to be getting any hail at all, but really surprised at the size. By the time I got rolling east, the hail had increased once again to baseball size. The glass angel must have taken a break because one stone hit at the edge of the glass and cracked a good part of the passenger side windshield. I moved to just west of Tipton and finished my viewing of the tornado as it passed to the northwest of the town. The tornado became more rain-wrapped and traffic was heavy, so the decision was made to head south to the next supercell.
I arrived just west of Grandfield around 7 pm and observed a nice looking supercell storm as it approach from the southwest. This storm became less impressive visually as it passed north of Devol, and I decided to change storms once again.
I crossed the Red River again and stopped a few miles west of Sheppard Air Force Base to view a pretty supercell near Iowa Park, Texas. This storm started steadily downhill just after 8 pm. I called it a day and started the crawl back north on I-44 through about 40 miles of torrential rainfall.