Beautiful supercell near Torrington, WY – June 9, 2010

Started the day cold – 42 degrees – but hey, we were almost 7400 ft high in Laramie.  I should really feel sorry for the folks in Oklahoma that have to endure the heat and humidity over the past week while I have been roaming around up here.  I really should.  What was that about again?
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After passing the ridge peak at 8640 feet just southeast of Laramie, it was downhill to Cheyenne and eventually Pine Bluffs.  There, I grabbed an early hotel.  It look like the best storms were going to hold off until late, and a motel room is a lot nicer to hang about than a parking lot.  I ended up back for the night to get my full moneys worth.  At midday, I had serious concerns about what was going to be possible this day.  Winds over southeast Wyoming had become light and variable after several rounds of early convection.  By 5 pm, the southeast winds had returned and the moisture along with it.  With several hours of daylight left, there was little doubt about storms anymore – just where, and when?

Those questions were answered when rapid storm development took off about 40 miles north northwest of Pine Bluffs.  With haste, I made it to near Hawk Springs in time to see a fairly impressive supercell.  For a brief time, it even looked capable of producing a tornado.  This didn’t last long and soon a surge of cold outflow undercut the storm and we were left with a beautiful, but elevated hailer pushing into Nebraska.  I followed the storm a bit longer and finally crossed the hail swath where there was a tremendous amount of hail on the ground and hail fog.  I drove farther west to get a good overall view of the storm before returning to the motel back in Pine Bluffs.

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