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Lightning Hunter

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Posts posted by Lightning Hunter

  1. I went down to Calshot spit to watch the 'queens' depart together the other evening. They passed just as the hazy sun was setting, giving them a nice hue (difficult for exposures though).

    First, Queen Mary 2, dwarfing the lifeboat. She is one of only 2 true ocean liners of the world (Queen Elizabeth 2 the other):

    0408a.jpg

    0408b.jpg

    By-standers watch as she sails into the Solent:

    0408c.jpg

    Next up, the newest of the 'queens', the Queen Victoria. She isn't an ocean liner, just a cruise ship, hence the lack of 'RMS' status:

    0408b-1.jpg

  2. Hi Iceagian,

    Yes it did have a slight 'bow' to it, but that doesn't make it a supercell. The storm had developed before sunset, and the storm was becoming outflow dominant. The gust front surged out south-westwards, lifting up some stable air creating the smooth shelf as it rushed overhead.

    It didn't even give any rain at my location, but there was a deluge just to the east and north as it was quite slow moving. I haven't heard any reports of any funnels or tornadoes and it certainly didn't produce anything whilst I was there, albeit late in it's life.

    btw, the full story with more pics is now on my website here:

    http://www.wildskies.co.uk/showerstorms/2008/13-04-08d.html

  3. Actually I have a question, how can this happen:

    That footage is amazing, I've seen it loads of times but it never fails to impress. Must be some great dynamics going on to create that. I've seen 'satellite' tornadoes etc, but to have two join like that.....wow

  4. Indeed, but this year is already better than last for photo opportunities so can't moan (yet).

    The last two years have been the least thundery in the last 15 here (6 days each with only 1 overhead, in 2006). No plume event affected us last year, we were grazed to the east with just distant rumbles.

    Bring back the stormy summer nights of the 1990s! :lol:

  5. The answer to the first question is probably the 'Tri-State' tornado in 1925, USA. It lasted over 3 hrs and travelled over 200 miles, see here:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tri-State_Tornado

    As for the second question, well I've seen some high profile chasers such as Warren Faidley using grills/mesh for their windscreens, but I think most just try to avoid damaging hail and keep a pair of safety goggles in the car just in case :o

  6. OK, certainly the most interesting of the winter months here. 16 air frosts, and plenty of photo opportunities with a hard frost almost daily in the frost hollows of the nearby forest. Also some great PSC displays at sunset (a first for me).

    Not particularly warm, highest temp of 13°C, or cold with a low of -5°C. Overall temp near average, but drier than average. Rather dull and featureless beginning and end.

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