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The big one. The really, really big one.
The 2013 El Reno, OK Tornado.
The largest ever recorded. Sadly, The '13 El Reno is the only tornado to date that had ended the lives of storm chasers due to it's chaotic nature.
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Hand sketched, lined in Clip Studio Paint and colored in Adobe Photoshop CS5
Check out my Gallery for more.
© Mother Nature
Check out my SubscribeStar: https://subscribestar.adult/araghen
====
The big one. The really, really big one.
The 2013 El Reno, OK Tornado.
The largest ever recorded. Sadly, The '13 El Reno is the only tornado to date that had ended the lives of storm chasers due to it's chaotic nature.
====
Hand sketched, lined in Clip Studio Paint and colored in Adobe Photoshop CS5
Check out my Gallery for more.
© Mother Nature
Category All / All
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 2386 x 1544px
File Size 1.83 MB
Fun fact: Despite never actually seeing a tornado, I do have some experience with them. In fact, it's related to El Reno II.
I was on my way back from celebrating my 21st birthday in (where else?) Las Vegas during the legendary May 2004 Outbreak Sequence, and was in the air over Nebraska during the Hallam Outbreak.
That outbreak produced the previous record holder of the title of Largest Tornado, the Hallam (Nebraska) F4.
I've also actually PREDICTED tornadoes, and this also involves a record-breaking event: the longest-tracked supercell thunderstorm ever.
March 12, 2006: I'm watching The Weather Channel as they're tracking a storm in Missouri. I can clearly see it turning from a NE track to a due E track. At this point, I say "This thing's gonna make it all the way to Michigan and on the way it's putting down a couple twisters in Springfield (Illinois)."
Lo and behold, BOTH predictions came true: Three twisters in the Springfield area, one doing serious damage downtown, and the storm would eventually dissipate... halfway between JACKSON AND FLINT.
Six States, over 700 miles, SEVENTEEN HOURS. From Oklahoma, through Kansas, Missouri, Illinois, Indiana and into Michigan.
And I accurately predicted the entire second half of it's track, along US 36 in Missouri, then I-72 in Illinois, then turning back NE just past Springfield, into Indiana South of the South Bend/Elkhart area and into Michigan.
Not my best predictions, though... but those involve hurricanes, not twisters.
I was on my way back from celebrating my 21st birthday in (where else?) Las Vegas during the legendary May 2004 Outbreak Sequence, and was in the air over Nebraska during the Hallam Outbreak.
That outbreak produced the previous record holder of the title of Largest Tornado, the Hallam (Nebraska) F4.
I've also actually PREDICTED tornadoes, and this also involves a record-breaking event: the longest-tracked supercell thunderstorm ever.
March 12, 2006: I'm watching The Weather Channel as they're tracking a storm in Missouri. I can clearly see it turning from a NE track to a due E track. At this point, I say "This thing's gonna make it all the way to Michigan and on the way it's putting down a couple twisters in Springfield (Illinois)."
Lo and behold, BOTH predictions came true: Three twisters in the Springfield area, one doing serious damage downtown, and the storm would eventually dissipate... halfway between JACKSON AND FLINT.
Six States, over 700 miles, SEVENTEEN HOURS. From Oklahoma, through Kansas, Missouri, Illinois, Indiana and into Michigan.
And I accurately predicted the entire second half of it's track, along US 36 in Missouri, then I-72 in Illinois, then turning back NE just past Springfield, into Indiana South of the South Bend/Elkhart area and into Michigan.
Not my best predictions, though... but those involve hurricanes, not twisters.
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