Squall Line Way Up North
St. John ND
10 Jun 12
SHORT: Blew off chasing in trees in MN or driving from ND-KS in one shot, intending to hang out in ND ’til the pattern returned favorable parameters to Dakotas. While en route to Int’l Peace Garden, intercepted photogenic, low-topped squall line and attendant arcus cloud over very green fields near St. John ND.
LONG:
The cold front from the previous day’s action was slated to shift into more forested land of central and northern Minnesota, within which we didn’t wish to chase. Strong to severe storms also were possible farther south, along and ahead of the front, in mode viewing-friendly areas of Iowa, NW Missouri and Kansas, but under weaker deep-layer shear.
Laundry beckoned, and so did a few days of R&R in the heretofore superficially explored state of North Dakota before the next substantial atmospheric perturbation brought severe potential to the northern Great Plains. After finishing the wash and brunch in Grafton, we charted a net WNW course on the township-range zigzag of eastern and northern North Dakota, aiming to grab a couple bucketfuls of rich, black soil from the old Lake Agassiz bed for my vegetable garden back home (check), visit Icelandic State Park (uncheck), see the Pembina Gorge (check), visit the International Peace Garden (check), and spend a night or two in the so-called Turtle Mountains (check).
Somewhat retracing the route we took the evening before, we encountered a fantastic layer of asperatus (a.k.a. “warm-advection clouds”) between Grafton and Cavalier. That was followed immediately by a rather featureless, messy band of elevated thunderstorms that timed badly for visiting the state park. Instead, we headed up to Walhalla and toured the misty, scuddy and decidedly green Pembina River Gorge by car.
Ascending that small canyon, which drains an escarpment separating the Plains from the Red River of the North valley, leads the driver to the marvelously open, flat and attractive countryside characteristic of most of the state NE of the Missouri River. Folks here seem to inherit their ancestors’ fastidious tidiness ethic. In towns, this means well-kept houses, gardens and lawns. In rural areas, we saw a distinct absence of junk cars, rusty appliances, neglected fencing, or haphazard accumulations of dilapidated mechanical rubbish strewn across weedy lawns of occupied homes–in other words, a refreshign difference from thousands of points of blight that are prevalent in the southern Plains countryside. Landscapes here were familiar from the day before, but the setting was different–scuddy, light rain on the back side of the elevated storm band, with broken blue sky to the west, and the cool, moist freshness of wet earth behind a summertime cold front. This trip already was a splendid pleasure, and soon would become more so.
Proceeding westward across the borderlands, we finally broke into sunshine west of Langdon–but not for long! Onboard radar showed a thin, curving arc of cold-core thunderstorms developing to the W, over the turtle Mountains. A low-topped squall line was forming–something that experience told me could be quite photogenic in such otherwise clean air and sky. It was.
Approaching the squall line from the SE (as it moved quickly eastward), we marveled at how shallow and low-topped the convection was–typical for a cold-core low in a low-CAPE, relatively low-tropopause setting–but still rather uncommon in my southern-latitude experiences. In fact, just a few miles ahead of the arcus cloud, sunshine still illuminated the moist and richly verdant fields adjoining the east side of the Turtle Mountains. This clearly was not any of the 60,000-foot-deep walls of deep-convective severity I’m accustomed to observing in a North Texas April.
Our viewpoint was just SE of St. John, only four miles S of Canada, and in a fine position to view the oncoming shelf cloud. We were able to frame the sweeping arcus above the gentle curve of a rural dirt road that nicely split the greenery. After that, we cruised into St. John and let the storms move over us, enduring a decent barrage of small hail and subsevere gusts.
Heading into the hills, we quickly left behind the weakening squall line and visited the International Peace Garden (highly recommended, no passport needed!). The storms had run off the visitors, so we nearly had the place all to ourselves in rain-cooled air with sunny, late-afternoon light. Afterward, and with no one behind us in the customs line, I had a long, very friendly conversation with a customs officer and USAF vet at the re-entry station (the park is directly astride the border, its driveway halfway between U.S. and Canadian customs). He gave us a good recommendation for lodging options beside beautiful Lake Metigoshe–at which we reserved two nights for R&R before the next chase-worthy, northern-Plains shortwave.
Pleasant Diagonal across North Dakota
Filed under: Summary
Rolla and Grafton ND areas
9 Jun 12
SHORT: Small convective towers and beautiful sunset Cb photographed along with abandoned structures and Northern Plains landscape.
LONG: This date loomed several days in advance, even in national forecast outlooks, as not just a potential supercell day, but tornado-outbreak day, across the eastern Dakotas. As time got closer, it became more and more apparent that the wind fields would be there–albeit in a smaller area mostly encompassing eastern North Dakota–but lack of robust moisture would be a major hindrance to storm development. So would capping, for much of the day, despite strong large-scale and frontogenetic forcing.
Elke and I had an additional logistic quandary in that the best low-level shear would be N of the Canadian border. We wouldn’t mind chasing there; but we didn’t bring our passports. So we undertook a strategy that, in essence, was: get ahead of the cold front and tuck ourselves just S of the border to jump on any storms that might develop to our S and mature before crossing the 49th parallel.
I was rather surprised to see the number of Southern Plains storm observers via SpotterNetwork attempting the long and dangerously sleep-deprived overnight trek from Oklahoma, Kansas and even Texas, for what looked to me like an ever more feeble setup for tornadoes. By contrast, we already were in the region and on vacation, with no particular place to be for a few days after the system departed. In fact, we fully intended to stay in ND after this day, until the next northern-stream weatehr system, and explore the state. North Dakota seldom was visited by us before now, and never in-depth, as true appreciation warrants. We had wanted to spend more than a couple of days in ND for many years, and now was the start of that chance!
Originating our trek from Bowman, in the SW corner of ND, involved an earlier-than-usual arousal from bed and crisscrossing the state on a diagonal. Fortunately, ND is not a particularly massive block of land (similar in area to Oklahoma), and the roads are plentiful and in good condition E and N of the Missouri River. Some short-range, convection-resolving models unzipped the front N-S across the eastern third of the state by about 4-5 p.m.; but I didn’t buy it. A simple examination of the 700- and 500-mb charts, surface chart and moisture-channel imagery indicated the strongest lift might not even occur before dark; and supercell initiation would be improbable before 0Z. For once, I was confident early development would not be a problem and storms would hold off before late afternoon, enabling a stop in BIS for lunch and procurement of a much-needed ND road atlas. [Yes, we still navigate chases exclusively with paper road atlases, though we found the BIS Barnes & Noble with I-Phone Google Maps–the best of both worlds!]
We zigzagged NNE from BIS through Rugby, stopping to visit the geographic center of North America. While heading E to stay ahead of the bent-back portion of the cold front, we crossed an outflow boundary from a strong morning MCS that was, in effect, acting as a warm front. Clouds on the NE side of the boundary were scuddy and more stratified than on the warm (SW) side that overtook us several minutes later. As the boundary crossed our location, we noticed that blades in the eastern portion of a nearby wind farm still were facing SE on the cool side, whereas those in the western part had pivoted to face S–a modern manifestation of “reading the wind”. Although those towers near the boundary were unlikely to build into a mature supercell before reaching the border, we had hopes others could fire farther S on the front and move our way.
Meanwhile, we stopped a few times between Rugby and Rolla to pass the time–enjoying the scenery of the Northern Plains‘ post-glacial landscape (closer shot of gaillardias with bumblebees) and that bit of Americana involving an old barn with glacial rocks. As seen from a spot near Rolla, as far N as we ever had been on a chase, convective towers kept bubbling along and ahead of the front to our W, but neither broadening nor deepening appreciably until crossing into Canada. Even then, they didn’t survive long upon crossing the remains of the outflow boundary.
Regarding the day as an increasingly probable bustola for sustained storms, but still wishing to stay ahead of the front, we headed several more miles E into Towner County. It was nearly 8 p.m., still plenty of (low) daylight left, and a few towers were erupting to our distant SE. Those appeared to be along the remnants of the outflow boundary, and a quick glance at a surface map confirmed that. But they also were on a sharply defined confluence line and the E edge of strengthening N-S baroclinic gradient ahead of where I thought the forward segment of the front should be by pure extrapolation of translation. The front was redeveloping (frontogenesis) ahead of its previous position–in effect, jumping E of us!
Zooming E on US-281 and ND-5, we realized that the first cell was moving fast and would pass our longitude before we safely could get there; it became a short-lived supercell just into Manitoba, N of the dying old outflow boundary. When realizing the futility of that pursuit, we stopped to photograph an abandoned farmhouse and barn in the warm, late-day light, with other frontal towers across the background skyline.
More cells fired to our SSE, this time reachable. However, since it would be just a little before sunset by the time we would intercept them along the now eastward-accelerating front, we chose to hold back W a little and photograph them from the side preferentially aglow. By the time we reached a point near Hoople (between Cavalier and Grafton), scuddy low clouds broke enough to afford us great viewing of the spectacle. As the sun set in the NW, a small cumulonimbus just past the Minnesota border reflected brilliantly in the eastern sky, turning deeper shades of peach and apricot before falling into shadow and growing dim. The convection softened, weakened and moved away rapidly after sunset, which was quite late in those parts (9:52 p.m. at our filming location); so we headed to nearby Grafton for lodging and a late fast-food dinner.
Elke and I had started the previous day in Cheyenne, WY, and ended it here in northeastern ND. That’s a long haul! Yet we had undertaken a scenic and rewarding trip, bisecting the central and northern Plains from SW-NE. The journey hadn’t been quite as tiresome as the many miles might make it seem, probably thanks to the many stops and small rewards bountifully scattered along the way. Still, we were ready for a few days of post-frontal rest and relaxation before the next storm-spawning system. I didn’t count on a fortuitous encounter with photogenic cold-core storms the next day…