Posts Tagged ‘oklahoma’


Beautiful scene in central Oklahoma on May 29, 2012 as this spiraling supercell thunderstorm rolled across the countryside producing very large hail and a tornado northwest of Oklahoma City. It made for a fascinating scene crossing the recently harvested wheat fields.

http://bit.ly/1zCqHh8


This was the last image of my Clouds 365 Project. For those of you that don’t know me (that would be a lot!) I photographed the sky and posted a shot everyday to http://www.clouds365.com for 5 Years between 2009-2014. I have been a storm chaser for years, but I never had taken my family out, until June 30, 2014.

It has always been important to me to pass on my love of weather to my family, so we decided to chase storms together on the last day of my project. We drove 8 hours from Dallas, TX to Guymon, Oklahoma and caught this amazing supercell at sunset. To me, this was the perfect ending I always wanted to my project. I wanted to honor and thank them with this last image. The storm is not as close as it appears, but close enough 🙂

This is one image. I had a remote timer taking half second exposures every 5 seconds. We stood very still for 5-6 frames. I was lucky enough to get this shot on the first frame! What a amazing experience. Hope you enjoy the image.

http://bit.ly/1CYfxo9


This was the last image of my Clouds 365 Project. For those of you that don’t know me (that would be a lot!) I photographed the sky and posted a shot everyday to http://www.clouds365.com for 5 Years between 2009-2014. I have been a storm chaser for years, but I never had taken my family out, until June 30, 2014.

It has always been important to me to pass on my love of weather to my family, so we decided to chase storms together on the last day of my project. We drove 8 hours from Dallas, TX to Guymon, Oklahoma and caught this amazing supercell at sunset. To me, this was the perfect ending I always wanted to my project. I wanted to honor and thank them with this last image. The storm is not as close as it appears, but close enough 🙂

This is one image. I had a remote timer taking half second exposures every 5 seconds. We stood very still for 5-6 frames. I was lucky enough to get this shot on the first frame! What a amazing experience. Hope you enjoy the image.

http://bit.ly/1CYfxo9


Pedestrian Bridge Scenic Viewpoint at sunset in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
http://bit.ly/QlXu6G

An orange, mammatus-filled sky closed out the day of a marginally successful storm chase day.
http://bit.ly/1eHQ5V2

water on a rock
http://bit.ly/1iOMcjq