Monday, July 27, 2015

The stunning snaps of nature at its wildest: Veteran storm chaser hits jackpot by capturing FOURTEEN tornadoes in just one hour

  • Brian Morganti's latest series features magnificent images of tornadoes tearing across Colorado's plains
  • He said it was one of the most prolific days he has ever experienced in his 19 years as a tornado chaser 
  • In one scene a tornado passes perilously close to a farm, with the dark skies clashing with the green grass
PUBLISHED: 12:10 GMT, 23 July 2015 | UPDATED: 20:49 GMT, 23 July 2015

For storm chasers who spend their summers criss-crossing America’s tornado belt, the astonishing scenes captured in these snaps are the equivalent of hitting the jackpot.

Veteran storm chaser Brian Morganti managed to photograph 14 tornadoes in just one hour, with his latest series featuring magnificent images from violent weather systems that tore through Colorado.

By the end of the day he had driven nearly 400 miles while capturing incredible shots, and said it was one of the most prolific days he has ever experienced in his 19 years as a tornado tracker. 

In one photo captured by Brian Morganti a tornado passes perilously close to a farm, with the dark skies clashing with the green grass


The veteran storm chaser managed to photograph 14 tornadoes in just one hour while tracking storms on Colorado's plains


Further proof of his passion for storm chasing, Brian drove nearly 400 miles to capture the incredible shots on a day last June


The weather enthusiast said it was one of the most prolific days he has ever experienced in his 19 years as a tornado tracker

Brian’s snaps show the fury of nature, with spectacular scenes of wedge, stovepipe and elephant trunk tornadoes ripping up the state’s Eastern Plains.

Brian works for a chasing company, and on June 4, was hoping to find a supercell or two to chase, but instead managed to chase down more than a dozen different twisters.

The impressive pictures reveal just how close Brian was to the tornadoes, getting in amazing detail of the dust clouds they produced and their potential to cause destruction to property.

Brian’s snaps show the fury of nature, with spectacular scenes of stovepipe and elephant trunk tornadoes destroying the landscape


This picture shows a trunk-style tornado in Matheson - one of the 14 Brian Morganti pictured on June 4


With a little bit of luck, he instead managed to chase down more than a dozen different twisters, including this dual tornado


Brian was a safe distance from this wedge tornado as it tore across the plains with sunshine breaking through clouds in the distance

In one scene a tornado passes perilously close to a farm, with the dark skies clashing with the strong greenery of the grass.

Brian said: ‘I looked in my rear-view mirror and saw a large dark dust swirl about a quarter mile behind me and had to get out to photograph the action once again.

‘This was when a high base tornado funnel occurred at cloud level with a long skinny needle tornado extended to the ground occasionally producing dark dust swirls.

‘Marble size hail began to fall and the tornado was getting away from me to the south, so it was time to blast south again.’


When Brian thought the chase was over, it resumed when he looked in his rear-view mirror and saw a large dust swirl behind him


The impressive pictures reveal just how close Brian was to the tornadoes, getting in amazing detail of the dust clouds they produced


Every year storm chasers flock to the notorious Tornado Alley in the US to chase and photograph these massive storms



Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/travel/travel_news/article-3172047/Brian-Morganti-captures-astonishing-images-FOURTEEN-tornadoes-Colorado-just-one-hour.html#ixzz3h68Mg6Dw

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