May starts the most active for tornadoes in at least five years, and it could stay busy

Tornado highlights covering the week of May 3-9, and a brief look ahead.

A tornado ropes out over the Colorado high plains on May 9. (Brian Miner Photography – Web, Twitter)

A big story the last few years, and even into the beginning of this one, has been drought. Plains rain drought, and tornado drought. Neither is getting much play at the moment.

It goes hand-in-hand. Last week, we pointed to the big rain coming, and it just keeps on coming this year across the south. As the drought gets knocked back, critical surface ingredients for tornadoes have once again become plentiful. Add in an active jet-stream pattern, and spin.

The week just ended was a big one by any standard. We’ve got a few “down days” in the work week ahead, but things are looking mighty interesting after that.

Last week’s summary map

And a few stats

Tornado activity across the U.S. last week. Reports are filtered by SPC, preliminary, and not necessarily indicative of one tornado per report. Warning counts are the first issuance and don’t include updates. (ustornadoes.com)

From May 3-9 ,there were 26 convective watches, of which 17 were tornado watches. 229 tornado warnings were issued and 123 tornado reports have come in as of publish. It was by far the busiest week of the year so far, and probably the busiest two-system set for the U.S. since 2011.

Related: Tornado Digest archives

If it seems like there have been a lot of tornadoes lately, there have. Following a slumber late April and into the first few days of May, we have now seen tornado reports every day since. We’re likely to break that streak ahead, but not for long.

(Storm Prediction Center)

Figuring out tornado numbers while the counts are ongoing is usually a fool’s errand, but let’s assume there have been in the neighborhood of 100-120 tornadoes in the first 10 days of the month. That’s about the same total as the past three years combined over the same period. Of course, those years produced record-low tornado numbers.

We have to go back to at least 2010 for comparable numbers over the first third of May. That May 1-10 came in with 108 tornadoes. It was at the tail of a stretch of tornadic early Mays. 2009 had 131 tornadoes, 2008 saw 147 tornadoes, and 2007 came in with 182 tornadoes during the same period. The high and low for May 1-10, back to 2000, are 2003 with 365 tornadoes and 2011 with 11 tornadoes respectively.

May 3-4: Central and Northern Plains

(SPC May 3 event page) | (SPC May 4 event page)

These days are combined since they were both relatively small, and there’s a lot more to talk about later. Just pics, really.

May 5: Southern Plains, focus on Texas

(SPC event page)

An outflow boundary made for a brilliant midday. The first tornado of the day was a stunner in west Texas:

Later in the day, more convection fired off the dryline to the west. Additional tornadoes touched down including this one near Lubbock, Texas:

May 6: Southern and Central Plains Tornado Outbreak

(SPC event page)

We waited, and after recent years we wondered. But a big day came, and we knew additional were still to follow. This was more of a “subtle” event when it comes to a big upper-level storm. Instead, classic low-level profiles up and down the Plains mixed with a relatively uncapped environment to deliver tornadic supercells to quite a large region.

Related: Videos from the May 6, 2015 Plains tornado outbreak

May 7: Texas

(SPC event page)

This was a pause day without a pause. As the main trough began to push into the southwest, abundant upper level flow for supercells persisted across the southern Plains. As did lots and lots of moisture (something to watch this year ahead…). Despite mesoscale convective complexes (MCS) out the wazoo, more tornadoes formed.

It was a cruel week for many across the region. Denton, Texas — as one — faced tornado threats on multiple days during the stretch. The city was hit again on May 9.

Near Denton, Texas…

May 8: Southern Plains

(SPC event page)

Wash, rinse, repeat. More big blobs of rain with outflow boundaries being spit out and supercells forming on the edges. Supercells then often quickly went high precipitation and decided to follow a river.

May 9: Southern/Central/High Plains Tornado Outbreak

(SPC event page)

A heck of a way to ruin a tornado outbreak. The main event came along as another in a strong of morning thunderstorm complexes attacked the main threat zone and took it off the menu for tornadoes. Comparative risks were lowered as we closed. But, plenty of twisters roamed.

Long-lived supercells dropped tornadoes across Colorado and Kansas. A significant and deadly tornado occurred in Texas.

Related: Videos from the May 9-10, 2015 tornado outbreaks

The tornado outbreak series then continued into Sunday, but we’ll cover that part of it next week. You can check out the videos in the meantime!

Just getting started?

Pattern reload ahead, and there are signs active times will continue

With the slow start to May in 2011-2014, any active period seems hyperactive. And while it’s not yet time to oversell the tornado activity of late, the future certainly looks filled with plentiful opportunities to quickly up the twister count.

The recent tornado-maker is still headed east today. A relatively lower tornado threat continues along with it, focused on the Ohio Valley per SPC. While it clears out, the pattern takes a bit to re-jigger. But, not long.

Forecast 500mb vorticity, wind and heights for Saturday, May 16, 2015. (Weather5280 Models)

Before the weekend event, we’ll have to watch a wave in the flow about Wednesday that may linger into Thursday, but moisture return seems meager for that. The severe weather threat may begin to generally increase as soon as Thursday, and even more likely by Friday as the western trough takes over the pattern.

Morning and midday “instability destroying” showers and thunderstorms have recently reminded us that high-end potential can be tempered rather easily, but the large-scale pattern for next weekend is one with historical precedent for tornado outbreaks on a number of scales.

GFS ensemble forecast for two weeks from now shows troughing in the west and ridging in the east. (Storm Vista Weather Models)

As with this time last week, ensemble modeling suggests the 1-2 week period ahead will be largely dominated by a tendency for storms to come in from the West Coast, and for high pressure to largely enjoy its stay in the east. This is suggestive of an overall active pattern continuing into the final third of May, and possibly beyond.

The following two tabs change content below.
Information lead and forecaster for the Washington Post's Capital Weather Gang.

Latest posts by Ian Livingston (see all)

Ian Livingston

Information lead and forecaster for the Washington Post's Capital Weather Gang.

Recent Posts

Girls Who Chase: Empowering Female Storm Chasers

In a field historically dominated by men, Jen Walton has emerged as a transformative figure…

3 months ago

The Storm Doctor: Dr. Jason Persoff

Jason Persoff, MD, SFHM, is recognized globally for his expertise in storm chasing. He earned…

9 months ago

Top tornado videos of 2023

Tornado numbers were near or above average. A chase season peak in June provided numerous…

10 months ago

March 31, 2023 tornado outbreak videos

One of the more widespread tornado outbreaks in years, from Iowa and Illinois to Arkansas.

2 years ago

Spring 2023 seasonal tornado outlook

The active start of the year could be a sign, but a mid-March pattern change…

2 years ago

Top tornado videos of 2022

A near average year for tornadoes across the country, with a cool season bend. We've…

2 years ago