Steve,
You need to ask the NZ authorities to give us back our soil!
Macca, were the cells in question long lived on the night? Yes some nice shaped cells but then they quickly merged with other cells, weakened or died out. The dynamics were incredible of course and tornadoes were certainly on the cards. Night time though is basically a no go zone.
Sorry for not getting back to all of this chase but it was not exciting news and I have also been busy on other items. I went out on the night (it was great to be simply amongst it) and was in those areas a little too late due to the time I was able to leave and distance I had to travel. Perhaps it would have been better to head down the Hume and head west. But my target was nearer the Cowra region, west and southwest based on earlier models I had access to. I was hoping at least one or two cells would left move along some sort of boundary but the shear itself was incredible.
My evening and night chasing was basically unsuccessful due to the time getting out there, the speed of the storms and the pathetic visibility of structure on the night due to low cloud and possibly dust! I have a couple of pictures on the run but you just watched storms disappear even from a distance. And then I thought that with tree lined roads and low visibility, being in the path of a core was simply not the best idea. Our road network is simply not ideal to deal with systems of this nature and you can easily lose your bearing. Getting to the storms without any specific organisation is simply too difficult to follow. I have chased very fast moving and violent episodes in Tornado Alley back in 2007 but that was more a day time situation. Better road network and also less trees.
Evening storm near Young - likely a lower topped supercell. What I liked about this cell is despite the incredible shear, the storm updrafts bubbled upwards - observed at the back! I thought I would be able to intercept this cell - how silly to think that. I had my bearing wrong by a few degrees - I said goodbye to the storm!
I did make it to Young before the 9pm cells hit, but the storms were producing anvil crawlers - obviously some large drops indicating imminent hail but I was basically decided not to hang around in terms of a midnight return home and the reasons above. I felt it was a likely probability of accidently running into a cell on the way home rather than trying to chase in a fassion of a soccer goal keeper trying to catch multiple balls.
Regards,
Jimmy Deguara