Tag Archives: monsoon

Throwback Thursday: Arizona Highways, August 1990

1990_08

From the issue: “A violent storm showers the desert with lightning bolts.” The issue included several more storm photos, along with a story about how University of Arizona scientists were researching new ways to pinpoint lightning strikes. Photo by William L. Wantland.

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Don’t Get Struck by Lightning This Monsoon Season

Jillian Danielson | Clouds and lightning over Lake Havasu City

Jillian Danielson | Clouds and lightning over Lake Havasu City

We’re at the height of monsoon season in Arizona, and that means lightning. Lots and lots of lightning. And while it’s possible to survive a lightning strike — Roy Sullivan, a Shenandoah National Park ranger, survived seven of them, if you can believe it — it’s far better to just avoid being struck at all. With that in mind, our friends at the Apache-Sitgreaves National Forests wanted to share a few lightning-safety tips:

  • No place outside is safe when thunderstorms are in the area. If you hear thunder, lightning is close enough to strike you.
  • When you hear thunder, immediately move to safe shelter — a substantial building with electricity or plumbing, or an enclosed, metal-topped vehicle with the windows up.
  • Stay in safe shelter at least 30 minutes after you hear the last sound of thunder.

But what if you’re caught outside with no safe shelter anywhere nearby? You can reduce your risk with these last-resort measures:

  • Immediately get off elevated areas, such as hills, mountain ranges or peaks.
  • Never lie flat on the ground, never shelter under an isolated tree, and never use a cliff or rocky overhang for shelter.
  • Immediately get away from ponds, lakes and other bodies of water.
  • Stay away from barbed-wire fences, power lines, windmills and other objects that could conduct electricity.

Additionally, check the latest weather forecast before you head outdoors to make sure thunderstorms aren’t expected in the area. Stay safe out there, folks!

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Friday Fotos: Arizona’s Spectacular Monsoon Storms

Glenn Tamblingson‎ | Grand Canyon

Glenn Tamblingson‎ | Grand Canyon

“Rain is grace; rain is the sky descending to the earth; without rain, there would be no life.” — John Updike

Another beautiful Friday Fotos gallery. Thank you for sharing your photographs of Arizona’s amazing monsoon storms. Let’s hope they come soon.

Enjoy.

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Take ADOT’s Driver Survey About Dust Storms

Cheyenne L Rouse | Haboob moving into Chandler

Cheyenne L Rouse | Haboob moving into Chandler

Well, it’s official. June 15 marked the start of the monsoon season, and that means dust storms (and hopefully some rain, too). Due to the intensity of some dust storms, our friends at the Arizona Department of Transportation (ADOT) are asking drivers for their help with a survey, which is designed to gauge driver reaction to dust storms, measure ADOT’s educational efforts and explore other ways public-service agencies can reach out to motorists about the dangers of dust storms.

In addition to the survey, selected community members will have the opportunity to participate in focus groups to help shape ADOT’s future public-education efforts about dust and other low-visibility events that impact highway travel.

Visit http://surveyentrance.com/run/pib/p1990/adot/ to begin the survey.

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PHX Photographer Mike Olbinski Goes to Hollywood

You might remember our friend Mike Olbinski, the Phoenix-based photographer who sent us his amazing photo of the mother of all haboobs (you know the one I’m talking about, see below). Well, Olbinski is kind of a big deal now. The video he shot of a massive “supercell” in Texas earlier this year has catapulted him into the limelight, and you can see his amazing work — albeit enhanced, Hollywood-style — in the new movie Thor: The Dark World.

Below, Olbinski talks to Arizona Highways about this opportunity, how it came to be and what life is like as a storm chaser:

The video you filmed of a supercell in Texas is now in Thor: The Dark World. How did this come to be?
One of the things I’ve been blessed with since really diving into storm-chasing and time-lapsing is the friends I’ve made along the way. I posted this video of the Booker Supercell, which I shot just this past June, on Vimeo, and it went viral. I hadn’t thought it would receive that kind of attention, so I also passed it on to my friends at TornadoVideos.Net, who have a very popular YouTube channel. They posted it there, where it also got a ton of views. Toward the end of July, Heidi at Tornado Videos passed on an email she received from Marvel, asking about licensing the footage! That day was one I’ll never forget.

What went through your mind when you read the email from Marvel?
Honestly, at first I wasn’t sure what to make of it. I never even knew that films like this would use stock photography to help them finish scenes. I figured it was all something they could create with computer-generated imagery. So, at first, I figured it must be for something for a webisode or something else that wasn’t a major motion picture. But once they asked me what was the highest resolution I had for that supercell time-lapse, I started thinking, “Wow, I think they want this for a movie.” And after a few emails back and forth, they told me what film it was for and I freaked out. I’ve always loved science fiction and comic-book movies, more than any other genre. To somehow couple my passion for storm-chasing with a movie like Thor: The Dark World … well, yeah, it blew my mind!

Did you have any idea what they were going to do with your video ahead of time, or were you in for a surprise?
No, I had no idea. It was all a surprise. For all I knew, it might have been something you see on a TV screen in the background of a scene — something no one would notice unless they were looking for it. I had hopes it would be more, but I honestly had no idea. In fact, it wasn’t until the week the movie came out that I even knew for sure that it hadn’t been cut from the film! So much gets left on the cutting-room floor, I was terrified that even though they asked at the last minute, it still wouldn’t make it into the final movie.

Haboob

Photo courtesy of Mike Olbinsky | PHX haboob 2011

What do you think about the scene?
I’ve only seen it once, and I would love to see it again. It was weird, but as the scene neared without me really knowing when it would happen, I got an inkling that it was close. And then, in that part of the movie, the drama heightened, and the music got louder,  and I got more and more nervous. I knew it was about to happen. And then it did, and it was amazing. I had my camera with me and started snapping photos so I could always remember when I saw it — but I kind of wish I had just sat back and enjoyed it. It was the thrill of a lifetime.

And not only that, but I believe Marvel made a bit of an exception and included my name in the credits in the “thank you” section at the end. I had a bunch of buddies with me when I watched it the Thursday evening it came out, and we all cheered when it popped up on the screen!

You’ve made a career, it seems, out of photographing and making videos of weather, including the mother of all haboobs, which rolled through Phoenix in 2011. How did you get into this line of work?
It was a bunch of random things that got me into storm-chasing and photography. One was the birth of my daughter — all I wanted to do was take pictures of her. At the same time, I was obsessed with looking at weather photos from other photographers. And I was becoming a huge fan of the show Storm Chasers, on Discovery. Put all that together, and I started taking photos of storms. I still remember my first lightning strike. And from there it grew into a passion that I had no clue I had inside me. I’ve always loved the weather and tried to share it with others by talking about it all the time … but I finally found a way to share it with everyone else in a way that would hopefully cause their jaws to drop!

At some point, I thought time-lapsing would be awesome, especially seeing how a dust storm moves in quicker time. Amazingly, that July 5, 2011, dust storm was probably my fourth-ever time-lapse. It only reinforced that I wanted to do this.

How did the Texas video come to be? How do you know you’re going to capture something that spectacular?
For the last four years, I’ve taken a trip to the Plains for a few days to chase storms. The first three were fun, but I never saw what I wanted to see. You truly have no idea if you are going to see the storms you want to see, let alone something spectacular. But on June 3 of this year, my buddy Andy Hoeland and I flew into Denver at 10 a.m., rented a car and headed for the Kansas-Colorado-Oklahoma border to chase storms that we hoped would pop up later in the day. We made it all the way into Kansas when we finally hit some good weather. We made a lot of mistakes earlier on, which kept us inside of some good hail showers and torrential rain. We finally corrected our course and headed into Oklahoma to get to the south of these storms. We were just a few miles into Texas when we came out of the rain and saw this massive, gorgeous, amazing supercell just floating over the land. It was everything I had been wanting to see and then some. I got my cameras set up, stepped back, got a tear in my eye and hugged Andy. We did it. I couldn’t believe it.

What does it take to be a storm chaser — is this an accurate term to describe what you do?
That is what I do, and it is an accurate term. To me, being a storm chaser is more than just going out now and then, driving a few miles from home and snapping some photos. You have to be an addict, in a way. The chasers on the Plains will be away from home for days, and maybe weeks, at a time. They’ll put 50,000 to 100,000 miles on their vehicles in a summer. Here in Arizona, we don’t have to drive as far, but I’ve chased all over the state and even into New Mexico. This past summer, I drove more than 8,000 miles just in Arizona and chased as far as Douglas. Being a storm chaser means you really don’t have a choice. If you see a storm, you have to go — even if you’ve chased 10 days in a row and are dead tired. Yes, sometimes you gotta say no … but if you missed something awesome, it would be devastating. Even being in Arizona, when I see an awesome setup in the Plains, I really wish I could fly out for each and every one of them. It’s hard not to chase.

What cameras did you use for the haboob and for the Texas supercell?
I shoot with Canon cameras, and both of those time-lapses were captured on Canon EOS 5D Mark II cameras.

Your work has reached Hollywood. What’s next?
I have no idea. Getting footage into a comic-book movie was something I never even knew was possible, so I assume whatever happens next will be the same thing. When I witnessed the 2011 dust storm, I thought it couldn’t get any better than that. An amazing storm, a viral video, appearing on the Weather Channel, Al Gore’s office calling and wanting to use it … I mean, what could ever top that? And then I saw the Booker Supercell. No clue what I’ll see next.

—Kathy Ritchie

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Friday Fotos Flashback: Arizona’s Magnificent Monsoon Skies

Lacy Kruger Photography | Scottsdale

Lacy Kruger Photography | Scottsdale

Happy Friday and here’s to more monsoon skies.

Enjoy!

By submitting photographs to Arizona Highways via Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Tumblr or other social networking sites, the photographer grants Arizona Highways electronic rights. No financial consideration will be paid to anyone for publication on the Arizona Highways blog or Website.

By publishing a photographer’s work to its blog, Arizona Highways does not endorse the photographer’s private business or claim responsibility for any business relationships entered into between the photographer and our readers.

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