July 11 Severe Weather Arrives in Southeast Iowa
Wednesday, July 16, 2025
SPC Mesoscale Discussion 1641, posted at 12:18 pm CDT for about half of the state of Iowa.
12:55 pm CDT. Tornado Watch 505 is issued for much of southeast Iowa and some of northwest Illinois.
2:15 pm. Time for me to fly. Storm cell near Ottumwa, Iowa is tornado warned and I am on the road southbound on Interstate 380/US Highway 218 on an intercept course. Radarscope image above is from 2:45 pm, showing tornado-warned polygon, and my mobile location (blue target icon).
3:05 pm. Visible storm cell with billowing cumulonimbus to my southeast. Though not severe warned, its echo tops (above) were reaching 40,000 feet.
3:09 pm. Photo capture of this storm cell to my southeast while southbound on US Highway 218 just south of Hills, Iowa in Johnson County.
Radarscope reflectivity image corresponding to the photo above it, with the storm cell being shown at right (near Wapello, Iowa).
3:13 pm. Same storm cell to my southeast while southbound on US Highway 218, about one mile south of the Kalona, Iowa exit (Exit 80) in Johnson County. The storm was now located at the border of Henry and Des Moines counties in southeast Iowa. Surprisingly enough, this potent cell was not severe warned.
3:32 pm. Now at a stationary spotting location on Yucca Avenue just south of Highway 92, about 1.1-mile east of the US Highway 218 exit for Ainsworth, Iowa in Washington County. The image above looks south at an updraft feature.
3:32 pm. Looking east from this location. The updraft at center exhibits an inflow cloud and small funnel.
3:33 pm. Similar capture of the updraft feature to the east, now without its funnel.
3:35 pm. Updraft, inflow and small ragged wall cloud appendage.
3:37 pm. Radarscope reflectivity image showing severe-warned storm approaching my location.
3:39 pm. Looking southwest at the incoming severe-warned storm cell.
3:39 pm. Similar image looking south as the storm approaches. Two storm chasers confer in the background to continue east on Highway 92.
3:43 pm. Now relocated east at the Cotter Presbyterian Church on County Road W66, about .3-mile south of Highway 92 in Louisa County, and about 3.6 miles east of US Highway 218. This image looks southwest. Though visually impressive, the storm has just lost its severe warning.
3:44 pm. Similar capture with the church in the picture. Nikon Z6ii camera.
3:46 pm. Radarscope image, showing my location inside a notch of the storm. I now decided to head for home, and drove through drenching rain for about 15 minutes before conditions finally improved.