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As far back as I can
remember I have always been fascinated with severe weather.
Lightning, thunder, and high winds always intrigued me...weather
that was common in South Florida, where I was raised. The howling
winds of a severe thunderstorm captured my imagination and fueled
a relentless desire to see more.
A great
opportunity came to my doorstep when Hurricane Donna arrived in
1960. Donna, a category four hurricane, came through the middle
Florida Keys and gave Miami a brush with winds gusting near 100
mph. It was the most awesome experience of my young life.
From then on, I
began tracking every tropical storm in the Atlantic basin.
Hurricanes Cleo and Betsy, in 1964 and 1965, both hit even closer
to home, and provided more adrenalin for a lifetime devoted to
storm chasing.
But another
direct hit in South Florida was a long time coming (1992!), so it
was time to expand my horizons. Tornadoes were naturally my next
target. Beginning in 1974, I decided to head for Oklahoma to see
some really amazing thunderstorms and hopefully a classic Midwest
tornado, something I had always dreamed of.
I saw my first
real tornadoes May 28, 1975 in the Texas Panhandle. My chase
partner and I saw one to our north, but a second much larger
tornado formed alarmingly close to our south and began to chase
us!
Later that
season, on June 6, near Freedom, Oklahoma, I was lucky enough to
take the first known motion picture of an anti-cyclonic (clockwise
rotating) tornado in the northern hemisphere.
Now I was hooked
on the dual passions of tornado and hurricane chasing, and
bringing back my quarry on film. Ever since, I have thought
nothing of hopping the next plane to any place in the world where
I might have the chance to experience nature's most powerful
displays.
This passion for
being witness to the most intense forces of nature has taken me to
the far-flung corners of the earth. In 1991 I decided to go to
Guam, in the northwest Pacific. There, typhoons (the name given to
hurricanes in that region) prowl the ocean with greater frequency
than anywhere in the world.
The following
season in Guam brought a record number of five typhoons to that
small island. Foremost in my memory, and captured by my
ever-present video camera, was Typhoon Omar, a category four storm
that struck just four days after Hurricane Andrew ravaged South
Florida...and, unlike Andrew, during daylight. Omar provided some
of the most amazing hurricane footage of my career.
Other personal
and filmed highlights include Hurricane Gilbert, the strongest
Atlantic storm on record, Hurricane Hugo, caught in both Puerto
Rico and Charleston, South Carolina, and numerous tornado
encounters, including a mile-wide monster near Allison, Texas in
1995, and another mile-wide tornado near Perth, Kansas in 1997.
My video
footage has been featured in National Geographic's "Cyclone!" on
NBC, the CBS special "Forces of Nature," "Tornado Video Classics"
by Tom Grazulis, the Discovery Channel's "Raging Planet," the
Weather Channel special "The Chase," plus many commercials. In
addition, I contribute video and eyewitness accounts of land
falling hurricanes to the
National
Hurricane Center Storm Surge
Unit.
I have only one
purpose in life -- to chase and photograph severe storms. I am
glad when I can contribute to scientific research and education
about storms, but the driving force behind my lifelong passion is
the incredible power and beauty of the storms themselves.
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