Get the Cheat Sheet: https://stormchasercoaching.com/storm-chasing-podcast-notes Join our Discord community: https://discord.gg/stormchasercoaching Join the 2027 Storm Chasing Tour: https://stormchasercoaching.com/2027-tour Get the FREE Chaser Safety Ebook: https://stormchasercoaching.com/eight-rules/ Get the FREE Dixie Alley Ebook: https://stormchasercoaching.com/dixie-alley/ Follow Storm Chaser Coaching on Twitter: https://x.com/TornadoCoaching Follow Trey on Twitter: https://x.com/ConvChronicles Follow Gabriel on Twitter: https://x.com/CrazyGabey Watch the original Convective Chronicles video here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YLSQrwxjdc4 00:00 Intro: The Quad-State Supercell Event 01:29 Trough & Surface Low: Long-Track Tornado Setup 03:52 Model Trends & Low-Level Cyclone Amplification 05:16 Nighttime Warm Advection Chasing Strategy 08:04 Radar Cues: Three Body Scatter Spike Explained 09:59 Velocity vs. Storm Relative Velocity 12:11 Occlusion Cycles vs. Brief Mesocyclone Disruption On the night of December 10th, 2021, a single long-lived supercell thunderstorm carved a path of destruction across four states — Arkansas, Missouri, Kentucky, and Tennessee — leaving a trail of devastation in its wake. Known as the Quad-State Supercell, this historic storm system produced multiple violent, long-tracked tornadoes that obliterated communities including Mayfield, Dawson Springs, and Bremen, Kentucky, making it one of the most destructive tornado outbreaks in recorded history. In this episode of the Storm Chaser Coaching podcast, host Gabriel Harber sits down with Lead Coach Trey Greenwood to break down the unique meteorological dynamics that allowed this supercell to remain tornadic for so long. Unlike typical springtime setups, this event was driven by a subtle shortwave trough embedded in southwesterly upper-level flow — a configuration that reduced forcing for storm mergers and kept the supercell discrete and isolated for hours. Crucially, a rapidly deepening surface low tracked alongside the storm, continuously transporting warm, unstable, moisture-rich air into the storm's inflow region, giving it virtually unlimited thermodynamic fuel. Trey and Gabe also explore key forecasting signals to watch on model trends, including low-level cyclone tightening, surface wind backing, and low-level shear amplification — all critical indicators of long-track tornado potential. The discussion extends to nighttime chasing strategy, explaining how strong warm advection and a ramping low-level jet can actually intensify tornado production after dark rather than suppress it. On the radar analysis side, Trey breaks down rare signatures observed during the Mayfield tornado, including a three-body scatter spike emanating from the debris ball — an extraordinarily rare phenomenon typically associated only with large hail — as well as deep debris lofting visible in correlation coefficient data. The episode also clarifies the critical difference between standard velocity and storm relative velocity products, and why storm relative velocity is the go-to tool for identifying tornadic signatures and velocity couplets. Finally, the hosts examine the difference between a classic mesocyclone occlusion cycle and the brief disruption the Quad-State Supercell experienced near the Kentucky-Tennessee border — and why the favorable kinematic environment prevented a full cyclic occlusion from ending the storm's destructive run.