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SaskatchewanPhotos

Pilot photographs 'rare' Yorkton storm from the sky

Pilot Matt Melnyk was up in the sky as severe weather wreaked havoc in Saskatchewan on July 31. The pilot is also a photographer and he took snapshots of the storm from the air.

Pilot Matt Melnyk has never seen a storm like this in his 15 years of flying

Matt Melnyk was operating the aircraft through the storm alongside his first officer. (Matt Melnyk)

Pilot Matt Melnykwas flying through the airwhile storms wreaked havoc in Saskatchewanon Sunday.

Melnyk flies with WestJet Encore. He is based in Calgary, but often flies in Saskatchewan and Manitoba. At the time, hewas travelling from Saskatoon to Winnipeg and then back to Saskatoon.

The crew waswarned of severe weather and funnel clouds in their planned flight pathjust before they were going to take off to Manitoba.

He wasn't worried about the storm, but noted it was stronger thananything he'd ever seen.

"It was by far the largest storm I have ever seen in Canada," Melynk said.
Pilot and photographer Matt Melnyk said the higher the thunderstorm grows in cloud height the more intense it is. (Matt Melnyk)

Melynk noted the cloud tops were at about 17,678metres (58,000 feet) whereas the average prairiecloud tops are at about 10,668metres (35,000 feet.)

"It was very rare."

They were flying at7,620 metres (25,000 feet).

He left Saskatoon, piloting the Dash 8q400,for flight 3274 at 4:40 p.m. CST on Sunday.

Melnyk was flying with hisfirst officer as well as two flight attendants. They were about to enter the runway for takeoff when the tower controller told them they should expect severe weather on the flight path to Winnipeg.
A look at the storm on July 31 from 7,620 metres (25,000 feet) high. (Matt Melnyk)

They were told that in addition to the severe thunderstorms there were reports offunnel clouds, and a potential tornado by Yorkton.

The crew decided to take an alternateroute. They had to deviate 157kilometres (85 nauticalmiles)off course to avoid the storm.

"We started flying towards Winnipeg and then deviated our course, at 25,000 feet and that's when Igot those photos," he said.

"I'm a photographer and it's a hobby of mine and I decided tohave my camera with me because it is summer and I thought that there would be some interesting photo opportunities and I had it with me, luckily."

They arrived in Winnipeg just after seven before turning back to Saskatoon.

"In my 15 years of flying commercial aircraft I have never seen a storm with this high of cloud tops and intensity," he said.
Matt Melnyk took the photos from the sky with his Canon Mark 3 camera. (Matt Melnyk)

Melnyk explained that cloud tops this high are more normal in the southern states Texas for example.

The more intense a storm the higher it grows in cloud height.

"A thunderstorm will grow as high as the atmosphere lets it," he said.

Canada's atmosphere ends at the Tropopause, just beyond the lowest region of the atmosphere which is about 12,192 metres (40,000 feet)

"This means this particular rare storm had a significant amount of energy to grow to such a cloud height."

The flight did not end up experiencing turbulence because of the pilots' flight path change, stayinga safe distance away fromthe severe weather.

The crewarrived back on Saskatchewan soil at 8:20 p.m. CST.

Around that time, people began to learn that two tornadoes did touch down and cause a huge amount of damage by both Yorkton and Melville.

Pilot Matt Melnyk had to deviate 137 kilometres (85 miles) off course to avoid the severe storm. (Matt Melnyk)