The dryline was out west, the warm front was in northern Oklahoma. Unfortunately the wave came and went early, so we were left chiefly with afternoon heating for lift. As the morning storms crossed northeastern Oklahoma, new cells formed near I-40 out west, and finally, west of Enid, where we were waiting. The individual cells quickly turned into large wet, messy congealed globs. There were tornadoes (brief, of course) reported, but not from credible observers. We saw tape of a landspout near Fairview. The whole mess dropped a lot of rain over northwestern and north central Oklahoma, with flooding the biggest problem.
We got to have a brief chat with Sean Casey at a Dairy Queen but did not see them the rest of the day. There were more discrete cells south along the dryline. Maybe they did better. We saw few chasers once the storms began. This was the most intense daylight lightning display in memory. We let the glob go on its way to eastern Oklahoma. The mammatus at sunset was beautiful.