Chasing storms on the prairies: How a Manitoba woman's passion was born out of fear - Action News
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Manitoba

Chasing storms on the prairies: How a Manitoba woman's passion was born out of fear

Mylne Mercier used hide in her house when thunder rumbled. Then, she started chasing storms to face her fears. Now, her storm hunts have become a passion.

Manitoba storm chaser once came face-to-face with with tornadoes 3 times in a 5-year period

Mylne Mercier says chasing storms 'makes me step out of my work and my daily life.' (Chlo Dior de Prigny/Radio-Canada)

Mylne Mercier used to hide in her house when thunder rumbled. Then, she started chasing storms to face her fears. Now, her storm hunts have become a passion.

It's June 7, 2020: dark clouds are threatening southeastern Manitoba.

As EnvironmentCanada issues severe weather alerts and everyone tries to get back home and away from the weather,Mercier jumps into her car.

The mother of twochecks different radars and drives to Tolstoi, a small southern Manitoba community close to the Minnesota border. Her phone shows four stormsin the area.

At some points, the rain is so heavy that she has to stop. Thunder rolls. The onlythingsvisible through her windshield are flashes from the sky.

In her car, Mercier is euphoric.

She usually stays far from storms, to appreciate their beauty while staying safe. This time, though, Mercier got stuck between two of these thunderstorms. When it happens, the best thing to do is go through one of them, she says.

Mylne Mercier tries to stay safe in her car, far from storms, when she chases them. (Submitted by Mylne Mercier)

"I could not drive any more, in case a tree hit me,"torn down by the wind, Mercier said in an interview in French.

"A friend called and I told her: 'If you could imagine! It's raining, but sunny at the same time.The sky is red,'" she said.

"For me, it was just wow."

3 tornadoes in 5 years

Despite her passion for storms, past experiences Mercier with tornadoes still leave her rattled.

In Alberta in 2010, atornado "just crossed the road where I was [driving],"said Mercier, who has lived in Manitoba for a year.

"I was really, really shaken. I got so scared I cried for two days after that. My car was really damaged."

In Ontario in 2014, a tornado in the town of Angus destroyed her neighbourhood, but fortunately not her family house.

Mylne Mercier combines her two passions during her chases: photography and storms. (Submitted by Mylne Mercier)

A year later, Mercier again encountered a tornado, while driving with her daughter, who is now six years old, and her mother.

"it was a small one, but still enough to say, 'we close our eyes and wait,'"Mercier said.

"This time we were not hit, but it's the kind of thing you remember your entire life."

After that,something changed: instead of being afraid of storms, Mercier tried to learn more about them.

Now, she loves the adrenaline she gets while chasing.

"It makes me step out of my work and my daily life as a mother", said Mercier, who works as a teaching assistantat Collge Louis Riel in Winnipeg.

A passion to be shared

Jordan Carruthers, the founder of Manitoba Storm Chasers,says trying to overcome fearis one of the main reasons why people join tours his company offers.

"There are also just the ones that are really passionate about the weather and want to go experience it, but do not have the knowledge to go out, do it themselves and stay safe,"said Carruthers.

Carruthers himself has always been interested in weather, but becamefascinated by storms in 2007, after seeing the damage doneby an F-5 tornado in Elie, Man., not far from where he livesin Portage la Prairie.

Carruthers now chases storms for a living, beginning each season in April.He says every trip is a new experience, which has kept him motivated all these years.

As one storm season ends in October, Mercier is already thinking about the next one. (Submitted by Mylne Mercier)

"It's kind of never the same two storms in a row," Carruthers said. "You can go out expecting one thing and then something changes in the atmosphere and you get somethingeither waybetter than you're expecting, or just different."

In most years, from May to September, he says about 75 to 100 people joinhim ontrips, coming from Manitoba to Alberta, and the northernUnited States.

"There's definitely a lot of repeats. I usually take three to four people at a time. There's usually one to two of those who are new people,"Carruthers said.

'Sold onthe Prairies'

Meanwhile, Mercier is followingher passion mostly on her own. Her friends and colleagues areawed when they see storm pictures she brings back from her chases, but most of them are afraid to join her.

"My son came one time. He could not understand why I was doing that. That day, he realized it is possible to stay far from a storm, be safe, while appreciating its beauty,"Mercier said.

Mercier says she has to use radar tracking from the U.S. and Canada to find the exact storm location. (Submitted by Mylne Mercier)

Recently, the mother of two children created the Facebook page MYZ Storm (in French) to get other people interested in thenatural phenomena. She publishes pictures, videos and anecdotes from her chases and invites cloud lovers to join her.

Originally from Quebec, Mercier has admired skies in Ontario, Alberta and British Columbia. According to her, the best storms are definitely in Manitoba.

"The way clouds and structures move is way more impressive here, probably because the ground is flat. I've been sold on the Prairies."


An earlier version of this story was published in French by Radio-Canada. Click here to read the French version.

Clarifications

  • A previous version of this story stated that Mercier encountered three tornadoes in the last five years. In fact, she encountered three tornadoes during an earlier five-year period.
    Jul 18, 2020 10:49 AM CT