Wild weather, severe storms, and lightning are usually the stuff bad dreams are made of for young children. As a local photographer, Cathy L. Gregg was not one of those children. She was always fascinated by thunder, lightning, and the likeāthanks to a father who studied weather and shared that passion with his children.

āItās in my blood,ā she said. āMy father was a climatologist by hobby. He taught us a lot about weather.ā
That passion for weather stayed with Gregg, and now she actually chases storms, camera in hand. Sheās captured storms, snow, lightning, and more throughout her photography career. Her images will be on display during the āInclementā exhibition at the Shepard Hall Gallery, showing throughout July.
The exhibit will focus on inclement weather, atmospheric phenomena, and, of course, the chase.
āI want to show people we do get some inclement weather on the Central Coast,ā she said.
From lightning and large waves to snow at very low elevations and 65 mph winds at Morro Bay, Gregg has captured the Central Coast in a way thatās not often seenāeven by residentsāsince 1998.
But the exhibition will be more than just images; it will be an educational experience as well. Gregg will be sharing her weather knowledge with displays that explain sun dogs and superior mirages and other atmospheric phenomena.
Gregg has been chasing storms for years, but it wasnāt until she captured a freak lightning storm in 2006 that she began to gain attention for her weather shots. The storm happened shortly after she finished shooting the crush at Byron Winery. As she got home, her friend who was still at the winery called her to tell her to get back to the winery quickly.
āShe saidāIāll say it nicely, āYou better get your butt back here; thereās a lightning storm!āā Gregg said.

Unbeknownst to Gregg, the storm was traveling east to west, so she was surprised when she looked out her window and didnāt see anything. Still, she packed up her camera and headed back to the winery.
It was the first time she tried to photograph lightning, but after 15 or 20 shots, she figured it out. Sitting in her carābecause it wasnāt safe to go outsideāshe set up her camera, rolled down the window, and began shooting pictures for three hours.
āIt was a monsoonal storm, unlike anything we get in California,ā she said. āLater, I found out the National Weather Service considered it a 50-year storm.ā
She found out that data showed the storm produced almost 6,000 lightning strikes.
āI was just amazed at how incredible the storm was,ā she said.
Her lightning movie on YouTube is now up to nearly 2 million hits, and her photos from that day are on the website of the National Weather Serviceās Los Angeles/Oxnard office.
Gregg tried to pinpoint why sheās so fascinated with weather. She surmised itās just the excitement of watching a storm and sometimes looking back and realizing she survived it.
āI think itās the excitement of watching storms come in and brew up,ā she said. āI get this adrenaline rush at seeing Mother Nature at her best.ā
Sheās become adept at using weather technology to gather information about upcoming storms and reading the clouds, but sometimes a low-level snowstorm or spontaneous lightning storm takes her by surprise.
āYouāre never going to be one up on Mother Nature, but you sure can follow her,ā Gregg said.
Arts Editor Shelly Coneās kids are always trying to one up her. She can be contacted at scone@santamariasun.com.
This article appears in Jul 5-12, 2012.

