A Childhood Strike Sparks a Lifelong Pursuit (Image Credits: Unsplash)
A massive positive cloud-to-ground lightning bolt pierces a clear night sky over Italy’s Ligurian coast, captured in crisp detail against the dark horizon. This striking image, taken by veteran storm chaser Christophe Suarez, graces the October page of Severe Weather Europe’s 2026 calendar.[1][2] The photograph symbolizes Suarez’s decades-long dedication to documenting nature’s most electrifying displays, from Alpine thunderstorms to elusive red sprites.
A Childhood Strike Sparks a Lifelong Pursuit
Christophe Suarez traced his fascination with storms back to a summer day in Spain when he was nine years old. A lightning bolt struck just tens of meters away from him and his grandmother, filling him with terror yet igniting an unquenchable curiosity. He recalled the moment vividly: “Suddenly, a lightning bolt struck just tens of meters in front of us, and I was terrified. I ran back down to the village and took shelter under the porch of an alleyway. My grandmother just kept walking. Scared but also a bit defiant, I wanted to relive that moment, that intense emotion – perhaps to say to the elements: I am here, and I am not afraid of you.”[1]
Born near Lyon, France, to a Spanish father and French mother, Suarez grew up immersed in the elements. He moved to Haute-Savoie near Geneva in 2001, working for the International Red Cross, and later settled in southern France, about 30 minutes from Cannes. Early travels for humanitarian work exposed him to storms at sea, but digital photography in 2003 transformed his hobby into a profession. “What really changed everything was in 2003, with the arrival of digital photography. I immediately realized I finally had the tool to photograph storms endlessly and refine my technique,” he explained.[1]
Essential Gear for High-Stakes Captures
Suarez relied on a carefully curated setup honed over two decades. He favored Nikon Z6 bodies – three in total, one modified with an Astronomik L2 filter – and two Sony A7S cameras, also refiltered for specialized shots. His lens kit included fisheyes, fast primes like 16mm f/1.8 and 24mm f/1.8 for wide storm vistas, and longer options such as 100mm f/2 for sprites. Tripods received special emphasis: “Having good cameras and lenses is great, but the real magic is in the details – and I’ve never neglected my tripods and accessories. An unstable tripod is the best way to end up with soft photos.”[1]
His chase vehicle, a rugged Fiat Panda 4×4 with over 290,000 kilometers, carried the load after he removed the back seats. Suarez typically chased with his wife, Kate, keeping teams small to maintain focus. He scouted European hotspots like the Alps, Italy, and Slovenia, targeting isolated cells that produced intense lightning rather than chasing crowded supercells.
The Liguria Night That Lit Up the Calendar
The calendar’s standout image came from a calculated pursuit in Italy’s Liguria region near Chiavari. Models predicted isolated storms, so Suarez and his wife positioned themselves away from busier Genoa areas, near Savona and Chiavari. A highly electric cell delivered around 20 spectacular bolts emerging from a clear sky, including the positive cloud-to-ground strike that defined the shot. He cherished sharing the experience with Kate, who witnessed such a display for the first time.
Suarez built his reputation on similar feats, like epic lightning series over Geneva displayed at the University of Geneva and on Swiss TV. His portfolio featured mammatus clouds, vortices, red sprites above Corsica thunderstorms, and auroral explosions that moved him to tears. “The first time I witnessed an auroral outburst, I cried with joy,” he shared.[1] These captures rivaled anything from distant plains, proving Europe’s weather held untapped power.
His online community, “Storm Chasers” or “Chasseurs d’orages,” inspired a new generation in France. Yet Suarez stressed patience over frenzy: “I often tell the enthusiasts I meet that luck favors those who are out in the field. If you’re not outside, the best gear in the world won’t do you any good.” He avoided second-guessing spots, a mistake he saw ruin many shots: “There’s nothing worse than choosing a spot, then moving for some silly reason, only to see a beautiful isolated cell develop exactly where I should have stayed.”[1]
Respect, Restraint, and Dream Chases Ahead
Suarez approached his craft with deep respect for storms’ destructive side. He shared images thoughtfully, avoiding distress to victims: “Faced with that reality, I try to give meaning to my reports, to avoid being indecent or sharing images that might distress victims… Be respectful.”[1] At 60, he saw no need to venture beyond Europe, where variety abounded from French floods to Italian supercells.
His ultimate vision blended elements into one frame: a towering cumulonimbus under aurora borealis, with a waterspout, lightning, and jellyfish sprite. As the calendar spotlighted his work, Suarez continued chasing, blending defiance, emotion, and precision to immortalize nature’s fury.
