The Cowboy State is still looking a
lot like Siberia. But travel in Wyoming
was really horrific on the days leading up to the 2019 Thanksgiving holiday.
Heavy snow and high winds struck at least three-fourths of the state. It was a
mess.
For a while, the state was
land-locked. There were few people able to get into or out of Wyoming. Interstate 80 was closed. Interstate 25 was
closed. And most other major roads were closed.
Of course, this was occurring on
Thanksgiving week and people were on the move.
AAA estimated 55 million would be traveling more than 50 miles and a
good number of them planned to head through Wyoming. The snow not only affected
people with connections to Wyoming but also folks east and west of the state that
were hoping to travel across the state. Not on this week, at least for a while.
Besides highways, there were businesses,
schools, colleges, and the University of Wyoming closing early for the holidays
because of the storm.
At its worst, we had 21 inches of
snow on the ground at my house in Lander. And yet because of our lack of wind,
we had it pretty good compared to some folks around the state.
Cheyenne was a disaster zone. Pete
and Chloe Illoway recently moved north of the capital city and found themselves
battered by wind and snow.
“We live in an area they call the
ranchettes just south of the Torrington Highway so there is nothing to stop the
wind or snow except for shelter belts. Our drifts are hard and high. They may
not melt until early spring,” Pete says.
“It was quite a storm for early in
the season. I do not have a gauge to measure the wind but it was strong enough
we never went outside. It was a Doozie,” Illoway concluded, as he spoke for
most Cheyenne residents.
Saddest story I heard was about
Dean and Kathi McKee of Lander. They were headed to Casper to catch a flight to
Fort Lauderdale. They had intended to join their daughter and her husband on a
Caribbean Cruise to Jamaica. They were
celebrating their 50th wedding anniversary.
They made it to Casper but their
flight was cancelled. They could not
make it to Denver on time so headed back home.
They ended up spending the night in a rustic nine-room motel in Jeffrey
City.
When they went to get breakfast
next door the next morning, the restaurant service was slow because the
exhausted bartender had been serving drinks to stranded travelers until 4 a.m. He was asleep in a lounge chair.
Kathi reported: “The people who own
the hotel are the best!”
She said: “A snowplow did come to
escort us and eight other vehicles safely out of Jeffrey City on a closed road.
Thank you WYDOT!”
Apparently there were a dozen
carloads of folks stranded down the road at Muddy Gap, too. Three Forks convenience center there takes
good care of people.
Wyoming’s biggest heroes during the
holidays were Highway Patrolman Sam Szott and an unidentified passing motorist
who saved a person’s life in a terrible crash near Wheatland.
Just after midnight on Tuesday,
Szott saw a pickup on fire down the embankment.
The driver was unresponsive and the two men got him out before the
entire truck was engulfed in flames. The
driver recovered later.
Press reports stated: “Without this
trooper’s actions and the Good Samaritan’s actions, this guy wouldn’t be able
to have the opportunity to be around for the holidays,” Lt. Kyle McKay said.
“By their quick thinking, they saved this guy’s life.”
Kudos go out to Gary Michaud who
runs the Wind River Transportation Authority in Fremont County. His crew sent a
bus to Laramie to pick up Lander and Riverton UW students so these young people
would not be out driving on dangerous roads.
One of those students was my
grandson, so this is a pretty great service it seems to me. Wonder if any other counties in Wyoming are
providing this service? If not, maybe
they should.
Fremont County students headed back
to Laramie Sunday in the safety of the bus, being helmed this time by Del
Nelson.
Dave “Pop” Lukens was visiting
Minneapolis prior to the storm. He says: “Donna and I were in MSP for
Thanksgiving with our other two grandkids. There is this web site called
morecast.com where you can find out the weather for your route and we plugged
in our trip back to Lander on Friday.
“At 3 a.m. mountain time, we got an
alert from this web site that said, "LEAVE NOW! And we did. We drove
those 970 miles in fog, snow, black ice, and heavy snow from Shoshoni to
Lander. And with stops, somehow we averaged 66.8 mph including potty and gas
stops.
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