After yesterday’s long drive to North Platte, Nebraska I
predictably cannot sleep. Our late arrival at 23:45 was compounded by an
internet outage that turned checking in into a tiresome ordeal at the less than
super Super 8. The paper thin walls and ceiling let through any noise:
snoring (Roger), either a small child or
dog squealing at 01:30, my sons continuing a text conversation at 04:30 and my
mother trying to Facetime me at 06:45. Not sure they get time zones. I “wake
up” tired with suitcases below the eyes.
I had a decent breakfast at the Lincoln Highway Diner with
sausage links, sour dough toast and a gallon of black coffee. It’s a little bit
more expensive than usual but I have colossally under spent as the incessant
chasing has meant many more truck stop grab and go “meals” than usual and not
so many sit down lunches and dinners; thank God for the breakfasts. I’ll have
some cash left over when I get home which will be a new one.
This morning the SPC has issued a now revised enhanced risk
with three separate tornado hotspots. The two within our chasing sphere are a
5% risk in the eastern Texas and Oklahoma Panhandles and another 5% risk being
an upslope event in south western Nebraska, south eastern Wyoming and north
eastern Colorado. Up slope essentially means that the topography as we near the
Rockies forces air and moisture upwards as opposed to the usual converging air
masses – this is known as orographic lift. We initially choose the latter area with
a target of Scottsbluff, Nebraska which is just off my South Central Plains
map.
There’s time for a visit to the Golden Spire Tower, a
volunteer run 8 story building dedicated to the North Platte Rail Yard, the
largest rail yard in the world which it overlooks. There’s a great panoramic vista
from the 7th floor outdoor viewing platform. We head west on the I80
interstate with a stop at Starbucks on the way which I decline. Too much coffee
already. We join the US26 at Ogallala heading north east towards Scottsbluff. The
countryside is pleasant with Lake McConaughy to our north and gently rolling
green down land giving way to the extensive Sand Hills, small continuous,
undulating dunes put down by an ancient sea. I momentarily get a 4G signal but
shortly after it reverts to a combination of 3G and “no signal” that has so far
characterised all of Nebraska.
A quick Subway top at Bridgeport and we arrive at
Scottsbluff National Monument, drive to the top and take some snaps of the
vista. It reminds me slightly of Lordstones Café back home, similar walk
through some bushes to a view of the Tees Valley, in this case the Plains; no
rattlesnakes back home though. It’s also chilly at 60f with a biting wind. Not
shorts and t-shirt friendly. As we return back to the SUV I’m trying to figure
out why my Z7 has drained the battery in less than three hours while sat in my
camera bag. Hopefully some changes of stings will sort that out.
As we descend back down to the Plains a tornado warned cell
has appeared south west of La Grange so we head south then west to intercept it
and enter Wyoming which is state number 6 for this trip. We bolt south on US85
then go east on Highway 216 then south
towards Burns, stop and take some
photos then dive under the I80 to Carpenter. There is a storm in front of us
and one beyond both of which have wall clouds with slow rotation apparent on
the nearest one. They’re not going to produce so we head east on the I80
towards a bigger storm that has had small funnels reported earlier and has
attracted the usual chaser convergence. It’s heading east, so are we; whatever
happens we’re also heading back to North Platte and the Super 8.
Well this is a bit surreal…this storm is barreling east on
the I80 at 30 mph and we are slowly reeling it in. It has a humongous hail core
showing 3” hail with intense precipitation and is still tornado warned. Jan
puts on the title track “Wings” from Picture’s soon to be released 12th
Album which passes the time. We pass through a contra flow and need to slow
down, it’s absolutely lashing it down and it’s a bit dicey. A new tornado
warned storm has sprung up to our south, the boiling updraft visible through
the rain.
We can’t get past this storm; its hail core is straddling
the length of the I80 like it is running on rails so we pull into Big Springs
services for a break. There’s hail everywhere and the car park is full of cars
with destroyed windscreens and sun roofs with bodywork like the surface of a
golf ball. Some of these cars are write offs.
We gingerly pull back onto the I80; there are dozens of
smashed cars littering the interstate, some in ditches and trees denuded of all
foliage with fallen branches everywhere. We pass a cattle facility containing
hundreds of cows. That beef will be tender…There’s hail covering the interstate
including some huge lumps. A snow plow appears on the other carriageway; we
edge up behind the core and follow it as close as we can at a snail’s pace.
We’re still 40 miles from our hotel. Another hail core has developed, it’s
getting hairy so we pull off at Paxton to try and find cover - there isn’t any
so we pull back on to the Interstate. This storm is like the truck in
Spielberg’s Duel. The hail core gets bigger and this bizarre storm sticks
faithfully to its route. We stop as does everything in front of us. The sky is
lit up with lightning. The other storm to our south is still tornado warned and
reports of tornadoes come in. That storm is heading directly to North Platte
and our hotel. That could really
bugger up check in…The semi-trucks (articulated wagons in UK speak) belt past –
nothing will interfere with their schedules. We crawl on, hazard lights
flashing in the night. It’s now 21:00 and well past dinner time and hail is
falling on us…
Eventually we find a way through the hail and find a steak
house and a well earned sirloin and a couple of 23oz amber ales and it’s time
to book back into the Super 8 – and all the power is out! I’ve got the world’s
supply of stuff to charge and no power so I plug everything in – in the dark –
and hope the power comes back on during the night. I’ve got 22% left on the
phone, hopefully that will be enough to last until my 07:00 alarm…this will
have to be loaded up later.
Total miles TBC