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Don Day's Wyoming Weather Forecast: Tuesday, July 23, 2024

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Don Day's Wyoming Weather Forecast: Tuesday, July 23, 2024


Mostly sunny in Wyoming on Tuesday. Smoky or hazy in much of the state at times. Highs from the low 80s to the upper 90s. Lows from the upper 40s to the mid 60s. 

Central:  

Casper:  Areas of smoke, otherwise sunny today with a high near 91 and partly cloudy overnight with areas of smoke before 10 p.m. and a low near 62.  

Lander:  Areas of smoke, slight chance of rain after 2 p.m., otherwise increasing clouds today with a high near 88. Gradually becoming mostly clear overnight with areas of smoke before 8 p.m. and a low near 60.    

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Glenrock:  Sunny and hot today with a high near 94 and partly cloudy overnight with a low near 58.  

 Southwest:  

Evanston Patchy smoke, sunny today with a high near 86 and patchy smoke, mostly clear overnight with a low near 51.

Rock Springs:  Areas of smoke, otherwise sunny today with a high near 90 and areas of smoke, otherwise partly cloudy overnight with a low near 57 

Cokeville:  Areas of smoke after noon, otherwise sunny today with a high near 90. Areas of smoke before 2 a.m., otherwise mostly clear overnight with a low near 49.

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Western Wyoming:  

Pinedale:  Areas of smoke after 1 p.m., slight chance of rain after 3 p.m., otherwise mostly sunny today with a high near 84 and mostly clear overnight with a low near 50.

Afton:  Areas of smoke, sunny today with a high near 89 and areas of smoke between 7 p.m. and 9 p.m., otherwise mostly clear overnight with a low near 52. 

La Barge:  Areas of smoke after noon, otherwise sunny today with a high near 84 and areas of smoke before 10 p.m., otherwise mostly clear overnight with a low near 47.

Northwest:  

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Dubois:  Areas of smoke after 11 a.m., chance of rain mainly after 2 p.m., otherwise mostly sunny today with a high near 84. Partly cloudy overnight with a low near 53.

Jackson:  Areas of smoke after noon, otherwise sunny today with a high near 89 and areas of smoke before 7 p.m., otherwise mostly clear overnight with a low near 47.

Old Faithful in Yellowstone National Park:  Areas of smoke after noon, slight chance of rain after 3 p.m., otherwise sunny today with a high near 82 and areas of smoke, otherwise partly cloudy overnight with a low near 46.

Bighorn Basin:  

Thermopolis Areas of smoke, otherwise sunny today with a high near 95 and areas of smoke before 7 p.m., otherwise mostly clear overnight with a low near 61.

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Cody:  Areas of smoke in the morning, slight chance of rain after 3 p.m. and increasing clouds today with a high near 91. Areas of smoke after 4 a.m. overnight, otherwise mostly clear with a low near 64. 

Worland:  Areas of smoke, sunny today with a high near 95 and mostly clear overnight with areas of smoke between 7 p.m. and 8 p.m. and a low near 56.  

North Central:  

Buffalo:  Areas of smoke, otherwise mostly sunny today with a high near 91 and areas of smoke overnight, otherwise partly cloudy with a low near 67.

Sheridan:  Widespread haze, otherwise mostly sunny and hot today with a high near 98. Widespread haze before 9 p.m., otherwise partly cloudy overnight with a low near 56.

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Story:  Widespread haze, otherwise mostly sunny and hot today with a high near 92. Widespread haze before 9 p.m., otherwise partly cloudy overnight with a low near 62.

Northeast:  

Gillette:  Widespread haze, otherwise sunny today with a high near 93 and widespread haze, otherwise mostly clear overnight with a low near 62 and wind gusts as high as 17 mph.

Sundance:  Widespread haze, otherwise mostly sunny today with a high near 88. Mostly clear overnight with widespread haze and a low near 62.

Upton:  Widespread haze, otherwise sunny today with a high near 93. Widespread haze overnight, otherwise mostly clear with a low near 61.

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Eastern Plains:  

Torrington:  Sunny and hot today with a high near 93 and mostly clear overnight with a low near 58. 

Douglas:  Sunny and hot today with a high near 94 and mostly clear overnight with a low near 57.

Guernsey:  Sunny and hot today with a high near 94 and mostly clear with a low near 61.

Southeast:  

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Cheyenne:  Sunny today with a high near 87 and mostly clear overnight with a low near 57. 

Laramie:  Sunny today with a high near 83 and mostly clear overnight with a low near 52.

Medicine Bow:  Sunny today with a high near 86 and partly cloudy overnight with a low near 52.

South Central:  

Rawlins:  Sunny today with a high near 87 and mostly clear overnight with a low near 55. 

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Saratoga:  Sunny today with a high near 86 and partly cloudy overnight with a low near 50.  

Baggs:  Sunny and hot today with a high near 90 and mostly clear overnight with a low near 50.



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Man taken into custody after police standoff in Wyoming

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Man taken into custody after police standoff in Wyoming


WYOMING, Mich. (WOOD) — Wyoming police officers were seen taking a man into custody after an hours-long standoff Sunday night.

Police swarmed Thorndyke Avenue near 44th Street SW in Wyoming for several hours after a man barricaded himself inside a home. A News 8 crew watched officers remove a man from the barricaded home in handcuffs around 11:35 p.m. Sunday.

A neighbor who lives on Thorndyke Avenue told News 8 that the incident began when a man who lives on the street left his house to confront a group of men who were working on the roof of a nearby property. The neighbor heard a single gunshot before the man retreated into his home.

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Thorndyke Avenue was blocked off for hours with those living on the street unable to get to their houses. Those already inside were asked to remain inside.



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Hunting: Arkansas might feel ripples from Wyoming public land access case | Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

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Hunting: Arkansas might feel ripples from Wyoming public land access case | Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette


Hunters won a major decision for public land access in Wyoming recently, and the ripples will ultimately reach Arkansas.

In October, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear Iron Bar Holdings, LLC v. Cape et al., preserving a unanimous decision by the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals’ upholding the legality of “corner crossing.” The case involved a Wyoming landowner that pressed trespassing charges against four Missouri hunters who cut across the corner of the landowner’s fence to get from one public parcel to another.

Law enforcement has traditionally supported landowners in “corner crossing” situations. It is an effective method to restrict public access to public land that is surrounded by private land. By restricting corner crossing, landowners have exclusive access to public land abutting their property. They can hunt it without competition, and they can run guided hunts on it.

We have encountered that situation personally while hunting in Oklahoma. A situation in Arkansas occurred about a decade ago where a landowner closed a road on his property that leads to a remote portion of Cache River National Wildlife Refuge. There’s the ongoing conflict between public land hunters in northeast Arkansas and the Hatchie Coon Hunting Club.

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Backcountry Hunters & Anglers, which in 2021 successfully campaigned to prevent the University of Arkansas from selling the Pine Tree Experimental Station Wildlife Demonstration Area to private interests, filed amicus filings in the Wyoming case and raised funds for the hunters’ legal defense. Backcountry Hunters & Anglers said in a release that the 10th Circuit’s decision preserves access to more than 3.5 million acres of public lands in Wyoming, Colorado, Utah, New Mexico, Kansas and Oklahoma. Impact might also expand to about 8.3 million acres across the West.

“The Supreme Court’s action affirms a principle hunters and anglers have long understood: corner crossing is not a crime,” said Devin O’Dea, western policy and conservation manager for Backcountry Hunters & Anglers. “Access to 3.5 million acres of public lands has been secured because four hunters from Missouri took a leap of faith across a corner, and the Wyoming Chapter of BHA stood up in their defense. It’s a victory worth celebrating, and a key domino in the fight for public land access across the West.”

In a sense, the Iron Bar Holdings decision dovetails with Arkansas v. McIlroy, a landmark 1980 case that preserved and expanded public access to Arkansas streams and rivers with a creative interpretation of the term “navigable.” Before McIlroy, “navigable” referred to the farthest distance upstream that a steamboat could go in high water. Landowners on the Mulberry River strung barbed wire across the river. Sometimes they physically accosted paddlers. McIlroy extended navigability definition to canoes and kayaks, creating the paddling environment that so many people enjoy.

Missouri recognizes public access rights to paddlecraft navigable waters, but one still risks an adversarial encounter with territorial landowners on many streams in the state. My former boss Dan Witter and several other Missouri Department of Conservation employees were forced off a well-known river at gunpoint. As Witter told me at the time, the law was on their side, but a streamside encounter with an armed and angry landowner is not the time or place to debate it.

Some public parcels are entirely enclosed by private land. There is no access to those parcels, corner crossings or otherwise. I have a friend in Roger Mills County, Oklahoma, whose land enclosed a 160-acre public Bureau of Land Management parcel. I quipped that it would be worthwhile for a hunter to hire a helicopter to airlift him into the property.

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Without cracking a hint of a smile, the landowner said a helicopter pilot would have to get permission to overfly his property, and that he would not grant it.

As people migrate away from cities and turn rural hamlets into suburbs, the demand for access to public land will intensify. The courts appear to sympathize with the public in access disputes, and the Iron Bar decision will ultimately factor into access disputes in Arkansas.



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Backcountry user caught in avalanche on Teton Pass

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Backcountry user caught in avalanche on Teton Pass


WILSON, Wyo. — According to the Bridger-Teton Avalanche Center (BTAC), today around 2:15 p.m. a backcountry user was caught in an avalanche on The Claw, a popular ski run on Teton Pass.

BTAC’s report states that one person was carried and partially buried and sustained a critical injury in the slide. The Wyoming Department of Transportation (WYDOT) closed the road over Teton Pass for approximately 45 minutes to execute the rescue.

Video: Tucker Zibilich

In today’s avalanche report, BTAC emphasized that “dangerous avalanche conditions exist in the backcountry.  Skiers and riders have the potential to trigger slab avalanches in steep terrain above 8000 feet on a variety of aspects.”

The Teton County Search and Rescue (TCSAR) helicopter can be seen landing on the roadway in a video from Buckrail reader Tucker Zibilich.

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Video: Tucker Zibilich

TCSAR has not yet released a statement about the event.

Hannah is a Buckrail Staff Reporter and freelance web developer and designer who has called Jackson home since 2015. When she’s not outside, you can probably find her eating a good meal, playing cribbage, or at one of the local yoga studios. She’s interested in what makes this community tick, both from the individual and collective perspective.

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