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Wyoming

Prepare For Cooler Temperatures And Precipitation In SE Wyoming

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Prepare For Cooler Temperatures And Precipitation In SE Wyoming


It looks like southeast Wyoming residents can expect cool temperatures and scattered rain and snow over the next few days, according to the Cheyenne Office of the National Weather Service.

The agency posted the following on it’s website:

”Here’s your weekend forecast for southeast Wyoming and Nebraska Panhandle. A low pressure system tracking through Colorado will drive a cold front slowly through the area Friday. Most locations expected to see some form of precipitation. Rain expected east, with a mix west and snow in the mountains Friday. Low moves southeast into southern Colorado Saturday, with mainly dry conditions for most locations. The low then turns northeast and we could see rain showers developing across our southern areas for Sunday. Here’s hoping you get some rainfall/snowfall the next 3 days!”

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Cheyenne, Laramie Forecasts

Cheyenne Forecast

Today

A 40 percent chance of rain. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 44. Breezy, with a north northeast wind 15 to 20 mph.

Tonight

Rain likely, mainly before 9pm. Areas of fog before 4am. Otherwise, mostly cloudy, with a low around 32. North northeast wind 10 to 15 mph becoming southeast 5 to 10 mph after midnight. Winds could gust as high as 25 mph. Chance of precipitation is 60%. New precipitation amounts of less than a tenth of an inch possible.

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Saturday

A chance of rain before 7am, then a chance of rain and snow between 7am and 8am, then a chance of rain after 8am. Partly sunny, with a high near 55. South wind 5 to 15 mph. Chance of precipitation is 30%.

Saturday Night

Mostly cloudy, with a low around 37. South southwest wind 5 to 10 mph.

Sunday

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A 20 percent chance of showers after noon. Mostly sunny, with a high near 64. Southwest wind 5 to 10 mph becoming southeast in the afternoon.

Sunday Night

A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly cloudy, with a low around 39. Chance of precipitation is 30%.

Monday

Mostly sunny, with a high near 65. Breezy.

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Monday Night

Clear, with a low around 42. Breezy.

Tuesday

Sunny, with a high near 70.

Tuesday Night

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Mostly clear, with a low around 37.

Wednesday

Sunny, with a high near 64.

Wednesday Night

Clear, with a low around 38.

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Thursday

Sunny, with a high near 70.

Laramie Forecast

Today

A 40 percent chance of rain. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 48. East northeast wind 10 to 15 mph.

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Tonight

A chance of rain and snow before 3am, then a chance of rain between 3am and 4am, then a chance of rain and snow after 4am. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 29. East northeast wind 5 to 15 mph becoming south southeast after midnight. Chance of precipitation is 50%.

Saturday

A slight chance of rain and snow before 8am, then a slight chance of rain between 8am and noon. Mostly sunny, with a high near 61. Southeast wind 5 to 10 mph. Chance of precipitation is 20%.

Saturday Night

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Partly cloudy, with a low around 32. Southeast wind 5 to 10 mph becoming south southwest after midnight.

Sunday

A 40 percent chance of showers after noon. Mostly sunny, with a high near 64. South southwest wind 5 to 10 mph becoming north northeast in the afternoon.

Sunday Night

A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 32. Breezy. Chance of precipitation is 40%.

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Monday

Sunny, with a high near 62. Breezy.

Monday Night

Mostly clear, with a low around 36. Breezy.

Tuesday

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Sunny, with a high near 68.

Tuesday Night

Mostly clear, with a low around 34.

Wednesday

Sunny, with a high near 66.

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Wednesday Night

Mostly clear, with a low around 34.

Thursday

Sunny, with a high near 68.

Laramie County’s Most Wanted Fugitives

Gallery Credit: Joy Greenwald

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Wyoming

What happens when a rural Wyoming town loses its only source of health care? – WyoFile

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What happens when a rural Wyoming town loses its only source of health care? – WyoFile


BAGGS—This town of 400 residents on the banks of the Little Snake River in south-central Wyoming has a school, a grocery store, a post office and a hotel with a restaurant and bar. Sometimes there’s a food truck.

But when it comes to health care, residents now have two options: calling 911 or driving at least 40 miles to the nearest town with a clinic or hospital. That’s because, as of last month, Baggs’ only clinic closed its doors, leaving residents without any local options if they have a fever, sore throat or need some stitches. 

The closure was due in large part to an inability to find a permanent health care provider — like a physician assistant — to take over after the last one retired, opting for a new career at The Cowboy Inn across town. 

Baggs is emblematic of a rural problem: scant health care resources that amount to a house of cards. One person leaves and the whole thing can fall apart.

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Baggs, Wyoming has about 400 residents, but lost its sole health care clinic in late September 2024 because it couldn’t find a replacement for a retiring physician assistant. (Madelyn Beck/WyoFile)

The clinic

Baggs is the kind of rural that even in 45 minutes of driving, the largest nearby town still has fewer than 10,000 people, and it’s in another state. It hosts an ag-heavy economy with plenty of ranches, which come with their own health care risks. 

As of the 2020 census, the population of the entire encompassing area of Carbon County was only 14,500, including its largest town: Rawlins. 

Until recently, Baggs was home to the Little Snake River Clinic, where people could receive primary care from the local physician assistant or come in as needed for non-emergent care like a fever, sore throat or bad scrapes. A physician would schedule appointments there once or twice a month, too. 

It was managed and paid for by UCHealth, a $6 billion Colorado-based health care provider, and the Little Snake River Health District. That levy-funded district was formed to help fund local health care needs like the clinic’s budget and equipment when the scant patients weren’t enough to keep the lights on. 

Most of Wyoming, including Carbon County, is a designated primary health professional shortage area. The last time that information was updated for the area was in 2021, long before the Baggs’ clinic closed its doors. 

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The collapse

While patient numbers were dwindling, UCHealth and the health care district’s amicable decision to close the clinic came because neither could find a new physician assistant to take over. 

“The Little Snake River Rural Health Care District was notified on the above date by UC Health that as of September 20, 2024, they will no longer be operating the clinic in Baggs, WY,” said an Aug. 12 notice from the health district. “They have struggled to find a permanent provider.”

Ryan Mikesell, president of the health care district board, said there were no hard feelings, it’s just been difficult to find someone willing to take the job.

“Finding someone not only willing to run the clinic for you, but to move here and stay here is a challenging thing,” he said.

The Baggs clinic had partnered with UCHealth’s Yampa Valley Medical Center in Steamboat Springs, Colorado, about 80 miles away. The center’s Director of Clinic Operations Ryan Larson said staff had been looking for someone to lead the clinic since February. Even part-time doctors wouldn’t move to what Larson acknowledged was likely the most rural facility in the entire UCHealth system of more than 200 clinics. 

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We have one, two lined up, and then one, two rescinded thereafter.”

Ryan Larson, clinic operations director, Yampa Valley Medical Center

“We have one, two lined up, and then one, two rescinded thereafter,” he said. “We had somebody looking from Sheridan, Wyoming, then decided that she just wasn’t willing to relocate from Sheridan to Baggs.”

By late September, residents of Baggs and nearby towns had already started signing up for primary care in Craig, Colorado, according to UCHealth. 

On a clear day, it’s about a 40-minute drive from Baggs, but slightly longer from Dixon, Savery or outlying ranches. While residents say the road almost never closes, it can still become icy or drifted in during the winter, especially after plow drivers park their vehicles for the night. 

Some residents already had a doctor in Craig, but for those who didn’t or needed more immediate medical help, the trip to see a health care professional for an open wound, burn or fever would likely be costly both in terms of hours and gas money. That’s excluding seniors whose ailments can be treated weekly if they’re able to hop on a free bus for trips to Craig and Steamboat Springs, Colorado, which is mainly funded with public money. 

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For emergency medical services, though, the loss of the clinic could mean more critical patients. Sue Lee has seen it before, when the clinic closed back in 2012. She’s been an EMT in town for more than 20 years. 

Two women stand in front of a building
Alex Foster (left) and Sue Lee stand in front of town hall in Baggs, Wyoming. (Madelyn Beck/WyoFile)

“When the clinic had closed before, we got a whole lot busier,” she said. 

The previous closure lasted until 2014, according to former health district board member — and unofficial town historian — Linda Fleming, and was likely spurred by reimbursement issues with Medicaid and other government programs. After a short stint of being run by a Craig doctor, UCHealth stepped in. 

When the clinic reopened, the critical calls to the town’s EMT service slowed again, Lee said. 

“It’s a rapport that they build,” she said, talking about the clinicians with the community. “I have already started getting phone calls about, ‘What do you think? Do you think I need stitches? There’s nobody here. What should I do?’ And I’m like, I’m sorry, you’re gonna have to go to Craig.”

Many locals used the clinic like an emergency room, Lee and fellow EMT Alex Foster explained. Without it, they may wait too long to call for help. 

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“I think that’ll be one of our biggest hurdles, is that they won’t call us until it’s too late,” Foster said. “They don’t want to make us come out, and even though we’re all willing to come out at all hours, they just don’t want to bother us. Because that’s the first thing they say to us, ‘I’m sorry I had to call you out.’”

The building

Beyond the staffing challenges, there were funding issues with the clinic building itself. 

It was set to be a major town asset with plans to house both the clinic and local seniors so they didn’t have to leave town for assisted living care. But that didn’t work out. 

Paul Prestrud works with the school in Baggs, and took a break from maintaining the football field to talk. 

Beyond working for the school, he was pastor for 25 years, served previously on the health care clinic’s board and is now on the Assisted Care Facility Board, which worked to get the clinic into a new office before it was forced to close.

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Originally, Prestrud said, Crowheart Energy donated its buildings to the assisted care board when it moved operations out of the area. But the facilities needed a lot of work to become a self-sustaining business that could house both the clinic and older residents.

A financier had promised to inject $4 million into the project, but told the Assisted Care Facility Board it would also need to borrow $1 million to prove its intention. A deal was struck, but the backer came up short, leaving the group $650,000 in debt to the bank, Prestrud said. 

The CEO of the company that promised the financing, Carlos Manuel da Silva Santos of Portugal, was charged with fraud and arrested last November. 

Prestrud said the group is still $400,000 in the hole even after paying down the debt. Prestrud sets his sights high, though, hoping someone like a generous Denver Broncos football player will enter the picture. Locals could take the pro-athlete fishing or elk hunting, and maybe the local group could start moving forward again, working to help the town’s aging population. 

A man points towards a building across the street
Paul Prestrud points at the now-closed health care clinic in Baggs, Wyoming from the crow’s nest on the football field. (Madelyn Beck/WyoFile)

Why did this happen?

Recruiting providers in rural areas is challenging all across the U.S., according to Mark Deutchman, director of the University of Colorado School of Medicine’s Rural Program. While it’s a “very complex” problem, he said, there are several well-known reasons providers don’t want to go into rural medicine. 

“They don’t want to live in a smaller community, they want to live in a bigger town,” he said. “And sometimes they’re worried about amenities, sometimes they’re worried about the school system, sometimes they’re worried about the workload, that they’re going to be the only one there, or only one of a few there. Sometimes their spouse or partner won’t go, even if they want to go.”

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Beyond that, he said training programs often do a “rotten job” of supporting students who want to practice in rural areas. Of about 160 U.S. medical schools, he said only 30 or 40 have programs specific for those seeking out rural jobs, providing them experience working in rural offices. And at least for his program, that means more doctors actually choosing to stay in rural areas — about 40% of his medical graduates in the last 19 years. 

But when it comes to a place as rural as Baggs, it can be even tougher. If young doctors want to specialize, or even make contacts, it’s hard to do that in a town without a hospital, he said. 

“If you’re a physician, and you look at your skill package and your knowledge and say, ‘Well, I want to be able to take care of people who are hospitalized, I want to deliver babies …’ you can’t do that if there’s no hospital,” he said.

A sign that says Little Snake River Clinic in a window
The Little Snake River Clinic closed in late September 2024. (Madelyn Beck/WyoFile)

Communities can make a difference though by getting creative, he said. That includes finding and providing housing, offering student loan forgiveness or even helping fund the education of someone from the area in exchange for them returning home to work. 

Local health care professionals like Lee and Foster helped host medical students aiming to work in rural areas year after year, but not a single one came back to work in the community.

“A big fat zero,” Lee said. 

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Jim Zimmerman, the retired physician assistant from the clinic, has a personal understanding of why it’s so hard to both recruit and retain health care workers. Originally from Craig, he’s worked in Baggs a few times, adding up to about 14 years, he said. 

Housing is one key impediment, Zimmerman said.

“If the community wants to have another provider come in and work here and stay here, they’re gonna have to figure out some housing things, which means they’re gonna have to find somebody that is going to sell a little bit of land,” he said. 

But beyond that, living in a town where the nearest Walmart is 40 miles away is a hard sell.

Once you work at a rural clinic for a while, Zimmerman said, the challenges can cause burnout. For him, the biggest issue was insurance and having to jump through hoops like preauthorizations.

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“The pressures of the job, dealing with the insurance companies and dealing with all the demands that come with that are just too much anymore,” he said. 

He liked the work otherwise, which he said was different every day. But he said the clinic is effectively the community’s ER, since the real ER is so far away.

“We have people that walked in with heart attacks,” he said. “UCHealth would just say, ‘Call the ambulance.’ Well, in a small town like this, the ambulance might be 20 minutes from getting here.”

Zimmerman often needed more equipment to treat these critical patients, he said, but it could be hard to obtain. 

Larson at the Yampa Valley Medical Center acknowledged the challenges, saying that the Baggs facility was the only UCHealth clinic stocked with advanced life support medications or a defibrillator, with that piece of equipment purchased by the health care district. 

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Still, Zimmerman felt it often wasn’t enough. 

Hiring for general practitioners or even certain specialists can be difficult across Wyoming because there are health care jobs that pay a lot more. 

That’s especially true for specialties like pediatrics and OB-GYNs, which WyoFile found are in short supply across much of the state and nation.

A sign that says the Little Snake River Valley Welcomes You
(Madelyn Beck/WyoFile)

Next moves

The Little Snake River Rural Health Care District isn’t done fighting for the local clinic.

“We have RFPs, request for proposals, out to major entities in Wyoming, northern Colorado, pretty much anybody that’ll take one,” Mikesell, the board president, said. “Hopefully we hear back from somebody and can open the clinic back up.”

There are also other resources clinics like the one in Baggs can use, like the staffing agency Wyoming Health Resources Network. On Caroline Hickerson’s last day leading that organization in late September, she was audibly frustrated about the Little Snake River Clinic’s closure. 

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“I’m just sad because I didn’t know, and I wish that I had been able to help them, because I think I have providers right now who are looking for rural, underserved locations in Wyoming,” she said. 

The agency has ties to providers and educational programs that bring health care workers to Wyoming or require them to work here for a time, she said. 

“We have RFPs, request for proposals, out to major entities in Wyoming, northern Colorado, pretty much anybody that’ll take one.”

Ryan Mikesell, Little Snake River Rural Health Care District board president

Hickerson left the agency at the end of September, but she said the network had a contract with UCHealth. She speculated that high turnover in UCHealth’s recruiting office resulted in new staff who were unaware of the agreement or the Wyoming Health Resources Network’s services. 

“It results in people not knowing about contracts that have already existed and being able to use all the connections,” she said. “I’ve worked with UCHealth and the leadership there knows I exist, but because they have so much turnover with their recruiters, and that’s unfortunate, but that’s an example of poor leadership in that organization.”

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When asked about the claims of high turnover and poor communication regarding the Wyoming staffing agency, UCHealth spokesperson Lindsey Reznicek reiterated in an email that the organization provided health care services in Baggs for a decade, posted an opening for an advanced practice provider in March and wasn’t able to find a replacement. 

“We were not comfortable continuing the clinic without a consistent provider presence to care for patients,” she said. 

Hickerson said there are also taxpayer-funded resources to help in situations like this, including 3RNET, the National Rural Recruitment and Retention Network, a partially federally funded online database for health care workers and jobs in rural or underserved areas.

“It’s been in existence for a long time, but because it’s publicly funded, it doesn’t quite have the same breadth and reach and marketing capacity that the for-profit groups do,” she said.

A valley at dusk with orange and green trees
South-central Wyoming is extremely rural, making health care hard to provide. This picture was taken between Baggs and Encampment along Highway 70. (Madelyn Beck/WyoFile)

Looking to the future

In the meantime, the people of Baggs will likely remain tough and self-sufficient, opting to make the long drive if need be. They’d done it the last time the clinic closed, and they may have to do it again.

“We know where we live, you know?” said Lee, the first responder. “We chose to live here, so that’s what makes [the community] tough. I mean, that’s why we are who we are.”

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Zimmerman has even thought about opening a cash-only clinic where he could offer stitches and diagnosis without having to deal with insurance. 

And many, like Kathleen Chase, remain optimistic. She’s the site manager of the senior center in Dixon, next door to Baggs. Chase recognizes that the clinic closure will be a big deal to some in the area, but she also believes that the health district and community will learn how to make do.

“They’re going to make it happen,” she said. “This is such a great community. Everyone looks out for everyone.”





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Wyoming

Don Day's Wyoming Weather Forecast: Friday, October 18, 2024

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Don Day's Wyoming Weather Forecast: Friday, October 18, 2024


Chance of rain, snow or both in much of Wyoming on Friday. Breezy, frost in some areas. Highs mainly in the 30s and 40s and lows from the teens to upper 30s. 

 

Central:  

Casper:  Frost before 9 a.m., rain and snow then just rain likely and breezy today with a high near 39 and wind gusts as high as 31 mph. Mostly cloudy overnight with a chance of rain and snow and a low near 26. Freeze warning from 11 p.m. tonight until 10 a.m. tomorrow.

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Riverton:  Frost before 9 a.m., rain and snow then just rain near certain and breezy today with a high near 42 and wind gusts as high as 25 mph. Gradually becoming partly cloudy overnight with a chance of rain and a low near 22. Freeze warning from 11 p.m. tonight until 10 a.m. tomorrow.

 

Glenrock:  Rain near certain today with a high near 37 and wind gusts as high as 30 mph. Gradually becoming partly cloudy overnight with a chance of rain then rain and snow and a low near 29.

 

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Southwest:  

Evanston Winter weather advisory in effect until 3 p.m. Snow today with a high near 36 and wind from 15-20 mph. Up to two inches of snow possible. Mostly cloudy and breezy overnight with a chance of snow before midnight, a low near 24 and wind gusts as high as 34 mph.

  

Green River:  Rain and snow then just rain near certain today and breezy with a high near 38 and wind gusts as high as 33 mph. Mostly cloudy and blustery overnight with a chance of rain and snow before midnight, a low near 24 and wind gusts as high as 31 mph. Freeze warning from 11 p.m. tonight until 10 a.m. tomorrow.

 

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South Pass:  Winter weather advisory in effect until 6 p.m. Snow near certain mainly before 11 a.m., blowing snow before 3 p.m. today and very windy with a high near 35 and wind gusts as high as 55 mph. Up to 3 inches of snow possible. Partly cloudy and windy overnight with a chance of snow mainly before 7 p.m., patchy blowing snow before 1 a.m., a low near 23 and wind gusts as high as 45 mph.

 

Western Wyoming:  

Pinedale:  Snow likely, possibly mixing with rain after 10 a.m. then gradually ending, cloudy today with a high near 44 and partly cloudy overnight with frost after 10 p.m. and a low near 18.

 

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Alpine:  Chance of rain and snow then just rain from noon to 3 p.m., otherwise breezy and gradually becoming mostly sunny today with a high near 48 and wind gusts as high as 21 mph. Mostly clear overnight with frost after 9 p.m. and a low near 21.

 

Big Piney:  Rain and snow likely, cloudy today with a high near 47 and partly cloudy overnight with frost after 9 p.m. and a low near 15.

 

Northwest:  

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Dubois:  Breezy, snow and rain likely today with a high near 37 and wind gusts as high as 23 mph. Up to 3 inches of snow possible. Partly cloudy overnight with a low near 22. Freeze warning from 11 p.m. tonight until 10 a.m. tomorrow.

 

Jackson:  Rain and snow likely today with patchy blowing snow before 11 a.m., otherwise breezy, gradually becoming mostly sunny today a high near 48 and wind gusts as high as 29 mph. Mostly clear overnight with frost after 10 p.m. and a low near 18.

 

Old Faithful in Yellowstone National Park:  Snow likely mainly before 10 a.m. today with a high near 38 and wind gusts as high as 20 mph. Mostly clear overnight with frost after 7 p.m. and a low near 13. 

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Bighorn Basin:  

Thermopolis Breezy, rain and snow then just rain near certain today with areas of frost before 9 a.m., a high near 44 and wind gusts as high as 25 mph. Gradually becoming mostly clear overnight with a slight chance of rain before 7 p.m., frost mainly after 1 a.m. and a low near 25. Freeze warning from 11 p.m. tonight until 10 a.m. tomorrow.

 

Cody:  Breezy, rain and snow then just rain likely today with areas of frost before 9 a.m., a high near 44 and wind gusts as high as 31 mph. Mostly clear overnight with areas of frost after 9 p.m. and a low near 26. Freeze warning from 11 p.m. tonight until 10 a.m. tomorrow.

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Ten Sleep:  Rain likely, cloudy today with a high near 45 and gradually becoming mostly clear overnight with a slight chance of rain before 7 p.m., frost mainly after 3 a.m. and a low near 31. Freeze warning from 11 p.m. tonight until 10 a.m. tomorrow.

 

North Central:  

Buffalo:  Breezy, rain and snow likely today with areas of frost before 9 a.m., a high near 41 and wind gusts as high as 29 mph. Gradually becoming mostly clear overnight with a chance of rain before 7 p.m., areas of frost and a low near 31. Freeze warning from 11 p.m. tonight until 10 a.m. tomorrow.

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Sheridan:  Chance of rain mainly before 9 a.m., patchy fog before 9 a.m., mostly cloudy today with a high near 49 and partly cloudy overnight with a low near 24.

 

Ranchester:  Chance of rain mainly before 9 a.m., patchy fog before 9 a.m., gradually becoming mostly sunny today with a high near 49 and mostly clear overnight with a low near 25.

 

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Northeast:  

Gillette:  Rain and snow then rain likely today with a high near 42 and wind gusts as high as 28 mph. Gradually clearing skies overnight with a low near 27 and wind gusts as high as 20 mph.

Newcastle:  Rain likely, mainly before 9 a.m. today with a high near 49 and wind gusts as high as 20 mph. Gradually becoming partly cloudy overnight with a slight chance of rain before midnight, a low near 32 and wind gusts as high as 17 mph.

 

Upton:  Rain likely, mainly before 9 a.m. today with a high near 45 and wind gusts as high as 24 mph. Gradually becoming partly cloudy overnight with a slight chance of rain before midnight, a low near 27 and wind gusts as high as 21 mph.

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Eastern Plains:  

Torrington:  Chance of rain, cloudy today with a high near 49 and wind gusts as high as 25 mph. Cloudy overnight with a chance of rain mainly before midnight, patchy fog after 5 a.m., a low near 35 and wind gusts as high as 25 mph.

 

Wheatland:  Rain likely, mainly after noon, cloudy today with a high near 46 and wind gusts as high as 25 mph. Cloudy overnight with rain likely mainly before midnight and a low near 38.

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Kaycee:  Areas of frost before 9 a.m., rain and snow then just rain likely and breezy today with a high near 42 and wind gusts as high as 33 mph. Gradually clearing skies and blustery overnight with a chance of rain mainly before 7 p.m., frost after 11 p.m. and a low near 25. Freeze warning from 11 p.m. tonight until 10 a.m. tomorrow.

 

Southeast:  

Cheyenne:  Chance of rain, cloudy and breezy today with a high near 47 and wind gusts as high as 35 mph. Cloudy and breezy overnight with rain and dense fog likely mainly before midnight, a low near 33 and wind gusts as high as 35 mph.

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Laramie:  Chance of rain mainly after noon, mostly cloudy and breezy today with a high near 48 and wind from 15-20 mph. Mostly cloudy and breezy overnight with a chance of rain and snow, a low near 33 and wind from 15-20 mph.

 

Medicine Bow:  Rain likely today with a high near 45 and wind gusts as high as 25 mph. Mostly cloudy overnight with a chance of rain and snow and a low near 30.

 

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South Central:  

Rawlins:  Breezy, rain and snow near certain today with a high near 40 and wind gusts as high as 35 mph. Mostly cloudy and blustery overnight with a chance of snow and rain, a low near 30 and wind gusts as high as 35 mph.

 

Encampment:  Rain likely today with a high near 53 and gradually becoming partly cloudy overnight with a chance of rain and snow and a low near 28.

 

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Baggs:  Breezy, rain near certain today with a high near 55 and wind from 15-20 mph. Mostly cloudy and blustery overnight with a chance of rain and snow, a low near 27 and wind gusts as high as 30 mph.



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Wyoming

Blowing Up Dead Horses No Longer an Option for Wyoming Forest Rangers, Thanks to Climate Change

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Blowing Up Dead Horses No Longer an Option for Wyoming Forest Rangers, Thanks to Climate Change


In the dry, fire-prone backcountry of Wyoming’s Shoshone National Forest, U.S. Forest Service rangers have temporarily put an end to a controversial method of disposing of dead horses. Thanks to drought and rising temperatures combined to heighten the risk of wildfires, all thanks in large part to climate change, the carcasses of dead horses will no longer be exploded to prevent grizzly bears from hanging around their remains.

Rangers usually use this very delicate tactic of blowing a dead horse to smithereens to protect hikers. But recently, after two horses died on a steep trail near Cody, WY, officials decided to eschew the use of explosives to blow that dead horse straight to hell so they could cut down the risk of sparking a wildfire in the surrounding dry grass. The officials decided to move the carcasses downhill and reroute the trail, thus creating a wide buffer zone to cut down on bear encounters.

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The practice of exploding dead horses as a means of disposal has been around in Wyoming since 1995 where a manual with the hilariously straightforward title “Obliterating Animal Carcasses with Explosives” details exactly how to obliterate animal carcasses with explosives. It’s a two-page manual that you can download right here. I highly recommend it.

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The first page of the manual provides the reader with a picture of a horse that has long planks situated around its body. Those planks are explosives and the entire diagram is telling you where to best place those explosives to effectively obliterate the dead horse. In the case of Figure 1, where time is not a factor and the horse isn’t too big, the explosives should be placed under the horse in specific locations, like its torso, head, and legs.

Figure 2 goes comically overboard with the explosives. It’s exclusively for exploding horses in situations where it’s not practical to move it or when “total animal obliteration is necessary,” like when it keeled over and died in an area heavily trafficked by humans. In that case, nearly every bit of exposed horse is blanketed in explosives and blown to kingdom come.

As a side note, opening the link to the document I provided above will open it in a separate tab that is titled “fun stuff.” Downloading the document will bring up the “autosave” window that has a pre-filled-in name for the document. That name is “Boom-Boom-Boom.”



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