High-Winds Derail Freight Train In Wyoming

www.zerohedge.com

Strong winds swept across the Western U.S. last week, knocking out power to hundreds of thousands of customers across the Pacific Northwest, and even toppling a double-stacked freight train in Wyoming.

Wyoming-based media outlet Cowboy State Daily reported that a BNSF Railway train carrying dozens of double-stacked freight cars derailed early Friday morning northwest of Cheyenne due to extreme winds exceeding 144 mph.

Cowboy State Daily meteorologist Don Day said the peak wind gusts in the area of the derailment incident were as much as 78 mph.

"That's a notoriously windy area," Day said. "My grandfather used to work for the Union Pacific Railroad, and I was always spun yarns about what it was like getting through that route, whether it was blizzards or windstorms. It's really nasty."

Retired Union Pacific Railroad employee and former Wyoming legislator Stan Blake told the local outlet that wind speeds recorded between Cheyenne and Laramie could "definitely" derail a train.

"From what I saw, they were intermodal cars, which are overseas shipping containers they double stack," Blake said. "It's like a giant billboard going down the rails."

Last week, widespread warnings for winter weather or high winds were in place for millions across the West and Midwest.

Hurricane-like winds...

Residents of the Pacific Northwest can expect a long-duration atmospheric river to continue.

The rest of the Lower 48 can expect above-average temperatures through Christmas.

Loading recommendations...