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Published: December 21, 2016

Snowplow drivers get stuck in 65 below zero temperatures

By Nate Brown

(KULR8) — CODY, Wyo. – A blizzard in the Beartooth Mountains outside Cody trapped snow plow drivers and even the tow truck that came to pull them out. An amazing rescue saved one plow truck driver who spent all night in the cab of his plow.  He survived deadly cold and wind.

In Cody Monday morning, just as temperatures rose above freezing for the first time in four days blinding blowing snow trapped a big backhoe in a drift, and it had to be pulled out with another rig.

All over town, tow truck operators were pulling cars out of the snow, even as the blizzard blinded them. But one of the men who saved Wyoming Department of Transportation tow truck drivers says conditions in the mountains outside Yellowstone Sunday morning were much worse…

Eagle Recovery Owner Mike Wood said, “The temperature gauge on one of our trucks was reading 65 below zero…”

Mechanic and Tow Truck Operator Brian Bragg remembered, “The wind was blowing 55 or 60 miles an hour at least.”

The weather was so bad 25 miles outside Cody on the Chief Joseph Highway Saturday night, a WYDOT snow plow was stuck in the drifts.

Tow truck operator Josh Parson drove a huge rig up the mountain to bring the snow plow and its driver back home to safety.  Another snow plow led him toward the tight curves and switchbacks, but,

Parson explained,  “The truck that was guiding me hit the first drift, and it took him right off the road.”

Parson pulled him back on the road. They were headed to the stranded plow driver deep in the mountains.


The remainder of this article is available in its entirety at KULR8


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