Friday morning started out with me in a suit meeting the Oracle of Omaha (Warren Buffett) and ended with me flying down the freeways between Omaha and Kansas City and then Kansas City and St. Louis. I left Omaha around 6:00pm and drove all night while taking a few naps in rest stops along the way. I took my last nap at a gas station in Ironton, MO and woke up at 7:30 ready to go.
(Room for the night)
I hadn't counted on so much snow in Omaha and the theme continued as I drove to the Ozark plateau that spreads into Missouri. As I got to the last stretch of road leading to Taum Sauk State Park, I realized the last two miles of the road wasn't maintained.... the result was 8-10 inches of snow on the road with the exception of a single set of tracks in the snow made my someone before the most recent snowfall. I was in a rented Chevy Impala and pretty much knew my car was woefully underprepared for the conditions but was willing to take the risk. I had a cell phone and, afterall, I had come all this way and didn't really want to leave without bagging the highpoint. So, I plowed into the snowy road doing my best to follow the one set of tracks there.
(Would you drive down this in a Chevy Impala?)
Things went well.... ALMOST the whole way! There was one incline I got stuck on but I just threw it in reverse, then picked up more speed and tried again. Repeat and I was up in a few min. Then with about 100 yards to go, I got stuck in a drift that apparently was on ice even though I was in the middle of the road. Now I was 2 miles from where the unmaintained road began and about 1/2 mile from the trailhead. I had a strong cell signal and knew I would be able to call out when I got back so I went after the highpoint.
Although I didn't bring good footwear, reaching the trailhead and highpoint were pretty straightforward. The recent snowfall really made the whole thing pretty amazing.
(The actual highpoint)
Once I got back to the car, I continue to try and get unstuck eventually drifting the car to the side of the road. Time to call for help. After a call to 411 and a few locals, Jim Randolph showed up to help. It ended up being tougher than it looked to get out but we were eventually successful. He charged me $45... I gave him $50 (cheap tow, right?).
Off to Arkansas!
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