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Most of a Little Town in South Dakota Just Survived 130 MPH Wind Gusts – HotAir

Highmore, South Dakota, population 647 according to the 2024 census, looks like the classic, tiny American farming community. There are all of two notable facts in the Wiki entry for the wee burg – one is that it was named for its ‘lofty altitude.’ No further explanation for that is available other than a footnote referencing a 1908 railway guide. And that there’s been a local post office in operation since 1882. Hardy souls those early folks in the high plains.





Had to be tough.

And I’m pretty sure it still is if the town has remained at its close-knit size.

As of early yesterday morning, Highmore is going to have another factoid to add to its brag list, one they probably could have done without.

They were hit with one of the highest wind gusts ever recorded in the continental United States (second highest in SD history), as a result of a tight, vicious, long track thunderstorm that rolled through the town.

One gust was clocked at 131 mph. For reference in our hurricane frame of mind, that’s a Cat 3. If you think Fujita-scale tornado, it’s a high-end EF2.

But this was a straight-line wind event in a nasty little thunderstorm cell. Sustained winds were in the neighborhood of 76 mph.

It was howling.

A devastating windstorm ripped through central South Dakota on the morning of June 29.

According to the South Dakota State University Mesonet, at 6:25 a.m. Monday, wind gusts were reported at 131 miles per hour, with the wind speed at 76 miles per hour. Rainfall totaled 1.64 inches.

And didn’t they tear that town up?

Holy smokes.

Miracle of miracles, nobody has reported any injuries to date.

…Lauren Schwedhelm, a resident of Highmore, said there is significant damage to the community.

Some places around have significant damage, with sheds completely knocked down while others just have trees down. Almost all of the power lines are down. A lot more people have it way worse than I do at my home. There are some folks that have lost animals, but I have not heard of anyone in the community being injured,” she said.





The wind reports were totally insane.

Other reported wind and damage reports include:

112 mph wind gust with power lines down at 6:34 am near Ree Heights.

74 mph wind gust at 6:45 am at Miller.

70 mph wind gust with reports of a garage lost and damage to outbuilding at 6:49 am near Polo.

84 mph wind gust at 6:58 am 5 miles east of Orient.

80 mph wind gust at 7:05 am 6 miles south of Rockham.

84 mph wind gust at 7:21 am 5 miles northwest of Redfield

Tornadoes were reported near Andover at 8:01 am and Pierpont at 8:13 am

I had to be terrifying, but it looks as if the National Weather Service and local stations had everything on the ball to keep the alerts constant and minimize loss as much as they could.

This local TV station meteorologist does a terrific job explaining how a lone, isolated storm traveled hundreds of miles across Nebraska into South Dakota and became the wind monster.

Grain elevators, sheds, and other structures took a whale of a beating, which is just devastating in a farming community.

Over nine hours on the ground in South Dakota, just tearing through things.

Interestingly, one of South Dakota’s first wind farms is in Highmore. Those turbine towers didn’t fare so well during the brutal assault, either.





A still photo of the damage is gobsmacking.

Think of all the toxic crap pouring out of those turbines. And they are supposed to be ‘rated’ for what I’m assuming are microbursts of 144- 161 mph.

DEPENDS WHAT YOUR DEFINITION OF ‘MPH’ IS, I GUESS

…With more than 20 of the 27 turbines affected, the 40.5 MW facility faces substantial downtime while assessments, repairs, or replacements are carried out. Exact numbers, causes of individual failures (tower buckling, blade detachment, etc.), and repair timelines are not yet available from the owner.Wind turbines are engineered to withstand high winds (typically up to 3-second gusts of 144–161 mph per IEC standards, with some models rated higher), but the 131 mph straight-line winds recorded today represent an extreme event capable of causing major structural damage.

Context

This incident highlights the vulnerability of wind infrastructure to rare but intense straight-line wind events, even as wind power continues to expand in South Dakota. The state currently has thousands of megawatts of installed wind capacity across multiple projects.

This should be a warning to wind advocates in areas prone to actual ‘wind events,’ but you can’t argue with cultists.





Meanwhile, it’s cleanup time in little Highmore.

And adversity is when the best of America always shines. Folks are turning to their neighbors, ‘What do you need? What can I do?‘ 

Even as their own lives lay in pieces around them.

Speaking of shining, somehow the roof of the local Catholic church, St. Mary’s, managed to hold on, only losing a strip right off the peak. We had something exactly like that happen to our house during Hurricane Sally.

We found it when I went into the attic for some reason and realized I could see without a flashlight. I looked up, and there was a twelve-foot-long gash where the roof vent had been. We always thought it had been an act of divine intervention that somehow, through God’s grace, no water ever came through that slash, and the rain had stopped. It never rained again until after Major Dad, and I got it tarped, either.

But the same sort of incredible and wonderful divine intervention in Highmore actually looks divine.





Sometimes it’s best not to ask how or why; just bask in the warmth, knowing that, with no injuries or deaths, there was, for sure, someone watching over Highmore.

All our best to those folks in SD.


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