NealRasmussen
EF2
Note that OK33 is closed N of Cashion.
You go west from Cedar Valley, hit the road block, go 3 mi south to Cashion, then west to North2940, then north back to OK33.
https://www.google.com/maps/@35.8214607,-97.7144351,13z
OK33 is also closed just on the east side of Kingfisher.
Coming in from the east, hit a road block at N2855, go north to E Roberts Ave and take that west to US81. Watch out for the train tracks. Really rough. As all roads NW of OKC are. The entire area, actually most of OK is falling apart. Which is why folks get Suburbans, Dodge RAMS, and Silverados. Oh, and F250's. Which, of course, just tear the roads up more. So... Poor poor Prius.
https://www.google.com/maps/@35.8620592,-97.9190555,15z
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And a BUNCH of roads are closed or at real risk of being closed in OK. It is a good thing by nature the action moves up to Canada. Or so. The 'out' road you think you have might not be there. Now with GPS on our cell phones, AT&T know that no one is going past point 'X'. But that data is not getting down to your maps.google.
Sure not realtime, which is what GPS Services is. But I rant...
I had to go 45mph from Lawton up ENE on a storm a week back, because of the road floodings. Beware.
You go west from Cedar Valley, hit the road block, go 3 mi south to Cashion, then west to North2940, then north back to OK33.
https://www.google.com/maps/@35.8214607,-97.7144351,13z
OK33 is also closed just on the east side of Kingfisher.
Coming in from the east, hit a road block at N2855, go north to E Roberts Ave and take that west to US81. Watch out for the train tracks. Really rough. As all roads NW of OKC are. The entire area, actually most of OK is falling apart. Which is why folks get Suburbans, Dodge RAMS, and Silverados. Oh, and F250's. Which, of course, just tear the roads up more. So... Poor poor Prius.
https://www.google.com/maps/@35.8620592,-97.9190555,15z
========
And a BUNCH of roads are closed or at real risk of being closed in OK. It is a good thing by nature the action moves up to Canada. Or so. The 'out' road you think you have might not be there. Now with GPS on our cell phones, AT&T know that no one is going past point 'X'. But that data is not getting down to your maps.google.
Sure not realtime, which is what GPS Services is. But I rant...
I had to go 45mph from Lawton up ENE on a storm a week back, because of the road floodings. Beware.