Wyoming’s Worst Roads to Drive on During a Disaster

Driving Through Disaster: Survival Tactics for Navigating Wyoming’s Worst Roads

When the sky turns black and the land starts to rumble, there’s only one thing on a survivalist’s mind: movement. You get caught sitting still during a natural disaster—be it wildfire, flood, blizzard, or quake—and you’re as good as part of the wreckage. Wyoming, beautiful and vast as she is, has some of the worst roads you could imagine driving when Mother Nature’s wrath descends. I’ve driven through it all—dust storms in the high plains, snow squalls near Togwotee Pass, even a landslide outside of Jackson that buried half a two-lane mountain road. And I’m still here to tell you what works—and what damn sure doesn’t.

Now, I’ve broken down in Bighorn Canyon in winter and blown a radiator going downhill on Highway 22 when the brakes cooked out. I know every rattle and groan a vehicle makes when it’s begging you to stop. But survival? That’s about going forward when everything else is falling apart.


Wyoming’s Most Treacherous Roads in a Natural Disaster

Some roads here seem like they were designed with disaster in mind—twisting, narrow, unforgiving. If a major event hits—earthquake, wildfire, blizzard—these are the roads you want to avoid or be prepared to conquer:

  1. Togwotee Pass (US 26/287) – Altitude, avalanche zones, and whiteout blizzards make this a death trap.
  2. Chief Joseph Scenic Byway (WY 296) – Gorgeous in summer, but in winter or fire season, it’s a one-way ticket to stuck.
  3. I-80 through Elk Mountain Pass – Infamous for sudden blizzards and 80-mph wind gusts. Trucks jackknife here regularly.
  4. Beartooth Highway – Known as one of the most dangerous roads in America; beautiful, but cliffs and snowstorms will kill you.
  5. WY-22 over Teton Pass – Hairpin turns, rockslides, and no room for error.
  6. Wind River Canyon (US 20) – Landslides, flooding, and ice take this scenic drive and turn it into a trap.
  7. WY-130 (Snowy Range Scenic Byway) – Closed most of the year for good reason. In a disaster? Forget it.
  8. Casper Mountain Road – Steep, unguarded, and a magnet for ice and landslides.
  9. South Pass (WY-28) – Historic, yes—but treacherous in high winds and with poor visibility.
  10. Medicine Bow Mountains routes – Remote, often unmaintained, and the first to close in bad weather.

15 Survival Driving Skills to Get You Through Hell

When disaster hits and the roads go to hell, here’s what you better know before you even turn the key.

  1. Threshold Braking – Learn to brake just before your tires lock. Especially useful on icy or gravel roads.
  2. Clutch Control (Manual Transmissions) – Use low gears to descend steep grades safely or to power through debris.
  3. Off-Road Line Picking – Know how to visually choose the safest path over rocks, through mud, or across fallen branches.
  4. High-Centered Escape – Know how to rock your vehicle out when it’s stuck on a crest (like snowbanks or debris piles).
  5. Skid Recovery – Steer into the skid, don’t panic, and throttle lightly to regain control.
  6. Water Fording Techniques – Know how to test water depth, use low gear, and maintain a slow, steady bow wave.
  7. Reading Road Shoulders – In Wyoming, shoulders are often soft, crumbly. Know what’s drivable—and what’s a trap.
  8. Using Reverse Strategically – Sometimes backtracking 50 feet is safer than pushing ahead into chaos.
  9. Downhill Descent Control – Use engine braking (low gears) instead of cooking your brake pads.
  10. Navigating Without GPS – Natural disasters knock out cell towers. Know how to read a topographical map and use a compass.
  11. Night Vision Preservation – Keep your cabin lights off, dash dimmed. Let your eyes adjust; use red filters if needed.
  12. Quick Tire Change Under Duress – Practice doing this in under 10 minutes. Time is life when you’re being chased by wildfire.
  13. Improvised Traction Aids – Floor mats, branches, even clothing can give you grip on snow or mud.
  14. Evacuation Convoy Driving – Know how to follow closely without tailgating and communicate with lights or hand signals.
  15. Stealth Movement – Sometimes survival means not being seen. Turn off lights, coast in neutral, stay low and slow.

3 DIY Survival Driving Hacks When You Run Out of Gas

Even the best laid plans meet the bottom of a gas tank. If you’re deep in Wyoming’s backcountry when the needle drops to E, here’s what can keep you moving:

  1. Fuel Siphoning (If It’s Legal and Safe)
    Carry a hand siphon or rubber hose. Abandoned vehicles or machines in remote farms may have usable fuel. Use a filter (like a cloth or even a coffee filter) to screen debris as you transfer.
  2. DIY Wood Gasifier (Advanced Hack)
    Old-school tech: with metal cans, piping, and a heat source, you can build a wood gasifier. Burns wood to create gas vapor usable by older carbureted engines. Doesn’t work on modern fuel-injected cars without major modding—but for that 1980s pickup? Maybe your only option.
  3. Alcohol-Based Fuel Substitute (Short Range Only)
    If you’ve got isopropyl alcohol, ethanol, or even high-proof liquor, you can mix it in with leftover gas in emergencies. You’ll burn hotter and dirtier, and it’s not good long-term—but in a disaster, range matters more than emissions.

A Survivalist’s Advice for Wyoming Disasters

Wyoming isn’t forgiving. With towns separated by dozens of empty miles and weather that can turn in a heartbeat, you have to drive like your life depends on it—because out here, it does. Keep your rig ready at all times: full tank, spare fuel cans (stabilized), tools, jack, patch kit, compressor, food, and water for three days minimum. I keep a bugout bag in the cab and a collapsible shovel in the bed. I also travel with tire chains—even in summer—because snow can hit in August up near Beartooth.

In winter, I preheat my diesel with a generator or plug-in timer, and I’ve learned the hard way that synthetic oil is mandatory when the mercury drops below -20°F. Got stranded once near Rawlins for 28 hours in a whiteout—thank God I had insulated boots, a zero-degree bag, and a Hi-Lift jack to lift the truck out of a drift when it all cleared.

Also, know how to communicate without a cell. A CB radio, handheld ham (with a license if you’re being legal), or even a signal mirror can mean the difference between rescue and rotting. Don’t expect anyone to come for you fast—not here.

And never drive into the unknown without logging your route with someone. Even if it’s just a buddy over text. If you vanish in Wyoming’s backroads, it can be weeks before anyone finds you—if at all.


Final Thoughts

Driving in disaster is not about speed—it’s about control. Knowing your machine. Reading the land. Making decisions in seconds that mean life or death. That’s survival driving. And in a place like Wyoming, where the sky can fall on you in more ways than one, that knowledge isn’t just a skill.

It’s your salvation.