An Evanston man is proudly flying Wyomingâs true colors in South Carolina.
Jaron Fry signed up to help during emergency relief efforts for his company, Sun Coast Resources. Heâs one of the many truck drivers who have responded to Hurricane Helene-affected areas to bring in much-needed fuel.
To find his truck amid the hundreds if not thousands of relief trucks that are flowing into the South, all you have to do is look for the Wyoming state flag.
The story of how he came by that flag is one that shows the Cowboy Stateâs generous and giving spirit, and itâs a chain of events that has personally inspired Fry, a 27-year resident of the Cowboy State.
âI was on vacation when Hurricane Helene hit,â Fry told Cowboy State Daily. âI had signed up for the emergency response team with our company, but Iâd never gotten a call. I thought, âWell maybe I donât have the right credentials or something like that.ââ
It turned out his employer was just waiting for him to finish his vacation before calling him up for relief effort duty. So, when Fry returned to work last week on Monday, he got his marching orders. He was headed for South Carolina.
There wasnât much time to think about the trip and get ready. He threw together a few changes of clothing and was soon on his way to Tennessee to fill up with fuel, then on to South Carolina âloaded up and trucking, as the old âSmokey and the Banditâ movieâs theme song goes, with a long way to go, and a short time to get there.
Like anyone whoâs in a little bit of a hurry to go somewhere as fast as the law will allow, Fry forgot a few things. Which he only discovered once he arrived at his destination.
These were little things like shampoo and soap, not to mention a shaving set, toothpaste and a toothbrush. Ordinarily these are things heâd get at a truck stop. But this trip had been a rush job, and he didnât even think about them until heâd arrived in South Carolina.
âThen I was stuck in the staging yard, and I couldnât really leave to get anything,â Fry said.
Wyoming Flags Flying Over Syria And The South
Fry was just planning to do without the things he forgot. But there was one thing he really, really wanted to find a way to get.
A Wyoming flag.
The reason he was so determined to get one has a little back story of its own.
âMy son was deployed in June to Syria,â Fry said. âAnd when he arrived there, he didnât have a Wyoming flag or a U.S. flag, and that was what he wanted. So, I got him three U.S. flags and someone else got him a Wyoming flag. We also made him an Evanston Fire department flag, and all the firefighters and EMTs signed it from Evanston.â
While Fry was in South Carolina his son called to thank him for the flags.
âAnd Iâm going, Iâm way out here, too, and Iâm not representing Wyoming,â he told Cowboy State Daily. âYou can do it all the way over there in Syria. I need to get a flag on my truck.â
It would be solidarity with his son. And it would differentiate his truck from all the other states. So Fry started searching online for flag stores in bigger cities where he might be able to find a Wyoming flag along the way.
But the nearest shop to him was closed on a weekend and wouldnât open until Monday.

Itâs A Small World After All
Fry was ready to give up on his seemingly unlikely personal quest to fly the Wyoming flag in South Carolina just as his son in Syria was doing, when an Evanston friend named Angie Hintz called him up. Sheâd seen his posts on Facebook about coming down to help Hurricane Helene victims.
âShe was telling me her daughter Kelsi Powers lived in the area, and I was like, âOh, where is she,ââ Fry said. âAnd she lived just a couple hours north of me.â
Powers and his daughter had been cheerleaders together during school in Evanston, so Fry decided to check up on her and see how she was doing.
During the conversation, it came up that Fry had inconveniently forgotten a few things like shampoo and soap â things that he would normally just get at a truck stop, but hadnât had time to attend to on his fast-track trip down, with ordinary trucking limits suspended to facilitate getting fuel and other essentials into the area.
While they were chatting, Fry decided to ask Powers if she knew of any places where he might find a Wyoming flag to buy.
What happened next shocked him. Powers texted him back, âNo problem. Ordered it from Amazon, itâll be here tomorrow morning!â
Just Pay It Forward
Fry was flabbergasted, and a little embarrassed. He hadnât meant for her to go to such trouble for him. He had just wanted to find a store that he could eventually work into his appointed travels.
He tried getting her to let him give her some cash via Venmo, but she wasnât having it.
âJust pay it forward,â she told him.
When the flag arrived the next morning, Fry was still stuck at the staging area, unable to leave and meet her anywhere.
That didnât matter to Hintz either.
âOK, Iâve got an errand to run, and then Iâll be down there,â she texted him.
Fry couldnât believe it.
âI was like, âWhat!? No way!ââ Fry said.
But she couldnât be talked out of making the run, which was a two-hour drive for herself and her husband Mike.
And, frustratingly, she still wouldnât share her Venmo information either.
âBeing from Wyoming, too, I think she wanted that flag on the back of this truck as bad as I did,â Fry said.
Wyoming Generosity
When Powers arrived, in typical Wyoming fashion, she had not just brought Fry a flag. She had also brought shampoo and soap, as well as all the other things Fry had mentioned forgetting.
In fact, she didnât just bring one bottle of shampoo and one bar of soap either. She brought several of each item, as well as a few other things he hadnât mentioned at all that she figured might be nice, like razors and hand wipes.
âBelieve it or not, but a lot of the guys down here didnât have shampoo either,â Fry said. âSo I set them out for all the guys to take one. And one guy asked me about a razor and I was like, âActually, I do. I didnât ask for one, but she brought a whole pack of razors for us!ââ
Many of the guys tried paying Fry for the donated items, which he could not accept.
âIâm like, âGuys, I didnât pay anything for any of this, so I canât charge you anything,â he said. âBut a lot of guys got use out of what she brought, and we were all so grateful for it.â
On top of all the toiletries, Hintz also brought some homemade bread and turkey and cheese for sandwiches. That came in mighty handy when Fry was unable to make the breakfast time slot on Sunday because he was too tied up loading trucks with fuel.
âTheyâre catering our food, but we only get the meal if we can make the particular timeframe,â Fry said.
And, since it was the breakfast time slot he missed, that meant he didnât get lunch either, because thatâs when the lunch sack is distributed.
âWhat a perfect time for her to show up with bread, turkey and cheese,â Fry said. âAnd it was the best turkey sandwich Iâve ever had in my life. It really hit the spot.â
Representing The 307
Several of the other truck drivers are quite jealous, Fry said, of the Wyoming flag thatâs now flying from his truck. Theyâre wishing theyâd thought about bringing down a state flag. Or that they had the kind of network from back home that would lead to someone local driving two hours to bring them a state flag to fly.
Fry, for his part, couldnât be prouder to show off a little Wyoming spirit, and all that comes with it.
âI tell them yeah, youâre not going to be able to find (state flags) over here,â Fry said. âBut I guess you could get an American flag. Thatâd be cool.â
But itâs still not 307 cool, and Fry really appreciates that in a new way now.
âThis is probably one of the cooler experiences Iâve ever had in my life,â Fry said. âYou hear about stuff like this happening all the time, but in the middle of a hurricane? Where peopleâs lives are being lost? Some guy flying a flag on the back of his truck is probably not the biggest priority in the world. But someone out there from Wyoming still made it happen.â
Fry also loves that heâs showing off that Wyoming spirit in an area of the country that doesnât know a lot about the Cowboy State.
âI thought I would bring that Wyoming spirit out here to the east coast, and maybe show them that we really are a state up there,â Fry said, chuckling a little. âIâve not always been a Wyoming knight, if you will. Iâve only lived here about 27 years. But Iâve tried to adapt that cowboy spirit, and, hopefully, somebodyâs watching and weâll pass that on to their generation.â
Fry has attached his Wyoming state flag like a badge of honor to his truck using zip ties and plans to give it a test run soon.
âIâm hoping it will hold up when we get down to Florida,â Fry said. âWith Milton headed that way, there could be hurricane-force wind, so I donât know how long it would hold up to that.â
Renée Jean can be reached at renee@cowboystatedaily.com.