The driver of a Ford Mustang was lucky to get off the Beartooth Highway without serious injuries after taking one of the many hairpin turns on the mountain pass way too fast.Â
The Wyoming Highway Patrol got a call about a single-vehicle incident near mile marker 27 on the Beartooth Highway on Sunday afternoon.
âWe got the call around 2:55 p.m.,â Aaron Brown, the Wyoming Highway Patrolâs public information officer, told Cowboy State Daily. âIt was a single-vehicle rollover in the vicinity of Frozen Lake. The Mustang was going downhill, took the turn, lost control of the vehicle, slipped, and rolled off the road.â
Incredibly, the driver only sustained minor injuries. He was flown to a hospital in Billings, Montana, and released later that day.
Brown didnât know the circumstances that led to the rollover, but said that the driver was ticketed for reckless driving.
Absolutely Totaled
When it comes to clearing wrecked vehicles, the Beartooth Highway is Zac Beardallâs turf. His Cody-based company, Zac's Towing and Recovery, was called to get the Mustang out of the mountains.
âIt was absolutely totaled,â he said. âThe roof is completely caved in, and the whole front K-member â which is the engine and front suspension support â got shoved back about a foot and blew one of the wheels apart. The back wheels are almost completely bald. Itâs decimated.â
Beardall said he spoke to the driver, who was able to get out and walk away from the mutilated Mustang on his own.
âHe has an injured shoulder and, Iâd imagine, a pretty good concussion from the incident,â he said.
The driver told Beardall that âsomething made him lose controlâ as he took the curve on the highway.
Itâs possible he caught the edge of the pavement during the turn, or was swinging too wide and too fast, causing the Mustang to roll and launch off the side.
âThe direct distance from the asphalt to the vehicle was about 60 feet,â Beardall said. âThe distance traveled, from where he left the road to where the car landed, was about 250 yards.â
Gone Adrift?
A tourist traveling on the Beartooth Highway got a video of the incident. Itâs amazing the driver escaped with his life, let alone only sustaining minor injuries.
While driving on a curvy road and in a high-powered vehicle, one might be tempted to put the pedal to the metal and do a drift, like Vin Diesel in âThe Fast and the Furiousâ franchise.
After watching the video, Beardall couldnât say whether the driver had gone adrift while drifting or just underestimated his speed.
âHe was definitely going too fast,â he said. âI couldn't tell if he was trying to drift it or what his intention was, but it definitely seems like he was at least going too fast for conditions.â
Automotive writer Aaron Turpen watched the video and came to the same conclusion.
âIt looks like the driver underestimated the turn,â he said. âIt doesnât look like an intentional slide to me.â
Ironically, if someone were going to roll off a section of the Beartooth Highway, this driver found the best spot to do it. Beardall understood that the same incident in any other spot could have been much worse.
âHe was really lucky to be in an area that had a place to land and didnât just fall off a cliff,â he said.
At Your Own Risk
Beardall regularly recovers vehicles from the Beartooth Highway, whether they were involved in accidents or stuck in the snow. He said that section is particularly treacherous for drivers who arenât mindful of their speed.
âIncidents happen fairly often at that spot,â he said. âThere are super-narrow lanes of traffic and not much of a guardrail in that particular section, and stability issues of the dirt and the road base itself don't allow for such precautions to be taken.â
The Beartooth Highway can be a harrowing-enough driving experience at the posted speed limits, and speeding can quickly turn into a dangerous incident.
Beardall hopes other drivers will see the video of the Mustangâs crash as a reminder to follow the speed limit and not go adrift, lest they end up in similar circumstances.
âIf you drive too fast on the Beartooth Highway, you assume your own risk,â he said.
Andrew Rossi can be reached at arossi@cowboystatedaily.com.