Severe thunderstorm wind is the dominant hazard at Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve, with 9 recorded high-wind events in the county — and on open tallgrass prairie there is virtually no natural shelter to break a gust. These storms can develop rapidly across the flat Kansas landscape, leaving campers fully exposed when conditions turn.
If thunderstorms are in the forecast, park your RV or pitch your tent in the lowest available terrain and orient your setup so the smallest profile faces the prevailing southwest winds. Keep a NOAA weather radio or a weather app with push alerts active throughout your stay, since cell coverage in Chase County can be spotty. Stake every guyline on your tent and store camp chairs, canopies, and loose gear inside your vehicle before turning in each night — unsecured items become projectiles fast when prairie winds spike.
Top recorded hazards in Chase County
County dataFrom NOAA Storm Events (2024). Counts of recorded incidents — not all occurred at this park.
- Thunderstorm Wind 9
- Hail 1
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About Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve
Tallgrass prairie once covered 170 million acres of North America, but within a generation most of it had been transformed into farms, cities, and towns. Today less than 4% remains intact, mostly in the Kansas Flint Hills. Established on November 12, 1996, the preserve protects a nationally significant remnant of the once vast tallgrass prairie ecosystem. Here the tallgrass makes its last stand.
Weather
Typical weather for the preserve ranges from lows of 0 degrees in the winter and highs of 90 + degrees in the summer. Prevailing prairie winds attribute to winter blizzards and occasional summer storms. Thunderstorms that form on the Great Plains have a rare chance of producing tornadoes. Lightning poses a danger when hiking into the prairie. Please check current weather conditions at NOAA before hiking into the preserve.