Its the monotony of this pattern that is the worst, it's like living the same day over and over. Hell, I'd take a 55 degree cold light all day rain every few days just for a change of pace.
At least as you get into later may and June you usually have daily activity off the front range to chase as a backup if there isn't any targets further east in the plains. It might not be high end tornado potential but you could still get lucky and also have some spectacular structure shots.
You try to plan a April or early May vacation you may end up with a week of cool and dry after a cold front plows Into the gulf the day before you get out there.
If I ever were to have the chance to dueba plains vacation it would definitely be the last week of May up to mid june
https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=10160242926902559&id=83040292558
This is what it's been like going on 18 hours around this part of michigans thumb. I would guess 4 inches of snow but with the wind it's been very difficult to impossible to travel outside of towns. Sheriff's department early this afternoon stressed no travel unless an absolute emergency and wreckers and road crews were being pulled at dark. So despite that relative low snowfall totals it definitely will be one to remember locally for a while.
If it is rated an ef3, damage looks like ef2-3 will be the rating, it would be the first ef or f3 or higher tornado in the Gaylord forecast area 31 years and first in the entire state of Michigan in 10 years
One dead and 23 with injuries. 1st death from a tornado in Michigan in 12 years
https://www.wnem.com/2022/05/21/least-1-dead-23-hurt-northern-michigan-tornado/
Hope that the elevated stuff in Wisconsin can survive the night and lay an outflow boundary somewhere toward the us10 area that something could fire and latch on too. Once you get north as others have said it's all hills/trees and a very spotty road network. Chances it happens are not high but it's better then trying to work up north. Or wait for a better day.