Hank Schyma
Quick Facts
Biography
Pecos Hank otherwise known as Hank Schyma is a musician, songwriter, filmmaker and professional stormchaser based in Houston, Texas. He has fronted the rock group Southern Backtones for over fifteen years. During the same period, he's directed, produced and starred in a full length independent film, several music videos, and a catalogue of storm and nature documentation. He's recently served as storm consultant on a major motion picture.
Early life
Pecos Hank was born and raised in Houston. Most of his growth and formative years were spent in the Pecos River Valley.
He's stated that he's hard-pressed to recall a specific reason why storm chasing held such an allure for him, though he admits an early fascination with the tornado scene from The Wizard of Oz.
Career
He relocated briefly to Huntington Beach, California in the early 1990s, reportedly "to be a rock star, but ended up just surfing and delivering pizza." By 1994, he was already back in Texas, capturing severe weather footage on his own and beginning the music for what would later become Southern Backtones.'
In 1995 he joined KHOU-TV's news team working as a camera operator, which gave him the opportunity to work under their head meteorologist Dr. Neil Frank.
Pecos Hank is regarded to have gained professional storm chaser status in 2007 when he was appointed as KRIV's exclusive in-house storm chaser. He launched an ongoing project photographing the complete body of snakes native to North America (though he feels it's moving a little slowly). Multiple music videos were produced during this period as well, including one which features a return to his home in the Pecos River Valley, and 2011 saw the release of his first full length independent feature film, Honky Tonk Blood. The soundtrack to the film was released separately, featuring a wealth of regional talent and long time collaborators, including Johnny Falstaff, Craig Kinsey, and Two Star Symphony.
El Reno Blues
Hank eventually left the usual rock band format in favor of mostly acoustic performances, often as a duet with violinist Jo Bird of Two Star Symphony. The new format in turn informed his recording format, which led to a solo album with a new approach. El Reno Blues was released in 2015. It was met with much praise among aficionados of southwestern American culture.
Pecos Hank was present in El Reno, Oklahoma on May 24, 2011 to witness and capture a rare, severe tornado ranked an EF5 (the highest ranking) on the enhanced Fujita ranking scale. He recounted witnessing an 18-wheeler grounded by the tornado on the outskirts of town, though he later found that it's driver survived the ordeal in the truck cabin unharmed. The driver's brush with mortality and the location of the incident were later commemorated on the album.
Pecos Hank was again on hand in El Reno on May 31, 2013 to witness an EF3 ranked tornado that stretch a mammoth 2.6 miles wide (4.2 km), the largest ever recorded. This storm would claim the lives of eight people, including four fellow storm chasers. The impact of witnessing these storms and their fallout significantly informed his following work.
Recent Work
Pecos Hank continues to contribute lightning and storm coverage to a variety of national and international outlets. In 2014, he served as Storm Consultant for the film The Last Witch Hunter.