In the parlance of aviators, this definitely represents IFR (instrument flight rules) conditions. This air mass lay about 50 miles north of an outflow-reinforced stationary front, a boundary that soon would focus supercells to the south. For now, however, it simply focused fog and sporadic drizzle on its cool side, cloaking one of the many commercial wind farms of the Texas Panhandle. An older, more traditional Great Plains wind-power device can be seen behind and to the right of the nearest, largest turbine.
14 NE Stratford TX (7 May 19) Looking ESE
36.446, -101.8787