Complete with foreign trucks, foreign soudtrack, and foreign grazing mammals. What more could you ask for?
Picked this one up from the Clubfrontier.org Forums
Apr 29
Complete with foreign trucks, foreign soudtrack, and foreign grazing mammals. What more could you ask for?
Picked this one up from the Clubfrontier.org Forums
Apr 29
Not sure if this is the experience of a lifetime or the stuff that nighmares are made of, but it’s an interesting photo.
[via Jalopnik]
Apr 23
Apr 22
I just can’t pass up most Moab stories, especially those involving Pritchett canyon. This one from Off Road is mostly a promo for Good Year and Walker Evans, but the photos and video are worth it. Especially the nice run up Rocker Knocker in a CJ7.
I also have to give credit to Off-Road.com for having the best website of the ‘big mainstream’ mags.
[Off-Road.com]
Apr 15
From the unexpected source of Field and Stream:
Don’t try this at home. I’m not sure I’d try it on the trail either, but I can think of several times this would have been a handy trick.
Apr 12
From (where else?) the Moab Easter Jeep Safari.
First the right way to tackle Potato Salad Hill:
And now for the not-right way:
Apr 12
Apr 10
Anyone that has traveled the roads of SW Colorado and NW New Mexico will likely report that the driving experience is both beautiful and challenging. Small highways full of high passes and tight curves, long distances between towns, and unpredictable weather conditions, make for an experience that is either uniquely enjoyable or potentially nerve-wracking.
I experienced a bit of both on a recent route finding mission in the area.
While traveling on business I had to find my way from point A of Farmington, to point B of Los Alamos. Simple enough, right? My worn road atlas showed 2 or 3 possible routes, none of which seemed particularly direct, so I decided to trust the decision to my Verizon phone maps and GPS (never trust the phone company…).
The result was an unexpected, but welcome day of mild 4 wheeling on Hwy 126. Why this road is called a Highway, I have no idea. I assume at some point it was the primary route in the area and earned the hwy designation. Be advised that it in no way resembles a Highway by ordinary standards. It also carries the designation of Scenic Byway, which it definitely deserves.
Here is the description of the road from Wikipedia:
New Mexico Route 126 is a state highway in New Mexico, United States of America. Its total length is approximately 40 miles (64 km). New Mexico Route 126′s northern terminus is in the small town of Cuba, at U.S. Route 550. The route passes through the Nacimiento Mountains and Jemez Mountains, then descends past Fenton Lake to the small, unincorporated community of La Cueva (east of Jemez Springs), where it ends at New Mexico State Road 4.
New Mexico Route 126 is part of the Jemez Mountain Trail National Scenic Byway. [2] It is paved near Cuba and La Cueva, but is graded dirt road for much of its middle section. This section is usually closed during the winter months, and may be impassable for a few days at other times because of muddy conditions resulting from rainstorms.
I, of course, knew none of this (I was just following my GPS). I probably would have gone this route anyway, but it would have been useful to at least know the part about 40 miles of dirt, possibly winter closing, and potential for mud…there was also no cell service for most of the drive.