This year's March Madness trip's destination was a subject of hundred+ strong email chain.
Death Valley? Nah...
Arizona Strip? Mmmm...
Mojave Road? Nah...
So - Toiyabes it is again. We've only been there in November - but didn't cover much ground.
Chris Snell is at the trip planning again: his "extreme package" translates into about 270 miles on dirt, in one long weekend.
We decide to give it a go, as much as we can manage.
But driving from SoCal to Alamo, Nevada, is an unpleasant proposition on a Friday morning. So three of us elect to camp on Mojave Road.
Have to tell you, driving to a geodetic coordinate in the desert at night is fun. But we've made it.
The morning on Mojave Road:
We are ready to go early enough that it doesn't make sense to hit pavement - so we take our time to cut a 23-mile corner of Mojave Desert.
I spot a desert tortoise barely out of our campsite:
We're enjoying cool morning air and very little dust - going across lava flows, dense Joshua Tree forest, and by old ranches.
We start hearing the conversations of our friends in Las Vegas way before we actually see them; John Lee in his NAS 110 and George in a big black Lexus form a tight convoy around Paul VKD's Series IIA and move at a regal pace of around 50 mph on I-15. We pass them temporarily to hit a gas station on U.S.93, and catch up with them relatively quickly.
Paul is issued a warning by Nevada highway patrol for driving too slowly...
Most of us congregate by the gas station in Alamo:
Chris and Ben have a longer haul to Alamo in their 300TDi ROW 110s, so by the time we all meet, we've exhausted things to buy at the store.
Here's the ROW fraction of the group:
We hit the dirt a few miles north of Alamo, and work our way up the mountain range.
I volunteer for the tailgunner duty - which allows me to see the rest of the group in rare moments when the dust settles.
We have a huge group by non-event standards - 12 trucks. By the time Chris finds a campsite large enough for the group, we've covered 40 miles on dirt.
I can't skip taking yet another photo of Paul's Series:
Here's Ben's ROW 110:
The evening views are gorgeous.
Camping gear is produced, food is sizzling, and drinks are poured. Our trek from Mojave Desert to Great Basin was great.
(to be continued)
Death Valley? Nah...
Arizona Strip? Mmmm...
Mojave Road? Nah...
So - Toiyabes it is again. We've only been there in November - but didn't cover much ground.
Chris Snell is at the trip planning again: his "extreme package" translates into about 270 miles on dirt, in one long weekend.
We decide to give it a go, as much as we can manage.
But driving from SoCal to Alamo, Nevada, is an unpleasant proposition on a Friday morning. So three of us elect to camp on Mojave Road.
Have to tell you, driving to a geodetic coordinate in the desert at night is fun. But we've made it.
The morning on Mojave Road:
We are ready to go early enough that it doesn't make sense to hit pavement - so we take our time to cut a 23-mile corner of Mojave Desert.
I spot a desert tortoise barely out of our campsite:
We're enjoying cool morning air and very little dust - going across lava flows, dense Joshua Tree forest, and by old ranches.
We start hearing the conversations of our friends in Las Vegas way before we actually see them; John Lee in his NAS 110 and George in a big black Lexus form a tight convoy around Paul VKD's Series IIA and move at a regal pace of around 50 mph on I-15. We pass them temporarily to hit a gas station on U.S.93, and catch up with them relatively quickly.
Paul is issued a warning by Nevada highway patrol for driving too slowly...
Most of us congregate by the gas station in Alamo:
Chris and Ben have a longer haul to Alamo in their 300TDi ROW 110s, so by the time we all meet, we've exhausted things to buy at the store.
Here's the ROW fraction of the group:
We hit the dirt a few miles north of Alamo, and work our way up the mountain range.
I volunteer for the tailgunner duty - which allows me to see the rest of the group in rare moments when the dust settles.
We have a huge group by non-event standards - 12 trucks. By the time Chris finds a campsite large enough for the group, we've covered 40 miles on dirt.
I can't skip taking yet another photo of Paul's Series:
Here's Ben's ROW 110:
The evening views are gorgeous.
Camping gear is produced, food is sizzling, and drinks are poured. Our trek from Mojave Desert to Great Basin was great.
(to be continued)