Badlands Off-Road Park
Attica, IN
8-9 June 2002
A handful of us from the
JeepOffRoad (JPOR)
mailing list finally decided that we needed to get together and
meet each other, so we planned a trip to the Badlands. It turned out
to be a longer drive and not quite as central a location as we initially
expected, but it was still a blast.
Since my 5-month-old daughter isn't ready for that level of wheeling yet,
and since we have friends in northern Indiana (La Porte), I took my whole
family out to La Porte while flat
towing my YJ behind my dad's E-350, then left the family there while
I drove the YJ down to Attica for the weekend. It's about a 12 hour
drive (600 miles) from Lincoln to La Porte with a family of small kids
(Attica is similar), then 2.5 hours from La Porte down to Attica. Lots
of driving in four days! Of course, being pulled over on the interstate
in Illinois for a drug bust by a sheriff deputy trainee added a little
bit to our time, too. His excuse was that we forgot to use our turn
signal when leaving a gas station. Newbie cops are fun. If you ask
them lots of unrelated questions, they get flustered and can't remember
what they're supposed to be asking you. He didn't find our stash, so
he sent us on our way. ;-)
I pulled into Attica around 9:30am Saturday and touched base with
John Nutter on the CB. He and his group had arrived the night before
and were already playing around in the quarry at the Badlands. I
went to check into the Summers Carroll
Campground about 9 miles northwest of town. It's a very clean,
quiet, cheap campground. I located John's camp and setup camp
across the road from him. I
finally made it back to the Badlands ORV park, checked in, and hit
the trail to find the rest of the JPOR group around 11am.
The rest of the group (about 8 vehicles) were on the orange (medium)
trail that begins just inside the park entrance. That trail is very
reminiscent of the low lands at
Tuttle Creek or
Timber Ridge,
with lots of narrow, twisty trails with mud pits, short, steep inclines,
and off-camber bits. I got my CB antenna ripped off by a low hanging
tree not 3 minutes into the trail, before I'd met up with the group.
I also managed to get mud to wash up over nearly my entire hood while
crossing one pit. The trails are fairly well marked with signs on
trees, so by following the signs, some tire tracks, and directions via
CB (while I still had an antenna), I was able to catch up with the
group in about 10 minutes. It would have been sooner, but I had to
stop at one point and wait for a small
turtle to wander across the trail. I felt like the ralley racer in
that video game commercial who pulls over to pick up a bunny off the
road and set it free in the woods.
When I found them, Jerry (red XJ) was crossed up trying to traverse
a muddy rut and John Nutter (yellow CJ) had to pull him across.
There were a number of times when Jerry's open diffs and lower
underbelly gave him some traction problems, but good driving skills
and Goodyear MTR tires sure helped. Still, I was very glad
that I had gotten my Trac-Lok
limited slip rear diff installed before this trip. It made a world
of difference down there.
After wandering around for a few hours in similar terrain that morning,
we headed back to the parking lot for lunch. There are two enormous,
gravel parking lots at the Badlands, and the lower one has a small
building that sells burgers, drinks, and the like around lunch time.
That afternoon, we headed out to the pink (hard) trail. Unlike the
orange trail, which is located at the northeast end of the park by the
entrance, the pink trail is located at the far south end of the park,
past the sand dunes and near the quarry. The pink trail starts out
with some off-camber rocky areas (where a tree claimed my radio
antenna) and then continues through the woods for a while before
dumping out into the quarry. The quarry is a large, open basin
surrounded by trails leading up the rock walls. Greg managed to flop
his CJ on its side while testing his off-camber tolerance in a small
gully. After a few jokes, we winched him upright. Our group dispersed
and played on the rocks for a while before congregating at Purgatory
("somewhere between heaven and hell"), the killer rock trail at the
Badlands. It's a very technical, narrow trail with large rocks and
only one "correct" line. A bunch of broken windshield glass on the
downhill side of the trail was evidence of what might happen if you're
not careful. We spent a couple hours there watching many of our bunch
try there hand. With Tracey Michaels spotting, John Nutter was the
first of our group to make it through without sliding sideways off a
rock and using a winch to drag the Jeep along on its axle. Jim Barlow
provided the most significant breakage of the trip when his steering
knuckle U-joint spit off its end cap and puked its guts onto the
trail. He got out with a winch and a lot of popping noises.
The park closes its gates at 6pm, so we headed back to the campground
for a long evening of relaxing, shooting the breeze, and watching Jim
remove the broken remnants of his axle so he could flat tow his Jeep
home the next day. Dora-ble
(the explorer) and her dogs came
down from Chicago that night to hang out with us for the evening and
pick up Tracey.
Only four of us stuck around
to wheel on Sunday: John, Janet, and
Sierra Nutter in their
yellow CJ,
not-so-Dentless Dave Stauffer in his
teal TJ,
Jerry in his red XJ,
and me (Ben "Obi-Wan" Hollingsworth) in my
black YJ.
With such a small group, we were able to move pretty quickly and covered
a lot of area. The day started by John's rear
fuel pump puking at a
gas station in town. He replaced it
with a spare he'd brought, and we
headed out on the green (easy) trail for the morning. The green trail
heads south from the parking lots and contains many steep up-and-down
hills roughly 20 feet tall and very sharp break-overs at the top. Jerry's
XJ (our leader at the time) scraped bottom a few times, but he never had
trouble cresting them. These hills are connected with relatively
uneventful wide, sandy, dirt trails.
While passing by an overlook for another section of Purgatory, we
stopped for a while to watch
two well-setup rigs play. The
first was a Sammy-based creation
that handled pretty much everything without much difficulty. The second
was a blue TLC that had a
little more trouble.
We eventually found our way onto harder trails through the woods and
dropped down into a stream bed for a while. The drop in went into a
semi-deep hole, which
hung up Jerry for a while. We
pulled him back up so he could get a run at it, and then he let John
take the lead for a while. The
stream got larger and rockier
as it went on, and it eventually took us under an old
concrete bridge and through
the infamous culvert. The
outlet of this culvert drops off a little into a pool,
but nothing as deep as I'd seen in other photos.
Shortly thereafter, we left the creek and started wandering through
some tight, wooded trails in the far south end of the park. We happened
upon a pair of Samurais that were about to run through one of the larger
mud holes that littered these trails. One of them ran along the left
side, but his right wheels hit a hole and
sank, drenching his (fortunately
empty) passenger seat and sucking some
water into his engine. He got pulled
out and emptied his engine in short order. Not five minutes later,
John performed a similar feat in a different hole. He managed to keep
his engine above water, but his wife's seat sank, giving her what Dave
dubbed "swamp butt" for the rest of the day. I pulled him out with
little effort, and after a little lost wandering, we headed back to
the parking area for lunch.
Having had our fill of mud, we spent the afternoon playing in the quarry.
For much of the afternoon, John and Dave (the big dogs in our group)
played on the large rocks while
Jerry and I spotted and heckled. We all went up a decent little ledge
down by a lake where Jerry stopped to pose for his
directory shot
before leaving a thick layer of rubber on the ledge in what was
eventually a successful attack. I tried to follow
John's route (John has
dual lockers, while I have only a rear LSD) and have a
mangled rocker panel to show for
it. That was the only time all weekend when my Trac-Lok failed me.
I eventually moved over a foot
and made short work of Jerry's route (no doubt due to the increased
traction from the layer of rubber left behind by his tires).
With closing time approaching, we headed back to the camp and then
out for pizza before I bid the Minnesota group farewell and headed
back to La Porte to see my family. The drive home with the
van pulling the YJ was equally smooth,
and we managed to avoid any "Imperial entanglements" this time.
Damage taken: I
dented my left rocker panel,
mangled the drip rail on
the right side of my windshield frame, tore off both my
radio ($25) and
CB antennas ($30),
ripped my roll bar pad in a couple
places, broke off the left side "door open" switch ($13), mildly dented
my oil pan, and broke the knob off one of my RS9000 rear shocks. The
loss of my radio antenna for a week was probably the most painful of
the bunch.
I finally managed to get these photos edited for size & content.
They're all in chronological order, too. I just haven't added captions.
Back to Obi-Wan's trip reports page
last updated 24 Jun 2002
Obi-Wan (obiwan@jedi.com)
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