Flatlanders Jeep Club Meeting
14 December 97 near Manhattan, KS
The December Flatlanders meeting was my first as an actual member.
The meeting started out with a little Christmas party. Everyone
brought finger food and we sat around eating and talking for the
first 45 minutes or so. We took nominations for officer elections.
Voting will be done in January, and new officers will take office
in February. It was also suggested by another newer member (John
Miller) that we put together a web page to help advertise the club.
I agreed that it was a good idea, if a little late. ;-)
Although a couple dozen people showed up for the meeting, only seven
vehicles went to the ORV park. That turned out to be a
pretty good number, since we didn't have to wait a long time for
anyone (except Nick) to make it through obstacles, but there were
still enough people to mill around and get to know fellow club members.
It had snowed quite a bit the previous two weeks, and had been cold
enough that most of the snow was still there. It finally warmed up
the day before out meeting, so most of the trails were a combination
of wet snow and mud. It wasn't complete slop, but everything was just
slippery enough to make it interesting.
Since my stock tires theoretically made me the most incapable vehicle
of the group, they put me near the middle of the pack. The first big
obstacle we tried was the little gully that ate several Jeeps during the
Briggs Jeep Jamboree in October. The first
time I headed up the other side, I didn't have enough wheel speed. I
had to back down 20 feet and try again in a higher gear. Problem solved.
Surprisingly, that was the only problem I had all day.
The mud made things a bit more difficult, but didn't pose any serious
problems for anyone until
Nick Falcetto
tried to go up one of the steepest hills of the day. Oddly enough,
taking this trail was Nick's suggestion. The obstacle was a small dip
followed by a 60 degree left turn up a steep, muddy hill with trees
close on each side. Near the top was a 90 degree right turn, followed
closely by a 90 degree left turn just as the hill leveled out. One
tree in particular came very close to taking out several side mirrors.
The trick to a successful climb seemed to be having good momentum
without excessive bounce or wheel spin. Nick apparently went either
too fast or too slow, lost traction, and slid far enough sideways that
a tree blocked his rearward decent. That seems to be a recurring
theme when Nick and I go wheeling (see the
September '97 trip report).
Due to the poor traction and winding trail, John Miller had to winch
Nick up from the side with a snatch block. After
winching from two separate places,
Nick finally got enough traction to move under his own power...until
he hit a large rock in the trail, lost traction, and came to another
dead stop. This time, we opted to
link two snatch straps together and have Doug Knox tug him to the top
of the trail. Nick and his dad had brought their new video camera, so
of course we got the whole incident on tape. Since nobody else broke
anything, this earned Nick the final Hard Luck Trophy for 1997.
After killing time with Nick, we decided it was time to head for home.
As we attempted to climb a small ledge on the way out, we realized that
muddy, packed tires made that ledge seem much larger than usual. Three
Jeeps, led by John's super-Jeep, made it up, while the rest of us took
the long way around. After a little more playing on some more ledges
and
the presentation of the Hard Luck Trophy, we hit the pavement.
Note how muddy that field is behind John and Nick. This area is
normally a large (200x200') grassy meadow, but some idiots, apparently
riding some quad runners, had really torn it up recently and turned
it into quite a mud pit. This is the kind of behavior that will make
the Army Corps of Engineers, who manage the ORV park, close the area
off to the public. Please, people,
Tread
Lightly! If you don't, none of us will have anything but pavement
to tread on before long.
I had just finished installing my new
York-based onboard air compressor
the day before, and was eager to see how quickly it would air up my tires.
Apparently there was still some problem, because it took for-bloody-ever
to add 10 psi to one tire. I ended up using the air hose at the gas
station to finish the job. Upon further inspection, it turned out that
the double-ended truck air chuck I was using simply wasn't opening up
enough to let much air through. Replacing it with a normal, spherical
air chuck solved the problem, at least in the driveway. We'll see
just how well it works in the field come January.
Back to Obi-Wan's trip reports page
last updated 11 Feb 98
Obi-Wan (obiwan@jedi.com)
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