Enthusiast III
Enthusiast III
Enthusiast I
Traveler III
12224
Mike is that Slick Rock?Ok I guess I'll kick this off.
This is August 28th just last Friday up at Lake Alpine!
View attachment 7
Member III
Good to see the horses still call it home.Thanks all! Here are a few pics of ours from Assateague...
Pathfinder II
Amazing view!!!!
Spent a couple days down in Big Sur sending off the trailer-less overlanding era with an outstanding view. Next trip I will have my trailer complete.
Member III
Traveler III
Great shots Jon! You must know a great photographer![emoji23]Thanks all! Here are a few pics of ours from Assateague...
Enthusiast II
13314
Off-Road Ranger I
Enthusiast II
Love the dogs, especially the heeler!View attachment 86242View attachment 86243View attachment 86244View attachment 86245View attachment 86246View attachment 86247View attachment 86248
Took the dogs out for a weekend camping trip in Mt Laguna. Got a little muddy towards camp but we made it though just fine. the Ko2 gripped nicely.
Influencer II
Traveler III
That’s a great picture!Not a super exciting picture but I took my Ford escape out to the mountains this passed weekend. No RTT or any crazy gear just kept it super simple and it was great. View attachment 93150
Expedition Master III
A nice setup indeed.
Trial run of the new Boobook expedition camper.
Firth Park in Wombat State Forest. Australia.
Pathfinder II
Expedition Master III
Pathfinder II
Hi Desert Runner! I don't know exactly. I might it was around 2 thousands meters above the tree line. There we was on 4,5 thousands meters of altitude, on a very dry and frosty region (it's a desert: -6c at nigth, and 32c at the day). It was fantastic. I realize the scarcity about the south history for americans and the scarcity about the history of the old civilizations on Americas for all off us. So, if you never been here, I encourage you to visit our continent and feel on your skin a litle bit of descendent Incas and indians culture. I'm an apaixonate about it.How far above the tree line? What altitude were you at? Years ago i watched a documentary of how food was produced with limited water and how the food was grown that didn't freeze due to the climate.
I think about what the New World would have looked like with the Aztecs expanding North and South, and the Incas empire expanding North along the Pacific Mexican coast, and the Spanish not arriving for 100-200 more years. The Mayans, by then, were fading and in decline. Those of us in North America get European history and a smattering of Mexican/Caribbean. You have to take advanced courses, to get Central and Southern...New World history.
It's definitely frosty...there.