We know the north end of the loop can get a little hairy with spaas creek and pumkin hollow, none the less we're up for the challenge. We all have 4wheel drive with decent ground clearance. We were hoping to get a better idea on the best places to start the loop (were thinking going through the nada tunnel and then working north on the east side of the loop first). We were also wondering if you have any good recommendations for camping grounds. We are shooting for public property, but are also willing to potentially pay for private property camp grounds. Also just curious of any legs of the loop that may pose a problem for us that time of year. Finally just from a navigation standpoint (what apps have worked best for you guys), we all haven't had much experience in the overlanding and were just curious what you guys have found works well. Any info helps!
Thank you!
That is enough to go off of. Okay yeah Spaas creek has on particular section that looks way more difficult than it is. Heading Northbound it's about 1000 ft from the ending of Spaas Creek Rd coming up to June Bug. Looks like you have an Xtera so you should be fine. Mid-size trucks should also be fine. Fullsize is where things get hairy. Our buddy with the F-150 had maybe 1" on either side when going through this obstacle.
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Beyond that I've not gotten around the other end yet on the North Trail as this section ate a lot of our daylight up. Plus it was at/near the winter solstice so we only had minimal daylight anyways.
The southern side we avoided the area at Walker Creek and Old Fincastle Rd as there is a known rock shelf obstacle and with my tacoma being stock at the time I decided against trying it. From what I hear now though I may have been able to do it and should be extra fine now.
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Those are the two Gotchas that I know about. As for camping spots we started in Slade at Koomer Ridge Campground for the first night as it's directly in the middle of the loop. There are dispersed sites on the northern end at Spaas creek road and they end right where it transitions to mainly dirt/trail. There are other areas for dispersed sites but you'll need to just look for them as best you can on the web as I don't have that info on me but I know they are out there.
For navigation I personally use Gaia and my Garmin Overlander. Both do things I like but you can get away with just one or the other. Gaia is better to plan with but in my experience the Overlander is better to navigate with when you're following a predefined route.
You can really start where ever you want but knowing what I know now I'd recommend starting at the Nada tunnel like you said and head east until you hit the track then head north.
*Edit it's also worth mentioning the southern side had a lot of flooding just recently. I would suspect a lot of the trail has been washed out or changed since i was there in December. I would take this into consideration until we get more info on the status. It was what they consider a 50-100 year flood depending on what area you look at.*