Hello everyone, I had some questions about the high water mark trail (HWMT).
One of my old navy buddies and I are planning for a trip trough a section of the HWMT. My main concern is his 98 RAV4, he has lifted it about 2in and is running 265s. I have a 99 Jeep Cherokee lifted 2 in running 30s. Its been in the water before so im not as worried about it.
How deep does the water get in late April?
Is it cross-able with a 32in intake point?
Is there any must have mods to complete even a section of this trail?
Also is there any spots that are good for overnight camping?
Our ultimate goal is a bonfire rendezvous at Byrd's Adventure Center.
The plan is to meet up Friday the 26th do some of the trail then camp that night. next day do a bit more then make our way over to Byrds. I am still in the Navy so my time frame is pretty tight seeing as i will need to be back Sunday or Monday depending how many days of leave I take. He and the friends he will be taking are civilians so they dont have quite the urgency.
Thank you in advance for all of your help.
Happy trails,
Aaron
One of my old navy buddies and I are planning for a trip trough a section of the HWMT. My main concern is his 98 RAV4, he has lifted it about 2in and is running 265s. I have a 99 Jeep Cherokee lifted 2 in running 30s. Its been in the water before so im not as worried about it.
How deep does the water get in late April?
Is it cross-able with a 32in intake point?
Is there any must have mods to complete even a section of this trail?
Also is there any spots that are good for overnight camping?
Our ultimate goal is a bonfire rendezvous at Byrd's Adventure Center.
The plan is to meet up Friday the 26th do some of the trail then camp that night. next day do a bit more then make our way over to Byrds. I am still in the Navy so my time frame is pretty tight seeing as i will need to be back Sunday or Monday depending how many days of leave I take. He and the friends he will be taking are civilians so they dont have quite the urgency.
Thank you in advance for all of your help.
Happy trails,
Aaron