T
The Raven
Guest
Edit: OP Here, This thread has been up, down and all around. People have gotten pissed, been supportive, and even gotten all "childish troll whiny, taking my toyota, and going off into the desert and never talk to you again because I don't like you sort of people " which seemed kind of funny given the embracing nature the overland community tries to encourage. It got bad and personal at times I felt bad about myself and really came close to removing the OB badge and just never logging on here again.
It's opened up an interesting dialogue and showed the realities of being a part of this community. To be part of the OB mantra means that anybody who is on a vehicle and using it for travel is an "overlander" this includes Side by Side ATVs, motorcycles, bicycles and lifted jeeps. While I still have my feeling on the term and will use it as I view it in the real world, I'll bow out to the consensus while here to keep peace and be part of the community.
Finally, as this subject is so touchy and in some ways is causing friction in the community myself and others want it to just die. I had thought about just deleting the first post, but in interest to avoid a similar post in the future I'm going to leave it here in place. So....
Feel free to read and DON'T COMMENT as it just wakes it back up again and drops it at the top.
Enjoy the ride----Raven
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In the past 6 months I have had a few opportunities to see the term Overland being used to describe what us old timers call 4 wheeling. Just today I had an interesting discussion with a fella who is embarrased to even use the term due to the conatation that the term is holding to those outside the rhelm of overlanding. I sold my overland jeep to a chemist who wanted to overland...but in reality he wanted a jeep to put big tires on and go mudding but felt that was what overlanding was. No...it's not and had I known I would have found another buyer.
To use the loose term OB has... Any vehicle dependant travel is a bit of a stretch. A soccer mom running to Walmart is not an overlander, nor is a guy in a 4wd jeep rutting up dirt roads in the spring. While the spirit of inclusion is warming to the soul and a nice guy thing to do, the reality is that in doing so allows a watered down version of what overlanding as seen in Australia and Africa actually is; Fully vehicle dependant travel over long distance.
Recently I have gotten to the point where I have begun to refrain from using the term overlander even though I travel full time in a appropiatly equipped Landcruiser 80. There have been bad issues in VT, in ME and out west where people calling themselves overlanders have been irresponsible ripping up public ROWs, private roads and resulting in loss of land/trail use, not to mention bad stereotypes for the activity. We are on a bad course right now I just hope it improves in time.
For now I think that perhaps the term should be more carefully applied and strictly emphisizing the travel aspect of the vehicle dependant travel ideal and not so much the technical capability aspect that many groups like to focus on. The honest reality is that only 2% of vehicle dependant travel is technical, the rest is fluff.
To quote Peter at the VO "Lots of overlanders walk the walk and talk the talk, but few truly challenge their overlanding proficiency and equipment. Are you capable of conquering VOT?" Nope and it's not even necessary that overlanders really need to.
It's opened up an interesting dialogue and showed the realities of being a part of this community. To be part of the OB mantra means that anybody who is on a vehicle and using it for travel is an "overlander" this includes Side by Side ATVs, motorcycles, bicycles and lifted jeeps. While I still have my feeling on the term and will use it as I view it in the real world, I'll bow out to the consensus while here to keep peace and be part of the community.
Finally, as this subject is so touchy and in some ways is causing friction in the community myself and others want it to just die. I had thought about just deleting the first post, but in interest to avoid a similar post in the future I'm going to leave it here in place. So....
Feel free to read and DON'T COMMENT as it just wakes it back up again and drops it at the top.
Enjoy the ride----Raven
---
In the past 6 months I have had a few opportunities to see the term Overland being used to describe what us old timers call 4 wheeling. Just today I had an interesting discussion with a fella who is embarrased to even use the term due to the conatation that the term is holding to those outside the rhelm of overlanding. I sold my overland jeep to a chemist who wanted to overland...but in reality he wanted a jeep to put big tires on and go mudding but felt that was what overlanding was. No...it's not and had I known I would have found another buyer.
To use the loose term OB has... Any vehicle dependant travel is a bit of a stretch. A soccer mom running to Walmart is not an overlander, nor is a guy in a 4wd jeep rutting up dirt roads in the spring. While the spirit of inclusion is warming to the soul and a nice guy thing to do, the reality is that in doing so allows a watered down version of what overlanding as seen in Australia and Africa actually is; Fully vehicle dependant travel over long distance.
Recently I have gotten to the point where I have begun to refrain from using the term overlander even though I travel full time in a appropiatly equipped Landcruiser 80. There have been bad issues in VT, in ME and out west where people calling themselves overlanders have been irresponsible ripping up public ROWs, private roads and resulting in loss of land/trail use, not to mention bad stereotypes for the activity. We are on a bad course right now I just hope it improves in time.
For now I think that perhaps the term should be more carefully applied and strictly emphisizing the travel aspect of the vehicle dependant travel ideal and not so much the technical capability aspect that many groups like to focus on. The honest reality is that only 2% of vehicle dependant travel is technical, the rest is fluff.
To quote Peter at the VO "Lots of overlanders walk the walk and talk the talk, but few truly challenge their overlanding proficiency and equipment. Are you capable of conquering VOT?" Nope and it's not even necessary that overlanders really need to.
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