Just curious how far yall go, what's the single furthest you've gone overlanding, as in longest offroad trek without using the pavement?
Member III
I did some googling, was it Desolation Canyon? Looks like a pretty cool trek!There's a spot in southern Utah identified as the furthest from pavement in the lower 48, and I've been there. But your question can be answered a lot of different ways. 99% off-road, just crossing one when needed, Time off-road, raw distance, lower 48 vs Alaska or global, etc., so it will be interesting to see what answers you get.
Another great looking trek!Furthest for me is Padre Island National Seashore. It's the longest stretch of undeveloped barrier island in the world. If you drive to the end, you're 66 miles from pavement.
I have not been to Desolation Canyon but I have been close by there. However, 20 years ago when I did it the spot I'm talking about was in the Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument and was between 89 (paved) and west of Hole in the Rock Road (un-paved). But I can see where the exact spot would move around based on ongoing development.I did some googling, was it Desolation Canyon? Looks like a pretty cool trek!
As always, it depends on what's meant by "offroad"; however:Just curious how far yall go, what's the single furthest you've gone overlanding, as in longest offroad trek without using the pavement?
We ended up driving a large portion of the 40, starting at the northern end. Our issue was we rarely stayed going in one direction so it wasn't uncommon to drive 4-500 miles off pavement, join the pavement to head off to a particular point of interest, then back track to pick-up where we left the off pavement. If would have run things continuously we'd sure to have a 2,000 mile stretch if the cobblestone sections that only ran through the small towns isn't considered paved. We were quite known for ridiculous routes, as in erratic, and drove over 1,100 miles during our first time through Belize, roughly 60% was off-pavement.So, I was reflecting and recall also:
Kazungula to Maun to Francistown to Selebi-Phikwe (now a lot of this is tarred but when I first covered this route it was all unsurfaced - I din;t record the distance however it would have been around 1200 km / 750 miles. If I include the outbound route, which was at that time "partially tarred" (i.e., strips of tar but mostly dirt - if someone came the other way you each gave up one strip) then this was a 2600 km / 1600 mile trip.
When we first drove the southern half of Ruta 40 most of it was unsurfaced - we covered around 1800 km / 1100 miles on this section.
Yes I understand completely. We've covered a fair proportion of Ruta 40, but not all in one run. As you do, we rarely stay on a specific highway, and in the case of the longest trip during which we were on this route we crossed the northernmost section, then headed east for a while, crossed again further south, and then even further south drove some of the actual Ruta 40 off and on for the remainder of the route, leaving it several times and coming back to it further south, so not at the same point as we had left. ...and so on. WE had driven some of Ruta 40 in the north on previous trips, and have subsequently filled in some of the gaps in the south, although never simply to "check the box", always because we wanted to explore an area and Ruta 40 was the way to do this.We ended up driving a large portion of the 40, starting at the northern end. Our issue was we rarely stayed going in one direction so it wasn't uncommon to drive 4-500 miles off pavement, join the pavement to head off to a particular point of interest, then back track to pick-up where we left the off pavement. If would have run things continuously we'd sure to have a 2,000 mile stretch if the cobblestone sections that only ran through the small towns isn't considered paved. We were quite known for ridiculous routes, as in erratic, and drove over 1,100 miles during our first time through Belize, roughly 60% was off-pavement.
Advocate I
Exactly, most understand what the Pan-American is so that's what we all say we were/are doing but most who drive it chuckle when they actually end up on it.Yes I understand completely. We've covered a fair proportion of Ruta 40, but not all in one run. As you do, we rarely stay on a specific highway, and in the case of the longest trip during which we were on this route we crossed the northernmost section, then headed east for a while, crossed again further south, and then even further south drove some of the actual Ruta 40 off and on for the remainder of the route, leaving it several times and coming back to it further south, so not at the same point as we had left. ...and so on. WE had driven some of Ruta 40 in the north on previous trips, and have subsequently filled in some of the gaps in the south, although never simply to "check the box", always because we wanted to explore an area and Ruta 40 was the way to do this.
In the same vein, although it's not even close to "off road" we've driven lots of the Pan American Highway, but always advise people to stay off the actual highway as much as possible.
Advocate I