Pathfinder III
- 1,050
- First Name
- Anthony
- Last Name
- Trombley
- Member #
-
30229
- Service Branch
- USAF
I just finished up a trip to a Labor Day weekend event at a nearby off-road park, and after some reflection, I've found that there is a significant difference between what a lot of folks mean when they say "off-roading" and "wheeling," and what I have found to enjoy and what I consider to be overlanding. I find myself drawn more to overlanding over off-roading because the level of equipment that I find I need to continue doing what I did this weekend is far more elaborate, and expensive than that of if I went for an overland build.
Context
Last year I did Canaan Valley Loop in West Virginia, and absolutely loved the trip. The trail was the perfect balance of leisure travel, and a few obstacles to challenge us and make us intentional about vehicle placement. Here is the video that inspired me to check it out.
After that trip, I was encouraged to start building a set of equipment that would allow me to independently go on more trips like that. Things like a camp stove, sleeping setups, and vehicle storage organization like a roof rack or bed rack.
Then this year, I went to this off-road park, and the experience was completely different. I'd never been to this park before, and everyone said how "a Subaru or sedan can do most trails, and there are turnoffs for bigger challenges." I went in looking for a mostly leisurely cruise across the park's discovery trail, and maybe do a couple of obstacles if they looked easy enough. Boy was I wrong. I'd gotten stuck multiple times, and at one point almost rolled my vehicle over on an obstacle that every other member of my group tackled with little issue! Turns out, that since my group had mostly Jeeps, their wheelbase gave them a better ability to crawl up the vast rocks on these trails. Pretty much everyone also had 35 inch tires or greater, while I showed up with my OEM 31 inch tires, which led to me having less of an ability to grapple up large rocks. At the end of the day, members of my group were impressed my truck did as well as it did, but I kept thinking "man I was punching above my weight class today." Everyone was compelling me to come back with at least 35" tires (which would require extensive suspension modification), armor (skid plates), and a winch. And while some of that I had already had long-term plans for, I left this adventure feeling like some of those things were REQUIRED if I didn't want to risk serious damage to my rig.
My takeaways
I left today thinking that a build to be confident in the kind of rock crawling I was doing this weekend at the Off-Road Park would look completely different than one for a long-range overland traveler. And my experience at Canaan last year was far better than the one at the park, and truly could have been done with almost any vehicle with even AWD (instead of specifically 4WD).
At the end of the day, I am grateful for the adventure and the learning experience at the ORP this weekend, but I definitely don't find I want to do it again. I'd rather focus my energy seeking out roads in beautiful national parks, camp in the woods, and have time around a camp fire with friends and family. But for the veteran overlanders on this thread, I guess my question is: am I just being a baby? Do I need to accept that there are simply going to be days where I might completely destroy my vehicle because "that's part of the game," or is there truly a difference between the two (overlanding, and off roading)?
Context
Last year I did Canaan Valley Loop in West Virginia, and absolutely loved the trip. The trail was the perfect balance of leisure travel, and a few obstacles to challenge us and make us intentional about vehicle placement. Here is the video that inspired me to check it out.
After that trip, I was encouraged to start building a set of equipment that would allow me to independently go on more trips like that. Things like a camp stove, sleeping setups, and vehicle storage organization like a roof rack or bed rack.
Then this year, I went to this off-road park, and the experience was completely different. I'd never been to this park before, and everyone said how "a Subaru or sedan can do most trails, and there are turnoffs for bigger challenges." I went in looking for a mostly leisurely cruise across the park's discovery trail, and maybe do a couple of obstacles if they looked easy enough. Boy was I wrong. I'd gotten stuck multiple times, and at one point almost rolled my vehicle over on an obstacle that every other member of my group tackled with little issue! Turns out, that since my group had mostly Jeeps, their wheelbase gave them a better ability to crawl up the vast rocks on these trails. Pretty much everyone also had 35 inch tires or greater, while I showed up with my OEM 31 inch tires, which led to me having less of an ability to grapple up large rocks. At the end of the day, members of my group were impressed my truck did as well as it did, but I kept thinking "man I was punching above my weight class today." Everyone was compelling me to come back with at least 35" tires (which would require extensive suspension modification), armor (skid plates), and a winch. And while some of that I had already had long-term plans for, I left this adventure feeling like some of those things were REQUIRED if I didn't want to risk serious damage to my rig.
My takeaways
I left today thinking that a build to be confident in the kind of rock crawling I was doing this weekend at the Off-Road Park would look completely different than one for a long-range overland traveler. And my experience at Canaan last year was far better than the one at the park, and truly could have been done with almost any vehicle with even AWD (instead of specifically 4WD).
At the end of the day, I am grateful for the adventure and the learning experience at the ORP this weekend, but I definitely don't find I want to do it again. I'd rather focus my energy seeking out roads in beautiful national parks, camp in the woods, and have time around a camp fire with friends and family. But for the veteran overlanders on this thread, I guess my question is: am I just being a baby? Do I need to accept that there are simply going to be days where I might completely destroy my vehicle because "that's part of the game," or is there truly a difference between the two (overlanding, and off roading)?