Member III
- 2,306
- First Name
- Steve
- Last Name
- Culbertson
- Member #
-
9519
- Service Branch
- Former NOPD LEO
I've researched and debated, to myself, by spending wisely how best to equip for overlanding trips. For a while now, I've been conflicted. I went back and forth between truck camper, Tear Drop trailer, trailer w/RoofTop Tent, and on and on.
I was trying to solve multiple situations with the same "setup", and IT JUST DIDN'T WORK.This has led to compromise(s). Finally, I had to realize that the trips I've been taking totally depended on who went with me. If it was my SIL we always shot for out of the way remote destinations, and if it was my wife we'd gravitate to more organized campgrounds with more amenities.
So the solution, for now, is 2 different setups for basically 2 different "styles" of overlanding.
My wife and I leave after the 4th for our big trip this year to Colorado and we'll be taking our 20' Winnebago travel trailer and the FJ. We'll stay for a month in 1 campground on the western slope of Rocky Mountain National Park. From this campground we'll do day runs on National Forest roads and trails. The FJ is equipped with a portable kitchen/fridge setup so we'll find a "primo" location to picnic and enjoy the mountains each day. Plan is to explore as much of the western slope as possible in a month. Each evening we'll head back to the campground. I guess you'd call that style extended stay/day trippin.
With my SIL it's totally different. We hook up the trailer/RTT and head out to remote places like Big Bend Ranch State Park and disappear into the back country for days on end, usually camping in a different location each night, and hopefully reaching pavement only on the last day. I guess you'd call that style explorin/boondockin.
For each style, the basic equipment on the FJ remains the same, only the lodging and location of the lodging changes.
What's your overlanding style(s), and what compromises have you made? Does it work, or are you rethinking your equipment and objectives?
I was trying to solve multiple situations with the same "setup", and IT JUST DIDN'T WORK.This has led to compromise(s). Finally, I had to realize that the trips I've been taking totally depended on who went with me. If it was my SIL we always shot for out of the way remote destinations, and if it was my wife we'd gravitate to more organized campgrounds with more amenities.
So the solution, for now, is 2 different setups for basically 2 different "styles" of overlanding.
My wife and I leave after the 4th for our big trip this year to Colorado and we'll be taking our 20' Winnebago travel trailer and the FJ. We'll stay for a month in 1 campground on the western slope of Rocky Mountain National Park. From this campground we'll do day runs on National Forest roads and trails. The FJ is equipped with a portable kitchen/fridge setup so we'll find a "primo" location to picnic and enjoy the mountains each day. Plan is to explore as much of the western slope as possible in a month. Each evening we'll head back to the campground. I guess you'd call that style extended stay/day trippin.
With my SIL it's totally different. We hook up the trailer/RTT and head out to remote places like Big Bend Ranch State Park and disappear into the back country for days on end, usually camping in a different location each night, and hopefully reaching pavement only on the last day. I guess you'd call that style explorin/boondockin.
For each style, the basic equipment on the FJ remains the same, only the lodging and location of the lodging changes.
What's your overlanding style(s), and what compromises have you made? Does it work, or are you rethinking your equipment and objectives?