Continued...
Carburetor
Hill was truly a wicked cool obstacle.
It was a steep climb with rock stair steps similar to
Guardrail at Tellico except the rocks were covered in a greasy
sand/mud compound. On either
side was a long drop off that would render a winch useless if you fell off
the side. Steve took the line
to the left and did an excellent job of negotiating the hill.
Rob went next and hammered on the hill but just couldnt get his
zook to bite so he moved over for Jay to attempt the hill.
Jay took the line to the right and with a little go-go juice
overcame the obstacle.
I went
next and took the line to the right but as I got past the first part Tim
guided me a different way to cut back across the rocks.
Unfortunately it failed. I
couldnt get the tires to bite on the rocks due to the mud so I backed
off the step and proceeded up the right-hand side.
After we made it up the slope Rob decided to follow our line and finally made
it up and positioned himself to winch Chesters zook.
Tim wanted to give this hill a shot so he drove Chesters zook
and broke the left front axle in the process so the winch pulled him up
the rest of the way.
We
decided to head back to the hotel to make repairs, watch the video from
the day and get some rest. Tim
and Steve were planning on going to Louisville to fix Tims zook while
the rest of us just hung out at the hotel and watched wheelin videos,
but before we could do that we had to get past seven large mud holes that
were filled with water from the previous days rain.
These mud holes were deep but not that bad.
We bypassed a few and hit a few but nothing impassable.
Now it was onward to the hotel.
Sunday
- February 18, 2001
Tim
and Steve arrived back at the hotel around 8 am and Tim explained how a
broken piece of axle had gotten hung up in the ring gear from a previous
trip and destroyed the teeth on his 5.12s.
Steve had a spare 5.12 back in Louisville and set it up for Tim so
he could run on Sunday. They
were up until 3am fixing his zook. Thanks
again Steve for all of your help.
This
was another cold yet beautiful morning.
The sun was shining hinting at warmer temperatures.
Like I said, hinting! Since
it was Sunday and church was in session we had to unload at the parks
parking lot. We were in luck
because there was another access point for the trail just down the road
therefore our on- road time would be limited.
We went up this section of trail and once again we encountered small ledges but this time there were patches of ice. As the weather warmed up the ice melted and mud softened, now it was gooey again. This trail led us to the rock pile from the previous day. Since Tim did not get to tackle this pile the previous day he was determined to conquer it.
Tim went every direction over this rock pile he could think of until he got his right rear spring hanger hung up on the biggest rock in the pile. The good part of this was that we were able to see how droopy his suspension was, the bad part was that he was stuck. As Tim tried to get the rig free he busted the left front axle when it hooked up on the rocks. After that Tim pulled the cable and winched himself off the rocks. Once again bad luck was upon Tim.
From the rock pile we proceeded to the "Tabletop" and then on to the bypass for the "Bowl" heading to a new trail for the day. When we arrived at the creek crossing we went straight
past the electric substation to an area we did not attempt the previous day. Steve told us that there was a great hill climb named "Moonshine" a little ways down the trail.
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