The Land Rover photo thread (original content)

pmatusov

Technical Excellence Contributor
Callsign: AK6PM
10050
 

Shearpin

Well-known member
Continuing the honeymooning theme... Eore, my wife and I southbound in Belize in ‘01. Coming up on 25 years with Eore and 19 years with my wife.

Rover-mooning is obviously a recipe for marriage success. Also, the memories you create make the idea of selling your Land Rover unthinkable...

eorehoneymoon.jpg
 

jymmiejamz

Founding Member
Callsign: KN4JHI
That was always a good trail.
I dont know if its currently open or not.... the battle of landowners and their gates!


.

Is that Shoe Creek? What ever happened with that trail Devil's Ditch? That was a really good tough trail. I only got to do it twice before it closed and I think I was in high school at the time and Rovertym was still in Richmond.
 

Uncle Douglas

Well-known member
Callsign: delete
That was always a good trail.
I dont know if its currently open or not.... the battle of landowners and their gates!


.
Asked Crandall about running it a couple weeks ago. He said it's open @ the bottom and the top. He suggested coming in from the Crabtree Falls end and give it a try.
 

chris snell

Administrator
Callsign: NW5W
Staff member
Somewhere in Utah. 2017 with @chris snell

That campsite was somewhere up in the Wah-Wah Mountains. We had driven out from Salt Lake the day before and stopped at the most excellent Kerouac's in Baker, NV for dinner and drinks. That restaurant was such a cool find. Fantastic, high-end food and great cocktails in one of the most remote places imaginable. If your travels ever take you on to the Utah-Nevada border on US-50 (Great Basin National Park), a stop at Kerouac's is a must.

Anyway, we had driven all day on the Pony Express trail from the west side of Utah Lake out to the border. That trail is normally 1-2" deep in moon dust but rainstorms had turned it into the slickest, nastiest mud imaginable. When we rolled into Kerouac's, we looked like we had been digging ditches or pig farming. We had a great meal and then headed out on new territory south across the West Desert to the Wah-Wah Mountains, finally setting up camp after midnight.
 

pmatusov

Technical Excellence Contributor
Callsign: AK6PM
That campsite was somewhere up in the Wah-Wah Mountains. We had driven out from Salt Lake the day before and stopped at the most excellent Kerouac's in Baker, NV for dinner and drinks. That restaurant was such a cool find. Fantastic, high-end food and great cocktails in one of the most remote places imaginable. If your travels ever take you on to the Utah-Nevada border on US-50 (Great Basin National Park), a stop at Kerouac's is a must.
My travels will take me incredibly close to this place... a couple of days from now :)
 

BenLittle

Well-known member
Callsign: KE7BEN
That campsite was somewhere up in the Wah-Wah Mountains. We had driven out from Salt Lake the day before and stopped at the most excellent Kerouac's in Baker, NV for dinner and drinks. That restaurant was such a cool find. Fantastic, high-end food and great cocktails in one of the most remote places imaginable. If your travels ever take you on to the Utah-Nevada border on US-50 (Great Basin National Park), a stop at Kerouac's is a must.

Anyway, we had driven all day on the Pony Express trail from the west side of Utah Lake out to the border. That trail is normally 1-2" deep in moon dust but rainstorms had turned it into the slickest, nastiest mud imaginable. When we rolled into Kerouac's, we looked like we had been digging ditches or pig farming. We had a great meal and then headed out on new territory south across the West Desert to the Wah-Wah Mountains, finally setting up camp after midnight.
Here:
6EEB4837-CEAC-4160-81DB-AADD4C50B2D5.jpeg
 
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