Dude swings like a girl. Just use a man size mini sledge and hit that sucker.Got the hub a day early.View attachment 352669 Hopefully the weather will hold on Saturday--of course it's supposed to rain Saturday AND Sunday.
Gonna try this--
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Dude swings like a girl. Just use a man size mini sledge and hit that sucker.Got the hub a day early.View attachment 352669 Hopefully the weather will hold on Saturday--of course it's supposed to rain Saturday AND Sunday.
Gonna try this--
Nice. Timken..?Got the hub a day early.View attachment 352669 Hopefully the weather will hold on Saturday--of course it's supposed to rain Saturday AND Sunday.
Gonna try this--
Yes sir.Nice. Timken..?
I might try it. Costs only a couple of nuts and a bolt. I still remember the fight I had with the one side. Rust in NJ is a *****!!Dude swings like a girl. Just use a man size mini sledge and hit that sucker.
Final Colorado update!
Yesterday evening we drove south and hit Geneva Creek(?). We found a mild trail on AllTrails listed "Geneva Creek Iron Fens", and we hit it about 5.30.
It had snowed up there about 4 inches already when we started up and it was a gorgeous drive. A ways up the trail we saw the biggest coyote I've ever seen, and the clearest view I've ever seen of one alive in the wild. There were tracks in the snow that looked like a pack was likely close. You can see part of the tracks in the first picture.
We made it *almost* to 10,000 feet when the snow started up again and pretty strong. 5 minutes further up the trail we would've made it, but at 9,950 feet we turned around. It was only about 30 degrees, but the missus was nervous about spending the night on the mountain and it was about half an hour from being dark. Definitely somewhere I'd want to revisit next time we're in the state.
We're back on the road towards home today. We've almost crossed Kansas ("The Long Flat"). A weird place for a fella who grew up in the mountains. The windmills fill me with a weird anxiety in my chest. Too much rotating mass, I think. We're gonna drive a few more hours and then hunker down at a rest stop for the night.
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Yeah better to get out while you can. There’s always people around here that stay too long up one of those roads in the Cascades after the snow starts and end up getting stuck and then that’s that unless they get lucky and a search party finds them before it snows another 15 feet on top of them.Final Colorado update!
Yesterday evening we drove south and hit Geneva Creek(?). We found a mild trail on AllTrails listed "Geneva Creek Iron Fens", and we hit it about 5.30.
It had snowed up there about 4 inches already when we started up and it was a gorgeous drive. A ways up the trail we saw the biggest coyote I've ever seen, and the clearest view I've ever seen of one alive in the wild. There were tracks in the snow that looked like a pack was likely close. You can see part of the tracks in the first picture.
We made it *almost* to 10,000 feet when the snow started up again and pretty strong. 5 minutes further up the trail we would've made it, but at 9,950 feet we turned around. It was only about 30 degrees, but the missus was nervous about spending the night on the mountain and it was about half an hour from being dark. Definitely somewhere I'd want to revisit next time we're in the state.
We're back on the road towards home today. We've almost crossed Kansas ("The Long Flat"). A weird place for a fella who grew up in the mountains. The windmills fill me with a weird anxiety in my chest. Too much rotating mass, I think. We're gonna drive a few more hours and then hunker down at a rest stop for the night.
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Amen. Good to know when to turn around. Years ago I went up on a peak with a few friends. All with extremely capable Jeep’s. Lockers, winches, 35”-40” tires… All the goods. We ended up on the mountain for 12 hours, winching each other forward. At the end of the day, my buddy’s built 9” rear was toast. We had to drive that sucker down I-70 with only FWD, and a locker..! It was pretty harrowing. If we hadn’t been “prepared”, we’d all have been stuck on the mountain in 3+’ of fresh snow. We actually would have turned around but the trail we were on was only wide enough for one vehicle, and a couple thousand foot drop off the side of the mountain.Yeah better to get out while you can. There’s always people around here that stay too long up one of those roads in the Cascades after the snow starts and end up getting stuck and then that’s that unless they get lucky and a search party finds them before it snows another 15 feet on top of them.
Sweet. So up off of Guanella Pass -- did you connect from the Georgetown (I-70) or Grant (US 285) side?
Yeah better to get out while you can. There’s always people around here that stay too long up one of those roads in the Cascades after the snow starts and end up getting stuck and then that’s that unless they get lucky and a search party finds them before it snows another 15 feet on top of them.
If you ever want to watch interesting high altitude recovery videos, check out the YouTube channel for this non-profit group. They seem like a class act, just search for "Colorado 4x4 Rescue and Recovery".
Colorado 4×4 Rescue & Recovery – We Recover the Rockies
www.co4x4rnr.org
Amen. Good to know when to turn around. Years ago I went up on a peak with a few friends. All with extremely capable Jeep’s. Lockers, winches, 35”-40” tires… All the goods. We ended up on the mountain for 12 hours, winching each other forward. At the end of the day, my buddy’s built 9” rear was toast. We had to drive that sucker down I-70 with only FWD, and a locker..! It was pretty harrowing. If we hadn’t been “prepared”, we’d all have been stuck on the mountain in 3+’ of fresh snow. We actually would have turned around but the trail we were on was only wide enough for one vehicle, and a couple thousand foot drop off the side of the mountain.