Tracy City trail ride

Tracy City trail ride

This weekend we attended the Damn Locals 4×4 club annual toy ride. We did not know what to expect but we loaded into Jennifer’s Jeep and took along a toy to donate. We had considered meeting the group leaving from Coalmont since we had heard about the weekend from their Facebook posts. However we passed the meeting point of the Damn Locals along the way and saw several interesting rigs about our size so we decide to just join in there.

No one jumped up to greet us but the people were welcoming enough when we approached them. We talked with a group of XJ’s and had made tentative arrangements to ride with them. However, a large group headed out and the XJ’s seemed to be waiting on someone who was still along way off. We dropped in at the end of a long line of various sized rigs including a stock TJ on street tires and several on Rockwells and huge boggers.

We dropped off the pavement near Pryor Ridge Church. We really had no idea where we were going or what lay in store for us. At various stopping points folks waved us around and we ended up in the middle of the pack. Directly behind us was another red XJ except his had leaf springs all around and full size Ford axles. There was another XJ behind him with tall control arm drop mounts. They were very friendly to us at the various stops.

We were directly behind a group of Toyotas that had come up form North Georgia. We could not see the front of the line. And since we did not have a CB radio, we had no communication with the group while moving.

We crossed a creek several times. There were several challenging rock ledges to cross and some mud holes so deep that we had to bypass.

Jennifer got hung once when she slipped sideways and hung her rear diff on a rock. Just a couple of stacked rocks and some side to side shaking got her moving again without any assistance from the others. They seemed to be willing to help but were nice enough to see if we could get ourselves out before offering to help.

We eventually stopped for lunch at the mouth of Peter Cave. We had elected to take the more challenging entrance down the creek bed. The Toyota in front of us lost a taillight that I returned to him when we stopped at the cave entrance.

We explored the cave which is large enough to drive a truck into. We had lunch and began to join some of the conversations going on around us. We learned some of the history of the area and plans for the future. I still had no feel for where I was and we had made too many turns to keep track of.

The group of Toyotas left to go their own way as did the two other XJ’s. We finally met our trail leader and tucked in near the front of the line. We also figured out who was running tail gunner so we knew when our group was all together at the stops.

We watched while some of the taller rigs played in a creek bed. We then ended up at a Church in the middle of no where. There is a small concrete block building marked Bryant’s Cove Baptist Church. I am not sure how the church folk get there because the way we went was very challenging. There seemed to be about a hundred rigs parked in the church yard.

After Janice and Jennifer made use of the church outhouse, we followed our leader up out of the cove. Our next stop was a huge mud hole. Actually it was several mud holes. The area appeared to be the intersection of at least three trails and there were rigs scattered in the trees as far as I could see. Every trail was blocked by something going on. It looked like a three ring circus.

A Full sized Ford had tried the deepest mud hole and may have popped bead on his huge tire. From the commentary and laughter, I think he had just re seated the bead using ether with the usual fire and excitement. I noticed his truck was held up by a bright pink Hi Lift.

The exit we wanted was blocked as far as I could see and our trial boss walked forward to clear a path. There was more commotion gong on down another trial with several full size pickups doing lots of tire spinning in the mud. The other group of XJ’s could be seen through the trees. They seemed to just be stuck in the traffic jam.

Eventually we had a path but not an easy one. Jennifer had twisted her ankle so she asked me to drive from that point. I had to negotiate a very deep mud hole with a step exit and then work between some trees with a scary off camber toward the creek below. I made it fine with both mirrors intact. Her Dick Cepeks gripped well, even though we had only aired down to 20 psi or so and never disconnected the sway bar.

A huge Toyota Land Cruiser was in front of us so we knew that if he fit we could too. The two of us ended up a bit ahead of the rest of the group as our trial leader had stayed behind to make sure people knew the way through the confusing set of bypasses. We stopped at the first wide spot which was a good ways up the trial. Once we had all lined back up again, dusk was settling in fast.

We arrived at a choice of exits from the cove. The trail we chose to follow the Land Cruiser on is called Parson’s. It is a step rocky climb. I slightly under estimated the difficulty from the bottom however. Next time I will air down and disconnect the sway bar.

The Land Cruiser was doing well with his spotter stacking a lot of rocks to get him through. I did pretty well as long as I kept moving. The trail was a lot like rail bed in Harlan except that it goes on forever. Like most it gets more challenging as it goes up.

For most of the trail I drove loaded with people as well. Janice, Caleb and Hunter were in the back seat and Jennifer in the front. With he ankle hurting I hated to ask to walk and spot much. Eventually I made a mistake and got hung on both diffs. I could not move forward or backwards. Everyone bailed out and as I was about to get out and see if I could jack it up and get a rock under a tire, one of the Other trail leaders showed up and began helping me work through. The Truck behind me had caught up by this point and gave me a slight tug backwards to get me off the rock. I was then able to take a different line and make it over the obstacle.

My guide stayed with me and helped me over the next difficult section. I was getting nervous because the trail was getting harder and the daylight was gong away. The Land Cruiser kept getting hung in front of me as well. I seemed to do fine until I would stop. Each time I stopped, I had trouble getting moving again. Also, the brakes had gotten spongy and at times non existent. That made backing up to take a different line very scary.

It was really getting dark when the Land Cruiser got hung on the last obstacle of the climb. My guide went forward to help them and I went up to watch. After a lot of rock stacking and maneuvering, they finally got out. Not before dislodging all the rock bridges they had built however.

I followed my spotter’s advice as best I could but I could not really get lined up like he wanted me to due to the scary lack of brakes in reverse. I was able to make it up the last rock in just two or three attempts however. I pulled to the side and popped the hood. The master cylinder chamber for the rear brakes was empty and had been sucking air. Jennifer asked around and got some brake fluid. Adding it brought the brakes up to full pedal immediately. For that I was very thankful.

I was congratulated on my climb by several in the dark. There were several groups mixed together at this point so I am not sure who was who. There were some big tube buggies that took the even more difficult upper climb in the dark. I ended up in the lead of my sub group and followed the winding trail through the trees to a wide spot where those who had not take Parson’s were waiting for us.

We regrouped and headed out of the woods. Back at the High School where we had met we said our goodbyes and headed home.

I hope to go back soon, but I will still have to have a guide. There are just too many side trails and loops for me to keep track of after just one ride along.

Video from the XJ list Fall Crawl

Tombstone is a trail we have all run in the past. Now it has washed out into a much more challenging obstacle. I was content to just watch.

Josh decided not to run Lion’s Den this year after having trouble on the entrance.

Fall crawl 2011

Fall crawl 2011

The XJ List returns to Harlan County’s Black Mountain Adventure park

My GMC Suburban was just not running right. It was down on power and had a severe stumble puling from stops and up the long hills on I 75 north of Knoxville. I had changed the distributor cap and rotor before leaving, but clearly there was still something amiss in the ignition system.

I arrived at the Harlan County campground about 30 minutes later that I had expected. However a quick text message to the group found them still having lunch at the top of the hill in the campground.

I got my park pass and checked into the campground. The drive up the hill to the campground was still a challenge towing the Jeep; but this time I made it without any assistance.

After, I unloaded and set up the tent, Wayne arrived and then we hit the trails. We were hoping to beat the rain. We managed to make it to the helipad and onto White Tail trail before the rain came.

We dropped down in to the ravine. Neal, Mitch and Adam took the rockier track While Wayne Jenny, Evan and I took the gravel track parallel to the boulder strewn path.

Soon the tricky downhill rock garden had Neal’s Cherokee lying on his side against the bank. A couple of guys pushed him back onto his wheels. Just a few moments later, Mitch laid his Wrangler on its side a little further down the trail. He was able to drive out of the flop with some encouragement from his spotters. No damage was evident on either rig.

The rest of us made a scary off camber scurry to join them at the bottom of the hill. The top of the hill had gotten slippery by this time due to the rain. At the end of the trail we found it blocked by banner tape. Apparently this trail was closed but we had seen no markings on the other end. We untied the tape and drove out onto 10 and put the banner back behind us.

We then did a little exploring on trail 11 and made our way over to Rail Bed. Jenny took the lead as this has now become her trail after the scary incident a few years ago. She made it look easy going over the slippery rocks all the way to the exit before getting stuck in the mud near the top of the exit. She got a quick tug and was out.

I tried to follow her line at the exit but I got mostly no where before burying my tires in mud. She tossed me a strap and pulled me to the top. Adam made it up behind me with lots of wheel spinning action. Mitch took what used to be the hard way out, but now that the rocks have moved around a bit, I wonder if I would not have been better off going the way he went.

We then made our way across the park back to our camp. By then the rain was hard and steady. Trail 45 was a slippery muddy mess but a fun way to end the day going back down to camp.

On the way down I kept hearing a dragging sound for the rear of my Jeep. It would go away when I accelerated but on the long downhill sections, it would just continue to get worse. I finally saw a place to stop and noticed that my left rear wheel was no longer centered in the wheel well. The noise was the tire dragging the rear fender opening.

I limped it on to camp. When I jacked it up and took of the wheel, I saw that the center pin of the leaf spring was sheared off. The main axle was free to slide back and forth along the main leaf. Using a couple a jacks and a large block of wood for a stand, I was able to get the spring pack apart and drive out the broke part of the pin.

We made a trip into town and luckily found a center pin. I also picked up an extra C clamp to help press the spring pack together. The next morning, I used a tapered pin to align the spring pack. I put in the new center pin and used the two C clamps to press the pack together while I tightened the new pin. I then used a ratchet strap to pull the axle back into place and align the pin with a hole in the perch. I then tightened the U bolts and was ready to wheel again. I did all this while most folks were still sleeping.

The other Kentucky folks showed up soon afterwards and we hit the trails again. We decided to do some exploring in the western part of the park where we really have never been. After the long climb up a very muddy trail 45 we regrouped at the Middle Fork Playground.

There were two high powered big tired buggies getting spanked by the slip and slide of trail 15. Adam could not wait to show them how it’s done in his XJ. He made it easily to the top and came back down one of the play hills.

We all made it up the slippery hill and regrouped in the small perch at the top of the first hill. Neal got hung up on about the third hill and those of us remaining at the bottom decide to take the bypass to speed things up some.

The two groups met back up at the end of trial 15. We then made our way out trial 12 to a wide spot for lunch. It had snowed on us here the last time I was there. This year is was just windy and cold.

We then paused at the Tough Truck challenge area. Josh made a run at the huge rock pile there. He made it across but somehow in the process of having all four wheels in the air at once got air in his power steering. We jacked up his rig and did a quick system bleed to get him going again.

We decided to head on west and see the sights. The leaves were beautiful as the sun broke through the fog. We stopped at 4 poles over look for a group photo. We also did a quick clean up of the area collecting a 30 gallon trash bag of bottles and cans.

We continued on west to the end of the park. Some how Neal spit out an axle shaft U joint so we paused for a quick trail repair. Unfortunately we had the trail completely blocked by out large group. He was nearly done with the trail fix when a group of ATV riders showed up. They were at first concerned over how long we would have the trial blocked but they were soon amazed at how fast we can swap an axle shaft as a group in the woods.

We then made our way up what looks like Kentucky’s version of Moab’s Lions Back. This trail is called Cliffhanger. It begins as a long gravely climb. Then it levels out and becomes a very narrow and steep rock ledge. There is an electrical tower right in the way so you have along the cliff to exit hence the name.

I was a little spooked as I drove to the top because I had not walked the trail like those in the front of the line had done. But I made it up with just a slight new pucker in the seat cushion.

After cliffhanger, we made our way across the park back to camp. It got dark on us along the way. The darkness added a little to challenge for us except for Evan who had no head lights. The darkness added a lot of challenge for him

The next morning we headed out to Lion’s Den. We had lunch and walked the trail. However rains had made entrance a mucky mess and Josh decided not to run. We then headed back across the park to Crawford’s cry. We had planned to run Your Turn but we got lost at a confusing intersection.

We headed out and got to watch so people on the new zip line fly across our heads. We eventually made it around to Crawford’s cry.

Neal headed up fist and Josh, Mitch and Adam followed. The climb was slipped in places and had large dry rocks in others. It was much harder than when I ran it a few years ago. Neal made it to the top but had trouble on the exit. There was no place to hook a winch line either. I walked back down and was driving Jenny’s Jeep up to use as an anchor when Josh found another way out.

Somehow in the maneuvering, Neal broke the main leaf in his right rear spring. As darkness approached we began to engineer a trail fix to get him out.

About the same time Adam popped a front axle U joint and had to back down. He also found he was out of fuel when he got back to the bottom. We had two trail fixes going at once.

I took my tool bag up to Neal and we decided to try using C clamps to hold the spring pack together long enough to get the XJ off the trail and down to the Evart parking area. With the springs clamped together, I left them to lead the rest of the group back to camp and get Neal’s tow rig.

Back at camp part of the group began dinner prep while Jenny and I took the long highway around the mountain to take Neal’s truck and trailer to him. It was well after dark when we got around, meeting Neal. But his rig had made it to the parking lot and he was able to drive it onto the trailer with the C clamps holding things in place. Our trail engineering fix had worked.

Once we were all back at camp, we dined on delicious fire cooked steaks and potato boats. We enjoyed the stars and conversation well into the night. Another excellent trip with the XJ list.

2011 Crow Mountain Hill Climb

2011 Crow Mountain Hill Climb

This weekend was I worked the seventh running of the Crow Mountain Hill Climb. I worked as I always have as Course Marshal. The race is held near Hollywood Alabama on a crooked section of County road 33.

My job is to make sure the course is staffed and ready to run. I also respond to any incidents and help clear any damaged cars from the course.

This year, I loaded up my fire extinguishers, tools and tow straps. I mounted my flashing light and siren on the roof of my Jeep.

We camped in the big hay field at the base of the mountain. It got unexpectedly cold during the night. I have always brought my Carhart coat in the past but I completely forgot to pack it this year. I was really missing it about 1am on Saturday.

did take a walk in the field however and enjoy the beautiful array of stars. Being well away from city lights the stars seemed much brighter than at home. The milky way looked like a huge cloud in the sky.

At 6:30 am I gathered up some pylons from the equipment trailer and carried my road closed sign to the top of the hill. I made it back down in time for the workers meeting which was more about putting people into their correct positions that training this year.

It seemed to take longer than usual tot get every body in place and all the equipment distributed around to the various corners. Janice and Jennifer ended up monitoring start and traffic in and out of side road 111.

I made sure the road was secured at the top with a Jackson County Deputy monitoring it and took up a position just past the finish. I could see turns 11 and twelve from there.

I had relatively little to do. I just monitored the radio net and confirmed that the road was in fact still secure between each set of runs. There were only a couple of red flag incidents neither of which required me to respond. And we have no unexpected visitors coming in from the woods this year either.

Saturday was a long day with racing continuing right up to the 5 pm closing time. The races seemed to be enjoying the hill and getting plenty of runs. The local FM radio broadcast was missing this year so I did not keep up with times.

The organizers had a nice pizza dinner and I won a nice shirt in the worker prize drawing. I lay down in the tent intending to get up and join the bon fire. However, I fell asleep and stayed that way until morning.

Sunday morning was just as cool. I think it was 39 degrees. We got the workers in place much quicker and had the course ready to race before eight. However, the Fire Trucks and Wreckers decided to wait to come based on their experience from the day before. So we all waited on them to show up.

I got to make a fun run up the hill as the big trucks were getting into place. Unfortunately I was past the timing lights when I started so I did not get a time. It was still fun to run the Jeep up the mountain knowing the road was closed and I could use all of it.

Again the day ran without incident. The drivers got as many runs as they wanted. In fact they were all out of tires fuel or energy by 2:30pm. We shut down early due to lack of cars wanting to run.

We cleaned up the course quickly and headed down the mountain. We gathered up the tent and camping supplies and said our goodbyes It was good to see folks that I see only once a year.