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Another Trail, Another Adventure!

 
    


This is another one of our many recent 4WD journeys. This time, however, I had my Canon instead of my phone.

Three people: "You can't do that road in a stock suburban." One person: "You are brave if you are going down that road in THAT!!" Clint: "Move aside and watch me." We had to wait for a couple to turn around because the first 100 yards scared them. It took them 45 minutes to do that 100 yards. Besides them, we saw a few motocross bikes, a nice young couple in a Jeep, and an older couple on a four-wheeler. For most of the trail, we had it to ourselves.

We had a BLAST! This was the worst part of the road, and the suburban scraped just a little. That's OK. No damage was done, and now there's slightly more clearance for the next driver! We did it alone and had no issues with the trail at all. We met one of the men who told us we couldn't do it at the bottom of the trail. He said Clint was one heck of a driver!

We have been able to do many trails people did not think a stock suburban could do. The key is tire placement. Clint will study the rocks and find his path through. Then he takes it easy.

For our rock crawling friends, there are some great picture-taking opportunities on this trail. For overlanders, there are some very nice, very large campsites.

Clint and I just like to go for the remoteness and scenery. As someone very strong in naturalistic intelligence, I thoroughly enjoy "getting away" from it all. I watch the change in the topography and flora and fauna. I also enjoy finding medicinal and edible plants.

There are many unmapped trails off of this area that we did not have a chance to explore, so Lord willing, we're going back! We took one that had hip to waist-high grass in the middle. It appeared no one had been down there in ages. It gets quite narrow with very sheer drops on either side. At the end is a small grassy field where you can turn around.

There was very spotty cell phone reception. If you get stuck, you might have to walk a mile or two to get reception. There are places to camp along the way. There were no creeks or streams for water, so if you plan to camp, you need to bring all you need in with you. There is plenty of firewood to gather. All of the campsites except the few on Flagpole Knob have plenty of privacy.

Location: I-81 to exit #235 on to route 256 west , north on route 11, west on route 727, north on route 613, west on route 257, this turns into route 924 west, which becomes a ridge road up to the intersection for Forest Road 85A / Flag Pole Road. Keep going and you will find the Stoney Gap section of this road (Forest Service Road 225 aka "Stone House" Road).. Be safe, and have fun!!


This post first appeared on Contentment Acres, please read the originial post: here

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Another Trail, Another Adventure!

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