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AOAA "Last Fall Bash" trip report

Discussion in 'Trip Reports' started by Roody, Nov 27, 2017.

  1. Nov 27, 2017 at 6:37 PM
    #1
    Roody

    Roody [OP] Well-Known Member

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    “You never have an idea of just how capable a car is until you have it on the track.” Well, that’s even more so for off-roading, and a recent weekend at Pennsylvania’s Anthracite Outdoor Adventure Area is a perfect example of that.

    A big shout-out to the attending members of TacomaWorld, without whom this "event" simply would not have existed. I’ve off-roaded with people from a number of other outlets/forums and none have been as welcoming and enjoyable to do so with as the TW crew. After seemingly months of planning, we finally met up in the coal hills of Shamokin for a long weekend of wheeling.

    My weekend started out with a five hour drive out after work on Friday to a super-cheap motel in the small town of Danville. After a decent night’s sleep and waking up to find only one upside-down-but-still-squirming bug on the bathroom floor, I made a quick stop for a highly nutritional breakfast with fellow white 4Runner owner/operator Kevin, then we made the half-hour drive southward to the hosting location of the weekend: the Anthracite Outdoor Adventure Area, a place I’ve been many times and was eager to return to.

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    Being among the first to arrive is new territory for me, but Kevin and I made a point of it so as to get a jump on the process of paying for a pass, airing down, and so on. The office supposedly opens at 9am; at 850 they had already given us wrist bands and we were cleared for take-off. While airing down to trail PSI my dad, a veteran off-roader of 30+ years, arrived for his Saturday stint riding shotgun to my right. As the other TW members pulled in we introduced ourselves and joked around in the light, chilling rain, then gathered into our groups and set out into the woods as the clock neared 930.

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    Team Nightmare, as my group was called, consisted of five trucks with drivers and rigs intent on running trails with blue and black difficulty levels. But as we were quickly reminded, bad weather has a serious affect on trail difficulty. With slick, rain-soaked rocks scattering the expanse of the trails, blues quickly became blacks and even greens, the easiest of the bunch, became blues. It’s a war of man and machine vs gravity, with the latter seemingly being much more powerful than it is in dry conditions. Weather doesn't get worse than it was on Saturday. Not in my opinion, at least; I'd rather have snow. With torrential downpours and temperatures hovering at around whatever 2*C is (my truck only displays in metric), Saturday was a day of battling the elements.

    AOAA’s west preserve is similar to its east in many ways, but since it closes at 2pm it’s just about mandatory to head straight into the west area upon leaving the parking lot. Less than five minutes on the dirt and we were climbing over tub-sized rocks, tires clawing for traction as we piloted our rigs away from trees and, with much trouble, uphill on the extremely off-camber sections we were traversing. I got scared quick and radioed to Lloyd who was behind me to verify I wasn't near my tipping point, and he confirmed I was A-OK..for now. It’s still shocking to immediately hit the trails in conditions that fall directly under the “seriously shitty” heading, but it’s an eye-opener and warms you up much quicker than slowly building up as you go.

    After completing the seriously off-camber first off-shoot, we crossed the main trail and immediately crossed paths with another group of Toyotas, the leader of which told Greg, our own leader, “It’s super hairy down there!” Of course, Greg responded to my questioning if we would head that way with a huge smile and a hearty, “Fuck yeah we are!”
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    A quick downhill led to a main blue trail on which a group of Jeeps were taking turns attempting-- and seemingly failing-- to spot each other up a rock obstacle. We passed them and continued on our way, following our blue trail and Greg's lead. We wove our way towards an intersection and on this little descent the Stormtrooper 4Runner took a bit of a beating.
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    Lloyd saw it coming from his position behind me. Having spent ten-plus years off-roading an ATV on which you sit dead-center, I’m still working on acclimating myself to not being in the middle of my vehicle while on the trail. And so there I was, too far to the passenger side, when the evils of torrential rain and the truck’s not-insubstantial weight took it off a rock and towards a tree on the passenger side. Over the CB Lloyd’s voice crackled through, with “right rear!” being the only words I heard...and then his recommendation that I stop and pick up the section of fender trip that the tree I tagged ripped off. White plastic safely in the back of the truck, we pointed deeper into the woods to seek out more blue trails.

    The going was rough. Every rock that would usually prove a grippy surface for tires was turned slippery by the cold and the wet. Our blue trail adventure meant nonstop spotting and continuous high-stress situations as tire placement was of the utmost importance.

    And then over the CB, Kevin radioed from the back: “Lloyd, I’m in trouble.” A distress call such as this would usually mean some sort of catastrophic failure, but luckily the circumstances were nowhere near such. Upon walking down to Kevin’s first-gen pickup, the damage was easy to see: the front driveshaft had slipped out, leaving him with a rear-wheel-drive vehicle at the bottom of a fairly steep, rocky climb. In under twenty minutes, less than the time it took Lloyd to fire up his grille and cook us a delicious trail-side lunch (thanks again Lloyd!), Kevin had repaired his truck and returned it back to 4x4 status. With stiff suspension and a manual transmission, I give him big credit for wheeling it as well as he did; repairing his own truck in such little time garners even more props.
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    Then it was back to business, snaking through the trees and doing our best to keep traction on the water-soaked rocks. Much time was spent on a trail on which the width of the space between trees was an issue for our mid-size trucks; a lot of backing up and multi-point turns were done. I have no idea how a full-size or a full-width Jeep would manage.
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    Very soon after our lunch we came to a section that would cause many second looks: to the left, an off-camber approach to a difficult blue-level rock-strewn downhill, to the right a genuinely tough black-level downhill with rocks the size of couches and a quick elevation change so steep that even walking down it was treacherous. Up front Greg continued with his high-energy “I’m trying everything!” mojo and attacked the black-level section with gusto. And with very little spotting, and very much credit to his truck’s sliders and skids, he made it down in what seemed like no-time at all. Dan followed, having then seen what line works and what line doesn’t, and quickly made it to the bottom as well. Next was my turn, and not wanting to push the Stormtrooper with no full belly skid, I opted to take the blue path and, with a ton of fantastic spotting from Lloyd, made it to the bottom in one piece. Lloyd then made it down the black path on his own with next-to no spotting, and Kevin bounced down the black path right after.
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    Last edited: Nov 28, 2017
    markelhof, steele-taco and Subway4X4 like this.
  2. Nov 27, 2017 at 6:37 PM
    #2
    Roody

    Roody [OP] Well-Known Member

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    It was at this point that we had to make a decision: where to go? The west side technically closes at 2pm, and the likelihood of us making it back in time was “unlikely.” As such, we chose a (relatively) short, uneventful path directly back to the gate and made a beeline for it. Shortly after we rounded a corner and came to a hill that, based on the angle of incline and decline and the height of the thing, was impossible to miss and almost comically out of place. After Lloyd popped over a log the size of his truck’s tires, Greg, of course, took the opportunity to try and make it over said hill but it snagged him right on the frame and left his truck high-centered twenty-plus feet up. With no luck pushing it off, it came to breaking out the tow strap and pulling Greg’s truck off its perch using Dan’s. Every willing vehicle/owner over the obstacle, we trudged onward.

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    Upon arriving around 300pm at the gate we found it locked and phoned the front office for someone to come let us in. Minutes later we were back in the parking lot, Kevin loading his truck on trailer for early departure and my dad hopping back into his own personal vehicle to head home himself.

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    A quick aside, and a thank you to my dad for joining on this trip. Over the last ten-ish years we strengthened our relationship through the ATV adventures we took together, and, thanks to my spine surgery and the recurring issues with his Polaris RZR, we’ve been sidelined from the quad world, for now at least. Having him with me in the 4Runner on a different off-roading adventure was something I will always hold with me as an incredible experience. Hopefully he will join us again in the future, as I think he enjoyed it more than he will admit.


    Back to the trails. We then headed into the east preserve for the first time of the weekend. After briefly being warned by a park staff member that the trails close at 4pm and it was already 315pm, we pointed towards the closest blue trails to the parking lot. With Greg still leading we found a short, ultra-steep uphill that then dipped down into a bowl of exposed rock, which is probably my new favorite obstacle in all of AOAA. From there it was a rain-ridden upwards trek over large rocks and through tight quarters in a series of 4-LO climbs.

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    A few turns later we came to a T-intersection, one with a slick, muddy, abrupt climb to the right and a normal downhill to the left. Ever-willing to take a shot at something, Greg turned right and punched it. With wheels spinning in the muck he made it about three-quarters of the way to the top and then, not able to climb any further, began to slide back down; a light tap on the brakes sent his Tacoma sliding under full lock back down to where I was photographing from. With Dan and me laughing, Greg then demonstrated his exceptional three-point-turning skills and left us in the rain-sodden dust as he prepared to show us down the hill to the left.
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    It was then back to the lot as our allotted time was coming to a close and we had a feast to get going. An unexpected amazing part of the AOAA Last Bash weekend, a full-fledged potluck-style dinner was held in the campgrounds. A big thanks to Lloyd for organizing this, as it was enjoyed by many and really rounded out the day well and added to the camaraderie. After plenty of food and enough shooting-the-shit to hold us over until the morning, those of us camping stayed put and those of us staying in the rented house drove the long 1.3 miles to our warm, comfortable, dry, bed-bearing place to stay for the night. After some whiskey and casual talk we were informed that a fellow TW member would be coming by to use our tools and garage to fix his alignment. Around 10:15 Joe and his dad came by to sort out his Tacoma’s front end. An hour and a successful test-drive later, we called it a night.

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  3. Nov 27, 2017 at 6:38 PM
    #3
    Roody

    Roody [OP] Well-Known Member

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    Day two started off nice and early, with the bright shiny thing that was hidden by the clouds the day prior giving us positive energy for the first time all weekend. With most of our group having left Saturday night, Team Nightmare now consisted solely of myself and Lloyd. As such, we picked up another Kevin, Mark, Jim, and Jeremy, making our group a full six trucks strong. Having the most experience in AOAA of our bunch, I took the lead and, not wanting to eat up time getting lost in the deep expanse of the west preserve, pointed us towards a fun trail in the east corridor: the BA.

    We ran BA last time I was at AOAA and had an absolute blast doing so. With the rest of my group not having run the trail, and with the sun shining brightly to give us good weather for exploration, I figured it would be a good place to start our Sunday. The BA starts off with a trail-exclusive dip down into a storm drain, followed by a slightly upward climb as your truck straddles the concrete V-notch. Here we found an unexpected roadblock in the group of truck ahead of us. The BA is a blue trail and, though not a terribly difficult one, it certainly has its difficulties and challenging obstacles. I’ve seen multiple trucks get hung up on the exact same spot, and the BA can definitely prove troublesome for less modified rigs.

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    And that’s exactly what happened. Tony, the last rig in the group ahead of us, found himself in a bit of a pickle, his frame hung up on the same rock that I've seen snag other rigs in the past. Much rock stacking got us nowhere except some added tire smoke and crushed fingers, so Lloyd broke out the winch cable and easily dragged Tony out of his predicament. Taco un-stuck, we navigated him past his trouble spot and then worked some of the other guys further on as we tried to keep the group moving. The rest of BA was relatively uneventful aside from Tony crunching his cab and bed-side on a tree, but with some careful spotting we were able to get everyone through BA and to the trail-end intersection without further trouble.

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    A quick pow-wow later and we were heading to our next section, the BA extension, which was a quick and fun little trail with a cut-out that all of us tackled with ease. Nothing to this point had caused any issue for Team Nightmare 2.0, which meant we were all in good spirits and were moving along nicely when we started Muddy Shackle.

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    We made it about a quarter of the way through when relative disaster struck: Jim’s 4WD actuator stopped working, leaving him with a rear-drive truck and, with no rear recovery point and tires balled up with mud, no way of easily getting him off the trail, even though an escape route to the green main trail was less than fifty feet away. We pushed, pulled, tried everything; it still took an hour to get Jim’s Tacoma off Muddy Shackle. Finally he succeeded and Jeremy worked his Jeep through the escape route to follow Jim out.

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    With Jim and Jeremy safely heading home, the rest of our group continued over the rocks on the trail we had started a long while before. With very little trouble we made it through to the end, happily dipping through the sink-hole type pit and then blasting through the muddy ruts that caused so much trouble last time. We then faced another decision: most of our group wanted to hit the road home by 3pm-ish, but that wouldn't leave enough time to really explore another blue trail with a safety net of time in the event of further issues.

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    Knowing we hadn’t quite gotten our fill of wheeling for the day, I brought the group over to run some of the blue trails close to the parking lot that we had run the day before, in hopes that it would be a little easier to play around and pick different lines sans-rain. We all had smiles as we climbed up the ultra-steep, short climb and down into the bowl on the other side, and being able to see out into the valley below made for a good sight as we ran our last trail of the day.

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    As the clock crossed 2 we directed our crew of Toyotas back to the lot, checked out, and congregated again in the campground where Lloyd heated up leftovers from the prior night on his trusty tailgate-mounted grille. We ate, joked around, and poked fun at each other over delicious chili, all of us dreading our drives home away from the wonderland that is the woods and the time spent wheeling with friends. And then, just as abruptly as it started Saturday morning, it was over. We double-checked our trucks, said our farewells, and all left the park to head back to our normal lives, minds basking in the glory that was the weekend at AOAA.

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    There’s just something special about a weekend off-roading with similarly-minded enthusiasts. For those who love it, it simply cannot be replicated elsewhere. It’s refreshing, rejuvenating, exhilarating, and a full-fledged spirit-booster all at the same time, and the AOAA Last Fall bash was wholly so. It was a great event enjoyed by many, and it speaks to the fun of it that some of us have already started talking about a Spring Bash. If that doesn’t reflect well on how enjoyable of a weekend it was, I don’t know what would.



    Thanks to Dave for the idea for the event (and for organizing groups etc.), Team Nightmare (in both variations) for an awesome time on the trail, Mark for putting the house together, Lloyd for getting the potluck together, etc. And a thank you to everyone who I met for being great people to hang out with and to become friends with. I can't wait for next time.
     
  4. Nov 27, 2017 at 6:44 PM
    #4
    Subway4X4

    Subway4X4 Shameless Copy Cat

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    Nice job!!!!

    This is great stuff.

    I’m gonna have my wife read this.

    I think she’ll have a better perspective of why I love doing this.
     
    El Dahs and Roody[OP] like this.
  5. Nov 27, 2017 at 6:56 PM
    #5
    El Dahs

    El Dahs I am DTF. Down To 'Froad

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    Awesome job Ross!
     
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  6. Nov 27, 2017 at 6:56 PM
    #6
    ADV4R

    ADV4R Well-Known Member

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    That was an awesome trip report! Definitely worth the wait. It's enjoyable being able to revisit the incredible memories created that weekend with this community.
     
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  7. Nov 27, 2017 at 7:10 PM
    #7
    Lux

    Lux @jamesgrouss

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    Fantastic report! Had a smile on my face the whole time reading it :thumbsup: I honestly can't wait to get to read another lol
    Also great pics, I might have to steal a few :p lmk if you've got instagram. Those pics in the fog are badass
     
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  8. Nov 27, 2017 at 7:44 PM
    #8
    Roody

    Roody [OP] Well-Known Member

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    Thanks Lloyd! That's high praise, and I very much appreciate it. Writing these is as fun for me as I hope it is for those reading, but they pale in comparison to the adventures themselves. That said, I do love writing Trip Reports, and I hope everyone who reads them loves them too.


    Thanks Greg!

    Grazi, thanks Kevin! That's the whole point :thumbsup:

    Haha that's awesome, and exactly the kind of response I want these to bring out :D I am on Instagram, @nonotliketheonefromfriends
     
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  9. Nov 27, 2017 at 9:20 PM
    #9
    Redmann

    Redmann DILLIGAF

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    Wow! Reading that trip report took me right back to AOAA. I'm glad I was in your group on Sunday, but I FELT like I was in your group for Saturday after reading through all of that. Well done!
     
  10. Nov 27, 2017 at 9:23 PM
    #10
    Lux

    Lux @jamesgrouss

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    If anyone else I wheeled with has instagram lmk :p
     
  11. Nov 27, 2017 at 10:02 PM
    #11
    Redmann

    Redmann DILLIGAF

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    how do you instagram? i have one, but I'm not sure how to use it. @MarkRedmann
     
  12. Nov 27, 2017 at 10:14 PM
    #12
    Lux

    Lux @jamesgrouss

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    you simply post pictures and then gain internet points, you cash these points in for self esteem boosts.
     
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  13. Nov 27, 2017 at 10:32 PM
    #13
    Redmann

    Redmann DILLIGAF

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    :rofl::rofl::rofl: got it. I'm going to get all the points:militarypress:
     
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  14. Nov 27, 2017 at 11:52 PM
    #14
    steele-taco

    steele-taco Well-Known Member

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    Nice report!
    Had a great time holding you guys up on BA.
     
  15. Nov 28, 2017 at 4:57 AM
    #15
    Roody

    Roody [OP] Well-Known Member

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    Thanks Mark! I know when I read trip reports I like to get that same feeling out of it, so glad my plan worked as intended haha.

    Haha thanks James! Had a blast on that trail
     
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  16. Nov 28, 2017 at 5:42 AM
    #16
    Skell

    Skell KORE

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    Very well written! The photography was stellar. Had to call out me crumpling my bed tho didn't ya? :D
     
    Last edited: Nov 28, 2017
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  17. Nov 28, 2017 at 6:18 AM
    #17
    Roody

    Roody [OP] Well-Known Member

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    Just reporting it as it happened :p
     
  18. Nov 28, 2017 at 6:21 AM
    #18
    Skell

    Skell KORE

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    As any reporter with integrity should!

     
  19. Nov 28, 2017 at 3:31 PM
    #19
    TacoTabe

    TacoTabe Well-Known Member

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    Great write-up, Ross!
     
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  20. Nov 28, 2017 at 8:39 PM
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    steele-taco

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