pamerica
Well-known member
One of my main problems with most of the roads I have seen in my short time out here full-timing, as mentioned in another thread, is that my van has only 6 in. clearance. This is due to the safety shield to protect the propane tank that is attached under the body of the van. I am posting photos here that show what I mean. Someone on here seems to not quite believe me about this amount of clearance...so here you go.
I hope the photos show. If not I will try again. It took me a bit to learn how to resize them, and thanks to whomever posted the steps for adding photos.
This is an older Class B and I have been doing my best to keep it in as good a shape as I can. I like it a lot and hope it provides me with a few more years of traveling. So I am not looking to change it for something else; I need to be mindful of where we drive.
Regarding the definition of the roads in all these places: I have been in the Flagstaff area since July 11. The monsoon rains do a number on the red muddy roads, making all kinds of huge ruts and very difficult to traverse roads. Most of what I have seen, anyway. Plus there are a lot of rocks here that you don't always see at first. I have seen some better roads, but not many. So, since this is my first and only, so far, experience out here, this is all I have to go by.
And as far as only going carefully and slowly...I would have been in deep do do if I had only done that, with the hills, big ruts, mud and rocks. I even hydroplaned on mud...this place was a mess. Now it's dried out some but the ruts remain. When it was that wet and muddy, if I had gone slowly, I would have been stuck. In deep mud a mile up a hill off the road. I know...I was given the advice from camp mates to gun it, don't stop, just keep going. It was very bad. I almost got stuck several times, but gave it the gas.
Now that it has dried out some, the ruts remain and they are often more than 6 inches deep. At the campsite I was at, anyway. So I had to make alternate arrangements.
What the roads are like in the Quartzsite and such areas, is something I will learn. Someone told me yesterday that I can do it with my van, so that's good to hear.
I hope the photos show. If not I will try again. It took me a bit to learn how to resize them, and thanks to whomever posted the steps for adding photos.
This is an older Class B and I have been doing my best to keep it in as good a shape as I can. I like it a lot and hope it provides me with a few more years of traveling. So I am not looking to change it for something else; I need to be mindful of where we drive.
Regarding the definition of the roads in all these places: I have been in the Flagstaff area since July 11. The monsoon rains do a number on the red muddy roads, making all kinds of huge ruts and very difficult to traverse roads. Most of what I have seen, anyway. Plus there are a lot of rocks here that you don't always see at first. I have seen some better roads, but not many. So, since this is my first and only, so far, experience out here, this is all I have to go by.
And as far as only going carefully and slowly...I would have been in deep do do if I had only done that, with the hills, big ruts, mud and rocks. I even hydroplaned on mud...this place was a mess. Now it's dried out some but the ruts remain. When it was that wet and muddy, if I had gone slowly, I would have been stuck. In deep mud a mile up a hill off the road. I know...I was given the advice from camp mates to gun it, don't stop, just keep going. It was very bad. I almost got stuck several times, but gave it the gas.
Now that it has dried out some, the ruts remain and they are often more than 6 inches deep. At the campsite I was at, anyway. So I had to make alternate arrangements.
What the roads are like in the Quartzsite and such areas, is something I will learn. Someone told me yesterday that I can do it with my van, so that's good to hear.