Bster13 said:
Nice pictures, what camera? Also, is that a tarptent?
Thanks! The camera is the
Nikon Coolpix S7000. And yes, that's a
Tarptent Contrail, which is no longer sold and has been replaced by the
ProTrail.
ArtW said:
I passed on an SUV the dealer tried to sell me, now i wonder if I was too hasty
Which SUVs do you find suitable?
Depends what you're looking for. I have a 2011 Toyota RAV4, which is definitely at the smaller end of the SUV spectrum. If you need a ton of space, you're going to want something bigger. But it's fantastic for me because (1) it gets great gas mileage (~31 MPG highway), (2) it's super easy to drive and park, and (3) the rear seats fold down to be nearly completely flat, which makes throwing a mattress down super easy. I don't have to do any modifications to get a suitable sleeping platform. The rear seats of most SUVs fold down to make more room in the rear, but most of the ones I've seen fold down to either not be very flat, or they have a big ol' bump, or something else. That's not a dealbreaker, though. You can always make a simple sleeping platform out of a sheet of plywood and some 2x4's.
As far as which SUVs exactly I recommend, I don't know. I don't have enough experience with more than a handful of them. I know that when I was shopping for SUVs, I knew I was going to be camping inside, so having the seats fold down flat was one of the main things I was looking for. The RAV4 and the Subaru Forester had seats that folded down completely flat (or at least
almost completely flat). The seats in the Nissan Xterra and Honda CR-V did not fold down very flat at all. If you wanted more room, one of the larger SUVs from one of the American manufacturers (Ford, GMC, Chevy, etc.) would have to be the way to go.
anewbiewannabe said:
The photos of the Tetons make me want to get back there even more than I already did. I think the Tetons call to me more than Yellowstone.
Yet more questions for you---on the 55 mile loop, how long did you stay out there? I remember when I was out there the one trail we wanted to do required getting a permit after a certain point, which we discovered at that point, so we weren't able to go there because of time constraints. Does that 55 mile loop require a permit?
Thanks
I did the 55-mile loop in two days. ~30 miles on the first day from the Taggart Lake trailhead to Alaska Basin, and then ~25 miles the second day back to Taggart Lake. The reason I did it like this is exactly for the reason you said: permits. Alaska Basin is actually outside of the national park on national forest land, so you don't need a permit to camp there. Doing the loop in two days instead of three or four or more was a challenge physically but meant that I didn't have to deal with the permit situation. It was worth it for me.
Here's a map of GTNP, and you can see Alaska Basin labeled outside of the shaded green park boundary a bit southwest of Grand Teton.