Chris in TX
Member
My first expedition. Ish. Kinda. Only in the broadest possible terms. And even then, not really.
I recently found myself needing to take a road trip from Austin, TX up to Lubbock, and I took the opportunity to get in a kind of soft-road, car camping shakedown for my new-to-me DD. The trip wound up being about 1000 miles, with about 10-15% on county-maintained unpaved roads and included a (cold) night camping in the vehicle at a state park.
My mighty steed for this trip was my box-stock, OEM-equipped, unmodified, all-season-tired, don’t-know-what-all the buttons-do 2019 Subaru Outback 2.5L.
I wasn’t driving a thousand miles in 38 hours for the fun of it (mostly). The reason for this trip, and my codriver from Austin to Lubbock, was this guy
My wife and I volunteer for a hedgehog rescue organization, and this little dude had been surrendered to us the week before (basically the owner got in touch and said they couldn’t care for the hedgehog any more). My role as Pig Chauffeur was to collect the hog from the owner, and deliver it to a long-term foster home ASAP (to keep the stress of a new home to a minimum). According to that post at the top of this Adventure Reports forum, this TOTALLY counts as a “higher purpose”. So tick that Expo box.
I spent a week poring over Google Earth, Google Maps, and my old Texas Road Atlas (which came in handy during Hurricane Ike evacuation in 2008) I had picked out a return route (Lubbock to Austin) that had as much interesting off-pavement driving as possible. I had three main considerations:
First, I wanted the drive to be not boring, and put me a little more in touch with the terrain. The highway route to Lubbock was a slog even at 90mph, and I knew there was more terrain to see along the way.
Second, I wanted to test the car. I know that a dirt county road aren’t the same as a 2-track in remotest Namibia, but an Outback isn’t a Troopy LC either (Though I’m pretty sure I saw one in one of the Top Gear Africa specials, which is basically the same thing). Some of the more remote camping locations my wife and I like to visit are at the far end of roads like these (Big Bend Ranch SP), and I wanted to see how the car would handle what hills, creek crossings, such in its stock configuration before I start spending money to modify it. I was limited in route choice by the fact that all the roads needed to be a: public, and b: actually go in vaguely the right direction, because…
Third, I had about 40 hours to get from Austin to Lubbock and back. So I figured I’d blast up to Lubbock, drop off hedgehog, then turn south and take my planned route to stay the night at Lake Colorado City State Park, camping in the car. The next morning I’d continue my route back to Austin. I wanted to avoid being in the more remote parts of the route after dark, so I tried to plan accordingly. As we will see, I didn’t quite make it. “Expo Rule: Duration: Typically several weeks” LOL NOPE. I GOT WORK ON TUESDAY
Still, it took a lot of planning, soooo…”Expo Rule: Route Planning Requiring Extensive Research” TICK and “Detailed Logistical Planning” TICK.
While we’re at it, I grew up in the German part of Central Texas, so to me anything north of Dallas is basically Canada. “International Borders” TICK.
I left at 7:00 on a Sunday morning and headed north. Apparently, if you want to travel at high speed through the city of Austin, the time to do that is 7:45 on a Sunday morning.
The rest of the drive was uneventful, with my codriver/payload asleep in a small pet carrier on the passenger seat (heated seats and zoned climate control, BTW, are awesome if you have to keep an African insectivore toasty on a 38 degree day but you yourself HATE being hot in a car).
It’s always interesting to watch the terrain change.
1608
More coming
I recently found myself needing to take a road trip from Austin, TX up to Lubbock, and I took the opportunity to get in a kind of soft-road, car camping shakedown for my new-to-me DD. The trip wound up being about 1000 miles, with about 10-15% on county-maintained unpaved roads and included a (cold) night camping in the vehicle at a state park.
My mighty steed for this trip was my box-stock, OEM-equipped, unmodified, all-season-tired, don’t-know-what-all the buttons-do 2019 Subaru Outback 2.5L.
I wasn’t driving a thousand miles in 38 hours for the fun of it (mostly). The reason for this trip, and my codriver from Austin to Lubbock, was this guy
My wife and I volunteer for a hedgehog rescue organization, and this little dude had been surrendered to us the week before (basically the owner got in touch and said they couldn’t care for the hedgehog any more). My role as Pig Chauffeur was to collect the hog from the owner, and deliver it to a long-term foster home ASAP (to keep the stress of a new home to a minimum). According to that post at the top of this Adventure Reports forum, this TOTALLY counts as a “higher purpose”. So tick that Expo box.
I spent a week poring over Google Earth, Google Maps, and my old Texas Road Atlas (which came in handy during Hurricane Ike evacuation in 2008) I had picked out a return route (Lubbock to Austin) that had as much interesting off-pavement driving as possible. I had three main considerations:
First, I wanted the drive to be not boring, and put me a little more in touch with the terrain. The highway route to Lubbock was a slog even at 90mph, and I knew there was more terrain to see along the way.
Second, I wanted to test the car. I know that a dirt county road aren’t the same as a 2-track in remotest Namibia, but an Outback isn’t a Troopy LC either (Though I’m pretty sure I saw one in one of the Top Gear Africa specials, which is basically the same thing). Some of the more remote camping locations my wife and I like to visit are at the far end of roads like these (Big Bend Ranch SP), and I wanted to see how the car would handle what hills, creek crossings, such in its stock configuration before I start spending money to modify it. I was limited in route choice by the fact that all the roads needed to be a: public, and b: actually go in vaguely the right direction, because…
Third, I had about 40 hours to get from Austin to Lubbock and back. So I figured I’d blast up to Lubbock, drop off hedgehog, then turn south and take my planned route to stay the night at Lake Colorado City State Park, camping in the car. The next morning I’d continue my route back to Austin. I wanted to avoid being in the more remote parts of the route after dark, so I tried to plan accordingly. As we will see, I didn’t quite make it. “Expo Rule: Duration: Typically several weeks” LOL NOPE. I GOT WORK ON TUESDAY
Still, it took a lot of planning, soooo…”Expo Rule: Route Planning Requiring Extensive Research” TICK and “Detailed Logistical Planning” TICK.
While we’re at it, I grew up in the German part of Central Texas, so to me anything north of Dallas is basically Canada. “International Borders” TICK.
I left at 7:00 on a Sunday morning and headed north. Apparently, if you want to travel at high speed through the city of Austin, the time to do that is 7:45 on a Sunday morning.
The rest of the drive was uneventful, with my codriver/payload asleep in a small pet carrier on the passenger seat (heated seats and zoned climate control, BTW, are awesome if you have to keep an African insectivore toasty on a 38 degree day but you yourself HATE being hot in a car).
It’s always interesting to watch the terrain change.
1608
More coming