GORV - Digital Magazine Issue #32 | Page 38

After wondering whether we had made a wise decision, our spirits rose as we saw a formed gravel road appear 100m ahead. However, as the tracks became ever boggier, we soon realised that this was 30m further than our momentum and all our Cruiser’s offroad smarts would carry us. We slowly came to a wheel-churning halt, with hard- surface salvation clearly in sight. “No problem,” I reassured my doubting wife, recalling my list of fixes for this sort of situation. I considered the options: improved traction was the first. I had a long-handled shovel and two pairs of MaxTrax, one on the roof rack of our Land Cruiser and the other that were part of my Trakmaster Pilbara Extreme’s standard gear. It didn’t start well. As I stepped from the Toyota, my feet stuck deep in the surrounding mud to the point where I couldn’t lift them and fell backwards into the morass. I realised that I had lost the meagre moral authority I had summoned to convince my wife that everything was under control. After getting upright, I found the shovel that I carried in the back of the Toyota and laboriously dug out a path in front of each of the Cruiser’s four wheels. I then stuck a MaxTrax there. No go. The Toyota’s wheels were already deeper than I was able to dig and each attempt to engage the MaxTrax drove the tyres deeper. Michael Browning has travelled Australia with his Trakmaster Pilbara Extreme. 38 \