The RV sat precariously on the edge of the road, with about a 400-foot drop to the driver’s left. The driver stayed the entire week with his RV, unwilling to leave his stuff, said Brad Klipping, a mountain biker who came upon the scene Thursday.
He was also unwilling to detach his car, believing it was helping anchor the RV to the road, Klipping said. No cars were able to pass, he said.
“I can’t image how he got that far,” Klipping said.
The driver slept under a tarp, apparently unwilling to stay in the RV perched on the dirt road. “It was kind of unstable, the vehicle was,” Barger said.
@chumley
I saw a mini Cooper on that road a few years ago. Pretty far in, too. Pretty amazing. By "pretty amazing", I mean, it's pretty amazing how stupid humans can be.
When I lived in Idaho I was in an online group like HAZ that was more focused on peak bagging. That group's "Joe" who ran the website also drove an ancient Geo Metro hatchback that you would see being driven into some interesting spots.
I've been on that road many times, I guess they need signs for those.......oh wait you would need signs on every dirt road in the Juans. I can't make out the plate but I'm guessing they are from Texas. They tend to stop and park wherever they want.
louie wrote:I like to think I know my limits…until I don’t…
Well, you seem to ask questions about where you can or can't get your rig to, so that's indicative of at least a semiconscious understanding that the vehicle has some limitations.
I'm not sure what my spirit animal is, but I'm confident it has rabies.
Alston_Neal wrote:.oh wait you would need signs on every dirt road in the Juans.
I was Jeeping on the Alpine Loop once and got stuck in a hole right at a hairpin near Engineer Pass. I had to give it max acceleration toward the abyss to pop out of the hole, then slam on the brakes the instant I actually moved. I lost interest in doing such things thereafter.