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Yes you must come up these switchbacks |
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In short order you are at the mining camp and headed out. Since we are headed back to Las Cruces we will go out through Box Canyon yet again and on to Florence (Again!). We will take Rt 89 to Tucson where we will pick up I 10. In Florence we stop at Burger King for a burger and I remove the front drive shaft (I still get a vibration from it) I notice that even though I had the U-joint replaced in Tennessee it is stiff. We get to I 10 with time to spare |
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We stopped at a NM tourist information @ exit 20, Lordsburg looking for a New Mexico travel guide with town info and history (Texas has a great travel guide). I was inside talking with the attendant when he asked me “Is your jeep supposed to be smoking?” I looked out and it was smoking, so I ran out and cracked the hood open… I saw FLAMES!! I got my extinguisher out cracked the hood and sprayed!!!! The fire was out, open the hood and survey the damage. While I was looking at it I could see glowing inside my PCV hose. So I ripped it out. As I watched, the air intake crossover tube melted and drooled over the injectors! Even though the fire was out plastic continued to melt. |
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Day 30 Saturday Made calls; to the New Mexico association of 4 wheelers. He gave me a place that is a jeep speciality shop “Mule Barn” in Las Cruces NM. And some junkyards. I called the junkyards first, one guy even laughed at me “You want parts for a 2000 TJ!”. Well I found none. I found a contact in El Paso. He couldn’t find any parts for me either. The dealers had no parts, in fact because of the three day President’s Day weekend, it would be Wednesday before I could get parts out of a dealer. So I ended up at the Mule Barn around 10:30 AM. Jeff looked at what I had and could not help me but he knew somebody that could, Fred Huff. Fred bought wrecked TJs and fixed them up, in fact he should be coming by any moment to pick up a part he had dropped off. (So this guy is the reason I can’t find any TJs at the junkyard!). People kept coming over and being amazed at my tale of woe and that my jeep with Pringles cans ran. One gentleman that came over, Lance, said, “nice jeep,” and wanted to know if we came here for the Chili Challenge. A Jeeping event happening next weekend. That sounds great, but right now we are waiting for Fred. He said he should be here in a moment (does everybody in this town know Fred?). Lance took us into the Mule Barn and had them print out an application for the Chili Challenge. Lance said “hope to see you there, as I will be a trail leader for three days.” At 12:15 Fred showed up. He came over looked at what I had and proclaimed “I got everything you need to fix her up but I need the stuff for my project car”… I said “I was hoping I could find someone with the parts as junkyards don’t have them, and I was hoping to beg, barrow, steal or buy the parts”. Huff said “if want to come with me to the dealer and order new parts for me I’ll give you what you need”. Yes!! Off we went to Fred’s house to make sure he had the right parts.
Yup he got all the parts, off to the dealer. The dealer people where amazed, astounded, astonished got out their cameras took pictures!
$320 for the wire harness… “only 8 wires are burned but one injector connector is burned” I was thinking out loud. “We may have just the connector” piped in the parts guy. 2 minutes later “Yup got it $25“. “OK I’ll take it” I said. OK now for same shade and to work, Fred offers his house. “I will take you up on that” said I. So off to a motel to leave off Sue and over to Fred’s house. I got started at 3:00 it was very awkward working on the jeep, I had to hang over the middle of the motor. During one of my breaks I went into Fred’s garage where he was working, putting body armor on the rear quarter of his jeep. I looked at what he was making and said like a smart aleckly, “You do know they make that part after market!” Fred said “Ya ... but nobody makes it the way I want it”. “That’s my problem”, I said , “When I buy something I have to modify it.” (a soul mate!). I was finished by 6:00!! Just like new!
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Day 33 Tuesday Got up at 7: AM back to work! The mountains to our west have snow on them this morning. Checkout time is 11:00 then back to Kinko’s to upload the next installment. From T or C (Truth or Consequences) It’s a 1 hour 20 minute drive from T or C to Las Cruces. We also stopped off in Hatch to buy a ristra to send to my niece. A ristra is a hanging rope of peppers. And Hatch is the Chili capital of the world 300,000 acres of Chilies! The man selling them said I needed to mist them real good because rite now they are so dry that with the slightest touch the peppers brake off, so it would never survive being shipped home. After Kinko’s we find a Hotel in Las Cruces to be near the “Chili Challenge” Meeting area (State fair grounds exit 132 on I 10) We found BayMont an excellent value at $44.00 for two. The BayMont is at exit 140 on I 10. Now off to the fair grounds to register for the “Chili Challenge” found our way there and $65.00 poorer where registered ($5.00 for trail defense fund (attorneys to try to keep the trails open)). That’s it, it took all day, just for that stuff.
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Day 1 of the Chili Challenge The start of the Chili Challenge is today and we are signed up for the “Dona Ana” trail. The fair grounds are about 10 miles west of our Hotel. Our departure time is 8:30 AM so we got there at 8:00. Wow we left on time! We have only 6 People in our group, which is nice. When you go to an organized event a lot of the other participants are there to take pictures of their jeeps. As a result it does not take 3 times longer to run 18 than it does 6 people, it will take you 6 times longer! After we left the fair grounds and took back roads to the trail head, about 40 minutes (we could have cut the time in half by going by highway but some people have modified their jeeps to such an extent that they are incapable of highway travel.) We go to the town of Dona Ana just north of Las Cruces where we cross under I-25 on a graded road and turn left. This whole area is littered with trails, they go up, down and around the steep foothills of the Dona Ana Mts. As usual this is desert area so not much vegetation is around. The foothills are steep, and start off only about 50 ft high. With each new hill they get higher and taller and the trails get steeper and steeper when you go up all you see out the windshield is sky. When you come down (I HATE going DOWN) all you see is the wash bottom in front of you, and everything that is not bolted down in the back, ends up in the front seat with you! While this type of trail does not look like it, it could be dangerous, not knowing how to climb or more correctly when to stop, can have tragic results. See Driving tips - Hill Climb as well as Airing down. These foothills seem to be made of the same type of terrafirma as a lot of the foothills in the southwest, that is, a mixture of sand and rock. These foothills seem to have a harder base than many of the foothills I have seen. As you get higher up into the foothills you start to see rock formations sticking out the top of the hills. Looks like the rock formations are uncovered by having the surrounding soil eroded away. On one of the trails, as you wait for your turn to go over the edge and into the abyss, the jeep in front of you goes between two rock outcroppings and head down. It’s so sharp a drop off that all you can see is the bottom of the jeep as he goes over the edge and is gone! You get the impression that you are waiting your turn to drive down into the throat of mother earth! The two rocks look like giant teeth and the jeep in front of you barely fit. As you move up for your turn all you see are the teeth and the sky. You thread your way between the teeth the front of the jeep drops and finally out in front of you over the hood you see the up side of a hill and beyond that more hills and then the Dona Ana Mts. in the distance. You can’t however see the bottom of where you are going. Since I did not hear any screams or cries for help I assume the jeep in front of me survived the trip down. We are up next (since I am righting about it I guess you can assume I too made it). Our trail continues to go up – down and around the foothills. Much of the rock looks to be like concrete (sedimentary). Eventually we come to “eye of the needle”. Back when jeeps where smaller the trail would go through the eye, in fact there used to be a professional jeep race that went through the eye. When we ran out of hills called it quits and headed back to pavement (Actually there were plenty of hills left, we where running out of daylight). See Trails Area area for trail map and GPS data. |
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The hills start off short. But they get much taller! |
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Down into the throat of mother earth |
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How steep is this, even though I am much lower, I can see the roof of the top jeep as he starts down!! |
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One of the not so steep hills. |
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Las Cruces |
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Eye of the needle |
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Day 35 Thursday San Diego trail |
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I HATE SIDE HILLS |
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What remains of Tonuco |
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The Odyssey |
[Odyssey] [Day 8-14] [Day 15 -21] [Day 22 - 28] [Day 29 - 35] [Day 36 - 42] [Day 43 - 49] |
[the shaft] [airing down] [Salsa] [Air Compressor] [Cooking Meatloaf] |
[Trails] |
[Choke Cherry] [Holy Cross] [Death Valley] [Chili Challenge] [Caballo Mts] [Gila NF Trip] [Titus Canyon] |
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