Free: Contests & Raffles.
He needs to find a buddy with a cat to pull him out of that spot.
Quote from: h2ofowlr on March 02, 2015, 09:04:51 PMHe needs to find a buddy with a cat to pull him out of that spot.I know some of the guys who dozer fire line, they go down some steep ground, but there is a reason this ridge had a hand dug fire line. What would stick out more? A stuck red Jeep or a stuck red Jeep and a stuck dozer?
A lot of folks keep saying to drive it out of there. Like JH nimrod said, You would need a beast of a rig to make that climb back out.....if all went reasonably well. OR the guy could roll it trying and scatter parts and fluids all the way down the hill to the orchard below, increasing the damage and more than likely ending his life.Here is a picture taken from the other side of the river that might give you a better idea of the magnitude of where the jeep sits. This ground is not hard, it's soft,loamy, crushed granite, the kind of stuff you take one step up and slide back two. The red X is basically where the two track dirt road ends, the red circle is where the jeep sits, yellow line is basic route of decent.
Quote from: NOCK NOCK on March 02, 2015, 08:02:45 PMA lot of folks keep saying to drive it out of there. Like JH nimrod said, You would need a beast of a rig to make that climb back out.....if all went reasonably well. OR the guy could roll it trying and scatter parts and fluids all the way down the hill to the orchard below, increasing the damage and more than likely ending his life.Here is a picture taken from the other side of the river that might give you a better idea of the magnitude of where the jeep sits. This ground is not hard, it's soft,loamy, crushed granite, the kind of stuff you take one step up and slide back two. The red X is basically where the two track dirt road ends, the red circle is where the jeep sits, yellow line is basic route of decent.So I'm confused now. Do the tracks prove that he got in the position by driving UP the hill or did he come down from the road at the top and then turn around somehow to try to drive back out? Can't imagine turning around on that stuff...
Quote from: gasman on March 02, 2015, 05:22:37 PMFirst off, I do not condone what this jack wagon did, and this is going to BUT you all sound like a bunch of Its dirt and sage brush, not a meadow of lushes grass being fed on, or the middle of the feel area for deer wintering deer in 2 feet of snow.Get that thing up that ridge, and have the dumb arse take a shovel, some seeds and take care of the dirt he disturbed.Rent a dozer and get ot out of there....jeesh......And you gusy would be suprised what a capable jeep can get through or up I 100 percent agree with this post. It's not the huge deal these guys make it out to be. No need to try and ruin his life.
First off, I do not condone what this jack wagon did, and this is going to BUT you all sound like a bunch of Its dirt and sage brush, not a meadow of lushes grass being fed on, or the middle of the feel area for deer wintering deer in 2 feet of snow.Get that thing up that ridge, and have the dumb arse take a shovel, some seeds and take care of the dirt he disturbed.Rent a dozer and get ot out of there....jeesh......And you gusy would be suprised what a capable jeep can get through or up
The state is not in the used car business. Fine him and make him rehab the the damage to a condition acceptable to a state bio., at his expense. JMHO
I realize they make a bunch of money from seizures but the stuff goes for pennies on the dollar. In this case I don't feel they would get back enough from the sale to cover the cost of rehab of the habitat to original condition. Crappy thing is, neither confiscation or responsibility for cost of rehab will happen if the RCW lists a fine up to $5000 as the penalty.