ALABAMA
Transcription
ALABAMA
While in Alabama for Blue Torch Fab’s Fabstock ‘07, some local wheelers invited us out to Gray Rock ORV Park just north of Birmingham for some Sunday wheelin’. Gray Rock is one of the more popular parks in the Southeast, with well over forty named obstacles that will challenge just about any rig you can drag though the park gates. With names like Cable Hill, Sense of Humor and Bents ‘N Dents, Gray Rock is definitely not a place for those who cower at the sound of metal scraping rock. Brandon Reed claws his way to the top of the optional exit on Gray Rock’s ‘Bents & Dents’ trail, named ‘The Lunch Line’. After an early morning departure from Dothan, AL, we rolled into Gray Rock behind Rob DuBroc and crew from Muchado Productions and were welcomed by a parking lot full of Rockwells and huge tires. On hand were rigs ranging from a 4.0L TJ on Dana 60 axles and 42-inch Iroks, to an LT1 powered tubechassis Jeep YJ on 47-inch Interco LTBs. These rigs were prepared for the abuse that these Southeast trails would dish out. The first obstacle we hit was one of the park’s newest and most difficult trails, aptly named Sense of Humor. The first rig up the trail was Matt Overton’s ’99 TJ on 42-inch Iroks – and he wasn’t laughing. He bounced off the rev limiter and smoked the tires, but was ultimately denied for all his hard work. Several more tried the climb with the same tough luck. Keith Bailey of The Offroad Connection gave it a shot and flopped his beautiful Hemi-powered Bruiser Buggy the slick Alabama mud and the steep rock ledges proved too much for even the most built rigs. With one flop, some broken parts, a small fire, and hurt egos in our wake, we moved on to the next trail. K C O R Y A R G AMA ALAB After completing the Bump ‘N Grind and Poison Rock trails quite easily, we sped over to Bents ‘N Dents. Park owner Tony Cousins had warned us that it was hunting season and that we could only remain in the park until about 3p.m. or risk the same fate as Dick Cheney’s friends. With muddy rock ledges, a large rock pile, and an optional exit that should have a Surgeon General’s warning about ill health effects, this trail is worth traveling to Gray Rock for. One of the best shows of the day was Cole Shirley in his Jeep YJ buggy on 47-inch tires attempting the optional climb. He took a bad bounce and turned 90-degrees in mid air, cut the wheels down hill and throttled out on all fours. That’s what we like to see! Paul Beattie broke a Dana 60 stub shaft early in the day, but that didn’t stop him from showing off for the cameras as he flopped his Chevy Truggy on the rock pile at the top of Bents ‘N Dents. S N OW ! U O Y MAGAZINE 51