Your first approach vehicle
Forum rules
- This is a mountaineering forum, so please keep your posts on-topic. Posts do not all have to be related to the 14ers but should at least be mountaineering-related.
- Personal attacks and confrontational behavior will result in removal from the forum at the discretion of the administrators.
- Do not use this forum to advertise, sell photos or other products or promote a commercial website.
- Posts will be removed at the discretion of the site administrator or moderator(s), including: Troll posts, posts pushing political views or religious beliefs, and posts with the purpose of instigating conflict within the forum.
-
- Posts: 149
- Joined: 7/10/2005
- 14ers: 57 1
- 13ers: 9
- Trip Reports (0)
Your first approach vehicle
My first "approach" vehicle was a 1988 Toyota Corolla. I think it had around 100 hp. It was a manual, but that didn't help. The maximum sustained speed on most high mountain passes was about 35 mph. What was your first approach vehicle?
Re: Your first approach vehicle
Rental cars were my 1st approach vehicles. Once I moved out here it has been my 2003 Toyota 4Runner, which has been the best vehicle for my 14ers quest.
Bill
Bill
Consecutive months with at least one 13er or 14er, 88 months
-
- Posts: 2005
- Joined: 11/24/2005
- 14ers: 53
- Trip Reports (6)
Re: Your first approach vehicle
I sold my 2wd Isuzu pickup and borrowed a 4wd vehicle from my dad when my wife and I moved to Colorado. Once we got settled I bought an '83 fj60 that had been stolen and recovered. It was missing a window and the damage to the lock cylinder meant you could start it with a Swiss army knife. But I sure did enjoy thuggin around the hills in it. Max speed between Georgetown and Silverplume was like 40 but in 4lo that old bastard would climb right up a tree if you asked it to. I eventually rolled it sideways off an embankment in the snow and sold the remains back to the junk yard out by the airport that I had bought most of the replacement parts from over my years of ownership.
Circle of life...
Circle of life...
Where ever you are... There you are.
-
- Posts: 2526
- Joined: 5/20/2013
- Trip Reports (0)
Re: Your first approach vehicle
1980 Toyota Tercel. I would regularly drive up the shoulder on the Georgetown hill so semis could pass me.
-
- Posts: 333
- Joined: 12/11/2007
- 14ers: 58
- Trip Reports (5)
Re: Your first approach vehicle
I would be right behind you in my 1980 Toyota Celica. That thing was a rear wheel drive tank whose 4-cylinders begged to be put out of their misery everytime they went up Boulder Canyon. Made it most of the way into Yankee Boy Basin though!SkaredShtles wrote:1980 Toyota Tercel. I would regularly drive up the shoulder on the Georgetown hill so semis could pass me.

“Dogs teach us a very important lesson in life: The mail man is not to be trusted.” — Sian Ford
-
- Posts: 1793
- Joined: 7/10/2007
- 14ers: 46
- 13ers: 24
- Trip Reports (9)
Re: Your first approach vehicle
My first was a Jeep Wrangler. Now I prefer a mountain bike and/or running shoes. Mountains aren't supposed to be easy.
"Tongue-tied and twisted, just an earthbound misfit, am I." -David Gilmour, Pink Floyd
"We knocked the bastard off." Hillary, 1953
"It is not the mountain we conquer but ourselves." Hillary, 2003
Couldn't we all use 50 years of humble growth?
-Steve Gladbach
"We knocked the bastard off." Hillary, 1953
"It is not the mountain we conquer but ourselves." Hillary, 2003
Couldn't we all use 50 years of humble growth?
-Steve Gladbach
-
- Posts: 1167
- Joined: 8/1/2007
- 14ers: 43 10
- 13ers: 177 22
- Trip Reports (56)
Re: Your first approach vehicle
1971 GMC half ton 2WD pickup. Sounds old, I know. But that was in 1973 and I was proud as can be of "old blue".
I take the mountain climber's approach to housekeeping - don't look down
-
- Posts: 1860
- Joined: 6/26/2007
- 14ers: 58 6
- 13ers: 308 21
- Trip Reports (6)
Re: Your first approach vehicle
Ironic ... when The Man and I met, he had a GMC 4WD pickup named "old blue" too.by Jay521 » Tue Jul 31, 2018 8:26 am
1971 GMC half ton 2WD pickup. Sounds old, I know. But that was in 1973 and I was proud as can be of "old blue".

Happy trails, my friend.

As if none of us have ever come back with a cool, quasi-epic story instead of being victim to tragic rockfall, a fatal stumble, a heart attack, an embolism, a lightning strike, a bear attack, collapsing cornice, some psycho with an axe, a falling tree, carbon monoxide, even falling asleep at the wheel getting to a mountain. If you can't accept the fact that sometimes "s**t happens", then you live with the illusion that your epic genius and profound wilderness intelligence has put you in total and complete control of yourself, your partners, and the mountain. How mystified you'll be when "s**t happens" to you! - FM
-
- Posts: 1041
- Joined: 3/19/2006
- 14ers: 18
- 13ers: 2
- Trip Reports (1)
Re: Your first approach vehicle
2000 Ford Focus ZX3.
"To give anything less than your best is to sacrifice the gift." PRE
-
- Posts: 125
- Joined: 6/25/2010
- 14ers: 58
- 13ers: 71
- Trip Reports (0)
Re: Your first approach vehicle
Dude.... So hardcoreTory Wells wrote:My first was a Jeep Wrangler. Now I prefer a mountain bike and/or running shoes. Mountains aren't supposed to be easy.

Buckshot
14er Finisher No. 1,580 ALL TIME
14er Finisher No. 1,580 ALL TIME
-
- Posts: 4690
- Joined: 8/28/2010
- 14ers: 3 1
- Trip Reports (37)
Re: Your first approach vehicle
Bike
You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.
Long May You Range! Purveyors of fine bespoke adventures
-
- Posts: 2526
- Joined: 5/20/2013
- Trip Reports (0)
Re: Your first approach vehicle
That seat looks funny.
NTTAWWT.

NTTAWWT.
