When I was young, our family subscribed to National Geographic, plus we had National Geographic's "adventure" book. There were many expedition adventures described there (across Asia, Africa, South America, etc.) during a time that sometimes it was necessary to build a road and some vehicles had caterpillar tracks. The degree of danger was off the charts.These sort of expeditions make what people accomplish today seem trivial and almost like nothing.Australia started the overland craze
You mean like Lewis and Clark?When I was young, our family subscribed to National Geographic, plus we had National Geographic's "adventure" book. There were many expedition adventures described there (across Asia, Africa, South America, etc.) during a time that sometimes it was necessary to build a road and some vehicles had caterpillar tracks. The degree of danger was off the charts.These sort of expeditions make what people accomplish today seem trivial and almost like nothing.
These sort of expedition adventures are precursors to "overlanding".
The original Overlander family portrait?I was thinking of the emigrants making their way across the California and Oregon Trails.
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The even had pizza cutters![]()
When automobiles were new, the roads were designed for horses and wagons. As a result, early cars were always driving on dirt roads. All of the successful cars had very tall skinny tires.I was thinking of the emigrants making their way across the California and Oregon Trails.
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The even had pizza cutters![]()
Huh? My own family took that highway at least once in the '70s. A '69 Cadillac Sedan De Ville (472 motor) pulling a camping trailer. There was plenty to see. There was no abnormal concern for survival. We did not go see the brothels though.Something more current would be the "Lonliest Road in America"
It was 30 years ago, in July 1986, that Life magazine used the term “The Loneliest Road in America” to describe the stretch of U.S. Route 50—more commonly known as Highway 50—from Fernley to Ely across central Nevada. AAA even advised against traveling the highway, claiming there was nothing to see. For those who were crazy enough to travel that lonely road anyway, they were advised to carry survival gear such as water and cold-weather clothes.