There it is Karl, cross and it's just a few minutes to home

BOAT, Karl, we don't need no stinkin boat!

Opps, Karl, is stuck! HANG-ON, on the way...

Nearly there Karl

Karl, how long can you tread water

Umm, Jeep is filling with water

Jeep is jammed into your rig Karl

Getting dark

Water is COLD, my nuts are up in my ear lobes

Time for the Warn 9.5ti to earn its money, UNDERWATER

Masterpull Superline earning its keep

Karl and his
“SilverBullet” Kia took us on a trail run North of the Aqua Fria River [since
it was impassable] today. The trip was to do some exploring and see some
less driven trails on the North side. Try NEVER driven.
It was truly great fun
and a rare adventure to be had by all. I ran my AC and my heater, heard
thunder, saw lighting and full rainbows. Got a sunburn in the pouring rain and
did it pour! Fun nonetheless as we went thru the ghost towns of Tip Top
and Columbia. Mines were to be spotted from every window of your Jeep.
Old homesteads and saloons long since abandoned, yet still haunted by miners
and bar girls.
However, the real fun
and adventure started when we reached the impassable Aqua Fria on its North
bank. Its 6 pm and the way back is well over 20 miles of treacherous
trail, trail that has rarely seen Jeeps and most often and last traveled by
wagons pulled by mule.
Karl and his “Silver
Bullet” is lead and I am his six. We pull up to the bank or the raging river
and our thoughts turn to the trip back. Most likely an all-nighter
covering a trail that was dangerous to begin with and now rain soaked becoming
slicker than Jose’s week old salsa two hours after you ate it.
Karl and I look at each
other, no words are spoken, but the die is struck. Karl straps in his Kia and
drives toward the River as if he is going thru the Mickey’s D’s drive thru and
he’s running an hour late getting home. Little does Karl know it’s the
river of no return!
The “Silver Bullet”
slaps the water like 450 lb man doing a belly flop. Karl is driving
upstream with both feet on the floor and one is nailed to the
accelerator. The Kia’s exhaust is gurgling like Monica choking on Bill’s
cigar.
All is well until less
than 35 feet from shore Karl’s now submarine strikes underwater hazards as if
Karl had commanded, “All ahead STOP!”
The waterlogged silver bullet coming to a halt faster than a young man
hands on your 16-year-old daughter as you turn on the living room lights.
I watch the scene unfold
like a Grade B movie. I know that hanging around like a cheap suit is not going
to fix the situation. I jump in my Jeep and head out across the water to the
rescue like John Wayne and the 7th Cavalry. As I approach Karl’s sunken
treasure the onslaught of the River slams me into Karl. I am wedged into Karl’s
Silver Bullet by the raging River and now Karl’s engine is deader than week old
beer.
Karl can’t go and I can
go, but would rip the side off his rig as a Buzzard rips the flesh off a
highway carcass. Thankfully, I had just installed Corner protectors and side
rails or “crapper bars” as some call it. I don’t care; it just saved my Jeep!
By the time I notice
those silly plugs in the foot wells of my Jeep aren’t in I notice the mornings
coffee cup floating by. This and the fact that my crotch has shrunk up into my
earlobes tells me I need to take some kind of action. Climbing out the window
on the passenger side since I don’t dare open the door on my side or the water
would rush in like the watered drinks down at the Dew Drop Inn.
I head to my Warn 9.5ti winch only to find it underwater
and now I am up to my armpits in it. Guess it’s a good time to see if those
advertisements are for real. I unreel my Warn winch with its stronger
than hell MasterPull synthetic rope.
Karl and I pull out a
100’ of rope and hook my Jeep to a truck that was watching the action. I climb
back in my Jeep and put the B&M shifter in 2nd gear, 4-low. With my thumb
on the winch control and my right foot on the skinny pedal, I winch and drive
upstream away from the SilverBullet, the water hazard and out of harms
way. This is a full pull of nearly 100 feet, winching under water
upstream with my Warn 9.5 ti as my only paddle.
I land on the shore and
in that, “Noah” of a rain I know that Karl and SilverBullet are heading
downstream without a paddle unless I can get him out. At this time, the
water is rising faster than a Paris Hilton mini skirt and going faster than
last weeks paycheck. I also know that he is stuck on an underwater stump
that is jammed between wheel and wheel well. I drive past him on the bank
and somewhat down stream to hook on and pull him off.
Thanks to MasterPull
line we are able to get him hooked up to my Warn. He is well out into the
water and the winch line is at its limit. I pull and back out at the same
time so as not to be sucked down stream with Karl. The electrical system
is dimmer than Brittany Spears at a MENSA convention, but Jeep, Warn, and
Masterpull are not to be doubted.
SilverBullet comes off
the stump with a large splash as it lifts up and out of the water like a
whale. I am backing up the shore and winching the deader than road kill
rig upstream then finally out onto the bank.
When all was said and
done, the Warn 9.5ti did two full pulls in less than 15 minutes and one was
underwater. My 5000 lb Jeep had a tub full of water and was heading
upstream in a 365 cu ft per sec flow and if that ain’t a cow peeing on a flat
rock I don’t know what is. Not sure, what the SilverBullet weighed but it
had to be similar, plus that puppy was jammed on a stump like a freshman boy
stuck on a senior cheerleader.
I winch Karl out, he
hits the starter button and suddenly his once deader than road kill engine
springs to life and all is well.
Many thanks to Warn
winch for flawlessly working under water, Masterpull Superline synthetic
rope for pulling when the pulling was really tuff and of course, my Jeep, for
never missing a beat. I owe both of you one, so the Warn will get a new
synthetic rope to replace the ragged one and my Jeep will get the Line-X tub
coating that you have been wanting so long.
