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Taking a large RV down a narrow, unpaved road raises the same concern as flying an airplane through a mountain pass in marginal weather: you want to be able to turn around if conditions deteriorate. Having been in both situations many times, I can testify that waiting too long to retreat is scary. That gave us the comfort and the capacity. But we sacrificed some accessibility, for even though we have the smallest trailer we could tolerate as fulltimers, 30 feet is still a lot of bulk to haul down those narrow, unpaved roads into the boondocks. Determining whether a back-country road is suitable for our rig can involve as much guess work as research. Maps typically depict these roads as squiggly broken lines with little indication about condition. Local residents who can provide condition reports may not know if the road is RV-friendly. And the regional office of the government agency that oversees a particular boondock-access road may be closed or located miles away. Of course, scouting the road first in the pickup unhitched is always an option, but it’s time-consuming and inconvenient. If the start of the road looks okay, we prefer to just venture onto it, like pilot and copilot poking our noses into the mountain pass, with the understanding that we’ll turn back if necessary. That’s how we occasionally get into trouble. As so often happens, the road becomes narrower and rougher, the turns sharper, the grades steeper. Soon we throw up our hands: Uncle! But the last adequate spot to turn around is a quarter-mile behind. Do we try to back up to it, or keep going and hope for an imminent pull-out? A few times when we proceeded, we wished we hadn't. Three years ago we were inching our way up a gravely road towards a wildlife-viewing area off Route 722 in Since then we've added a transmission-temperature gauge and switched to synthetic transmission fluid, which allows for a slightly cooler operation. We're also more conservative these days. That occasionally means fashioning a makeshift turn-around space on the spot by moving rocks and logs and filling in depressions. Even then, getting turned sometimes takes a half-hour of frustrating, painstaking maneuvering. Once, in
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