Fireflyfishing
WKR
I live in the mountains, so my daily drivers are my dedicated mountain rigs.
Landcruiers and lexus are like gold down here. Used to be cheap before Western hunter magazine.This is my dilemma too as I don't like putting my truck through some of the forest roads. Been looking at XJ Cherokees or probably a Landcruiser/Lexus GL or GX470 because of the better ride for my wife if we go for a ride somewhere. Always liked the Toyota extra cabs from the 90s though too. Insurance rates keep rising here though which I have to figure in my budget.
same, added fuel injection79 CJ5
This ^^^In my younger years I grew up with a 1950’s vintage Willys jeep being the hunting rig that got dusted off for sage brush hunts - it seemed ideal and in my 20’s picked up a similar jeep and puttered around mountain jeep trails after elk, or sage for antelope. It just feels vintage and seemed right - like cooking bacon in a cast iron pan.
Then along came my friend with a Ford Bronco and my view totally changed. The extra room and creature comforts were really nice - definitely a better rig than the old jeep.
Probably as many friends way back when had short bed full size trucks in the family as the go-to mountain rig.
What I keep running into, is justifying a vehicle new enough to be reliable, to just sit and not be driven. Right now my old 3/4 ton pickup sits until a special occasion comes up, but I don’t see it as super reliable, mainly because of the poor quality aftermarket parts that fail regularly.
That's always a thing, but with older rigs, if you're reasonably hand with tools, you can fix a lot of stuff on the side of the road. My brothers and me used to take an old beater suburban to CO every spring to ski. One year we had to replace the alternator on the side of the road. Another year the water pump went out when we rolled into Denver. Although both were inconvenient, we always carried enough tools with us to fix the bolt-on stuff.This ^^^
Last thing I want is some beater to break down 20 miles from pavement and 100 miles from town.