I remember riding in my grandpa’s 48 Willys CJ2a in the early 60s. I was 5 or 6 at the time. He would drive around town and take me up into to the hills. He also had a couple of old military ambulances that my dad grew up hunting, fishing, and camping in and the stories that surrounded those days are too numerous and crazy to compile. I’m especially amazed now that those ambulances were driven to Nevada, Idaho, and Wyoming, as well as covering Utah many times over. My grandpa had a service station on 36[SUP]th[/SUP] and Harrison in Ogden and would use the 4x4s for repair and recovery runs.
My father always had 4x4s when I was young. Our hunting trips up to the Lost Creek area above Croydon were always a great time of the year, and there were a few years when it snowed a lot during the week while we were up there, making the trip out especially scary. We also had a couple of recovery runs to town and back up into the hills during those hunts. The 4x4s I remember most were grandpa’s Willys, an early Dodge Power Wagon and a 63 Ford truck.
When I was 13 my dad bought a 66 Ford Bronco and it was the first rig that I actually got to wheel. We would hike a long ways while hunting and my dad would send me back to get the EB. That Bronco became my driver when I turned 16 and my dad bought another EB (69). After spending months fixing it up, painting it, and installing a stereo, I learned a hard lesson. Early Broncos are not sports cars. I was racing a friend (as 16 year olds do) and took a corner to fast. Went into a ditch, hit a culvert grate, over corrected, and launched into the air. I went end over end the first time, and sideways 6 more times, according to the cop report and my friend that was behind me. No seat belt usage at that time. I was lucky to live.
After that it took a while before I bought my next rig, but I’ve had many since then. My off road experience grew exponentially when I purchased an 88 XJ in 1996. It had 5 different suspension systems on it in 2 years, and it ended up with the first front long arm upgrade I had heard of, an Atlas, Dana 44s, and 37s. I started competing in 99 at the second Warn event and ran ARCA, RRCA, UROC, and CalRock events from 99 until 2006. It was fun and expensive, but I wouldn’t trade the memories.