StealthGTI
Autocross Champion
- Location
- Newport News, VA
- Car(s)
- 2017 GTI Sport
I awoke nice and early because I wanted to beat the crowds to the Sequoias. My goal was to shoot the car with some Sequoias and to get a photo with the car/trailer in the fallen tree tunnel. The road had been marked "closed" on Google Maps, but appeared to be open now. I called the road conditions hotline: "Roads open," "Chains not required." I'm gone!
My hotel is at around 350 feet above sea level. The Sequoias are in the mountains. That was not a place to take a trailer without a full tank of fuel. I refueled about halfway there to avoid any surprises. Then came the entrance... all to myself...
It was a beautiful morning and about 45 degrees outside. The sun was up, but still behind the mountains. I shot a few scenic items as I climbed toward the Sequoias...
I think this formation is called Moro Rock, but I'm not sure...
Note: This area was VERY crowded when I descended later...
A higher view of Moro Rock...
There came a point when I noticed that temperatures were dropping. I started to notice around 4000 feet. It was near freezing at 5000 feet. I cannot recall if this first Sequoia was above or below 5000 feet. But this is when I started to see snow on the ground. The road was still clear. Look deeper into this photo and you'll see one of MANY 15-mph switchbacks on this road...
The car had plenty of traction and was pulling the trailer like a champ! I started to see light snow on the road as I approached 6000 feet. Still, the hotline said "Chains not required." So, I was cautiously optimistic that the snow was not going to get worse. I felt the first slip of my tires just above 6000 feet. I was only a few miles from the fallen tree tunnel. But it was beginning to look like I could go no further. There are plenty of pull-outs along the climb. I began to look for a place to turn around. I knew the ride was over when I saw this climb at a switchback...
I had just passed a pull-out to my left and was beside another. But it was too late. My traction went from "good" to "nothing" very quickly and I lost all forward momentum. The car slid backwards each time I eased out the clutch. I could not get to the pull-out that was just 20 feet to my left. I set the parking brake and got out to assess my situation. I was going to unhitch the trailer and get turned around.
Then something shocking happened: The two rear wheels that had been held by the parking brake were not enough to hold the car. The car began to slide down the mountain with me standing ouside! I quickly jumped inside and stood on the brake. I'm not sure how much farther I slid.. A foot? Two feet? More? The car did eventually stop sliding and came to rest like this...
This time, I turned off the engine and left the car in gear. Hopefully, four locked wheels would hold. It seemed to work! The trailer did not make contact with the car. So, I wanted to work quickly to separate them before things got worse, as if a disconnected and brakeless trailer on an icy mountain isn't a bad thing!
The road appeared to have received some sleet or freezing rain that evening. There seemed to be tiny frozen bumps on the surface.
Personal background: I'm a believer in minimizing any negative impact that I might have on others. I make mistakes, but REALLY seek to avoid involving others in them. As I mentioned earlier, I was practically alone on this road. I wanted to clean up my mess before it could affect anyone else.
The back of the trailer was almost against the stone wall. The snow berm was giving me a buffer. My goal was to uncouple it from the car, push it back and away from the bumper, spin it around, and then move it downhill and away from the car so that I could move them each to safety... first, the car and then the trailer. I didn't take many photos because I was busy trying to save the car and trailer.
My technique involved spinning the trailer around and then "surfing it" down the hill a few feet at a time before shoving the tongue jack into the snow berm. This seemed to work well. The tongue weighed about 140 lbs. So, I wasn't lifting if off the ground, just sort of unweighting it to move it left or right. The tongue jack foot acted as sort of a ski. I would lift, pull right, "surf," and then push into the berm when the trailer picked-up a little speed... maybe a few inches per second. I managed to slide the trailer about 30-50 feet down the hill from the car, about 5-10 feet at a time. With some space between the car and trailer, I attempted to move the car over to the nearby pull-out. No luck! I could only slide. So, I set the parking brake, turned the steering wheel, and then let the front wheels spin gently. This action allowed me to pivot the car around to point downhill. From there, I drove to in front of the trailer to see if I could recouple. That didn't work. Here's the little "burnout" where I lost traction trying to back up...
As you can see, I kept the tongue pointing at the berm except for when I was "surfing." I then moved the car down to the next pull-out. So, here's the distance that I needed to move the trailer to reach the car and find some traction...
This photo shows all the skid marks from one stunt or another...
A park ranger came down the hill as I worked. I'm sure it looked much worse than actual when he saw my car facing downhill on the right side of the road and my trailer facing downhill on the left. It looked like I had lost my trailer. "Failure to secure" and "failure to chain" are no joke! I told him what happened and what I was doing. He approved of my plan and was impressed by my ambition. Not enough to help, which I don't blame him, but enough to loan me a set of these...
They made the work MUCH easier. He parked near a turn to provide warning to upcoming traffic, which was starting to pick-up...
I think about 10-15 cars drove by during the hour that I worked. All of them were 4x4 or AWD except for two. The first FWD got stuck, but was able to mount chains in a pull-out. The next one was able to get going with a small push from the ranger and me. After that, the ranger opted to have a truck come sand the road. He encouraged me to wait before attemping to couple the trailer. I was near a blind turn at this point. The trailer was visible, but moving it more may have been hazardous. While we waited, another FWD car got stuck with us. We were able to get her into my pull-out to await the sand truck. It was about 10 minutes away.
While we waited, the ranger encouraged me to leave the trailer in a pull-out and go see General Sherman Tree. "Really? I was going to call it a day. HAHA!" He insisted, "You can't come here all the way from Virginia and not see what may be the largest living thing in the world." He assured me that the trailer would be fine. The sand truck came by and laid sand (the park does not salt). The women waiting with me were on their way and I moved-in to couple my trailer.
I went down to the next pull-out and uncoupled the trailer, but I couldn't leave it there because it wanted to slide down the hill. So, I took it to a level pull-out below 6000 feet and was able to leave it. I found some rocks to chock the wheels.
General Sherman Tree is off-road and about 1/2-mile into the woods. So, no car photos with it. But I did manage to shoot a photo with this tiny tree...
General Sherman Tree is massive! It's neither the widest nor the tallest in the forest. But it carries the most girth farther up its trunk, which makes it the most massive tree in the world. I'll share photos of General Sherman later.
Thanks for hanging out through this nutty story!
My hotel is at around 350 feet above sea level. The Sequoias are in the mountains. That was not a place to take a trailer without a full tank of fuel. I refueled about halfway there to avoid any surprises. Then came the entrance... all to myself...

It was a beautiful morning and about 45 degrees outside. The sun was up, but still behind the mountains. I shot a few scenic items as I climbed toward the Sequoias...
I think this formation is called Moro Rock, but I'm not sure...

Note: This area was VERY crowded when I descended later...

A higher view of Moro Rock...

There came a point when I noticed that temperatures were dropping. I started to notice around 4000 feet. It was near freezing at 5000 feet. I cannot recall if this first Sequoia was above or below 5000 feet. But this is when I started to see snow on the ground. The road was still clear. Look deeper into this photo and you'll see one of MANY 15-mph switchbacks on this road...

The car had plenty of traction and was pulling the trailer like a champ! I started to see light snow on the road as I approached 6000 feet. Still, the hotline said "Chains not required." So, I was cautiously optimistic that the snow was not going to get worse. I felt the first slip of my tires just above 6000 feet. I was only a few miles from the fallen tree tunnel. But it was beginning to look like I could go no further. There are plenty of pull-outs along the climb. I began to look for a place to turn around. I knew the ride was over when I saw this climb at a switchback...

I had just passed a pull-out to my left and was beside another. But it was too late. My traction went from "good" to "nothing" very quickly and I lost all forward momentum. The car slid backwards each time I eased out the clutch. I could not get to the pull-out that was just 20 feet to my left. I set the parking brake and got out to assess my situation. I was going to unhitch the trailer and get turned around.
Then something shocking happened: The two rear wheels that had been held by the parking brake were not enough to hold the car. The car began to slide down the mountain with me standing ouside! I quickly jumped inside and stood on the brake. I'm not sure how much farther I slid.. A foot? Two feet? More? The car did eventually stop sliding and came to rest like this...

This time, I turned off the engine and left the car in gear. Hopefully, four locked wheels would hold. It seemed to work! The trailer did not make contact with the car. So, I wanted to work quickly to separate them before things got worse, as if a disconnected and brakeless trailer on an icy mountain isn't a bad thing!
Personal background: I'm a believer in minimizing any negative impact that I might have on others. I make mistakes, but REALLY seek to avoid involving others in them. As I mentioned earlier, I was practically alone on this road. I wanted to clean up my mess before it could affect anyone else.
The back of the trailer was almost against the stone wall. The snow berm was giving me a buffer. My goal was to uncouple it from the car, push it back and away from the bumper, spin it around, and then move it downhill and away from the car so that I could move them each to safety... first, the car and then the trailer. I didn't take many photos because I was busy trying to save the car and trailer.
My technique involved spinning the trailer around and then "surfing it" down the hill a few feet at a time before shoving the tongue jack into the snow berm. This seemed to work well. The tongue weighed about 140 lbs. So, I wasn't lifting if off the ground, just sort of unweighting it to move it left or right. The tongue jack foot acted as sort of a ski. I would lift, pull right, "surf," and then push into the berm when the trailer picked-up a little speed... maybe a few inches per second. I managed to slide the trailer about 30-50 feet down the hill from the car, about 5-10 feet at a time. With some space between the car and trailer, I attempted to move the car over to the nearby pull-out. No luck! I could only slide. So, I set the parking brake, turned the steering wheel, and then let the front wheels spin gently. This action allowed me to pivot the car around to point downhill. From there, I drove to in front of the trailer to see if I could recouple. That didn't work. Here's the little "burnout" where I lost traction trying to back up...

As you can see, I kept the tongue pointing at the berm except for when I was "surfing." I then moved the car down to the next pull-out. So, here's the distance that I needed to move the trailer to reach the car and find some traction...

This photo shows all the skid marks from one stunt or another...

A park ranger came down the hill as I worked. I'm sure it looked much worse than actual when he saw my car facing downhill on the right side of the road and my trailer facing downhill on the left. It looked like I had lost my trailer. "Failure to secure" and "failure to chain" are no joke! I told him what happened and what I was doing. He approved of my plan and was impressed by my ambition. Not enough to help, which I don't blame him, but enough to loan me a set of these...

They made the work MUCH easier. He parked near a turn to provide warning to upcoming traffic, which was starting to pick-up...

I think about 10-15 cars drove by during the hour that I worked. All of them were 4x4 or AWD except for two. The first FWD got stuck, but was able to mount chains in a pull-out. The next one was able to get going with a small push from the ranger and me. After that, the ranger opted to have a truck come sand the road. He encouraged me to wait before attemping to couple the trailer. I was near a blind turn at this point. The trailer was visible, but moving it more may have been hazardous. While we waited, another FWD car got stuck with us. We were able to get her into my pull-out to await the sand truck. It was about 10 minutes away.
While we waited, the ranger encouraged me to leave the trailer in a pull-out and go see General Sherman Tree. "Really? I was going to call it a day. HAHA!" He insisted, "You can't come here all the way from Virginia and not see what may be the largest living thing in the world." He assured me that the trailer would be fine. The sand truck came by and laid sand (the park does not salt). The women waiting with me were on their way and I moved-in to couple my trailer.
I went down to the next pull-out and uncoupled the trailer, but I couldn't leave it there because it wanted to slide down the hill. So, I took it to a level pull-out below 6000 feet and was able to leave it. I found some rocks to chock the wheels.
General Sherman Tree is off-road and about 1/2-mile into the woods. So, no car photos with it. But I did manage to shoot a photo with this tiny tree...

General Sherman Tree is massive! It's neither the widest nor the tallest in the forest. But it carries the most girth farther up its trunk, which makes it the most massive tree in the world. I'll share photos of General Sherman later.
Thanks for hanging out through this nutty story!
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