Riding the Suzuki Vstrom 650, I was able to leave the pavement for long stretches of exploring unpaved forest service roads. A lighter, more off-road capable bike would be e even better once there, of course, but with all the highway and interstate riding to do the 3700-mile trip out and back from Mississippi, the DL650 was a good compromise. I plan to post a more detailed account of the trip with more photos on my main website soon, but wanted to share a couple of photos here too. Those of you living out West are fortunate to have access to so much publicly accessible wild land for exploring, camping, hunting and in the worst-case, as potential bug-out locations.
Southwestern Colorado near the San Juan Range |
Blue Range Primitive Area, Arizona |
An another note, before I left on the trip I did an interview with Morry Baines, who runs a multitool review site and has been working on a round-up of interviews with various survival authors and others with questions such as "What is the most useful tool for the outdoors?" You can read the answers including mine and those of some of my fellow survival authors including Jim Cobb, Bernie Carr and others here: http://bestmultitoolkit.com/expert-roundup/most-useful-tool-outdoors/ The full interview that I did is here: http://bestmultitoolkit.com/interviews/scott-williams-bugoutsurvival-com/
Morry also wrote an article on multitools aimed specifically at boaters, and since much of my writing has to do with bugging out by boat, here is the direct link to that: http://bestmultitoolkit.com/knowledgebase/multi-tool-boat-essential-tips/
Also, don't forget that I'm giving away a free copy of Refuge After the Collapse (Book II of The Pulse Series) every Friday of this month to subscribers to my newsletter. Last Friday's winner was Wayne in Fort Edward, NY. Today's winner will receive notification through the newsletter list, and will be announced to the rest of the list later today or tomorrow. There are three more Fridays in this month, so if you haven't won a copy yet, hang in there, you've still got a chance.