I had planned to go to Busco last weekend, and I am so glad I had to wait until today. All the rain and snow we got last week flooded the river and turned it into an AATV dream park. A third of the park was still covered in water, fully obscuring the trails in many areas.
I got there at 1pm, choking on the dust from hundreds of ATVs and UTVs riding around the beach areas. I was wondering why so many of them had absolutely no mud on them whatsoever, even some highly modified ones.
I quickly found out as I reached the pole line. It was completely flooded with no tracks in or out. Of course, I just swam right in.
On the other side, near the river, very few patches of trail were not submerged. In fact, there were some places where I wasn't sure where to go, even though I was familiar with this section. I could touch bottom in about 2/3rds of the riding, but I also had to swim a lot just to get anywhere at all. I guess that's why even the big quads hadn't made a single track in those hundreds of acres.
I started to get nervous about being surrounded by so much water without another rider as back-up, so I headed to where I thought I'd find the brave riders on the big quads. The third photo shows the trail you have to take to get to the 50/50 hole. The trail itself was now a 100% fail hole. Unless you could float. You can see a guy sunk to his armpits in the middle of the water. He ended up taking some photos of me with his camera swimming across where he was just standing.
I did find some dry trail and a LOT of quads to ride with, eventually. In fact, they took me to a section of the park I hadn't been before. It was very, very tight with a lot of off-camber whoops and turns. It was extremely challenging to manage, but I had fun. I'd like to see how a MuddOx would do in that section. <g> Sorry, but I didn't get any photos of those trails, but I'm sure we'll get video in a few weeks.
Anyway, here's a teaser for all of you heading out there in April. I bet it won't be anything like it by then, but there's always hoping for some April showers to flood it out again.
I got there at 1pm, choking on the dust from hundreds of ATVs and UTVs riding around the beach areas. I was wondering why so many of them had absolutely no mud on them whatsoever, even some highly modified ones.
I quickly found out as I reached the pole line. It was completely flooded with no tracks in or out. Of course, I just swam right in.
On the other side, near the river, very few patches of trail were not submerged. In fact, there were some places where I wasn't sure where to go, even though I was familiar with this section. I could touch bottom in about 2/3rds of the riding, but I also had to swim a lot just to get anywhere at all. I guess that's why even the big quads hadn't made a single track in those hundreds of acres.
I started to get nervous about being surrounded by so much water without another rider as back-up, so I headed to where I thought I'd find the brave riders on the big quads. The third photo shows the trail you have to take to get to the 50/50 hole. The trail itself was now a 100% fail hole. Unless you could float. You can see a guy sunk to his armpits in the middle of the water. He ended up taking some photos of me with his camera swimming across where he was just standing.
I did find some dry trail and a LOT of quads to ride with, eventually. In fact, they took me to a section of the park I hadn't been before. It was very, very tight with a lot of off-camber whoops and turns. It was extremely challenging to manage, but I had fun. I'd like to see how a MuddOx would do in that section. <g> Sorry, but I didn't get any photos of those trails, but I'm sure we'll get video in a few weeks.
Anyway, here's a teaser for all of you heading out there in April. I bet it won't be anything like it by then, but there's always hoping for some April showers to flood it out again.
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