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Ranger_Tim's avatar
Ranger_Tim
Explorer
May 14, 2017

Wow! Come Back Toto!

So, off upon the trail we started, with high hopes for a relaxing weekend of birding, reading books and being away from work. Winds were forecasted to pick up and be gusty, so I was prepared for a bit of sway. The trip to City of Rocks was mostly uneventful and made for the perfect post-winter shakedown before our trip across country in two weeks. Winds were picking up, but we'd be parked for the night soon, no biggie.

What? One campsite left? What luck! So we made our way to site number 22 amidst the swirling dust and debris. How much harder is it going to blow?

Man, this site is exposed! Perched out on a rock precipice overlooking what would normally be a stunning view I could see the weather front approaching. Sleet and snow began to sting my face as we jockeyed the truck/camper into the most level position. Gusts were battering me and almost knocking me off my feet - at 260 lbs. that ain't just whistling Dixie!

My wife looks at me through the back door of the camper with eyes the size of extra large eggs, so I dropped the jacks down to stabilize the rig more. Whoah! That gust almost picked up the whole rig on one side! Thank goodness I've got TorkLifts. I'm really worried about bending a jack leg. No amount of wax is going to protect our rig from this sandblasting.

The next thing I knew I was on my hands and knees trying to figure out who had hit me with a pillow. My wife is already in the truck honking the horn. Jacks up, check. Chase down the step stool, check. Lock the back door, check. We're outta here!

Dodging rolling dome tents on the way down the mountain I figured we'd find immediate sanctuary from the chaos as we made it into cover. NOT!!! The darn wind had resorted to pushing so hard I had to fight to keep the wheel straight. Yeah, the storm will probably be over soon and all will be fine - Wow, the weather says it is going to blow gale force all night... birds were trying to use the side of the camper for a wind block. Welcome to Oregon signs were being blown across the road - and we're in central Idaho!

That's right, we bailed. Ended up an hour away in a well sheltered state park with water and electric hookups for 12 bucks and enjoyed a nice night of steak dinner, cold 20 mph gusts that rocked us to sleep, and a quiet campground that had folks buttoned-up in their campers. Weather can bring a type of behavior enforcement that no camp host possesses.

Have you ever had to bail like that? Last time I had winds that strong was during hurricane Isabel back in Virginia. Out here in Idaho we get wind all the time, but this was exceptional.
  • Several times I have ended up someplace where it was too windy to drive safely. Best procedure for me is to point the truck nose into the wind and hunker down until the weather improves. Sometimes this means I've had to stay an extra night or two in the same spot and fortunately that has always been possible.

    I'm originally from San Diego. Sometimes on I-8 heading east through our mountains you could see highway signs which had been mounted on something the size of telephone poles - poles snapped, metal signs twisted and bent. Newspaper had photos of semi-trucks blown over. Warnings to high profile vehicles are serious. Please don't ignore them and try to drive on through.
  • I've never had to bail because of the wind, but we have had to bail out of a great boondocking site because of a snowstorm:

    Last-Minute Escape From a Surprise Midnight Blizzard


    There is no shame in running for cover when things look really bad. There were other folks camped near us that time who did not bail. They got stuck, and it cost them hundreds of dollars to get towed out.
  • A few times when I stay out on the beach fishing, It was calm when I stopped fishing and went to nap but A few hours later I was awoken by a rocking camper then a knock on the door by another fisherman telling me I should leave, there's nothing better than chasing down your chairs and stuff while getting sand blasted trying to pack and leave. then there was a time when a big storm came in over night on opening day (Labor Day)
  • That same windstorm was creating a lot of havoc further south on I-80 across the salt flats. Sustained winds over 60 when we drove out to Wendover Friday afternoon. Passed one poor guy with a truck camper crawling along leaning at an angle steep enough I wouldn't have kept going. Put a couple semi trucks on their side, and an SUV up on the center divider. Think he got disoriented in the salt fueled whiteout which you kept going in and out of. We had decided to motel camp this trip and boy am I glad I did. Had we got the fiver out there it would have been a sea sick night at best. Of course City of Rocks is right on the north end of that wind corridor, where besides the possibility of going over you have to worry about poor visibility, and flying debris.
  • SidecarFlip wrote:
    Just had a friend out that way message me and said his outfit felt like a 'kite' going down the road.



    True statement. Wind was even worse today crossing SD on I-90. Fuel consumption went down 3.5 mpg bucking a quartering wind. Wind let up when we arrived at the CG.

    Lakeside
  • Last spring we were staying at Clifty Falls State Park in Madison Indiana. Our campsite was next to the woods so we could hear the wind but it didn't affect the camper much. However when we were walking around the campground that afternoon we watch 1/2 the shingle on the bath house get peeled off in the one big chunk. We decided it would be to get back to the camper at that point.
    Driving back from Yellowstone two years ago. Driving thru Nebraska the wind blowing so hard it was a major challenge to keep the truck on the road at 60mph. When another passed us we both laughed as his rig was leaning so much as he fighting the wind. We the realized we probably looked the same.
    I've been thinking next time we go out that way we want a dually.
  • Reminds me of my days as an over-the-road trucker. Every time I headed toward New Mexico, I was bucking the wind and every time I headed back east, I was bucking the wind... Don't miss it really. Back then fuel was cheap too. Think I was paying about 50 cents a gallon exempt and averaging about 3.5 mpg.
  • :B Good story. Yes, I have had a night like that. I had to chase my dome tent across Death Valley one night in 1979.

    Mike
  • If it is possible to point into the wind, then 65mph is really no worse than a calm drive down the freeway. A lot of campsites make this hard though, and the wind may shift on you.

    With our welded steel frame and 1/4" plate steel tiedowns welded to the frame, the plan has always been to put down chains into ground anchors if we ever needed to camp in 70mph+ winds. North Dakota plains was the closest at 50 to 60mph gusts but really the camper did not move much.

    I *think* I could make the camper secure to around 100mph winds but would not want to test that :) This of course ignores projectiles like tree limbs...
  • I have camped in very strong wins. I put the jacks down for stability. Of course, you need something to do to make it make sense or know the weather is going to change. In one case, we were camped right off the beach overlooking the waves which we enjoyed. It made the wind worth it.

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