I drove up to CK Sunday (19th) for the second time that weekend. The first was the Saturday before(w/o my dog).. I got as far as I could go in 2wd and went to drop into 4LO when I realized after my recent 2" body lift, my transfercase shifter no longer had proper clearance to engage. So I tooled back down the mountain to my house and proceeded to cut out what's essentialy a 1" square piece of plastic from my cupholder

. So Sunday, I loaded up the dog, (I never wheel without my dog.. Perhaps a sign from above?) and we headed back up to town. Recently, perhaps within the last month, they've graded the first good mile of the trail after cow creek, pretty much up until the first split (obstacle). It was the usual beautiful trail from there, with several other playgrounds to test out new stuff on. Fort Misery's still there, and it looked dry and the creek was virtually dead. It did however start to rain at that point and there was obviously worse weather ahead as I looked up the mountainside. It was snowing pretty good by the time we hit Oro Bell, and the ground was completely covered in snow, a couple-few inches thick of fresh powder. Up the hill and around the corner, then we're off. Many in my group had not seen Oro Bell since the "trail revision". We trudged on to the switchbacks in BLINDING SNOW, couldn't see much more than maybe 30 feet. It was basically a bit of keep the truck on the white part between the trees, where applicable.. The snow was pretty thick at this point, 6-10" so it began to cover a lot of the terrain, homogenizing it all and turning it flat, and benign. I crept along, looking for high spots to place the tires, the X teetering and creeping along on the fresh snow, making that crunchy sound it does as it fell beneath the 33s. There was almost no visibility along the trail for the last mile, the forest white and silent, my tracks being covered no sooner than I had created them. Pulling into town was a welcome site as always. A coupla' cold Fat Tires in the bar, than off to deplete the general store of their peanutbutter-fudge w/ pralines stock, and it was down the mountain I went. All in all, one of the best days ever spent on that trail for me.
Snow or not, the one thing I can say for that trail is aggresive tires will help anyone. With so many variances in terrain from bottom to top, and all that crushed granite (bbs) in between, a heavy lug tire aired down will help you pull your way to the top.