JohnDar
Prolifically Gabby Member
Or so some say. Today I got a call from the storage yard that the large, old cabin cruiser that's parked up on stacked cinder blocks was leaning towards my rig and I should get there and move. So I hustle out there and see the thing is leaning to starboard and looking like it might mate with my rig. It's been pretty wet and the ground is saturated, to the point even my tires on the ODS are sunk in a little. So much so that I had to use the Ground Control jacks on that side to lift it enough to get the tire covers off. Then I hook it up and tell the wife to pull forward a bit. She can barely budge it (in D, not manual), and the trailer tires are digging into mud. So I get in, put it in 4Wd and second gear and had to muscle it free of the mud and onto the harder surface.
With limited space available, I ended up parking lengthwise on an angle between two old vehicles that weren't going anywhere and let the office know I had taken two spots. Couldn't park it straight since there's not enough room between the road and the fence. They're going to try to relocate the small vehicles that insist on parking in the pull through spots to along the fence line, or be towed if they haven't been moved since the last Ice Age. That boat's been there for several years and is not looking very good.
Those of you that can park your rigs at your homes...feel very lucky.
With limited space available, I ended up parking lengthwise on an angle between two old vehicles that weren't going anywhere and let the office know I had taken two spots. Couldn't park it straight since there's not enough room between the road and the fence. They're going to try to relocate the small vehicles that insist on parking in the pull through spots to along the fence line, or be towed if they haven't been moved since the last Ice Age. That boat's been there for several years and is not looking very good.
Those of you that can park your rigs at your homes...feel very lucky.