Two days after that dirt track exploring I was packed and ready to start my run south.
I had been watching the winter storm that was moving in from the far north, but got delayed by a day harvesting fuel.
As I left, just after dawn, the whole western sky was black w/ heavy clouds. This was deff riding the edge of a storm.
Crossing over the first low pass about 20 miles into the trip I started getting snow flurries. This is when I noticed that the windshield wiper on the drivers side cleaned an area too low to see through . . . I could see the hood well!
So now I'm driving like a hunchback . . . bumping my chin on the steering wheel.
About 200 miles south there was a place that I knew I could harvest some fuel from. First stop NAPA, I would need to get some parts to make the transfer pump independent from the trailer that I pulled it from when Elise left. Wire, batt clips, a high amp on/off switch, I also tried to get some big washers to space the pulley on my new alt . . . not here, I'll have to keep working on that.
As I neared Walker lake (Captain Walker?) I started to feel like I was almost ahead of the storm, but the snow was still chasing me.
After topping my tank and filling every container that I had, six 5gal units, I had enough fuel to make it back to the J-Tree base camp (fingers crossed). During this harvest I tapped into a drum off ATF. I had been wanting to burn some ATF and this was the first time I'd scored some. It was the cleanest looking fluid I'd seen in the last 2 years. I was guessing that it was un-used and had somehow been deemed unfit for use. As I pushed the pickup tube farther down every time it started sucking air I finely hit it . . . water. This is why I've developed the habit of pumping into a 5gal first, every time I change drums, or change depth, no harm done.
Now I just had to put on miles, lots of them, I was on a deadline. Elise was sched'd to do a show that weekend and set-up was Fri morning . . . it was Wens.
As darkness approached I crossed a 6,600' pass. There was a pull-off away from the road that would work for the night. Tomorrow . . . drive all day!