
Honestly, don't fear this.
These days, there are two pretty distinct 4×4 cliches: the 4×4 Yuppie, and the 4×4 Redneck.
The former we see in town, driving spotlessly clean and very high end 4×4′s to and from shops, sometimes carrying children or a single 2×4 strapped to a spotless roof rack. Rest assured their 4x4s will never see an hour of off road use.
The latter, the 4×4 Redneck, we see less often but still often enough: usually on the trail, probably drinking beer, sometimes firing a shotgun, and almost always driving a big domestic 4×4 far too aggressively for the conditions. And laughing.
In my years on the trail, it’s the 4×4 redneck that has vexed me most. Not because I have anything against rednecks (being partially one myself) but because they tend to give four wheeling just a bad image. Yes, I drive a (usually) muddy 4×4 with aggressive tires and big fog lights. But that’s because I’m an ‘explorer’, a caretaker of trails, and someone who enjoys the great outdoors and want to help preserve it for use–by using it.
When I try to introduce people to off roading in a four wheel drive truck or SUV, I find it’s the redneck image of off roading that’s hardest to overcome. Because that’s what people are most likely to remember: the guy with the beer or the gun, doing donuts next to the quiet campsite, and keeping everyone up at night…
Here at Island4WDLife.com, four wheeling is about exploring, spending time with family, getting out of doors, and discovering more of what Vancouver Island has to offer. Sure, that also means engaging low range and challenging ourselves and our 4x4s to conquer off-road obstacles (the more the better).
But it has nothing to do with the cliche.