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Lancashire County Council’s Countryside Service, together with the local group of GLASS members, organised a volunteer working day recently to repair the damage and put barriers in place to discourage further incidents, following reports of damage to ‘Boggy Wood’ by illegal off-roaders.

In total there were about 25 vehicles and 40 people, many of whom had not met before. As well as GLASS members there were members of the Red Rose Land Rover Club and individuals who had found out about it through a report in the local paper and the forums.

Recipients of the Royal Geographical Society (with IBG) and Land Rover 2010 ‘Go Beyond’ Bursary recently departed the UK in a Land Rover Defender 110 to document the lives of hundreds of people who live along some of the world’s most dangerous fault lines.

The British explorers who form the expedition group Fault Line Living, will be travelling 15,000 miles from Iceland to Iran over a 12-week period to gain a detailed understanding of the issues faced by communities living on fault lines.

Serena Davies, Tamsin Davies and Adam Whitaker were given a Land Rover Defender 110 and funding of £10,000 at the Royal Geographical Society (with IBG) in London, after which the team left Harwich.

Starting in Iceland the team will experience up to 78 earthquakes a day, after which they will travel to Italy, Greece, Turkey and finally Iran.

Visit www.faultlineliving.com to keep up to date with the Fault Line Living team.

 

jumpThe fifth event of the Northern Off Road Club’s Cross Country Championship, held on a hot, sunny and dusty July Sunday at Gainsthorpe, Lincolnshire, produced a surprising leaderboard writes Gavin Lodge. Current series leader, Ashley Short was quickest over the opening run, but out of the event on run two, due to a broken rose joint.

Ian Gregg hit the front only to be overtaken by Steve Hickman on run three. Both Martin Hay and Ant Jackson looked likely to hang onto the leading pair’s pace, but Hay dropped out of contention with broken suspension on run five; Hickman and Gregg swapped times for the rest of the day, with Hickman taking his first ever NORC victory, with a winning margin of just nine seconds. Behind them, Jackson was unable to hold off a late charge by Robert Simmonite, who surged past to claim third spot, within the last couple of runs. Tim Sagar was fifth.

1stdriveThe Range Rover is celebrating a significant birthday this summer. In company with most of its customers, Land Rover’s flagship 4×4 has passed the big 4-0, and by way of celebration it has been equipped with a new, more powerful and cleaner diesel engine plus a few cosmetic touches.  

Words: Sue Baker; photos: Sue Baker & Nick Dimbleby

In place of the previous 3.6-litre TDV8, the Range Rover, at a rather fabulous 40 years young, has acquired a new 4.4-litre double turbo unit. The gearbox is new too, an eightspeed ZF auto accompanied by steering column paddle shifts.

Phil Weeden – editorial director

isuzuPhil Weeden editorial director I’d been looking forward to getting behind the wheel of the Rodeo. When we acquired the company Mazda BT-50 pick-up in 2008, the Rodeo was firmly on our shortlist. It’s better looking than the Mazda and the 3.0-litre turbo diesel feels uber strong, with a purposeful induction roar, a decent turn of speed, plenty of traction and reasonable refinement on the motorway. Only a killer lease price made us choose the Mazda over the Isuzu in the end.

It’s been well documented in previous reports from Hils and Bob that we’re not fans of all the chrome accoutrements, and I certainly agree. The grille is fine, but the tail-light trims look a little tacky in my view and the sidesteps look too bulky as well as prohibiting the Rodeo’s otherwise excellent off-road ability. What a pity that the market for these pick-ups seems to be dictating this level of bling…

Garry Stuart – freelance photographer

nissanIt seemed a good idea at the time. We were due to go down to our house in South West France for a few weeks in July when I learned of a new Land Rover event near Clermont Ferrand, deep in the Massif Central. We needed to be down there on a Friday, but only found out about it the day before, so the Terrano had to be fettled and loaded in a hurry so that we could drive down to Dover overnight and sleep for a few hours at the ferry port before boarding an LD Lines ferry to Boulogne at 05.00hrs.

Louise Limb – contributor

vitaraIf I was concerned last time that my finances were becoming stretched by my coy little motor after a couple of big garage bills, I was set to see even more moths fluttering from my rapidly emptying purse this month. I’d forgotten for a moment that my insurance was due.

I’d been with a big broker attached to a very well-known breakdown organisation. It handles a fair proportion of the nation’s roadside repairs and gives me peace of mind. The insurance side of things had been okay last year, too. The renewal premium for 2010 had me stunned. As I’m the wrong side of 50 now, I wasn’t expecting my car insurance to be over £450! I run a three-door Grand Vitara with a sensible diesel engine and with the same specifi ation as she left the factory, not a Hummer with blacked-out windows, Lenso wheels and running on nitrous! I rang a couple of the specialist 4×4 insurance guys and not only got myself back down below £380 but with the addition of off-road and business cover. No longer would I have to pretend that the Grand only ever drove on the M6 and that I am a shop assistant.

Nigel Fryatt – contributor

rav4While buying a new 4×4 is fun, it is also undoubtedly frustrating and, at times, stressful. Why do some traders insist on writing ‘immaculate’ in their advertisements when even the most cursory inspection shows the vehicle to have been used and seriously abused? Why, after phoning up to check, do you find out when you arrive to view a vehicle that, ‘there’s a small problem with the air flow sensor so you can’t go for a drive, I’m afraid. The mechanic should have changed it this morning but he’s a DJ and last night he had all his gear nicked so he’s not come in…’ Would you buy a 4×4 from some absentminded DJ who can’t even be bothered to come to work? No, neither would we.

Bob Cooke – contributor

HotchkissNever again will I allow a lunatic at the wheel of the Hotchkiss…well, maybe ‘lunatic’ is a bit strong, it’s just that it’s a while since Ivor had done any off-roading and he’d never before driven anything as much fun – and as open – as Eugene. Now Eugene may be close on 50 years old but the old dog can still move; the 2.2-litre Willys engine may only be puffing out around 55 of its original 60 horses but with its stroke of nearly 4.5 inches it’s still got surprisingly muscular lowdown torque, so when Ivor saw a gap in the undergrowth and went for it, his enthusiastic flooring of the accelerator saw Eugene leaping into the bushes like a startled rabbit, leaving me hardly any time to hang on, let alone blink.

In consequence, weeks later, I’m still trying to blink fragments of shredded gorse bush out of my eyes. Resolution No 1 in consequence of this: three pairs of eye-protection goggles becomes standard equipment in Eugene’s glovebox, one for driver, one for passenger and one for anyone crazy enough to sit in the back while Ivor’s driving.

Shion Scudamore – contributor

bedfordThe sun has been beating down in North Wales and so there has been little excuse not to get on with sorting the TM for its MoT. I started well and the lower cab panels have been removed, revealing even more rust, I have exposed even more daylight through the cab floor.

The problem is June is also a good month to do several other things that are considerably more fun than grinding rust and welding. The start of the month saw a trip to France on the bikes with a crowd of my ex overland driving buddies, some enjoyable miles spent in the Alsace region meant I needed some tyres and brake pads to get home so that blew the vehicle budget for the month. A landmark birthday party meant a great weekend of camping at our place and rerunning some of the old stories over a few drinks (well, a lot of drinks really). The Bedford was present which seemed fitting as many of us had driven them all over the globe but not yet fit for active duty. Finally, I failed to get her ready for Glastonbury but taking a VW camper instead meant the budget looked better, it would be cheaper just to charter a jet these days rather than drive her to Somerset; 300 quids-worth of fuel is a very conservative estimate.