Me and Jimbo went
back to the construction yard after a slight rain. The BII had
lost a lot of its coating of mud, and I thought a re-application
wouldn't hurt...
This is back in
the familiar "friendly" mud puddle

Jim was trying out a camera, and he apologizes for the lens flare...
This one seems to
bring out the true shape of the BII for some reason

You can't see it in this picture, but I've got a newly-mounted
CB antenna on the driver's side rear gutter.
Jimbo recently
got mudflaps, new rims, and new tires. The mud flaps defeat
the purpose in my opinion, but the tires make up the difference
really well.



Again, apologies for the lens flare...
Yes, this is the
same construction yard that I got stuck in last time.
Yes, the puddle was still there.
Yes, I got stuck.

Shown here is the classic "AGAIN? Son of a..." look.
New tires this summer are a rather high priority.
Jimbo had been
complaining earlier about his clutch suffering due to my
habitual fondness for sitting in mud, so I decided I'd dig myself
out.

The CB antenna is clearly visible here, while my look of
frustration is not.
This is my response to Jimbo's "Y'know you're resting on
your rear axle..."

I really hate it when he's right like that.
After a few
minutes of digging and tranny grinding, I got the sucker out
myself. We then quickly realized that I
couldn't very well go back through the puddle, so I had to
attempt to climb a rather steep, rock infested hill.
This picture doesn't really show the grade, but the rocks are
pretty clear.

Jimbo stayed at
the top of the hill, and we passed the camera to another friend
of ours. This is a better shot of the grade.

There was a tire-eating
rut to my front left that decided it was hungry

If you look
closely, you can see that the only things in my line of
sight were Jimbo's hands and the very top of his head.

This is my final
push to the top. Jimbo cleared out of the way so I could
drop the hammer and let the horses do the talking.
