The first time we laid eyes on the vintage Tucker Sno-Cat, grandiose ideas flew around the room. A snowcat is capable of going anywhere you can take a snowmobile so the options for back-country adventures are almost limitless. The Tucker is owned by our friends, also owners of Colorado based Weston Snowboards, and they were just as excited as we were to try something crazy.
We have spent the last six months towing the Airstream Basecamp around with a mix of mid-sized SUV’s and knew just how light and agile it was. We knew we wanted to use the Basecamp to access snowboarding but the plan was still forming. At first we talked about staging the Basecamp at the bottom of the mountain and using the snowcat from there to access the higher mountain terrain. It didn’t take long for that conversation to elevate (no pun intended) to towing the Basecamp into the backcountry with the Tucker.
Weston provided us with a couple of the largest and stiffest snowboards Weston produces that did not pass their rigorous quality testing (didn’t want to wreck perfectly good boards). We began the process of retrofitting them to carry a travel trailer instead of a human. We cut lengthwise slots in the boards and heavy gauge angle iron bolted in. This gave us a metal fin protruding through the base to help keep the trailer in line behind the snowcat. The angle iron also gave us a nice platform for the tires to sit on and a place for tire webbing harnesses to be bolted to.
“They were just as excited as we were to try something crazy.”
Mother nature not only cooperated, but gave us a blizzard on the inaugural voyage. The Basecamp easily backed onto the snowboards and we strapped it down. We all wondered how the 1979 Tucker Sno-cat would do towing an Airstream travel trailer through two plus feet of fresh snow into the Colorado mountains. The moment of truth came and the Airstream floated effortlessly behind the iconic orange snow machine. Huge cheers went out from the crowd as it pulled away without hesitation.The combination of the Airstream and the orange Tucker chugging along through the blowing snow was beautiful. Tucker snowcats are an iconic piece of engineering and often meticulously cared for and restored by aficionados similar to the way Airstreams are loved and cared for. The sound of the cat’s four tracks could be heard before it could be seen in the blowing storm. Then the lights would start to show, then the orange, and then the shiny aluminum of the Basecamp.
Dead trees were gathered and a bonfire was lit. While some folks warmed by the fire others indulged in the warmth and comfort of the Basecamp. We had the heat on and there was hot cider and green chili on the stove; comforts not usually experienced in the backcountry. It was truly amazing to be sitting on a nice seat, out of the snow, in the warmth, eating good food with music cranking, while a couple feet away is a raging blizzard and temperatures not even in the teens.
“The tiny space was filled with huge smiles and laughter.”
We did not get back to the parking lot until midnight and several of our vehicles were completely stuck in snowdrifts from the storms, but we had a snowcat! Mason (co-owner of Weston Snowboards) showed his cat driving prowess and pulled car after car and truck after truck out of the lot.
There was no doubt from anyone involved that this was the first of many more adventures of the Basecamp and Tucker; paired up in perfect, snowy, harmony.
Special thanks to our friends at Weston Snowboards for being so gentle on the throttle of their Tucker Snowcat.
See you in the mountains!
The team at The Public Works | www.thepublicworks.biz
1 comment
Very cool. Maybe you saw me out there with an even more agile Scamp 13 camper towed by a 1000cc 1800lb Polaris Ranger Crew.
Vail Pass, I presume?