Testimonial to what overlanding really is about.

XC70_OVERLANDER

Local Expert Northern Germany
Member

Pioneer III

14,357
Hamburg, Germany
First Name
Thore ‘Ove‘
Last Name
Fahrenbach
Member #

40915

Service Branch
Education (6th form)
A few months ago, I had the great honour of being contacted by Alu-Cab with a request for an interview. The main focus was on what motivated me to choose a Volvo XC70 as my vehicle for my travels. Twenty questions and about two months later, the interview was published on the Alu-Cab website as a testimonial. What makes me particularly happy is that my philosophy and that of Overland Bound were perfectly captured and conveyed.
It’s simply brilliant to be able to represent such a community.

What do you think of the article?

 

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I love seeing peoples own interpretation of what an overland vehicle should be. So many cave to what industry, content creators, and others think it should be. I can always appreciate what others have created, and always seem to pick up something to take back to my projects. Very nice article, congratulations. and great plug for OB! It does not matter what you drive (and occasionally push in my case ... lol) is my favorite founding principle:)
 
I love seeing peoples own interpretation of what an overland vehicle should be. So many cave to what industry, content creators, and others think it should be. I can always appreciate what others have created, and always seem to pick up something to take back to my projects. Very nice article, congratulations. and great plug for OB! It does not matter what you drive (and occasionally push in my case ... lol) is my favorite founding principle:)

Really appreciate your replay. Cheers.
 
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Fantastic! Reminded me so much of my European touring days (now called "Overlanding") in my Volvo 145 S, that took us everywhere and we only really got stuck on the waterfront in Amsterdam.

„Bleib sicher und hab großartige Reisen.“
 
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Thanks for sharing, that was a great article and a solid philosophy on the nature of travel and what is really important.
 
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A few months ago, I had the great honour of being contacted by Alu-Cab with a request for an interview. The main focus was on what motivated me to choose a Volvo XC70 as my vehicle for my travels. Twenty questions and about two months later, the interview was published on the Alu-Cab website as a testimonial. What makes me particularly happy is that my philosophy and that of Overland Bound were perfectly captured and conveyed.
It’s simply brilliant to be able to represent such a community.

What do you think of the article?

Really outstanding article, well done!

I would certainly say you're a man after my own heart, and the article definitely encapsulates the spirit of Overland Bound, the spirit that made me want to join. It's all about the adventures, it doesn't matter what you drive, and leave it better than you found it.

My first 4x4 was of course my 1999 Honda CR-V, a rig that many scoffed at, but which proved itself time and time again on some incredible, even once in a lifetime adventures, and never let me down.

From a fellow "unconventional overlander," cheers!

Hayesposecrop.png
 
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A few months ago, I had the great honour of being contacted by Alu-Cab with a request for an interview. The main focus was on what motivated me to choose a Volvo XC70 as my vehicle for my travels. Twenty questions and about two months later, the interview was published on the Alu-Cab website as a testimonial. What makes me particularly happy is that my philosophy and that of Overland Bound were perfectly captured and conveyed.
It’s simply brilliant to be able to represent such a community.

What do you think of the article?

Really outstanding article, well done!

I would certainly say you're a man after my own heart, and the article definitely encapsulates the spirit of Overland Bound, the spirit that made me want to join. It's all about the adventures, it doesn't matter what you drive, and leave it better than you found it.

My first 4x4 was of course my 1999 Honda CR-V, a rig that many scoffed at, but which proved itself time and time again on some incredible, even once in a lifetime adventures, and never let me down.

From a fellow "unconventional overlander," cheers!

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100% agree. Really appreciate your message.
Tell us something about your special journey
 
Great article. I’m sharing this with our daughter who just had a set of Falkan AT 4W tires mounted on her Hyundai Tucson as the beginning of her build.

Awesome. A great set of tyres will always be a good starting point. To many unforgettable adventures.
 
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Fantastic! Reminded me so much of my European touring days (now called "Overlanding") in my Volvo 145 S, that took us everywhere and we only really got stuck on the waterfront in Amsterdam.

„Bleib sicher und hab großartige Reisen.“

What a great adventure vehicle and good memories.
 
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Reactions: CR-Venturer
100% agree. Really appreciate your message.
Tell us something about your special journey
When I moved to Chilliwack, BC, which is an area very close to some spectacular wilderness and awesome 4x4 trails, we decided we needed to get a new vehicle that was better on gas than the mini van I was driving at the time. The 4x4 aspect was secondary to the primary concern of a fuel efficient car that could fit at least 5 passengers and would be good for practical purposes like shopping, commuting, etc.

As we were looking around, a 1st gen CR-V came available locally for $1800 which was and still is a spectacular price for that vehicle.

Here's the build thread for it:


In practice, I found that the Realtime 4wd system worked far better than I ever thought it would given how it's designed, and that rig was able to get me into some insane places, to the top of mountains, deep in the bush, far from any paved road, and most of those adventured happened even before it had a lift and significantly oversized tires. Technically the first AT tires I bought were "oversized" but barely.

In 2019, it took me on a once in a lifetime trip to Kitsault, BC, probably the youngest and best preserved ghost town in Canada:

Then in 2021, it took it's last major expedition across Northern BC

There were many small trips and overnighters in between, and through it all, I really learned to appreciate the brilliance of the design of the RD1 CR-V. It was designed as an all around car that could do "some off roading" but the places it went and the obstacles it overcame far exceeded that goal. Very often I would get astonished looks from guys driving jeeps and other similarly capable rigs. One of the most frequent questions was "You drove that thing all the way up here?!"

Sadly when I moved to Alberta, I was forced to part with Ganbaru due to a snapped timing belt during the drive and other factors.

As we moved to an acreage, I replaced it with a pickup truck, a 2006 Dodge Dakota I named "Rumble" due to the loud rumble its V8 makes when the flex pipe replacing the stolen cat rusts out lol
This was how it looked basically stock, right after putting bigger tires on:
Newshoes.jpg
And how it looks now with my DIY setup:
evening fire.jpg
It's old and rusty and has 365k+ kms, but it's still rolling strong, taking me on adventures AND hauling stuff around :)