Gambler 500 Arkansas

Okie Gambler 500, Oklahoma. 1,171 likes 2 talking about this. The Okie Gambler 500 is a navigation rally through Oklahoma! For more info follow this page. To see what the Gambler 500 is all about. Gambler 500 Kansas Rally. 3,855 likes 12 talking about this. 500 mile Navigational Challenge and Automotive Festival. The 'Gambler 500 Florida' returned to the 'Hog Waller' for our big 2020 event June 2020. This campground served as base camp for our weekend of fun and adventure and shenanigans. 251 teams and over 700 people shared the weekend. We even had hot showers, so talk about glamping! The Gambler 500 is the world's largest trail cleanup. The winner is the one with the most trash in their ride. That includes, but is not limited to: tires, couches, boats, bumpers, shotgun shells, cans, and anything with a Chevy logo. This event is not a race. Gambler 500 started in Oregon 2014 by Tate Morgan and the OG Gamblers, a small group embracing cheap fun in all forms. Now dubbed 'Gamblertown' the original event in Oregon is the global meetup for what Gambler has evolved into as brand encouraging people across. The world to go have adventures using Gambler 500 as a call sign.

Gambler 500 - Arkansas - Gamblin' the Ozarks, TBA-somehwere in the Ozark Mountains of Arkansas, Pátek, 07. Říjen 2016

Gambler 500 Arkansas 2019

This is a navigation rally that will cover ~500 miles of paved, dirt, and 2-track roads/trails through the Ozark Mountains of Arkansas. This is NOT a race. You will be locating checkpoints, documenting your arrival at checkpoints, and using navigation skills to complete the course.
Vehicle: purchase price of $500 or less! If you want to fix up your $500 ride, that is totally up to you, but the point of the rally is to try and navigate your $500 beater through a series of moderately rough trails/roads. It SHOULD include GPS equipment, paper maps, tools, a fire extinguisher, and camping gear. A CB radio or some other form of communication (besides a cell phone) would be handy if you break down.
Cost: FREE. Well, you get to run for free, but you'll have to pay for your own vehicle and gas and food and whatever expenses you incur.
Why: because it's going to be fun.
When: The rally will officially start on Saturday morning at 8:00am, but if you're traveling very far to get to the event, you should come camp out Friday night at the starting point so you will be there and be ready to go Saturday morning.
Where: TBA. I am trying to find a safe, large place to camp/start/park tow rigs as I'm sure many people will trailer their Gamblers to the event.
More info to come...
#ABG #GambleOn

Pátek, 07. Říjen 2016, TBA-somehwere in the Ozark Mountains of Arkansas, Gambler 500 - Arkansas - Gamblin' the Ozarks

Zdroj: Facebook
Fievent.com není pořadatelem této akce! Kontakt na pořadatele ZDE.

Reading mazdeuce - Seth's write up about the Texas Gambler 500 last year got me thinking that a Gambler would be good family fun and an excuse to take on another project car. About the time I started looking for a car and local event, a 2000 VW Beetle showed up at my house for free other than the cost of the towing fee. More on that story is on page 3 of this thread: No, this is not a build. I want it gone

The last week of April I went to the Gambler 500 Kansas Rally, Spring Sling 2019. My wife came along as co-driver and we had a great time. Our car, the 'Dung Beetle', was perfectly capable of making the three hour drive to the venue, but considering our comfort and having a back-up in case something did go wrong, we decided to trailer it there with Pepper. Friday morning we dropped off the dogs at the pet resort for the weekend and we headed out to Fall River Lake, Kansas in the early afternoon.

We arrived at our motel (Mrs AAZCD is not a tent camper), had a nice dinner and went to the lake for a recon of the area. The organizers had rented an entire campground. I didn't actually look up the address of the campground. It's a small lake and we were looking for a large group of cars. Probably some banners and signs for the event. How hard could it be? With the loaded trailer in tow, we went around the lake on gravel, then dirt, then some mud, looking for the campground. As it got dark and we were driving into places where turning around with the trailer presented a challenge, we decided to go back to the motel. Taking a corner about a mile from the motel, the trailer started to wobble. I slowed to about 40 and it smoothed out, so I nursed it the rest of the way. When we arrived, I found that the left rear tire was completely shredded. Luckily there was no damage to the wheel. Back at our room, Google maps showed that there was a tire place nearby that would open at 8:00 in the morning and that we had driven within ¼ mile of the campground and missed it before circling around the lake.

Gambler 500 iowa

Gambler 500 Tennessee

Saturday morning. I got up early, unloaded Dung Beetle from the trailer, and pulled off the bad tire. The continental breakfast at the motel was out of coffee and unattended at 7:30, so we left (a little grumpy) and hit up a gas station convenience store on the way to the campground. A couple other Gamblers were there, the first we had met, and we had a nice chat. This was their first Gambler too and none of us knew what to expect. Loaded up with a couple breakfast burritos and sugary snacks for the day, we arrived at the campground at 8:00 to complete registration. The briefing and start was at 9:00 so I took some time to walk around and check out the other cars. Some were creative and highly modified, some were just rusty junkers straight from their life as a daily beater. There was no official check of the cars, or care about budget, or roadworthyness. I think that the (unread) waiver I signed covered all that. Over 200 people had showed up with probably about 100 cars for the event. The only real rule was “Don't be a Dick.”

Gambler 500 Arkansas

Event start. A short briefing followed by handing out a sheet of paper with about a dozen checkpoint coordinates on it with names like “creepy bridge to nowhere” and “two men in a bathtub”. It's not a race, but I felt rushed. I still head to deal with my flat tire 20 miles away and didn't want to fall too far behind the main group. We rushed to the tire shop. They quickly set us up with a new tire, while I answered a local ranchers questions about my odd car and entered coordinates in the Google Maps app. I was worried about falling behind, but it turned out that the first checkpoint was a big US flag and overlook on a hilltop that was only 1.5 miles from the tire shop. As I was leaving the tire shop, the main body of the group was just getting to town. Awesome.