Across the Valleys of Death | Lost Gear

Ultimate Gear List For a 4WD Roadtrip Around Death Valley

Fully loaded with gear, food, friends, and dogs we make our way out across the vast expanse of Death Valley.

Overlanding in the comfort of a Toyota Tacoma is a dream. The truck easily clears anything we encounter.

Pacific Overlander

Tacoma 4-Sleeper

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Morning meals are important for me, and there is nothing like the smell of hot coffee and breakfast in the backcountry. Mountain House does it right with their Breakfast Skillet. With it being lightweight and minimal in packing size, these meals accompany me on any off road adventure. I can quickly get food going, or have an easy meal when hiking up a hard to access trail.

Mountain House

Breakfast Skillet

As we pull in to our campsite for the night, after a long day of driving, the last thing I want to think about is having to set up a tent. I do not want to fuss around with poles, a rain fly that is practically a sail with any degree of wind, and staking down a tent with desert concrete underneath my feet. I am stoked on the idea of just folding open my home for the night, climbing up my ladder and lying on a memory foam mattress! This is what I call a luxury experience.

Front Runner

Roof Top Tent

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Off-roading is rough on your bones, your gear, and car. The dust gets everywhere, and everything is shaken around. I have broken many speakers on backroads. It happens, things get tossed around, dropped, or spilled on. Which is why I go for the durability of the SOUNDBOKS. They outlast the rough nature of the road and tote a superior sound quality to other portable speakers.

Soundboks

SOUNDBOKS Gen. 3


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