For anyone who hasn’t yet seen or heard of the Gambler 500, in a nutshell it is an on/off road adventure for beaters. There aren’t any hard and fast rules other than Rule #1: Don’t be a dick. The price point to shoot for is $500 for your car but really as long as you’re bringing something weird and having fun no one cares. The end goal is to just have a good time, try to visit as many waypoints as you can and clean up the trails while you’re out and about in the wild.
Part 1: Prep and The First Leg of the Journey
We were riding in this magnificent beast: Pokey the 1982 Vanagon camper.
HippieWagon bought this van off an impound lot in South Detroit and it had previously housed a man who was literally living in a van down by the river. After clearing out this guy’s junk it turned out to be a pretty solid example of the last years of the air-cooled VWs. For $1800 it was a steal considering the inflated market for these things. One other funny note is that this is actually a Canadian van which was subsequently abandoned in Detroit, so there was no title at the impound lot and some import paperwork had to be done between HippieWagon and the lot he bought it from but in the end they figured it out and it’s now tagged and legal (but hard to determine how fast you’re going since the speedo is in kph AND horrendously inaccurate).
I was supposed to be driving a 1986 Fiero but as I mentioned elsewhere it blew up in my face and has headed to greener pastures (Indy-Barely Functional-Guy’s yard/driveway). So I rode up to Detroit in the FiST Friday morning and we got to work putting the final touches on the van. A new fuel pump, some Amazon special offroad lights and a smattering of mildly illegal strobes were all we needed to get on the road.
Naturally we needed to do some testing so we did some fast and furious style street races through the neighborhood. Now normally I wouldn’t recommend drag racing right next to an elementary school, but when it’s an air-cooled Vanagon vs. a Coleman minibike with a beat clutch, you can get away with it. So it turns out a minibike will beat the van for about 75 yards, or until the van gets into second gear at which point it can finally surpass the bike’s 22mph speed limit.
Got some funny looks from pedestrians as we rode around the block with the sliding door open taking pictures of the minibike in action then we packed it up and grabbed some well earned dinner.
A few hours of shuteye later and it was time to load up and roll out. We had 5 people in a 4-seater van so we had to add some extra seating in the rear and I was surprised at just how well this van swallows 5 people’s worth of gear; there are so many nooks and crannies for stashing things! We were going to be camping out of the van up in northern MI tonight so many a blanket was packed, along with essentially half a garage worth of tools. Even with all this stuff there wasn’t any intrusion into the passenger cabin area which was very nice for the long haul later.
Registration/Check in was just north of the city in Troy, and we got to stage with the cool kids in the special paddock – I guess they just respected the insanity of bringing an old bone stock ACVW on a 500 mile trip. This was awesome not partly because it meant we were one of the 50 or so vehicles that the organizers thought was cool (out of 813 vehicles that showed up) but we also got an extra recovery token, which is basically how you can pay other gamblers for helping you out of a bind. We were by far the most “normal” vehicle in the cool kids paddock, some of these guys had some seriously off the wall stuff. Compared to some gambler photos I've seen I think that the Detroit Gambler has stayed pretty cheap, I didn't see a lot of high dollar vehicles other than people who were there exclusively to help recover other Gamblers. Some highlights follow:
This rampage scratched an itch I didn't know I had and now I want one.
This Probe had a grill built on the back and was radical.
Gotta watch out for the tacticool Party Patrol (also the colonial explorers and their trackin' dog).
One of the more interesting amalgamations of car and camper we saw.
Seeing a couple Fieros made me sad mine didn't make it, this guy basically did exactly what I was planning on doing just with a different paint job.
Warthog tribute and a sweet Whiskey Rebellion flag.
Paint roller pans and HVAC components as hood scoops was a common theme.
One of the guys in this van was wearing a Scooby Doo costume and it messed with my dog's head.
Definitely not a $500 car but berkleying awesome nonetheless.
Some slightly dubious frame lengthening or reinforcement or something, this was basically a foxbody exocet hack. Surprisingly lasted the weekend, we saw him driving home on Sunday.
These guys will be important later...
Am I the only one who thinks an Acura TL looks way better without a trunk?
Or maybe it was just the fine selection of horns and severed heads...
These guys were channeling the Mad Max in a strong way and I was a big fan.
A good example of some of the guys who came along to rescue stuck beaters on the offroad portions of the trip.
There's more than one way to skin a car...
"Runs great just needs a little bodywork"
We had about an hour to roam around and hang out before the driver’s meeting to kick off the event so we checked out cars and chatted with other teams, other folks had some more… interesting activities to pass the time.
Since this is the Detroit Gambler, Tom, the guy who puts on all the Gambler events up here, wanted everyone to get to see some “real” Detroit first. The first waypoint, “The loneliest spot in Detroit”, was by the city airport (not the main airport, Detroit Metro), in an area where there used to be full blocks of houses but now there was just grass, wreckage and a couple still inhabited houses scattered around. Everywhere we went in town, people were stopping to watch all the whackos drive by in their beaters, we got lots of waves and thumbs up in the van. It was definitely interesting seeing the really desolate parts of Detroit that you wouldn’t ever see if you were just passing through town. Got to do some “urban offroading” in that the roads almost cease to exist in places.
Trash, tires piled up all over the place:
Abandoned and less abandoned (but no less sketchy) homes. Hard to believe we are in the heart of a major metropolis here.
Next we headed down to the River Rouge/Zug Island/Fort Wayne area which from all I could tell was pretty much all either a former, current or future EPA superfund site. Here there was some real offroading in an area that used to be houses but was now a giant mud pit. We didn't attempt it in the van and by the time we had circled around the block, Detroit PD had shown up and shut the whole thing down. So it was on to the next waypoint, a railroad crossing that wished it had been in Dukes of Hazzard.
But it wasn't quite steep enough to make the cut...
This was the only car we saw catch any air, a bone stock Acura which I'm pretty sure was this guy's daily.
Next stop was the Detroit river, and with it came a big flippin boat. I'm sure the van felt at home in its natural habitat.
At this point we'd spent about 2 hours driving around the wastelands of eastern Detroit and it was time for some lunch. The spot to hit was the Eastern Market. They essentially have a farmer's market type spread set up in the old warehouses here, as well as lots of good eats along the road next to the market itself. Got some killer pierogis and kielbasa at the market and got to see some more gamblermobiles here.
We also parked right behind David Tracy's $800 Grand Wagoneer which was neat. As a couple of us were walking back to the van from lunch a guy stopped us and asked "what's going on with all these crap cars with stuff piled up on their roofs driving around here?" We told him about the gambler and what we were doing and about the focus on trail cleanliness and he was very appreciative. Turns out this guy is the section chief for ORV trails with the Michigan DNR. He gave me his card and asked me to send him some pictures and info so I'm hoping he sees this when I email the link to him, in which case hi Paul!
With lunch finished we were done with the first leg of the journey. Next step was to head north and hit the trails up north of Saginaw. That will be coming tomorrow (hopefully) in part two of this adventure!