We left the station and headed towards our evening campsite.
Here we encountered my weirdest vehicle carnage yet. We're crawling along and I hear a THUNK. I look over any my young copilot is wide eyed and ready to burst into tears. But nothing seems out of place. I stop the truck, dispense an appropriate amount of comfort, and then start piecing together what happened. A few feet away from the truck is this freshly broken stick:
The best I can figure is that the front right wheel picked up the 2" diameter stick and somehow managed to throw it through the open window into the cab (flying over her head). It then smashed into the B-pillar, breaking the stick and causing the portion inside the truck to reverse direction and brush the back of her head before vacating the vehicle. Her head was fine (thankfully), but I had a hard time figuring exactly what path the stick could have taken. It hit an odd set of things. Mirror:
And the window frame by the pillar. The window still closes, but it snags where the track has been crimped shut:
And that was all I found, aside from the startled copilot. Later on I discovered pieces of wood embedded into the headliner. The biggest one was half the size of my fist and tore a hand-sized hole through the new headliner before wedging into one of the roof beams. At the opposite corner of the cabin, behind the driver-middle passenger seat. Very glad that one didn't hit one of us, it would have left a mark. And I usually have passengers back there, too.
Anyways, the event was bizarre, as the stick made it into and back out of the truck without breaking any windows. And miraculously managed to miss her head. The mirror is serviceable, though I now have a good excuse to ditch the straight mirror for a convex one. I've decided to leave the hole in the headliner as a reminder of how quickly things can go wrong.
Back on the road, we rolled through Republic. Not because we wanted to be in Republic, just because crossing points on the Michigamme river are annoyingly scarce.
Having crossed the river, we headed to camp and swapped our 4-wheeled vehicle for a 3-wheeled vehicle.

We rode the trails a bit before settling in for the evening. It was a welcome addition to our normal camping routine.

As the sun set we gathered around the fire to plot the next day's route.
