A SuperDuty Philosophy

This evening, I found myself reclining in the bed of my SuperDuty, buffered from the cold steel by a salvaged rubber mat. Above me, the stars shifted behind the flickering warning of a distant thunderstorm, a quiet backdrop to the mental inventory of a life in transition. As I sat there playing with the bed lights, the reality of my next big chore loomed: the spray-in bedliner. It is a biting, begrudged expense—essentially “pissing money down a tube”—yet it is the final tax on a dream of durability.

There is a common modern delusion that vehicles are assets to be managed for depreciation. In reality, a truck is pure consumption, a machine destined for a landfill in fifteen years. But it is a consumption with a noble purpose. We don’t buy these machines to preserve value; we buy them to reach the vast, unpaved spaces of America that a bus or a bike simply cannot touch. This truck is the entry fee for a decade and a half of dirt roads, scenic vistas, and small towns that smell of paper plants and dairies.

The financial sting of the SuperDuty is real—writing a cash check for a heavy-duty rig leaves a visible dent in any net worth calculation. Between the recent market volatility of the Iran War and the looming costs of the camper shell and electrical gear, the “pain of price” is a constant companion. Yet, as the markets recover and the truck stands largely paid off, that pain is beginning to fade into the background. In a few months, the cost will be a mere blip on the radar, a necessary hurdle on the path toward a larger goal.

That goal is a simple, off-grid retirement. I look at this truck and I see the bridge to my next chapter. It is the tool that will carry me until I file for my state retirement in fourteen years, when I finally trade my rundown apartment for a cabin in the wilderness. While I still have the physical strength to homestead, I want a life away from the commercialism and the reach of government workers—a place for fires, livestock, guns, and no utility bills.

Some people look at my income and suggest a different path: a plastic house in the suburbs and a sensible, aging sedan. They prioritize the appearance of wealth and the safety of the status quo. I prefer my current trade-off. I’ll keep the modest apartment and the “expensive” truck because they offer something suburban life never could: immediate access to the wild. I don’t have the off-grid cabin yet, but with this SuperDuty, I have the next fifteen years of weekends spent living that future in the present.

Map: Alma Pond
Map: Capital Region Wildlife Management Area
Map: Dobbins Memorial State Forest
Map: Donahue Woods State Forest
Map: Harrisburg Roadside Camping
Map: Little John Wildlife Management Area
Map: Otter Lake
Map: South Hill State Forest (Oneida 23)
Map: Summer Hill State Forest
Map: West Parishville State Forest
SVGZ Graphic: albany-snow-depth
SVGZ Graphic: college-rate
SVGZ Graphic: december-holidays
SVGZ Graphic: ht2025
SVGZ Graphic: Increase in Price for a Gallon of Regular Gas Since May 13, 2025 [Expires May 27 2026]
SVGZ Graphic: lt2025
SVGZ Graphic: May-sunset [Expires May 27 2026]
SVGZ Graphic: Places Named Bethlehem
SVGZ Graphic: Sunset Time Over Next 30 Days [Expires May 19 2026]
SVGZ Graphic: Towns with Most Similiar Land Cover to the Town of Bethlehem
Terrain Map: Happy World Milk Day!
Photo: Bully Hill Road
Photo: This afternoon at the Marie Antoinette Overlook
Photo: New Development
Photo: Duelly noted
Photo: Sun
Photo: Wetlands
Photo: Cold water
Photo: Down To Troy
Photo: Clearing
Photo: Shoreline

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