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EXCITING GRAND CANYON JEEP TOURS

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Tunes for a Road

JON CARAMANICA “We Got It 4 Cheap, Vol. 2,” a 2005 mixtape from a hip-hop twin Clipse, is all brazen motion, dark, anxiety-inducing verses atop surging, snarling beats. It creates we feel as if you’re on a run — as good a reason to be in a automobile as any.

NATE CHINEN Locomotion was always a running element for a jazz guitarist Wes Montgomery, who had a Cadillac of stroke sections on a 1965 bar date that became “Smokin’ during a Half Note” by a Wynton Kelly Trio and Montgomery. The whole manuscript grooves like crazy, though generally a back-to-back marks “Unit 7” and “Four on Six” — some of a best highway strain ever made.

JON PARELES My Morning Jacket’s “Okonokos” is a double live manuscript — good for a prolonged float — of ringing, optimistic, expanded songs, propulsive though never rushed and prepared to soundtrack a wide-open road. And should a view get dull, there’s an event to nonplus out Jim James’s lyrics.

BEN RATLIFF For longer drives we wish strain that sounds like one elevated, joyous, trancelike discourse. Often that’s gospel, from whenever. Right now we like Jason Nelson’s new album, “Shifting a Atmosphere,” and a 1948 Alan Lomax recordings of Mississippi and Texas church strain during culturalequity.org.

BEN SISARIO The Shins, “Oh, Inverted World.” For many people a campfire acoustic guitar and capricious vocals of a strain “New Slang” will substantially conjure adult a adore story of a film “Garden State.” But we will always associate a somewhat scary atmospherics with an overnight expostulate by a Southwest, where a sky looks like outdoor space and a tellurian voice feels like one of your usually ties to Earth.

ANTHONY TOMMASINI For highway trips, no messenger helps pass a time improved than Wagner, whose operas reveal over long, organic spans, with changeable bursts and ruminative stretches. The four-hour expostulate from Manhattan to Cooperstown, N.Y., for a Glimmerglass Opera Festival zips right by when I’m listening to any of a “Ring” operas, contend Georg Solti’s recording of “Götterdämmerung.” Or Karl Böhm’s classical recording of “Tristan und Isolde” with Birgit Nilsson. That does a job.


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Fans still wild over Minaj

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2012 Jeep Grand Cherokee SRT



The 2012 Grand Cherokee SRT is the latest of the breed, built on the fourth-gene. Photo by Andrew Trahan.

The Jeep’s chassis also gets the SRT treatment that effectively turns the Grand . Photo by Andrew Trahan.

In SRT trim, Jeep upgrades the engine to a Godzilla-level 6.4-liter, 470-hp, 465. Photo by Andrew Trahan.

The cabin of our machine came with standard SRT trim —deeply bolstered lea. Photo by Andrew Trahan.

A bonus: Without the ceiling taken up by a TV screen, our SRT had a massive dual. Photo by Andrew Trahan.

Automatic ride mode carried us across the Great Plains, but sport was our settin. Photo by Liam Donan.

Though our 2,924-mile journey included mind-numbing hours of cross-country inter. Photo by Liam Donan.

Spring trips always end too soon, but we didn’t dread loading our bump-run batte. Photo by Liam Donan.

Many a spring va-cation starts and ends with a pile of overstuffed suitcases and backpacks crammed along with their respective owners into the family minivan, sedan or sport-utility vehicle. It’s either for a round trip to the local airport or a long slog to and from a beach locale somewhere in the (hopefully) warmer and sunnier South.

Once at the destination, the vehicle—whether driven from home or rented on arrival—becomes an afterthought, an appliance that sits parked until the beer cooler or the SPF 50 runs low, or unless it’s called upon for a run to a theme park or local entertainment establishment. Regardless, you’ve probably given much more thought to your destination than your choice of spring-break wheels.

We propose a compromise—try thinking of your motorized travel partner as an integral and equally important element of a successful spring trip. If sloth and gluttony are your goals, along with a substantial dose of sunshine and saltwater, pick from the plethora of utilitarian vehicles available. If economy is your primary driv-er, you, your tent and your hybrid will make out just fine. But if you choose a more active vacation—where quick bursts of speed, hard cornering and sudden stops are a big part of the postcard—only a proper performance vehicle will do.

For our spring snow-sports adventure to the mountains of Colorado, we knew we’d want a vehicle with utility to spare but also one with high-performance credentials—a vehicle as capable of hauling a load as it would be hustling from 0 to 60. Knowing that we’d be spending the week driving cross-country and then running through a gauntlet of twisty mountain roads, powering from peak to peak in search of white gold, we wanted a vehicle that promised solid SUV functionality and long-haul driveability, along with the kind of handling and performance we’d need in a high-altitude environment. From the very short list of high-performance sport-utility vehicles on the market (see sidebar), we chose the all-new 2012 Jeep Grand Cherokee SRT as a keen example of the segment. Did we mention that we needed to carry skis?

The 2012 Grand Cherokee SRT is the latest of the breed, built on the fourth-generation Grand Cherokee that debuted as a 2011 model (and promptly claimed our inaugural Autoweek Best of the Best/ Truck award). Our vehicle of choice came dressed to the nines in brilliant black crystal paint, with only the SRT badging, wicked blacked-out grille and dual-vent hood hinting at the monster hidden beneath. Our tester was accessorized by Mopar with a beefy Thule roof rack ($276) and ski/snowboard carrier ($172), and a Mopar-option, dealerinstalled Wi-Fi wireless kit ($508) tucked under the front passenger seat.

In SRT trim, Jeep upgrades the engine to a Godzilla-level 6.4-liter, 470-hp, 465-lb-ft V8, hooked to a paddle-shifted five-speed automatic transmission sending power to all four wheels via Jeep’s Moab-tested Quadra-Trac four-wheel-drive system. The SRT powertrain massaging assured that the vehicle would easily hit our requirement for quickness: Chrysler says the Grand Cherokee SRT is its best-performing Jeep ever, running from 0 to 60 mph in 4.8 seconds and the quarter-mile in the 13s, with a top speed of 160 mph.

The Jeep’s chassis also gets the SRT treatment that effectively turns the Grand Cher-okee from capable mountain goat into a taut and muscular mountain lion. At the center of it all is the SRT’s Selec-Track system, which allows five settings (automatic, sport, tow, track and snow) for stability control, damping, transmission shifts, torque proportioning, throttle response and electronic limited-slip differential performance.

Special steering tuning and Bilstein adaptive damping provide a claimed 0.90 g of cornering force, while bright red Brembo calipers (six-piston fronts, four-piston rears) clamp 15-inch front and 13.8-inch rear vented rotors to bring the 5,150-pound SUV (6,500 pounds fully loaded) to a halt from 60 mph in just 116 feet. We ran on standard-issue Pirelli Scorpion Verde All-Season P295/45ZR 20-inch run-flat tires mounted on factory-forged aluminum wheels. Jeep recommends Pirelli P Zeros for maximum warm-weather grip, but we shied away from the three-season rubber in the hope of running into a spring snow squall.

The cabin of our machine came with standard SRT trim —deeply bolstered leather SRT seats with suede inserts, a heated, leather-wrapped, flat-bottomed steering wheel, carbon-fiber accent trim and plenty of space for four to spread out. We skipped the available rear-seat entertainment system and instead relied on the Wi-Fi system to keep laptops, game machines, phones and iPads wirelessly linked to the Inter-net and all the media options it has to offer. Multiple power ports (12-volt DC and 110-volt AC) kept everything running, while the built-in navigation system kept us on course.

Having traveled many miles with various forms of built-in or carried-on entertainment systems, it’s safe to say that your money is best spent on Wi-Fi, even with a monthly cell-service fee.

Unlike factory entertainment systems that usually force everyone to watch the same programming, Wi-Fi lets each passenger choose how to while away the miles. Games, movies, social media, e-mail—everything you can access from your home or office is available while winging across the expanses of Nebraska at 80 mph. The hardship of long-distance travel melts into the background as miles fly by with nary a complaint. A bonus: Without the ceiling taken up by a TV screen, our SRT had a massive dual-pane sunroof that allowed us wide-open views skyward.

We were pleasantly surprised to see that the latest SRT comes with trailering capability, unlike the original, which took up the hitch zone with twin exhaust outlets. The 2012 model moves the tail-pipes, allowing Jeep to restore the hitch point—and gives the SRT up to 5,000 pounds of towing capacity. We didn’t come close to that limit, but we did install a tailgate cargo rack that allowed us to punt some of the bulkier gear out of the cabin.

Though our 2,924-mile journey included mind-numbing hours of cross-country interstate travel, there were few complaints from passengers or pilots. For such a high-strung vehicle, the ride was smooth and steady, thanks in part to the settling effect of a full load.

The active cruise control garnered high praise, not only for keeping a steady pace but also for automatically slowing with fellow motorists when the inevitable state trooper appeared on the horizon.

Most surprising was the amount of time the big V8 spent in eco mode, with four cylinders deactivated. Chrysler says an improved active-valve exhaust system allows cylinder shutdown over a wider rpm range, upping fuel economy by as much as 13 percent and pushing range to 450 miles from the 24.6-gallon tank, or about 18 mpg. We never achieved that kind of mileage —our best average for a tank was 16.6 mpg (did we mention that we had skis on the roof?), while economy plummeted to 12.7 mpg in mountain driving. Overall, we posted 14.8 mpg, just bettering the EPA combined estimate of 14 mpg.

Automatic ride mode carried us across the Great Plains, but sport was our setting of choice in ski country, where it provided a just-right level of responsiveness without tacking all the way to track mode. Gear holding on grades via the steering-wheel-mounted paddle shifters was great, as was roadholding even when light snow and wet pavement loosened the traction. Braking was instant and linear, a critical commodity when corners come quickly and are at the bottom of steep downhill grades.

Though quick reflexes and surefooted handling are important in mountain driving, we gave our highest marks to the pure power we could summon from the big Hemi under the hood. In a region loaded with wheezing 18-wheelers, overloaded rental rigs and more four-cylinder Subarus than we’ve ever seen outside of Japan (or maybe Vermont), being able to obtain dragster-level thrust on demand is an attribute that cannot be underestimated. When that power comes on just as strong on a 6 percent grade at 10,000 feet as it does at sea level, it’s nearly as joy-inducing as first tracks in knee-deep powder.

Spring trips always end too soon, but we didn’t dread loading our bump-run battered bodies back aboard the SRT for the 1,200-mile ride home. With equipment loaded and locked, electronics running hot and the Grand Cherokee SRT ready to roll, what most would consider a brutal “are we there yet?” 24-hour trip back home beckoned us as just another chance to drive.

Can we go now?

2012 Jeep Grand Cherokee SRT

ON SALE: Now

BASE PRICE/AS-TESTED: $55,295/$63,975

DRIVETRAIN: 6.4-liter, 470-hp, 465-lb-ft V8; 4WD, five-speed automatic

CURB WEIGHT: 5,150 lb

0-60 MPH: 4.8 sec (mfr)

FUEL ECONOMY (EPA/AW): 14/14.8 mpg

Big Brutal

The list of logic-defying SUVs isn’t a particularly long one, but they all pack at least 500 hp and are more than capable of making you chuckle.

2012 BMW X5 M/X6 M

Base Price: $88,145/$91,195

Drivetrain: 4.4-liter, 555-hp, 500-lb-ft twinturbocharged V8; AWD, six-speed automatic

Curb Weight: 5,368/5,324 lb

0-60 MPH: 4.5 sec (mfr)

Fuel Economy (EPA): 14 mpg

Our Opinion: A little more practical in the X5 wrapper but nonsensical as the X6.

2012 Mercedes-Benz ML63 AMG

Base Price: $95,865

Drivetrain: 5.5-liter, 518-hp, 516-lb-ft twin-turbo-charged V8; AWD, seven-speed automatic

Curb Weight: 5,170 lb

0-60 MPH: 4.7 sec (mfr)

Fuel Economy (EPA): 16 mpg

Our Opinion: Optional performance package bumps power to 550 hp and top speed to 174 mph, which is really necessary.

2012 Porsche Cayenne Turbo

Base Price: $109,725

Drivetrain: 4.8-liter, 500-hp, 516-lb-ft turbo-charged V8; AWD, eight-speed automatic

Curb Weight: 4,784 lb

0-60 MPH: 4.4 sec (mfr)

Fuel Economy (EPA): 18 mpg

Our Opinion: The most satisfying performance SUV, with a top speed of 172 mph.

2012 Land Rover Range Rover Sport Supercharged

Base Price: $76,095

Drivetrain: 5.0-liter, 510-hp, 461-lb-ft supercharged V8; 4WD, six-speed automatic

Curb Weight: 5,816 lb

0-60 MPH: 5.9 sec (mfr)

Fuel Economy (EPA): 14 mpg

Our Opinion: Elegant and incredibly quick.

Pick Your Ride

Depending on YOUR TYPE OF VACATION, there are many vehicles to fit the bill. These are from our partners at, based on the site’s lifestyle categories.

Family

2013 Ford Explorer, $29,695

Seating for seven, lots of entertainment options, four-star overall NHTSA crash rating.

Hauling

2012 Honda Odyssey, $29,205

Seven configurable seats, with up to 148.5 cubic feet of flat-floor cargo space.

Best Value

2012 Kia Sportage, $19,300

Standard satellite radio and Bluetooth, with a 10-year powertrain warranty.

Sporty

2012 Chevrolet Corvette convertible, $55,575

A romantic, 430-hp ride for two. See the U.S.A. unobstructed in this Chevrolet.

Luxury

2012 Audi A8, $79,625

Best mix of serenity, tech-nology and craftsmanship.

Green

2012 Volkswagen Jetta TDI, $23,548

Gobs of torque and 30 mpg city/42 mpg highway.

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Take a outing into story during a classical automobile show

A RECORD series exhibitors are approaching during Faversham’s annual two-day classical automobile uncover this weekend.

Travel Through Time promises 350 cars, buses and motorcycles from yesteryear, as good as live music.

  1. RETURNING:  Peter and Barbara Franklin are bringing a singular 1955 Morris Minor to a show

    RETURNING: Peter and Barbara Franklin are bringing a singular 1955 Morris Minor to a show

  2. TRAVEL THROUGH TIME: Homefront, a Second World War train museum

  3. PULLING IN THE CROWDS: Travel Through Time captivated 10,000 visitors final year

  4. ON SHOW: Charlie a bus

  5. VINTAGE: A Model T Ford will be one of a many classical models on display

  6. SERPENTINE: A Pilgrim Sumo Cobra reproduction

This year outlines a 50th anniversary of a Triumph Spitfire car. A two-seater automobile indication easy by Practical Classics repository will be on uncover outward a Shepherd Neame Visitor Centre.

Among those exhibiting will be Peter and Barbara Franklin of Lower Road, Faversham, with a singular 1955 Morris Minor Series 2 outpost and one of a final Morris Minor pick-ups to be made, dating from 1972.

Peter, 75, a late builder, said: “We always demeanour brazen to a Faversham show. Being in a High Street adds to a atmosphere.

“The 1955 outpost contingency be one of a oldest Morris Minors in a country. It is one of usually 4 left so it is a genuine provide to uncover it.”

Visitors will be means to transport to Challock, Selling, Boughton, Oare and Graveney on vintage-double decker buses and learn about a story of a Second World War on house a Homefront train museum during South East Coachworks in Preston Street.

The giveaway event, now in a 16th year, is second usually to a bound festival for pulling in crowds.

Last year it captivated 10,000 motoring enthusiasts from opposite a country.

Faversham Enterprise Partnership business corner coordinator, Ima Rix pronounced a uncover had an corner since a Gothic city centre provides a ideal backdrop for a arrangement of ancestral vehicles.

She added: “We have some-more entries than we have ever had before so we wish a uncover will be bigger and improved than ever.

“Veteran buses are increasingly popular. This year we are going to underline them in a city centre on Saturday with classical cars and motorcycles on Sunday. Hopefully a eventuality will assistance internal businesses.”

There will also be stalls, live song and dilettante events, crafts, trams and film footage during The Alexander Centre in Preston Street, Abbey Street’s Creek Creative Gallery and a Old Brewery Store during Shepherd Neame.

The automobile uncover is organized by Faversham Area Tourism Association.

For some-more information revisit www.faversham.org


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Gurnee, Illinois Chrysler Dealership To Take Part in Bonus Cash Allowance

GURNEE, Ill., May 14, 2012 /PRNewswire-iReach/ — Gurnee Dodge, a Chrysler dealership in Gurnee, Illinois, is happy to announce that they will be offering members of the United States military an additional incentive through the month of May in the form of $500.00 Military Appreciation Bonus Consumer Cash allowance. This $500.00 allowance will go towards either the purchase or lease of a new Chrysler Group vehicle, including; Chrysler, Dodge, FIAT, Jeep or Ram Truck.

(Photo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20120514/CG06541)

Reid Bigland, Chrysler Group’s Head of U.S. Sales as well as Dodge’s President CEO, talked about how important this offering is to them, stating that, “Chrysler Group and its dealers are proud to support the members of the U.S. Armed Forces and their families by offering this additional Military Appreciation Bonus Consumer Cash. During this 18-day period, eligible members of the military and their families can take advantage of this $1,000 cash allowance to purchase or lease a new Chrysler Group vehicle.”

The promotion will start today, May 14th, and run through the end of the month, May 31st.

Members of the military must fall into one of these categories to qualify, including; active military, active military reserve, retired military(honorable discharge required) and retired military reserve. Discharge date doesn’t factor into this at all, although honorable discharge is required.

For more information visit, www.gurneedodge.com or call us at (888) 472-7194. At Gurnee Dodge we sell the latest Chrysler Group makes and models in Gurnee as well as several used cars in Gurnee, Illinois.

Media Contact: Mike Kuhn Gurnee Dodge, 847-623-3000, MKuhn@GurneeDodge.com

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Children on prolonged automobile trips – small monsters in a behind seat

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Busch Gardens' Serengeti Safari lets you live an animal lifestyle

I’ve been to Busch Gardens more times than I can count. I have purchased the Florida Fun Card more years than not, ridden roller coasters to the point of sickness, eaten at almost every restaurant on site and even experienced some of the nighttime festivities. The one thing I had never done — and have asked for every year for my birthday — was to go on the Serengeti Safari tour.

This year, my birthday came a few months early when an opportunity arose for me to go on one of these tours. Needless to say, I jumped at the chance. Taking pictures with a zoom lens is one thing, but the idea of being up close to rhinos, giraffes, zebras and other animals excites me like crazy.

On the big day my husband Jeremy and I checked in at the Adventure Outpost for our afternoon tour. We were directed to a tented area with couches and chairs while we waited for our tour guide, Cherish. Once it was time to go, we were escorted to the truck that can fit 18 people comfortably.

We departed onto a 65-acre mockup of a wild African plain, where we saw so many animals and learned so much in a small amount of time. For example, I never knew that when zebras are born, they are brown and white. Only as they age does the hue turn black and white as the hairs get compacted. I also didn’t know that the horn shape is different for each rhino, and it changes as they rub it on surfaces around them. In my 30-minute crash course, I think I learned more about these creatures than I ever soaked up in school.

My only regret was that I didn’t take a sunset Serengeti tour. It wasn’t until I was on the tour truck that I even knew that was a possibility. It’s a seasonal offering, but seems like it might have been even more fun. Guests begin by enjoying an adult beverage and then hiking out onto the plain and then stopping at a fire circle before hand-feeding giraffes to finish off the night.

The good news is I still got to hand-feed some giraffes on the daytime tour. Cherish pulled out big heads of romaine lettuce, and all of the folks on our truck got to take turns watching their long black tongues stretch out as they reached for the green goodness. Before ending the tour, Cherish helped us all take pictures with the giraffes, and then we were whisked away back toward the tent.

We relived the tour the rest of the day from the tram ride back to our car and all the way home. The memories of that short tour will last us a lifetime.

I hope that since the Serengeti Safari daytime tour can now be crossed off my bucket list, my husband comes up with something just as awesome for my birthday. Perhaps the Serengeti sunset tour, cough cough, wink wink.

— My First Time is a column about trying new things in Tampa Bay. Email Ashley at famousashleygrant@gmail.com.


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