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The Jeep Gladiator Mojave deserves better than New York City in the spring of 2020.
It is, after all, the latest and arguably greatest of the already-great Gladiator breed — an off-road pickup truck created by the first name in American off-roaders. It’s designed for fast running over rocky terrain, first and foremost, replete with tough all-terrain gear like Fox internal bypass shocks and front hydraulic jounce bumpers, 33-inch all-terrain tires, an extra inch of ride height up front and stronger axles — all on top of the Rubicon model’s already-impressive suite of features, like a disconnecting stabilizer bar up front and locking differentials front and rear.
It’s enough to make the Mojave the first Jeep to earn the new Desert Rated badge, signifying that it’s ready to take on not just forest trails and rolling plains, but the dry dust of places like Baja California. In those sorts of environments, the removable top, detachable doors and fold-flat windshield all come into their own, bringing driver and passengers closer to the warmth and wind of the natural world than any other new vehicle can manage.
And yet, my time with said Jeep landed during the deepest, darkest part of our national coronavirus-related shutdown, in the densest part of both the East Coast’s population and the viral outbreak…during a particularly cold, especially gray April.
The closest thing to a silver lining was knowing that, if things went all I Am Legend, the Mojave would probably be one of the better vehicles for going full Plissken and making an escape from New York. (Yes, I’m mixing movie metaphors. Deal with it.) Still, I made the most of it: tearing up the local pockmarked highways and roughshod side streets, venturing upstate for a little socially-distant hiking, and occasionally hopping the curb just because I could.
