I often get asked:
“How do you know all this?”
And the honest answer is: this isn’t information you learn from a book or a YouTube video.
How do you drive a vehicle up a wall?
How do you crab-walk across a cliff face?
How do you balance a 4×4 inches from a rollover point while remaining completely controlled?
But the bigger question is:
How do you teach someone else to do it?
That’s the real craft.
The answer is a combination of things:
being a lifelong student of vehicle dynamics
spending decades behind the wheel
constantly exploring what these vehicles are truly capable of
and, importantly, pushing those limits personally first
But experience alone isn’t enough.
The real challenge is breaking technically complex concepts down into small, digestible pieces that customers can actually absorb under pressure.
Because when someone is looking through the roll-cage at an obstacle that feels physically impossible, logic disappears very quickly.
That’s where coaching matters.
Over time, I’ve become obsessed not just with what the vehicles can do — but with how people learn to trust what the vehicles can do.
That’s why the tracks are designed the way they are:
controlled environments that allow customers to attempt manoeuvres that genuinely trigger anxiety, but do so safely enough that learning can still happen.
That balance is incredibly difficult to create.
And ultimately, that’s what people are really experiencing:
not just four-wheel driving, but a structured process of learning something they previously thought was impossible.

