Hard to say from a distance, but once tyres are coated in mud you ain't goin' nowhere! I had a similar experience in a pine plantation where I had to drive up a gently sloping but wet and slippery track (not even badly rutted). Now this was in a Rangie LSE with front and rear diff locks, but with normal 16" wheels and AT tyres which had reliably taken me wherever I had wanted to go. But once the mud stuck on the tyres, there was no way I was driving up. I could have persevered, dropped tyre pressures, winched etc., but it just wasn't that important and there was another track anyway.
Sometimes it is surprising what you can drive through. And it can be just as surprising what stops you. There have been any number of occasions when I thought I wouldn't make it all the way through this, but the car just kept plowing through. And many other occasions where a seemingly straightforward section of track has become virtually impassable.
2013 D4 expedition equipped
1966 Army workshop trailer
(previously SII 2.25 swb, SIII 2.25 swb & lwb, P38 Vogue, 1993 LSE 3.9V8 then HS2.8)
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