There are sensible places to test a car. Smooth roads, controlled environments, perhaps a quiet proving ground with a polite engineer holding a clipboard. And then there is Moab, Utah, which is none of those things. It is hot, it is dusty, and it appears to have been designed by nature specifically to make vehicles cry. So naturally, this is where Jeep chooses to celebrate sixty years of the Easter Jeep Safari, from March 28 to April 5. Because if you are going to prove that your machines are capable, you do not do it gently. You throw them at rocks the size of small buildings and see what happens.
This year, the whole affair is bigger than ever. Thousands of enthusiasts descend upon Moab, not quietly, but with the sort of enthusiasm usually reserved for festivals involving loud music and questionable decisions. Jeep, along with its performance arm, arrives not just with vehicles, but with an entire experience. There are concept cars, hands on demonstrations, and a home base set up at Walker Drug in downtown Moab, which becomes, for a brief and glorious moment, the centre of the off road universe. And then there is the important bit. Jeep is not merely here to play. Alongside Red Rock 4 Wheelers and the Bureau of Land Management, it is also busy cleaning and preserving trails like Fins and Things. Because it turns out that even when you are flinging machines at unforgiving terrain, someone has to tidy up afterwards.

This is what happens when someone at Jeep decides that subtlety is overrated. The Wrangler Anvil 715 is built for overlanding, which means it is designed to go very far away from civilisation and remain there quite happily. It is purposeful, unapologetic, and engineered with the sort of intent that suggests it would rather climb a mountain than sit in traffic. There is no unnecessary bulk here, just capability distilled into something that looks like it could outlast most geological formations.

Now this is where things become slightly unhinged. The BUZZCUT is a two seat Wrangler that appears to have been put on a very aggressive diet, only to emerge stronger, faster, and considerably more mischievous. It is compact, sporty, and built for those who believe that less weight and more capability is always a good idea. There is also increased storage, which suggests that while it is wild, it is not entirely impractical. Think of it as the off road equivalent of a sports car that has decided roads are optional.

At first glance, this looks like a large, luxurious machine designed for comfort. And it is. But then Jeep has gone and given it actual off road ability, which feels faintly absurd in the best possible way. The Grand Wagoneer Commander blends premium refinement with genuine capability. It can tow, it can climb, and it can do so while making its occupants feel rather pleased with themselves. It is for those who want to venture into the wilderness without giving up heated seats and a sense of occasion.

This one is refreshingly straightforward. The Wrangler Laredo strips things back to the essentials and then adds just enough character to remind you why simplicity can be so appealing. Built on a Willys base, it celebrates mechanical honesty. There is a tactile, almost nostalgic quality to it, as though it is gently reminding you that off roading used to be about feel rather than features. It is not trying to be clever. It is simply very good at what it does.

And then there is the XJ Pioneer, which is less a concept and more a rolling tribute. It harks back to the original 1984 Cherokee, a vehicle that quietly changed the sport utility landscape. This modern interpretation ties that legacy to eighty five years of Jeep heritage while looking ahead to the return of the Cherokee nameplate in 2026. It is a clever blend of nostalgia and forward thinking, which is not an easy thing to achieve without becoming sentimental. Somehow, it manages it.
Beyond the metal and the madness, what Jeep is doing here is rather clever. It is celebrating its past, testing its future, and inviting people to be part of the process. The expanded experiences at Walker Drug, the interaction with enthusiasts, and the sheer scale of the event all point to a brand that understands exactly what it is. It is not about refinement in the traditional sense. It is about capability, character, and a willingness to go where others would sensibly stop. And in a world increasingly filled with quiet, efficient machines that do everything rather well, there is something immensely satisfying about that.