Hmmmmm
My thoughts are this...........I think finesse is the key. Right line, understanding where all of your vehicle is, what the terrain is and how it will react.
However, when stuff goes wrong I want to make sure I can force it.
On the finesse side of things its more about knowing what will happen in a given situation. Take my little rub on Cabin Creek a few weeks ago. I watched the rig in front of me maneuver around the hump.........I knew that I didn't have the same clearance so I couldn't maneuver it in the same manner. In the end what I was hoping to do didn't quite work out, funnily enough what I thought would happen did and I scrubbed my door and fender,
what I hoped would happen didn't bear out. In that case a little more experience would have told me that I should have went with my thought and understanding of how my rig would react rather than trust my ego to drive
Same run we had a rather large uphill to do. I did not know what to expect, the hill was south facing and there was a risk of ice under the snow. But in this case rather than working the finesse angle I chose forth. 4 Low, Locked up, Disconnected, 5th gear and hold on. In the end more force than was needed but my lack of experience in winter wheeling didn't allow for the "finesse" approach
so it was nice to know that the force was there to use.
So as your experience grows (both with wheeling and specifically your own rig) I think finesse can be used more and more......................but sometimes force can just be plain fun BAJA!!!
Just my relative newb thoughts on it all.
BTW did I mention that I LOVE WHEELING