Maybe if you drive right above a few hundred foot long copper water supply pipe --- and against or thru the water pipe!
Old minuteman missile silos in Grand Forks, ND often measured under 1 ohm resistance to remote ground. However, those were 12 ft dia steel 80+ ft deep, often 75 ft below water table, and so much ammonia salts (from fertilizer in adjacent fields) that leaks formed stalgmites and stalactites, and have seen the ground water etch nickel plating off aluminium forgings in the silos.
My own house measures about 6 ohms - 350 ft of 24 in wide footings below water table with 2 parallel spot welded rebar in the footings.
I did notice that there is an old thread here on XIT rods, a supposed big thing in the early 1970s, never did use one though.
Wahiawah HI naval base built an big pulse antenna over part of the base in the 1970s to test site EMP hardness. Volcanic soil on Ohau very acidic (and conductive), so bad that when the Honolulu airport was expanded in the 60's/70's buried aluminum conduit corroded thru in less than 1 year. Big 100 ft diameter circle of ground rods linked with buried copper wire was needed to get resistance under 100 milliohms, dont recall how many rods.