Trucks, cars, highways, landscape, good writing. "You cannot travel on the path, before you have become the Path itself."
Tuesday, September 11, 2012
Basha's Oog
Oog is eye in Dutch. I grabbed this collage from Basha Burwell's intriguing blog on visual aspects of our life here in the Netherlands. Check it out at http://bashasoog.blogspot.nl/
Monday, September 10, 2012
Shanklin, Isle of Wight, Coach-and-four
We're pushing the edges of the thematic envelope here...not an old truck in sight. But AL is supposed to be about vehicles, and roads, and we have both here. That's my father, HHB, age 2, clutching his father's (HB) hand. The scene is the village of Shanklin, on the Isle of Wight, England, at 130 pm on Friday 19th July 1912. I believe the coach is taking passengers to Newport where they will catch the steamer across to Southampton on the mainland. I don't know who took the picture, or why. I've always wondered about the guy in the white shoes. And the driver's sunburnt face reminds me of some west-country character out of one of Thomas Hardy's Wessex novels.
Saturday, September 8, 2012
The Dutch 1964 El Camino
So far the coolest, barest Chevrolet I've seen in the Netherlands. Dutch people rarely deliver the American car aesthetic in such a satisfying way, it seems to me. American cars & trucks over here are usually organized to send out a message of right-wing insouciance. It's the Harley-Davidson spirit. If you run any kind of big US car or truck in the Netherlands you're sending out a slightly archaic, don't tread on me, greying-braids-flapping-in-the-wind kinda vibe. Or that's how I'm reading it. Don't know how they sustain the rebel attitude with gas at $10 a gallon but that's the price of freedom, I guess. Sure liked this cool, bare, slightly ratted El Camino, though. But i you're going to operate an El Camino in the Low Countries, you had better make sure all the drain holes are operational, or you'll end up with a duck pond back there.
Thursday, September 6, 2012
1950 Chevy trucks
This from our Nevada correspondent: "As regards the '51 Minnesota Chevy; yes, they all have that vent above the firewall; my '45 does, too.
After a summer of erratic effort we got our '50 fired up enough to pull out of the mud and get parked just before we left; new gas tank, new fuel and vacuum lines, rudimentary carb cleaning. Next summer, maybe, we'll finally attach the body to the frame like it should be... ours is a "3100", which means half ton...Jarrod's looks like it has the longer bed, might be the 3/4 ton.
After a summer of erratic effort we got our '50 fired up enough to pull out of the mud and get parked just before we left; new gas tank, new fuel and vacuum lines, rudimentary carb cleaning. Next summer, maybe, we'll finally attach the body to the frame like it should be... ours is a "3100", which means half ton...Jarrod's looks like it has the longer bed, might be the 3/4 ton.
Indestructible, wonderful, simple...great vehicles"--MSM
| Saskatchewan grainer |
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| Banff to the Rio Grande 1983 |
Monday, September 3, 2012
The 1951 Chevrolet truck
from photographer Jarrod McCabe whose Montana-to-Masachusetts trip in brand-new-old F250 was documented in a series of posts last December:
"1951 Chevrolet found in Emily, Minnesota. couldn't find the owner, just his wife who said it was a '51 but didn't know the capacity of the truck.
I was intrigued by what looks like a manually operable air intake right in front of the windshield." --JM
Mercury Trucks & Pontiac Laurentians
NYTimes ran a piece today on Canadian auto marques. Autoliterate has visited the subject of Canadian-branded trucks in a couple of posts: one on (Dodge) Fargo pickups, another on the beautiful Mercury M-3 truck we came across in Nova Scotia last year. Also have a look at PB's essay Love Cars, which refers to 1959 Canadian vs. US Pontiacs.
Ambassador of India
At first I thought it was a London taxi. Upon closer inspection, I remained puzzled. Reminded me of a European sedan from the 1950's or early 1960's--a Peugeot, a Hillman, a Volvo? A Russian ZIL? The windscreen visor was a popular feature on early 1950s Chevrolets. But this car was brand-new, with shreds of protective plastic still on the seats. And the interior was quite modern.
It's an Ambassador, made by Hindustan Motors in India. This model has an Isuzu engine. They must be one of the most popular cars in the world, but I've not been to India, and had never encountered one before. Based on an English Morris from 1957, Ambassadors have been produced in India for the past half-century. It's a handsome car. I want one. The only thing that didn't appeal were the cheesy, stick-on badges.
I wonder if these are being imported to Europe and sold here. Would like to learn more abut the motor industry in India: I know Land Rover is Indian-owned now. Is this car, on the streets of Wassenaar, NL, a one-off owner-import? Or perhaps belongs to the Indian Embassy in The Hague? The plates weren't CD plates but didn't look like regular NL number plates, either. Perhaps Indian?
It's an Ambassador, made by Hindustan Motors in India. This model has an Isuzu engine. They must be one of the most popular cars in the world, but I've not been to India, and had never encountered one before. Based on an English Morris from 1957, Ambassadors have been produced in India for the past half-century. It's a handsome car. I want one. The only thing that didn't appeal were the cheesy, stick-on badges.
I wonder if these are being imported to Europe and sold here. Would like to learn more abut the motor industry in India: I know Land Rover is Indian-owned now. Is this car, on the streets of Wassenaar, NL, a one-off owner-import? Or perhaps belongs to the Indian Embassy in The Hague? The plates weren't CD plates but didn't look like regular NL number plates, either. Perhaps Indian?
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