Not Mine, but Close. |
A commentator on NPR (1) yesterday
was talking about boys bonding with fathers with a car as the, no pun intended,
vehicle. Got me thinking about my generation, pre-boomer, high school in the 50’s,
and my first car at 12. That was a 1933 Pontiac 4 door sedan with running
boards and duel spare tires on the front fenders. Straight 8. Eighty
horsepower. Of course I couldn't drive it on public roads, so the farm roads
were my world. I made an oval track on about an acre and raced around it for
hours. Turned it on its side a few times but nothing major. Of course no seat
belts or other safety gizmos. Mechanical brakes. Five gallon gas can in the
back seat for a gas tank. Unsecured. I was lucky I didn’t burn myself to death.
Then, when I was 16, I bought the
49 Ford convertible. Saved up from paper routes and produce boy at Penn Fruit,
and paid $250 for it. Beautiful hot rod. V8, Crestline
chrome, Carson top, custom grill, custom interior in black and white, skirts,
nosed, decked, lowered, duel Stromberg 97s, milled heads, Mallory ignition and
wicked pipes. Red. I spent days of time working on it. Over the next three
years I replace or rebuilt 9 transmissions, 3 rear ends and 3 drive shafts. The
drive train was just not up to the power delivered by the reworked engine, or
the drag racing moron behind the wheel. But Oh My did I have fun in that car. Drunk
driving, girl hunting, buddy racing, rumbling with a few gangs from out of
town, driving to Florida, pissing off Mr. Canosa, the Assistant Principal at
Roslyn High.
Driving,
always driving. But no bonding. My father knew cars, but worked almost all the
time. He would occasionally offer some advice, usually good, but never got with
me on a project. We worked some together in the summers, and fished together
some as well. We had one of those father-son things that didn't include much
touching. So I could relate to the guy on the radio about cars, but not about
dads. Still, I had a kick-ass car and a good father. When the Ford finally gave
up in 1959, he helped me buy a 1959 Chevy 2 door post coupe. Basic with a 283
V8. Blue. Good transportation but never the “flash” of the Ford.
Same year, model and color. Not mine. |
But none
ever approached or surpassed the ’49 convertible. One of these days I may get
another oldie and play mechanic. But age is a funny thing. Desires and wants
sometimes are transient, and what seems like a good idea today seems a bit
silly tomorrow. But Sally never really knows what I may come home with. The beauty
of Sally is this: whatever car I might come home with, she would accept, if not love,
and what more could a man ask? Thing is, with Sally, what else do I really
need?
Image:http://image.streetrodderweb.com/f/images/10979708+w195/0812sr_44_z+goodguys_ppg_nationals+1949_ford_convertible.jpg
Image:
http://www.boldride.com/image/http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8514/8504948408_a1e028c194_o.jpg?width=1024&height=770
Image:
http://www.boldride.com/image/http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8514/8504948408_a1e028c194_o.jpg?width=1024&height=770
1. http://www.npr.org/2014/08/05/338099738/complicated-cars-put-a-dent-in-an-old-father-son-ritual
1 comment:
What a touching story
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