G
Guest
Guest
Reminds me of a 2 week family road trip to Florida, with 8 people and a dog in our 1974 VW bus. Only 7 seats, so the 4 of us kids had to take turns sitting on the floor between the middle row seat and the sliding door. Would have been nice to have some padding for that!
My wifes family routinely travelled cross-country in a VW bus; parents, 7 children and camping gear. Their tales of disaster are many; the canoe that blew off the roof on a bridge, the car top carrier disappeared unnoticed, windows that fell out and long trips into Mexico where half of the kids had Montezumas revenge.
I am sure we all have favorite, or at least most memorable, tripping vehicles. Lets hear yours.
I have had the great fortune to haul canoes and travel cross country in some wonderful vehicles; 4 different Toyota pick-ups, a Datsun pick-up and most memorable of all, the 67 VW camper bus.
The bus, with crew and gear load, would not get much above 60mph on the flats, even with a 1968 motor in it. At that time inter-State highway speeds above 55 miles per hour were prohibited, but even so we were Granny lane puttering, especially up any hill. Tell that 55 mph crap to folks on lonely highways out west.
I have so many fond memories of travelling cross-country in that bus. We installed a cassette deck and good speakers, but there was no handy cubbyhole to store the empty cassette case. I wore a leather hippie hat with a deep set crown that was perfect for holding the empty cassette case.
I could not count the number of times I walked into a gas station or convenience store with an empty cassette case atop my hat and wondered why the weirdo cashier was staring at a point 5 inches above my eyes.
The gas gauge on the bus worked, but if you twisted the faceplate the gauge below the needle could go from below empty to above a quarter tank. You did not need to actually turn the faceplate, the road jiggle would do so for you.
We ran the bus out of gas so often that we made signs reading OUT OF GAS for the driver, now highway hitchhiker, to hold up to oncoming traffic.
Near instant rides, often still in sight of the bus. Or, more than once, pull overs by folks with 5 gallon gas cans in the bed of their truck.
Your favorite tripping vehicle past or present?