The adventures of the merry band of misfits who call Dock Six in Port Dover their summer home. Boat repair, boat maintenance, boat building, boat cruises, boat philosophy, boat recipes and just plain boats are the focus, fueled by good food, good friends and cheap booze. Welcome!
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Tuesday, 22 November 2011
Wheels for Keels- A Bittersweet Swap
"I don't write songs about girls anymore, I have to write songs about women."
-The Pursuit of Happiness
In February of 2002, I acquired an old VW Thing, the 47th VW I had owned. It was a project, in need of an engine, some bodywork (a tree had fallen on it), paint and reassembly. My plan at the time was to do a quick and dirty rebuild and get it on the road by the summer. Shouldn't take more than 6 months, tops, I figured.
Last week it finally left the garage. On the back of somebody else's trailer.
It wasn't as hard to see the car go as I thought it would be. In fact, as I watched the trailer and it's cargo head out of the driveway, the hardest part was coming to grips with the fact that I was now, officially an old fart.
I could ignore the receding hairline.
I could ignore the greying beard.
I could ignore the expanding waistline.
I could ignore the fact that I listen to talk radio.
I could no longer ignore the fact that I preferred standing and sitting while working with wood and fiberglass in a warm house to lying on my back on a cold floor in a cold garage clutching cold tools, under two tons of old rust trying to remove a cold , seized, 40 year old bolt, nut or screw that is going to snap right...about...* ...now. I prefer the scent of fresh cut cedar and mahogany to the stink of PB Blaster and overheated gear oil. I prefer the growl of a table saw cutting ply to the sound of a cut off wheel shrieking through sheetmetal. I prefer to shake sawdust out of my hair to trying to excavate rust and filings out of my ears.
Hey! You kids! Get off my damn lawn!
While I was disappointed in myself for not finishing what I had started with this project, I was eager to move on. It was time.
Cleaning out the garage was the last hurdle to clear before I could start the catamaran build. Now, with the garage empty, I could begin to refill it.
Monday, the donor boat was delivered to Stately Jones Manor. Time to strip it down, and get to getting.
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Thats not a bad looking boat...
ReplyDeleteJordan.