Early March,
Anchorage, Alaska.
It’s cold and dark, but we have a warm glow in our souls lighting our
way as we drive our newly purchased VW Eurovan across town to its new
home. We’re starting to get excited for
our big fall road trip, and the van is a key piece of the puzzle. The love affair lasts exactly one week, until
Abby runs out of gas. The tank is still
supposed to be half full. The gas
mileage turns out to be drastically less than advertised – 8 mpg instead of
20. As the weeks pass by, we discover
more hidden treasures. There’s a hole in
the windshield washer fluid reservoir.
The blower motor has been replaced by a hack, and is ducktaped in place,
hidden behind the dash. The interior
ceiling fabric falls off revealing that the pop-top is actually an add-on – it
wasn’t made that way but modified later.
The list grows longer. It turns
out we bought a piece-of-shit (POS) van from a lying POS on craiglist. Abby breaks into tears.
Late July, Anchorage,
Alaska.
It’s Day 1 of our trip. The morning dawns cold and dreary. It’s been raining in Alaska nonstop since May
but we’re embarking on our epic journey!
Our summer of glory has turned out to be full of aborted trips through
wet tundra, but it’s still been a good time.
Now it’s time to move on, and we’re excited. The open road is ahead of us, and we leave
Anchorage with a nervous anticipation of what lies ahead. The van has been repaired, tuned up, and
pimped out. He has been hopefully
christened Skookum.
6 hours later we stop for a last slug of cheap gas before
crossing into Canada. Our newly tuned-up
Skookum, fresh from the garage and his pre-roadtrip checkup, refuses to
restart. We enlist our passengers, a
couple of French hitchhikers who have been rained out of Denali, to help push
start the van, and park on an incline at subsequent stops all the way to Whitehorse. We limp into the Superstore parking lot and debate
our options. Our mechanic in Anchorage
pulls through over the phone, and with some poking and prodding (and a few
bangs and clangs thrown in for good measure), I find a loose connection on the
starter and fix the problem. Click and
Clack would be proud. My mechanic
skills are improving at an unsustainably exponential rate. Surely the curve will flatten soon? Abby starts scowling, a permanent furrow developing
in her beautiful brow.
Late August, Big Sky,
Montana.
We’re on our way to a Michael Franti concert at Big Sky, toiling our way
up the mountain through the hot summer air.
The faint smell of gas appears shortly outside of Bozeman and gets
gradually stronger over the next few hours.
It eventually becomes unbearable, so I pull over and get out to check
the gas tank. The smell is immediately
overpowering. I hear a strange bubbling
noise coming from the tank, and can see fumes billowing out. The gas cap fairly blows off when I loosen
it, and gas starts spurting out. The
fuel is literally boiling in the tank.
We try to make the best of it by running a 5k the morning of
the concert, winning resort gift certificates by beating a half dozen severely
hungover ski resort employees who haven’t slept since leaving the bar the night
before. We score some guest passes to
the resort spa with our sob story, and drown our sorrows with the winnings as
afternoon thunderstorms threaten to cancel the concert. We stare silently into the storm clouds, the reality
of what being a VW van owner really entails hammering home like so many raindrops.
The clouds miraculously pass, the sun comes out, and then
it’s time for FRANTI! We get down,
and the world is happy once more. The
next morning, we limp slowly to Abby’s sister’s house in Salt Lake City,
Utah. We stop every hour to prevent the
van from getting too hot. Abby spends
the entire time with her hand on the seatlbelt release, ready to eject at a
moment’s notice. She is developing a distinct
nervous tick.
Early September, Salt
Lake City, Utah.
We leave Skookum with John and Shannon’s mechanic, a gruff semi-retired
character who restores vintage race cars and POS VWs. I rumble in to the parking lot and park Skookum
between an early model Porsche 911 and a Lamborghini. The mechanic takes apart the gas tank, traces
the gas line and vents the whole system.
He comes up with nothing but charges us $400. Abby has begun to stutter.
Late October,
Corvallis, Oregon.
After spending a few days visiting our good friends Chris and Leanne, we
pack up and head south, towards Ashland.
Half an hour down I-5, the storm that is dumping more than 6 inches of
rain along the Oregon Coast and flooding cities up and down the western
seaboard threatens to rip Skookum’s pop-top right off. We pull over to debate our options, and
decide a skylight will not add to the van’s value. We turn around and limp back to Corvallis,
surprising the Cusacks when we show back up at their door. Along the way, we remark on the interesting
new grinding sound coming from underneath Abby’s seat. We end up needing “nothing more” than an
exhaust hanger replaced, but the mechanic remarks casually that the vehicle
“really needs some work”. We thank him,
and head north. Abby is an unresponsive, limpid puddle in
the back seat, staring vacantly into space, a steady trickle of drool escaping
the left corner of her mouth.
Late November,
Vancouver, B.C. Skookum gets posted on craigslist in
Vancouver, Seattle, and Portland. A
potential buyer emerges who takes him to a mechanic where he is told that under
no circumstances should he buy the van.
The list of recommended repairs is long and sordid, and only 75%
accurate. We fly to Hawaii. Abby bursts
into song.
Skookum is still for sale.
2 comments:
How much are you asking and do you deliver? I could always use a new shed!
I think Skookum could have made a lovely greenhouse. Carry on.
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