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Thread: i still cant believe he is gone

  1. #1
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    i still cant believe he is gone

    hey after watching the memorial part of the logies and seeing mike leyland up there it just hit me that what a great man he was and i wish he was still here today he still had so much more to give to the world.im not sure if anything has been done before i asssume so but i feel like i need to do something to honour him.maybe a really special trip one that links a australians and the country

  2. #2
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    Maybe recreate one of there trips & only use landrovers real ones (series) .

    1969 LWB S2a yellow, gone
    1972 LWB S2a 5 DOOR wagon coming & GONE
    1973 LWB S3 green Sadly GONE
    1977 LWB S3 tabletop building
    1992 disco BOINGY BOINGY

    My landrover doesn't leak oil , IT SWEATS POWER

    JASON & KAREN

  3. #3
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    ah hell bugger me I didnt know he had passed on - the leyland brothers shows are certainly a part of why I lived in the out back so much and why I have lived in so many remote places

  4. #4
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    i was thinkin bout recreatin one of there trips or maybe go to a few of there favourite places
    have to do something

  5. #5
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    Their show is on channel 72 most nights around 12.30am I must admit I have been watching a few of them lately and really enjoy them.
    There was one episode last week where they went up to Darwin in the wet season in their two landrovers. It took them 3 days to travel about 5 kilometres as they were constantly bogged in the mud. Very interesting show, I'm definately going to buy some of their dvd's off ebay

  6. #6
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    While I love my Landy & probably will never own any other type of fourby again ( except an LJ50 when I can find one) I still never understood the reverence with which most people hold these lads???? Possibly because I spent all my life in four wheel drives I didn't see them as special, just doing what we were..

  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by twitchy View Post
    While I love my Landy & probably will never own any other type of fourby again ( except an LJ50 when I can find one) I still never understood the reverence with which most people hold these lads???? Possibly because I spent all my life in four wheel drives I didn't see them as special, just doing what we were..
    Yes, but 30 or 40 years before anyone else , they travelled a lot of places in at times suss vehicles with no chance of meeting up with someone else if they broke down, which they regularly did, places back then that could kill you quick smart, great blokes, Regards Frank.

  8. #8
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    Good point, they had some balls. My 4wd life started in 1968 (as a tiny passenger) so it just seems a natural thing to me I guess.

  9. #9
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    maybe when rangie rover has got his leyland car registered

  10. #10
    JDNSW's Avatar
    JDNSW is offline RoverLord Silver Subscriber
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    Quote Originally Posted by twitchy View Post
    While I love my Landy & probably will never own any other type of fourby again ( except an LJ50 when I can find one) I still never understood the reverence with which most people hold these lads???? Possibly because I spent all my life in four wheel drives I didn't see them as special, just doing what we were..
    I have to agree with you. My first encounter with them was at Old Andado in 1966, when they were on their cross Australia trip. At the time I was in charge of an exploration camp halfway across the Simpson, and was just going out for a break in my 2a (I actually drove non-stop from there to Sydney via Port Augusta, with my brother as a co-driver).

    I had a look at their setup, and told them they were hopelessly overloaded, which they were. I have photos of them rebuilding the back axle on their station wagon in our camp. What they did not mention in their book was that they mainly followed our roads (as does almost everyone who crosses the Simpson up to today!)

    John
    John

    JDNSW
    1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
    1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol

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