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Thread: I think 'She' is trying to tell me something

  1. #1
    austastar's Avatar
    austastar is online now YarnMaster Silver Subscriber
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    I think 'She' is trying to tell me something

    After several years of looking and reading about 4wd, camper trailers, slide ons etc, I had narrowed my choice to a cab chassis by Mr. T. or Mr. N. either of which seemed to have not invoked any hint of marital disapproval.
    They looked neat and shiny and looked (well the front at least) "almost like a car".
    Nothing like those squarish, bomby looking things seen on our wanderings, that I would point enthusiastically to and yell "Landrover" in a some what pythonesque manner; only to be politely ignored and another subject introduced.
    Yes, I was digging my self a deep hole, but was not worried, for Landrover was not producing a cab chassis.
    Hah!

    Now Wifey very kindly brings me home various 4wd mags etc from the library, and has her own tracking method (a secretly placed dot) for remembering which ones I have read, bless her little cotton socks.

    What was on the back of the last 4wd mag? Yep, a 130 Defender cab chassis.

    A bit of research convinced me that the Defender 130 was the way to go and I printed out my illustrations of how much better the Defender would carry our choice of slide on.
    It was not met with out right prohibition at least ("But it is a Landrover"), and tales of woe of past journeys in the back of ex army "Jeeps" (actually early Landrovers) over rough roads, and snow blowing in under the canvas in eons past were lain before me to weaken my resolve.

    The fortnightly trip to the library came around last night, and after work I noticed a new library book on my chair.
    No it was not a 4wd magazine, I have copied it below.



    Do you think she is trying to tell me something?


    ps A link to an extract from said book.
    Try substituting Landrover for the tractor names and it could be valuable information for some forumites.

    cheers
    Last edited by austastar; 14th August 2009 at 07:40 PM. Reason: grammar

  2. #2
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    Do you perhaps resemble the man hugging his tractor?

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    I resemble that man hugging that tractor.

    So anyone for a date?
    Our Land Rover does not leak oil! it just marks its territory.......




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    I know of an abonded 1948 David Brown ,I could put a word in for you db.

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    Lou, you any good with a crank handle?

  6. #6
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    so AUSTASTAR your version would read like this??


    OLD LAND ROVERS AND THE MEN WHO LOVE THEM
    {or HOW TO KEEP YOUR LAND ROVERS HAPPY AND YOUR FAMILY RUNNING}
    bastardised from original by Roger Welsch


    Over the past couple of years, I have collected advice along with my LR's, and I think it is only neighbourly that I pass along to you what I have learned. If you're married and are thinking about getting into the old landy business, forget trivial things like socket wrenches and bearing pullers and lay the groundwork for your new hobby by carefully studying the following rules … THE WELSCH RULES OF LAND ROVER COLLECTING!

    RULE #1. Collect only one model and make of LAND ROVER - nothing but Series 1s or Series 2as, for example. When all your LAND ROVERS are the same color and shape, it's harder, if not impossible, for anyone (if you catch my drift) to figure out how many LAND ROVERS you actually have.

    RULE #2. Similarly, never line up your LAND ROVERS, ever. Nothing distresses a difficult spouse more than seeing twelve old LAND ROVERS lined up, looking for all the world like a burning pile of hundred dollar bills. Scatter the LAND ROVERS around - a couple behind the shed, one or two in the shed, another beside the garage - so that it is not possible for anyone, if you know who I mean, to see more than two or three from any one perspective. Your hobby will be less "irritating" that way, if you know what I mean.


    RULE #3. For much the same reason, don't number your LAND ROVERS #1, #2, #3. Give them names. You'd be surprised how much less trouble you will have, if you talk about "Lenny " or "Grover the rover" rather than "Series 2a, 88” #14."


    RULE #4. Somewhere fairly early in your collecting, buy a LAND ROVER you don't want. Sell it again as quickly as you can; don't worry about making money on the transaction. The main thing is to get a LAND ROVER and get rid of it. Then, for years, you can say, "Yes, Angel-face, I do have six Series 2a’s, and they are in the shed while our car is out in the weather, but that doesn't mean that I will always have six Series 2a’s. Remember the one I got rid of a few years ago? I'm thinking of selling another one any day now so we can put the car in the garage"
    If you are lucky enough to have a friend who collects LAND ROVERS, make an arrangement for him to drop off a LAND ROVER now and again. That way you can say - if anyone asks - that you bought it. Then have it hauled off again, and say you sold it. With this system, you can re-establish your reputation for moderation every couple of years or so.
    WARNING: About the time I accumulated my sixth or seventh Series 2a 88” I thought I'd be smart, so I bought a lovely little Series 1. Linda and our nine-year-old daughter Antonia were standing in the farm yard as I unloaded this lovely little item that needed only some paint work and a new wiring harness. "I see you bought yourself another LAND ROVER that doesn't run," said Linda.
    "Guess what, dear?" I beamed. "I didn't buy myself another Land Rover. I bought you a Land Rover! She's yours, and ain't she cute?"
    I could tell by the look on her face that she was about as excited as she was the Christmas I gave her a new drain cleaner attachment for her vacuum sweeper, but I wasn't at all prepared for what she said next: "How much can I get for it?"
    "Er, uh, I didn't get it for you to sell, honey-cakes. I was thinking…if you don't want to drive it all the time, I can take it into town now and then just to keep the oil stirred up for you. It won't be any trouble at all."
    "Well, thanks, Rog, you're really too sweet, I don't deserve a darling like you. How much can I get for it?"
    I almost broke into tears at the thought of someone loading that great LAND ROVER onto a trailer and driving off with it. I was thinking that I should have gone with my first impulse and said that it had followed me home and could I maybe keep it, but thank goodness, about that time my mind kicked in high road gear. "Actually, I thought that if you wouldn't mind sharing, it could also be Antonia's LAND ROVER. Right. That's it! Eventually it'll be Antonia's LAND ROVER."
    Antonia leaped into the S1's seat with a squeal and started twisting the steering wheel and making LAND ROVER noises. Linda snorted something about me fixing my own supper that night - that is, if I was intending to stay over - and headed back toward the house while I helped Antonia bond with her LAND ROVER. That was a close call, and my advice to you is not to buy your wife a LAND ROVER. Better stick with a drain cleaner attachment for the vacuum sweeper.


    RULE #5. Pay for LAND ROVERS with a cashier's check, postal money order, or cash, which leave far less evidence than checks drawn on a family account. Once you have gotten possession of a LAND ROVER and paid for it, eat the stubs, carbon copies, or receipts immediately. Such things have a way of becoming an embarrassment later, take it from me.
    Some collectors like to point out to skeptical marriage partners that what with interest rates so low these days, buying old LAND ROVERS is actually an investment, a way of being sure the spouse will be "taken care of and comfortable should something .... something terrible happen." Doesn't work with Lovely Linda. She thinks Land Rovers are the "something terrible".


    RULE #6. Now and then buy a wreck "for parts," even if you don't need the parts, even is there are no salvageable parts. In fact, you might want to consider hauling home a wreck or two whenever you haul home a good machine - if possible, on the same trailer or truck. This is called "liability averaging." If your spouse says something about it being strange that you have money for yet another LAND ROVER but not enough for a new refrigerator, point indignantly to the LAND ROVERS on the trailer - the beautiful one on steel and in running condition for which you paid $1,600 and the two rusted hulks you got for $50 each - and you huff (or whine, depending on what has worked in the past), "Snookums, I got those for a little more than $500 each and the one in the back is easily worth $2,000 just as it stands, a tidy profit of $400, more than four times what I paid for the other two." See? Doesn't that make you sound like an investment wizard?

    Some collectors find it effective to add something like, "it's pretty hard to find a good refrigerator for $500!" but it has been my experience that a smart-aleck attitude can fairly directly lead to the purchase of a $500 refrigerator.


    RULE #7. When things get critical in the household, you might consider dragging home a LAND ROVER without a transmission or rear wheels. If there is a complaint, you say something like, "LAND ROVER? What LAND ROVER? That's not a LAND ROVER! That's only a front end. Not even close to a LAND ROVER."
    Then a couple weeks later bring home a rear end, minus the radiator, engine, and front wheels. "What LAND ROVER?" you say. "That's no LAND ROVER! That's only a rear end. Not even close to a LAND ROVER." Don't try this, however, more than once every couple years.


    RULE #8. Have a auto dealer or friend call you now and then when you're not at home and tell your spouse, "Rog told me to keep an eye on the Land rover going at the auction up at Centerville Saturday, but it sold for $1,200 and I know there's no way a financially cautious and responsible guy like Rog would pay that much so I didn't even make a bid on it for him."
    Not only will this make you look real good, the next time you do buy a LAND ROVER, say something like, "Lovie-bear, this beauty only cost me $300, which means we're $900 ahead of where we'd have been if I'd gotten the one at Centerville. If I keep saving money like this, we'll be able to go on a Caribbean cruise next winter." If you say it fast enough, it might work.


    RULE #9. If your mate insults your LAND ROVER work by referring to it as "rustoration" or "tinkering", laugh a light-hearted laugh that makes it clear that LAND ROVERS are not to you what shoes are to Imelda Marcos.


    RULE #10. In the event that your situation deteriorates to the point where your mate asks, "Who do you love more, me or your blasted LAND ROVERS?" whatever you do, don't ask for time to think it over.


    Notes:
    The above suggestions are not dishonest or deceptive, exactly. They are ways to make life easier for your spouse. In fact, now that I think about it, these little acts of diplomacy are actually a kindness, a way to smooth the road for someone you love. Following Roger's Rules is a way of being a better person. People who follow Roger's Rules are good people. In fact, I feel so good about myself, I think I'll go out and buy myself another LAND ROVER! It'll be a good investment. I'll have it hauled in at night. That way I won't bother Linda.

    (apologies to Roger Welsch, bastardised from his TRACTOR files ) -- Official Roger Welsch Homepage



    sound about right?
    (REMLR 235/MVCA 9) 80" -'49.(RUST), -'50 & '52. (53-parts) 88" -57 s1, -'63 -s2a -GS x 2-"Horrie"-112-769, "Vet"-112-429(-Vietnam-PRE 1ATF '65) ('66, s2a-as UN CIVPOL), Hans '73- s3 109" '56 s1 x2 77- s3 van (gone)& '12- 110

  7. #7
    austastar's Avatar
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    Yep, that's just about how I imagined it.
    The book is a good read, he has a nice relaxed style, good with words and an all round great yarn.
    cheers

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