avalancher
Arboristsite Raconteur
As I spent some time at the workbench this afternoon, I happened to glance out the window and for the hundredth time noticed my old truck from my college days, sitting there like an old dog waiting for our next adventure together, and I reminded me of the last time I sat behind her wheel…..
We have all had those trucks I our lives, the ones that no matter how many we had since we have never forgotten that “one” truck. We gave it a name, trusted it with our lives, and would kill if someone leaned on it too hard.
Back in my college days, I had such a truck. It was an ugly thing, a moron with ten thumbs had seen to that with sixty cans of Krylon, but I still loved that hunk of junk. Like any truck, it had to have a name, and being short on imagination and the proper etiquette in truck naming, I named her Skippy.Now Skippy and I had an agreement. I would wash her, wax her, change the oil with the best products on the market and she would choose the time and place to reward my devotion by breaking down at the worst possible moment.
The day before Christmas several years ago, Skippy and I were pressed into action at the request of my mother. Mom had a elderly friend that dearly wanted to spend time with her family in the Cascade mountains, just east of Seattle. The weather was bad, roads were near impassable, and the general consensus was that maybe the old lady might have to spend her holiday by herself this year. My mother however assured her that if anyone could get through, it was me behind the wheel of Skippy.
Early that afternoon, I picked up what I will refer to from here on as “my old lady” and her pet parakeet Ralphy from her home in Washougal Washington and headed north. The roads were gentle and fair as we made our way to Seattle, turning harsh and cold as we headed east up into the mountains.
Finally we approached what looked like a traffic jam and mother nature descended upon us with a fury. Traffic stopped, and I began to wonder if this trip was such a good idea. Moving along at a snails pace, we finally came to a stop, a scant hundred yards past the off ramp to what looked like a good sized town. As I sat there cursing under my breath and wondering what the $@!#&$%#@ was the holdup, I happened to glance at my passenger. My old lady was fast asleep.
As I looked around, I noted with glee the gentle grass slope that ran up from the highway up to the off ramp that we had passed. Easy enough for a truck in 4wd, especially of Skippy’s caliber. Nudging my old lady awake, I gave her the fair warning of, “Hang on!” Simultaneously with the skill of a fighter pilot, I dropped the gear selector in 4wd, swerved around the car in front of me, and dropped the hammer.
Now when Ford built that truck, they made plenty of places to hang on. Door grabs, arm rests, even the dash looked like a pretty good place to hang on. My old lady chose none of them but elected instead to heave her arms around my neck and commenced to carry out a tune that made all dogs within 16 miles go deaf on the spot. Shoot, I was having a hard time hearing myself over the ruckus granny was cranking out.
We have all had those trucks I our lives, the ones that no matter how many we had since we have never forgotten that “one” truck. We gave it a name, trusted it with our lives, and would kill if someone leaned on it too hard.
Back in my college days, I had such a truck. It was an ugly thing, a moron with ten thumbs had seen to that with sixty cans of Krylon, but I still loved that hunk of junk. Like any truck, it had to have a name, and being short on imagination and the proper etiquette in truck naming, I named her Skippy.Now Skippy and I had an agreement. I would wash her, wax her, change the oil with the best products on the market and she would choose the time and place to reward my devotion by breaking down at the worst possible moment.
The day before Christmas several years ago, Skippy and I were pressed into action at the request of my mother. Mom had a elderly friend that dearly wanted to spend time with her family in the Cascade mountains, just east of Seattle. The weather was bad, roads were near impassable, and the general consensus was that maybe the old lady might have to spend her holiday by herself this year. My mother however assured her that if anyone could get through, it was me behind the wheel of Skippy.
Early that afternoon, I picked up what I will refer to from here on as “my old lady” and her pet parakeet Ralphy from her home in Washougal Washington and headed north. The roads were gentle and fair as we made our way to Seattle, turning harsh and cold as we headed east up into the mountains.
Finally we approached what looked like a traffic jam and mother nature descended upon us with a fury. Traffic stopped, and I began to wonder if this trip was such a good idea. Moving along at a snails pace, we finally came to a stop, a scant hundred yards past the off ramp to what looked like a good sized town. As I sat there cursing under my breath and wondering what the $@!#&$%#@ was the holdup, I happened to glance at my passenger. My old lady was fast asleep.
As I looked around, I noted with glee the gentle grass slope that ran up from the highway up to the off ramp that we had passed. Easy enough for a truck in 4wd, especially of Skippy’s caliber. Nudging my old lady awake, I gave her the fair warning of, “Hang on!” Simultaneously with the skill of a fighter pilot, I dropped the gear selector in 4wd, swerved around the car in front of me, and dropped the hammer.
Now when Ford built that truck, they made plenty of places to hang on. Door grabs, arm rests, even the dash looked like a pretty good place to hang on. My old lady chose none of them but elected instead to heave her arms around my neck and commenced to carry out a tune that made all dogs within 16 miles go deaf on the spot. Shoot, I was having a hard time hearing myself over the ruckus granny was cranking out.
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