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Date:         Thu, 7 May 2015 21:39:11 -0400
Reply-To:     Dake Collins <wuwe423@YAHOO.COM>
Sender:       Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From:         Dake Collins <wuwe423@YAHOO.COM>
Subject:      Re: Awesome Vanagon Close Encounter
Comments: To: Jim Felder <jim.felder@GMAIL.COM>
In-Reply-To:  <CAFnDXk0cBoUM8QxxzCYw=bbhsq99n9bgNoXdcWt5M+RsFsfQNw@mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

Great story Jim, I love small world stories. One question - this guy you met was in the Air Force in 1892? He and the van must be really old, older than both of us added together. Seriously- that's a great story. Much more impressive than my vans small world story. I bought my '84 Westy Wolfsburg in Maine in '05 and in the summer of '13 I was in Belfast,ME., this guy comes up to me and says "I think I'm the original owner of your van. Turns out he was, he recognized the dealer sticker from Hornel, NY. He sold it to them in '87. Simple story, not the multiple layers of personal history of your fantastic story. for about five years

Sent from Wu-Wei on the road to...

> On May 7, 2015, at 4:42 PM, Jim Felder <jim.felder@GMAIL.COM> wrote: > > Today I had a lunch meeting so before that I stopped off at Home Depot for

> a few things I would need this weekend. I was leaving the parking lot when

> I saw the chocolate brown 86 Westy of Nick, a former Vanagon mechanic at my > local VW shop so I turned around and parked to talk with him for a minute.

> When I returned to my car, there was a guy about my age standing behind it

> and asked if I had time for a few questions. I told him I was waiting on a

> phone call about the exact time of a meeting, so until that happened, yes,

> I did. > > He told me that he was in the Air Force in Germany in 1892 When his dad, > back in the states, became obsessed with owning a Westy. The son explained

> that they worked out a deal: The exchange rate was good, so the son put a > westy just like mine on layaway at a dealership near Rammstein. Dad sent > the money for some time, then the son drove it during the rest of his hitch > in Germany with the agreement that dad would pick it up and own it after it > got shipped back to the states. > > Dad's ownership of the Ivory diesel was legendary in the family. It was the > only car he owned or drove regularly for the next 20 years, and in fact > soon after the keys were taken away from him by the family, he passed away. > > The fellow telling me all this introduced himself as Travis Reeves. > > I asked him if his father was also Travis Reeves. > > He said that he was. > > "Then this is the car you bought in Germany in 1983" I told him. "This is > your dad's car." > > An outing is planned for the few surviving family members to go somewhere > in it. > > As we were leaving, here comes Nick in his brown Westy leaving the parking

> lot. I introduced Nick to young Travis as the guy who worked on the car > throughout his dad's ownership. The old mechanic remembered the car, the > dad, and Travis when he was a young man. > > It was quite a reunion. > > Jim


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