Saturday, August 16, 2008

Nostalgia

Today is the Woodward Dream Cruise… and Boy! am I ever nostalgic about this event. The Second Mrs. Pennington, my buddy Greg, and I participated in the first-ever Dream Cruise back in 1995… in this car:
And dang but we had us some fun! And one not-so-fun moment, too, when the car inexplicably died… just quit running… and wouldn’t re-start. Greg, TSMP and I pushed that two-ton monster about six blocks to Greg’s house where he diagnosed the problem, fixed it, and we jumped back into the fray. It’s GOOD to have a GM power train engineer as a friend, and even better to have him hanging around in the back seat when your vintage auto-machine decides to go belly up on ya. But I digress.
I can think of a lot of places in the world I’d like to be at any given point in time. But today? There’s NOwhere I’d rather be than on Woodward… laughing, joking, having a beer or two, and ogling all the fantastic cars that turn out for Da Cruise. There are a lot of good links, with lotsa pics of stunning machinery, and here are but a few you might wanna look at… assuming you’re a gear-head.
That ought to hold ya for a while.
(Photo: My old Cadillac, in my old driveway, in old Ferndale, Michigan. The photo says 1992, but I think it was more like 1995...as we did The Cruise shortly after I acquired the Caddy.)
Update: I just had to add this lil blurb from the Mark Phelan column, linked above (coz not everyone chases every link, ya know):
'Run what you brung” is the street-racer’s motto, but run what you love will be the rule as Woodward Avenue turns into the world’s largest car show today.
The Woodward Dream Cruise may also be the world’s most egalitarian, democratic event, uniting car lovers of all ages, incomes and races in a parade of more than 30,000 vehicles.
From teenager with their first cars to retirees driving the cars they longed for when they were young, the Woodward Dream Cruise has become a spectacle that unites people from throughout metro Detroit and draws visitors from across the country and around the world to see the Motor City at its best.
[...]
There's no telling what you may see, though, from Ford engineers taking the new 2010 Mustang out for a spin to the 1932 Buick sedan that 67-year-old Ken Materia of Flint souped up with a high-output Chevrolet small block V8.
Dang. I SO wanna be there...

5 comments:

  1. Man, I so wanna be there too.....

    :( Sounds like a rockin cool event!

    Cool digs you attended in back in '95 by the way, even if you did have to push it a ways....I remember days having to do that to a few GTO's, Chargers, Mustangs in my youth...we were just a large group of muscle car owners who tended to run out of gas a lot :D

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  2. I love it...I attend every car show I can. I've heard of the Woodward Cruse. What a show that must be.

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  3. ASW: That first cruise was simply excellent. I'd go every year, too, had I stayed in Deetroit. I lived half a block (about six houses) from Woodward Ave, so joining the Cruise was just TOO easy, LOL! As for running out of gas... that's only happened to me once in my life, IIRC. And I just knocked on wood!

    Dan: The Cruise is almost literally unbelievable, until you see it. I was just amazed at the sheer numbers of old cars attending... ranging from immaculately restored "show cars," to well-kept daily drivers, to rolling wrecks that were on their last legs. It's really something!

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  4. I remember that car! I remember being in the back seat with Anastasia commenting on the lack of seat belts. At the time it was a big deal for me not to be wearing one.

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  5. I remember that car! I remember being in the back seat with Anastasia commenting on the lack of seat belts. At the time it was a big deal for me not to be wearing one.

    There was quite a bit of discussion about whether or not you girls would be allowed to ride in the car without seat belts, IIRC. But I could be mistaken. Wouldn't be the first time!

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