The last time I bought a car, or built out the back of it, my
dad was there to help me. And his table saw, and his tape measure, and his chop
saw, and his power drill.
Aside from the fact that my parents support me day in and day
out, no matter where in the world I am, I never consciously recognized how privileged
I was in regards to the resources I had at my disposal.
This time around I’m 11,000 miles away from my dad, and his
workshop, and he happens to have skipped town to spend the better part of
December rafting the Grand Canyon (read:
out of service). I’m on my own.
Lucy herself is a solid, well-respected car with a reputation
for loyalty, sold to me by solid people. Unfortunately, Loosey Lucy’s journey
from humble Eildon work wagon to the second adventuremobile of my life turned
into a bit of a saga right about when we thought all was pretty much said and
done (aside from, ya know, putting signatures on the same piece of paper from
different countries).
And so, hence forth I present to you two weeks in the
Chronicles of Gavrila’s Somewhat Nonsencically Complicated Automobile Life:
•
Return from program to a flat tire.
Because folks in Melbourne suburbs apparently don’t know how to put on a new
tire without a leaky pin.
Grab
the spare.
•
Monday, 28/11: Drop Lucy at the mechanic
to complete her Roadworthy Certificate. And fix her tire. Said mechanic gives
back a rattly, lurchy car, tells me a sensor broke sometime during the day, and
it will cost $100 to replace. Also there isn’t one available in the area. (Also:
Seriously, man? You break it, you buy
it.)
•
Tuesday, 29/11: Return Lucy to the
mechanic. Collect her three days later after program, with complete Roadworthy,
and drive happily back to town.
•
Friday, 2/12: Attempt to ditch Lucy’s
back seats at a coworker’s house for the summer. “Free couch! Just please don’t
christen it…”
Car doesn’t
start. Realize I left the lights on. …oops.
•
Saturday, 3/12: Borrow jumper cables.
Jump the car. Take her for a spin to juice the battery. Start smelling
something weird. Noticed the engine thermometer skyrocketing. EMERGENCY LANDING
NOW.
Radiator
fluid is empty. (Uh…. isn’t this something a mechanic would, ya know, notice in
three days of work, and maybe make a point of telling me???) Fill radiator with
water. Pray a little bit. Sit and twiddle my thumbs a bit longer.
Get Lucy’s
seats to Connor’s house. Drive my ass home. Really, really slow. Hardware store
and gas station are both closed. Awesome.
•
4/12: Buy coolant ASAP.
•
5/12: Lucy is dead again. Re-jump. Thank
god for car-minded roommates with cables.
Buy
cables. Like nowza. Also buy plywood.
And recruit good-hearted carpenter with a table saw to build a bed. Because,
you know, adventuremobile 2.0.
•
10/12: Make curtains. Lay down a rug.
Insert mattress.
•
11/12: Sign the stuff. ALL the stuff.
Give Australian government more money.
• 12/12: Drive Lucy onto a huge-ass Boat. Wave Goodbye to
Melbourne. Life is Good.
To say that I would have been in a lurch preparing for the
summer without help would be an understatement to the point of insult: if the
last two weeks have exemplified nothing else, it’s the power of good people.
I know I’m a bit of an introvert, and that I tend to spend a
day or two hiding from the world after getting off five days of kids and
teachers 24/7. Ergo, I don’t always see tons of folks on my weekends, no matter
how awesome everyone around me happens to be. And I as much as massive thank
you lists are a bit overused, there’s something to be said for what can be
accomplished when a little effort and a whole lot of goodwill come together. So
here’s a shout out to everyone, whether you’ll see this or not, who chipped a
hand, or simply a hug, to help out in the last two weeks, in semi-chronological
order:
• Jared, who helped me change my spare.
• Ben, who gave me a ride back from dropping my car off.
Again. And then jumped my car. The first time.
• Sergio, who gave me a lift to pick up my car when we were
all dead tired after program.
• Jamie, who helped brainstorm Adventuremobile 2.0’s storage
setup. And contributed a tape measure.
• Jeremy, for the jumper cable lend.
• The random Eildon stranger who almost scalded himself on my
overheated car, then poured the last of his water into my radiator.
• Ben (the other one), for jumping my car for the second time
it putzed out.
• Chris, who gave me two hours of his time away from a sick
kid to get my bed built.
• Whip, who knowingly and unknowingly contributed tools to
take out my back seats and finish off my bed.
• Dave, who totally gave into my puppy dog eyes when I was
sick and tired of cutting things. And contributed a rubber mallet. And storage
containers.
• Keith, who helped get Lucy’s back seats out. And
contributed heaps of food storage containers.
• Sasha. Your rug is dope. And now it’s my bed.
• Watson and Jo, who sold me a solid car and worked with me
for months while we were all out of town and on program at different times to
make things all—finally—come together.
And my dad, who's always been there for me, rooting me on
from the other side of the world, whose support and guidance through the
process last time let me fumble my way through on my own this time.