Love washed over me 29 years ago; a little German girl, my
age with curves, big round curves; a 1967 Volkswagen Beetle.
I became obsessed, looking and admiring, reading and researching, exciting
my brain with information and boring those around me with its regurgitation. That last part, the regurgitation, may be why
boxes of ‘VW Trends’ and ‘Hot VW’ magazines mysteriously disappeared during a
move early in my marriage.
Yes, Adolf Hitler played a part in her creation, calling on
Ferdinand Porsche to design a peoples’ car (folks’ wagon), even presenting him
with a sketch in 1934 that looks eerily like my red ‘67. But none of us can be held accountable from
whence we came; only what we’ve become.
Three other VW’s have come and gone, a ’69 Beetle, a ’73
Super Beetle and the sexiest of the girls, a bright red ’71 Karmann Ghia. But it’s not the air cooled Volkswagens that
captured my eternal love, it’s their cousin, a girl I met as a mere child, the car
my Grandfather taught me to drive when I was just twelve. A 1964 Opel Kadett, also a German made
econocar, she was designed to compete directly with VW’s Beetle for market
share.
Related to, but not the GT (mini Corvette) produced by Opel
in the 60’s and 70’s, she looks more like a mini ‘64 Chevy II. When I was 12, she was pristine. My Uncle Frankie bought her new, drove her
and then handed her off to his dad. Grandpa
Buck traded mechanical work for paint, body and interior and rebuilt the rest
himself. Buck died when I was fifteen
and she was given to friends who drove her until she wouldn’t drive and parked her. Frankie’s boy Steve happened across her one
day and brought her back into the family.
A few years later I traded him out of her for some war metals that’d
been handed down to me via Grandpa Buck, a U. S. soldier in Germany during WWII,
that he’d gathered from Nazi prisoners.
It was a win-win for me, those things had given me the creeps for
decades.
Were it not the actual car my Grandfather owned I’d never consider
her a restoration project, she hadn’t aged well. When she’s finally on the road again I’ll have
lost money comparing investment to market value, but that doesn’t concern me. She’s a link to my past, the car Buck loved (probably
because my Grandma’s name was Opal), the car he taught three of his four
grandchildren to drive in. She may even be
the car I teach my grandkids to drive in.
All this comes to mind because of an email from the Texas
Opel Club, a reminder of Volktoberfest, a German car show in McKinney, Texas at
the end of September. I’d go for the
VW’s but there’s been mention of Opels, probably just GTs, but one never knows,
a type ‘A’ Kadett might crawl out of the woodwork. At the very least I’ll get a day looking at old
cars and catching up with my cousin Steve (the one too young to have been
taught to drive in the Opel). And with
one email the countdown has begun: August, September, Volktober…
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