Stanley Doble
Call Me a Cab
- Messages
- 2,808
- Location
- Cobourg
No matter where you are I guarantee there are old cars and other old thing going to wrack and ruin out of neglect, or that are up for sale near you.
Why don't you go "save" those things, since you feel so strongly about it?
Because if you did save them YOU would turn into a hoarder.
So, If I save old things I should be damned as a hoarder. If I can't or won't preserve them I should be damned as a hoarder anyway.
It seems like the only way I can avoid being damned in your book, is to just scrap everything I can't use as soon as I get my hands on it.
Now about the guy who owns the cars in the picture. Maybe I have some insight on what is going on there because I am a collector, or hoarder, as well.
The story says he is a collector known for saving some very rare old cars. I bet he has a garage, or garages full of nice old cars carefully preserved.
So far, so good.
If he is like me and every other collector I know at some point his acquisitions outpace is storage capacity. At that point you have to leave your least valuable cars outside, or sell them, or do something.
Evidently he had a lot of old cars that were no better than parts car, or too far gone to restore. He was storing them outside.
Rather than leave them laying around at random like a common junkyard he arranged them into an "art exhibit".
This was very clever on his part because it dodges one of the hazards of storing old cars, which is having your property condemned by the local zoning authority, and having your cars towed away and scrapped.
A friend of mine left a nice, original, but not plated 57 Rambler sedan parked in his driveway for 2 weeks while he went away on vacation. By the time he got back it had been towed and scrapped by the town. It does happen.
So, I don't like seeing those cars rotting into the ground either. But there are other angles that you are not considering.
Why don't you go "save" those things, since you feel so strongly about it?
Because if you did save them YOU would turn into a hoarder.
So, If I save old things I should be damned as a hoarder. If I can't or won't preserve them I should be damned as a hoarder anyway.
It seems like the only way I can avoid being damned in your book, is to just scrap everything I can't use as soon as I get my hands on it.
Now about the guy who owns the cars in the picture. Maybe I have some insight on what is going on there because I am a collector, or hoarder, as well.
The story says he is a collector known for saving some very rare old cars. I bet he has a garage, or garages full of nice old cars carefully preserved.
So far, so good.
If he is like me and every other collector I know at some point his acquisitions outpace is storage capacity. At that point you have to leave your least valuable cars outside, or sell them, or do something.
Evidently he had a lot of old cars that were no better than parts car, or too far gone to restore. He was storing them outside.
Rather than leave them laying around at random like a common junkyard he arranged them into an "art exhibit".
This was very clever on his part because it dodges one of the hazards of storing old cars, which is having your property condemned by the local zoning authority, and having your cars towed away and scrapped.
A friend of mine left a nice, original, but not plated 57 Rambler sedan parked in his driveway for 2 weeks while he went away on vacation. By the time he got back it had been towed and scrapped by the town. It does happen.
So, I don't like seeing those cars rotting into the ground either. But there are other angles that you are not considering.