So yesterday (Sunday) I managed to make it to this classic car event. It’s only about 15 km from our home. That is how the crow flies though. On the road it is almost 45 km. Lots of rivers to cross, which means finding bridges and or little ferries. Nice relaxing ride over.
I had never heard of this event. I heard about it from a guy a met at my Alfa Garage a week ago. Whilst I was waiting for my Spider to go up the lift, his Ford Capri was still on it. We chatted, as classic car owners always do and told me he would be visiting this event. I looked it up on line and decided to go.
It is held at a huge park. Anything goes, as long as it is old. Over the years it has also become one of the larger Classic Truck gathering. It is all free of charge, both for participants as well as the public. Very relaxed, very easy going, very Dutch. About two dozens of market stalls selling “car” related stuff. I manage to find myself another cool sign to go onto the wall of my garage.
Some pieces to give an impression.
Nice little Honda. These are quite rare these days. They are tiny. I could never ever fit into one of these, even if you paid me.
I know very little about trucks. Other then I like looking at them and I love the old classic trucks. Some of these were of course, part of the daily road view when I grew up.
A nice little Jenssen. Look at the low riders at the back. And I mean LOW riders! Ford Cortina at the right (or Taunus?)
Most of these classic trucks are meticulously restored. Have a look at the paint job on this one:
Here the Ford Capri I mentioned earlier. The owner has had it for more than thirty years. It is quite modified. Still, I always like Ford Capri’s. This one has a 3.0L 6 cylinder engine and an auto box. Both are modifications. Even though he has had it for a very long time, he rarely drives it. Only club meetings and these sort of events. A few hundred kilometers a year only.
As you will see on these images, a lot of American hardware about. Not particularly my kind of classic cars, but always good fun to look at, talk to the owners. At the rear you will see a couple of old school “caravans”. These contraptions are proper little houses on wheels. They used to be horse or donkey drawn. Early 1900’s and you would have seen plenty of them on the road. Gypsies used to roam around them. Now they are more of a hobby thing. People restore them and show them off. They are also still being made brand new!
In this part of the Netherlands, you can not have a classic car event without some classic tractors showing up as well. At the back some Willy Jeeps too.
Several classic motor bikes. I love this FN one. Old Belgium make.
Restoring old mopeds is quite a thing here as well. Usually guys my age. When I grew up these were the ones to have. Under then Dutch legislation anything with less than 50cc engine and limited to 40 km/h was considered a moped. You could legally drive it from 16 years upwards. No test or papers other than insurance required. Of course, my mates and me managed to get these things modified and they were doing 80 km/h easily! You could buy all the upgrade parts easily. After a while I seem to recall it became illegal to sell these parts for the mopeds. Anything other than stock got your fined, moped impounded and most likely destroyed.
This particular moped was known as a Puch. If you had one of these, you grew your hair long and were anti-establishment. It never became clear what you were in favour of, just what you were against.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nozem
But the Puch was their transportation mode of choice
A very nice Alfa Romeo Spider Duetto. A well preserved and or restored Duetto costs a lot of money these days. I have seen them being advertised for well over Euro 80.000.
Another Spider, this one being very similar to mine, though a few years it’s senior. Look at the mighty Mack behind it!
Not my cup of tea, as they say, never the less, all the work done on this car are of the highest standard.
Another quite rare car these days, the Pacer. Notice the bucket? There were buckets everywhere. They fill them with sand, so they don’t topple over and you can extinguish your cigarettes in them, but also throw all your trash into it.
This event attracts thousand and thousands of people. There is food and drinks all about, but nobody throws anything on the ground. It all goes into these buckets.
All in all, quite a nice event. I spend about 2.5 hours walking around, chatting to some folks, looking at the cars, the merchandise on sale, enjoying myself
Jeroen