Wednesday, June 25, 2025

The Art of Speed

 

3 comments:

  1. Wow, this brings back so many memories! Just out of the Navy in late '69, I got into VWs -- the first (of many) being a '66 Karman Ghia. I used to hang out at a local VW repair shop on the weekends and one of the owners, Gunther, had a 1960 356 coupe. He would let me borrow his 356 from Saturday afternoon when the shop closed until Sunday evening when I would drop off his car at his home (he drove my car to his home). The condition was that I would wash and detail the Porsche during the time I had it. That was a great deal for me and I took every opportunity to get more seat time in it.

    A few years later, his partner Ron bought a 1963 356B cabriolet from a friend of his in the Air Force who brought it back from Germany. It was Ruby Red and Ron subsequently had it custom painted by a well-respected local shop (Roman's Chariot Shop). It was simply gorgeous and in pristine condition. Several years later he decided to sell it to fund the purchase of a Winnebago motor home and asked if I wanted to buy it. That was a no-brainer and I loved the heck out of that car for a couple years before my (then) spouse decided she wanted to move on. In the settlement, she got the Porsche and most of the furniture, and I got the house and a '74 2002Tii that I was making payments on. She ended up selling the 356 to Check Stoddard (owner of Stoddard Imported Cars and Porsche collector). I was heartbroken but life went on, and got better.

    I was never able to find another 356 that could match the one I had, but continued my love for VWs, mainly GTi's, a Scirocco, an R32 and others. I did end up buying a perfect 85.5 Porsche 944 (with just 6K miles on it) from a neighborhood buddy and kept it for a number of years. But it wasn't a 356, or a 911 so I ended up selling it to an Oberlin College professor after several years of ownership.

    Fast forward to the 90's and while browsing at a bookstore I found a Porsche coffee table book that had 6 photos of my old 356 taken somewhere on Chuck Stoddard's estate. His collection included the rarest of Porsches, race cars, including a 917, etc. At least I knew my 356 had a good home. Not sure what ever happened to it after Chuck Stoddard passed away. Every so often, I pull that book off the shelf, or pull out the stack of photos from the box in the attic and reminisce about the fun I had driving it.

    My 2nd wife (we're now at 45 years together and counting) has been supportive of my penchant for nice cars and other guy toys. Looking back, I realize just how lucky I've been to find a life partner who means more to me than any car, no matter how special it might have been.

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    1. That was a refreshing bit of good news; thank you for posting and congratulations

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  2. I was a senior in high school in 1979. I lived on a hay farm and one of our customers was a local doctor. He had a trophy wife that had horses. I delivered the hay for her horses. He had a 64 365 coupe he wanted to sell because he had ordered a 930. The 365 was deeply discounted to me but I could not afford it. I could come up with about half the cash to buy it. Missed opertunities.

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