Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/09/05
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Being well informed of my impending trip, Chris presented me with a travel kit. It consisted, appropriately enough, of an old Absolut Vodka box filled with various useful bits and pieces. A torch, a few old rags, a screwdriver, some Chinese flu-medication (which Chris carefully explained to me incase the US customs officers took an interest in the strange pills packed in wrappers scribbled only in Chinese pictograms), some tea bags, and a bar of chocolate. The chocolate, he explained, had a very special purpose. It was for major disasters. If I ever found myself beside the road in the middle of nowhere with a broken down car, the first thing I should do is eat the chocolate. "You panic much less with food in your stomach," he reassured me. That evening, we parked the Lincoln in Tom's underground garage. He rents two parking spaces, not because he has two cars, but so that he can park the Chrysler ascew, without having to conform to the white lines that someone else has decided should govern the placement of vehicles. For this evening, the Chrysler was in one lot, and the Lincoln next to it. The Chrysler, which had looked so massive and enormous on our first encounter last November, was dwarfed by the Lincoln, in every dimension, and the Toyota Corolla on the other side looked like something manufactured by Corgi or Matchbox. Tuulikki came down to take a look at it and burst out in laughter, for a minute forgetting her Finnish stoicism. On the night before my departure, Tom was as enthusiastic as ever, while Tuulikki was painting nightmare scenarios of how I'd be standing at the side of the road, in the middle of the night, miles from anywhere, with a gigantic ocean-liner of a car that refused to move. She was probably just preparing me mentally for the worst, but somehow I felt much better listening to Tom's fancies of how the flanks of the car begged for flames to be painted on them, although our tastes in decoration differ quite drastically on that point. Somewhere among these two discussions, the question of a name was raised. It was clear that this was a car that begged for a name, but what name could do it justice? I think Tom had the winning entry. "Eric the Red, discoverer of America," he said quite plainly. It was brilliant. Eric the Red. "I could nickname him 'Big Red'," I chimed in with glee. "Or you could call it a longboat," sighed Tuulikki, who by this time had resigned herself to the idea that this poor, feeble-minded 30-something obviously had no clue what he was getting into. "In a Longboat Across America," Tom announced, saying it like a title. He was paying no attention to Tuulikki's attempts to knock some sanity back into me again. I loved it. Eric the Red, the Longboat. And so he was named. Now, a critical part of the circumstances surrounding this trip is that I had already booked tickets to go to Sweden on the morning of Thursday the 17th of August. They were cheap tickets, which means that they are not refundable other than with a doctor's certificate signed by the Surgeon General, stating that you're suffering from a life-threatening, airborne, infectious disease, that has the potential of getting the airline sued if you're taken on as a passenger. So, I pretty much had to be in Columbus by early evening on Wednesday the 16th, since I needed time to wash all my clothes (I would have been on the road for three weeks by then), pack, and get my stuff ready for the trip to Sweden. It was noon on Saturday when I packed Eric with my bags and hugged Tom and Tuulikki goodbye. So, I had 2,700 miles to drive in an, essentially, unknown car over the next 101 hours, which would get me in Columbus by 5pm on Wednesday. If you do the maths, you'll learn that you need to be doing just over 26 mph for each of those 101 hours to make the trip in time. Denial can be a powerful force. It was a glorious day. I set off for the Canadian-US border, driving in the sunshine, a smile on my lips, and one of Vancouver's rock stations bubbling out from the quadraphonic stereo speaker system. A few days earlier, Tom had discovered that you could push one of the radio's knobs in and turn it and had managed to find a sweet spot where you were completely surrounded by music. It seemed to drift just slightly as the electronics heated up, so my head was suspended in music that was slowly phase-shifting as it played. This suited me just fine, since there was a pretty long queue at the border, so I sat there listening to classic rock from Pink Floyd, The Eagles, Lynyrd Skynyrd, and others as the long line of cars inched forward to the inspection point. I'd been through this border a number of times before. When you travel north, the Canadian immigrations and customs officers are friendly, polite, and at least appear to take the view that you're not a drug-smuggling terrorist until they get indications of otherwise. Their US brethren have a slightly different approach. From my two previous encounters, I'd got the impression that you were guilty until all your paperwork and the story you told proved otherwise. Being friendly was clearly not part of their job description. Still, I knew I had all the paperwork I could possibly need, both for myself and for Eric, so I wasn't too worried. We pulled up to the booth. The INS officer took one look at my passport, the IAP-66 and I-94 forms and handed them back to me. "Did you buy the car in Canada?" he asked. "Yes, I have the bill of sales and all the documentation here. Do you wish to see it?" "Pull over to the side and enter the Customs Office door on the left." I did as instructed. Once inside, I was met by an officer in his early 30s who took a look at all my paperwork. "How old is the car?" he asked. I told him the year of manufacture. He pulled out a gigantic file binder and started flipping through it. His brow furrowed as he read two lines. Apparently, there are two age limits for importing cars into the US. The first is at 21 years. If the car is younger than this, then the Department of Transport needs some kind of paper. Since this didn't apply to my 23 year old Lincoln, there was nothing to worry about. The other limit is at 25 years old. Cars younger than this must have a piece of paper from the manufacturer, stating that they fulfil the US Federal Emissions Regulations. This, apparently, was not among the vast number of papers which I had presented to him. "Let's step out and take a look at the vehicle," he suggested. We went out, I popped the hood and he looked around. "I can't find any sticker stating that it fulfills the emissions regulations." We went back inside. He pulled out another, even more gigantic ring binder and started flipping through it. During this process, he explained to me that what I would have to do is write to Ford and get the required piece of paper, then drive to the border and re-enter the US, legally importing the car. I would be able to drive it in the US on my ten day temporary permit, but I wouldn't be able to title or register the car in Ohio until I'd done this. I explained that that was probably going to be impossible. I was leaving for Sweden the day after I returned to Ohio, and the temporary permit would expire while I was in Sweden, meaning that I would not be able to drive the car to the border or back again. At least, not legally. He found the passage he was looking for and confirmed: yep, the requirement was for all cars less than 25 years of age. Mine was 23. "How much did you pay for the car?" I showed him the bill of sale, which was made out for C$500. Hey, what they don't know, doesn't hurt them, right? "Let me talk to my boss," he said, closed the ring binder with a thud and walked off. I was left to ponder my options. The most realistic one appeared to be to turn around, drive the car back to Tom and Tuulikki, and then take the bus from Vancouver to Seattle and fly back from Seattle to Columbus. The only problem was having to face Tuulikki with the prospect of storing the car in their garage. She had been quite adamant that the car be *removed* from their property. In particular, she had been worried at one point that Tom would offer to keep the Lincoln and I give me the Chrysler in exchange, should I find the Lincoln to be a bit "too much". Privately, I suspect she was really worried that Tom had fallen in love with the size of the Lincoln and wouldn't want to see it go. In any case, it was painfully clear to me that Tuulikki did not want to see this particular car on the Canadian side of the border ever again. - -- Martin Howard | "I am Pentium of Borg. Division is Visiting Scholar, CSEL, OSU | futile. You will be approximated." email: howard.390@osu.edu | -- Unknown www: http://mvhoward.i.am/ +---------------------------------------