I've got a little story for you Ags.
My grandad, class of '55, was a good man. He was a farmer, served in the US army, a believer, and a supporter of his small town community. I grew up on the family farm that he led and watched him love his family with tremendous work ethic. He passed away in 2017.
My family was big supporters of the Window on the Plains Museum/Art Center in the local panhandle town in Moore County that I grew up in. My grandmother was an artist and led the art center, and he regularly volunteered at the museum. Over the years I've seen this museum grow into something really nice for that town, and several tractors and exhibits were part of our family's farming history. I haven't been in years, but I decided to take my kids for a day trip, and they had a new barn in the back of the property that they actually named after him. I didn't know that our family donated his truck, and it was almost an overwhelming surprise to round the corner and see it parked there.
It's nothing special, just an '87 GMC half-ton. But drove it for 30 years until his death. Hell, the paint on the door was worn down to the metal where he used to hang his arm out the window. When no-one was looking, I opened the door and just the smell made so many memories come flooding back. They even kept all the stuff in the bed just like he had it (buckets, shovels, baling wire, etc). It was like being teleported back in time.
There's a great story posted on the windshield. One day, he was out working on a center pivot irrigation sprinkler, and he parked his truck and was walking down the sprinkler, trying to find an issue. He got about a quarter mile away, found and fixed the issue, and then started walking back to his pickup. What he forgot about was that he parked directed in the path of one of the towers, and so he got to slowly watch it mount itself on top of the hood of his truck. He refused to believe in carrying a cell phone and was in his 70's, so he couldn't do much about it from so far away.
We've laughed about that story for years. But he fixed that truck and continued driving it. He didn't want a new one because they "were just too hard to get into". It really made my day to see this thing, remember "Grumps" for who he was, the tremendous legacy he left, and just take a moment to cherish the time we did have together.
I hope this is a story that makes you smile and maybe some others will share similar stories and photos of vehicles that do the same for them.
My grandad, class of '55, was a good man. He was a farmer, served in the US army, a believer, and a supporter of his small town community. I grew up on the family farm that he led and watched him love his family with tremendous work ethic. He passed away in 2017.
My family was big supporters of the Window on the Plains Museum/Art Center in the local panhandle town in Moore County that I grew up in. My grandmother was an artist and led the art center, and he regularly volunteered at the museum. Over the years I've seen this museum grow into something really nice for that town, and several tractors and exhibits were part of our family's farming history. I haven't been in years, but I decided to take my kids for a day trip, and they had a new barn in the back of the property that they actually named after him. I didn't know that our family donated his truck, and it was almost an overwhelming surprise to round the corner and see it parked there.
It's nothing special, just an '87 GMC half-ton. But drove it for 30 years until his death. Hell, the paint on the door was worn down to the metal where he used to hang his arm out the window. When no-one was looking, I opened the door and just the smell made so many memories come flooding back. They even kept all the stuff in the bed just like he had it (buckets, shovels, baling wire, etc). It was like being teleported back in time.
There's a great story posted on the windshield. One day, he was out working on a center pivot irrigation sprinkler, and he parked his truck and was walking down the sprinkler, trying to find an issue. He got about a quarter mile away, found and fixed the issue, and then started walking back to his pickup. What he forgot about was that he parked directed in the path of one of the towers, and so he got to slowly watch it mount itself on top of the hood of his truck. He refused to believe in carrying a cell phone and was in his 70's, so he couldn't do much about it from so far away.
We've laughed about that story for years. But he fixed that truck and continued driving it. He didn't want a new one because they "were just too hard to get into". It really made my day to see this thing, remember "Grumps" for who he was, the tremendous legacy he left, and just take a moment to cherish the time we did have together.
I hope this is a story that makes you smile and maybe some others will share similar stories and photos of vehicles that do the same for them.