Re: Stuff, was: Doug DeMuro | <– Date –> <– Thread –> |
From: Rick Moseley (ramosel![]() |
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Date: Tue, 16 Dec 2014 06:28:04 -0800 (PST) |
Rick, You've got me by about 10 years but it's been so long I don't even remember when I joined the list. How do you remember such things. I don't know if you have a Dish Network or if it's on another provider, but it's either Rural TV or RFD TV, that has the show "Classic Tractor Fever". I tell Ya, some of the restorations are gorgeous. And many of those OLD farmers have got more money than most of us combined. Many have 40 or 50 fully restored tractors and a few have hundreds. As you say, they are big and heavy... Most start as complete rust piles but they restore them beyond new so you know it ain't cheap!! Rick > On Dec 16, 2014, at 4:32 AM, Rick Lindsay <richardolindsay [at] gmail.com> > wrote: > > Hello old friends, > > I just read through the tractor thread and the underlying age theme. (I read > the List in digest form now.) Its funny that in the almost-twenty years that > I have been here, its not just me getting older! CG is 44?! When the hell did > that happen? And Matt's son will be driving soon?! And sadly, a few of us are > no longer on this Earth. > > I was 45 when I joined the list, and bought my 308GTB a few months later. > Interestingly, 45 was the average age, at that time, of the first-time > Ferrari buyer. Mid-life crisis or finally can afford it? When I got my 308 my > wife jokingly told me, "If you were going to have a mid-life crisis, you > should have gotten a blond. She would have been cheaper and a lot less > trouble!" Gotta love her. > > So here I sit, a few days shy of 64-years-old, with two Ferraris in the > garage keeping company with eight other interesting cars. Sadly, no tractors > though. I have always wanted to restore a tractor; a little Farmall Super-A > cultivation tractor. But alas, EVERYTHING on a tractor is heavy so > restoration would be difficult. I only recently got a powered hoist. And of > course, I live in a subdivision administered by a Nazi HOA. So my desire to > restore a tractor (and a locomotive) goes unsatisfied. > > Anyone have records of how the Ferrari List membership has changed since > Steve first launched it? I have no clue as to how large the membership is > now. I also don't know how large it was in 1996 when I joined, or even how I > found out about it! There are a lot of things I don't know... > > I do know that my '78 Lotus Esprit has new front brakes. Well, the left front > is back on the car and the right front is rebuilt and on the workbench > awaiting reattachment. That's today's job, after a few hours exploring for > oil. > > And a quick aside regarding oil; While sub-$60-oil may be great for those > struggling to fill the gas tank, its long term effect is freightening. My > friends over at Exxon say, "If oil hovers around $60 for a while, it will > soon bounce back. However, if is continues to slip downward, we expect it to > bottom out at $45." And while some might cheer, OPEC's plan (read: Saudi > Arabia's plan) is to cripple America's shale-oil industry and keep us > dependent on imported oil! Yes, Exxon, BP and Shell will survive but I fear > the smaller producers will fold. They just don't have the huge reserves of > operating capital needed to weather this Saudi storm. > > Oil exploration is extremely expensive, mostly because of the long > concept-to-production time lag. I won't go into that but imagine you have a > store and are looking for a supplier to satisfy your plan to buy inventory. > Now imagine you must pay for it all in advance. And finally, imagine that you > can't sell the very FIRST item to your customers until a DECADE later! Can > you weather low product prices? Such is O&G exploration. > > Yes, we're all getting older. I did hear an interesting statistic the other > day, and it is encouraging. It seems we have passed the era of the > you-owe-me-everything-millennials! Teenagers are smoking less, drinking less, > doing fewer drugs, and accepting responsibilities for their own actions, > better than we've seen in the past decades! I've seen that too in the kids I > talk with. Imagine teenagers a decade ago, with 5-year plans! They have them > today! I find that interesting, and encouraging. It also tells me that > EVERYTHING is cyclical. I had to get old to recognize that! > > So perhaps I will restore a tractor some day. Who knows. Perhaps I'll stick > to my frightfully unreliable British cars. And perhaps a teenager will help > me with the work. > > Gawd, it must be Tuesday. Never could get the hang of Tuesdays. (Reference: > paraphrased from Arthur Dent.) > > Woohoo, > > -rick > > > _________________________________________________________________ > To unsubscribe or modify your subscription options, please visit: > http://lists.ferrarilist.com/mailman/options/ferrari/ramosel%40pacbell.net > > Sponsored by BooyahMedia.com > and F1 Headlines > http://www.F1Headlines.com/
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Stuff, was: Doug DeMuro Rick Lindsay, December 16 2014
- Re: Stuff, was: Doug DeMuro Rick Moseley, December 16 2014
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Re: Stuff, was: Doug DeMuro A.J., December 16 2014
- Re: Stuff, was: Doug DeMuro Richard Lindsay, December 16 2014
- Re: Stuff, was: Doug DeMuro Rick Moseley, December 16 2014
- Re: Stuff, was: Doug DeMuro Mark, December 16 2014
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