Hi guys.
Imagine our bringing back the RH GT40 from the UK to France... here's my recollection:
Our morning wakeup comes at 6 when the steward walks in with breakfast. I mean walks in without address or ceremony. We go downstairs with our little bag now bulging with wine and dirty socks, strap ourselves in, and wait for the big trucks to roll out so we can depart with the motorcyclists. We leave Le Havre at 8 a.m. Two hours later we have cleared the congested Paris peripherique (ring-road) and are on our way to open sunny Champagne country.
After a pleasant lunch in Champagne (more gawkers and questions in several languages), we hit a long section of tollbooths. This is a problem. How to get a RH-drive car through a LH tollbooth? The car is so low that you can barely see the cashier, and the driver is on the wrong side anyway. You can’t roll down the windows—this is a racecar. You can’t open the door without hitting the sides of the narrow toll lane, and because it is cut into the roof, you would have to swing the door wide in order to even put out a hand. The answer lies on my side of the car. I open the tiny plastic window that’s set into the door window. It’s just wide enough to admit a woman’s hand. Clutching the quickly and carefully counted-out money, I strain upward, and the cashier strains down to grab it. The gate goes up, and we’re through!
Unfortunately we congratulate ourselves too soon. After about five or six of these tollbooths, which occur with depressing regularity, we hit an unmanned one that wants us to pull in and take a ticket. Well, the machine only issues a ticket when the car pulls into the lane, but the ticket machine is way higher than my little window. The chute is so narrow that it’s too late to open the door. The answer is again—me. T stops dead in the entrance of the lane, I get out. He drives into the lane chute to activate the machine, while I stand on the island next to the lane and grab the ticket. He pulls out into what looks like the Bay Bridge Maze at rush hour, I jump into the car, and we speed off. We make our way across the breadth of France and are home by late afternoon. As yet another big American engine howls up the driveway, the neighbors cross themselves and know for certain that we are really completely out of our minds.
Trice
1968 280SL US, signal red/bl leather, auto, kinder