Tuesday, October 22, 2024

Whimsy

Modern life is insipid. Unless you make independent effort, life's banality will bore you into stupor. That's why I search for eccentricity and whimsy anywhere I can find them. They make life exciting.

The Volkswagen Beetle, acclaimed as "a people's car," was introduced in 1938. VW's idea was to provide folks with cheap basic transportation. Eliminating frills and unnecessary expense enabled budget consumers to get on the road. It also, unintentionally, allowed arrant oddballs to create custom cars at very low cost.

I, for instance, inherited a 1966 VW Bug as my first automobile. I learned on it, grinded gears while mastering "the stick" and drove the car to high school. With teenage exuberance and quirky artistic vision I converted the Bug into the strangest vehicle in my town. I stapled white shag carpeting to the interior walls and roof, removed the entire muffler system and installed "straight pipes," painted racing stripes (actually a decal), boasted racing-style "mag wheels" and tires, replaced the plain knob on the stick-shift with a black billiard eight-ball, and mounted loud, uncovered speakers to boost stereo volume. My proudest achievement was to add a risible car-horn that moo-ed like a cow. Seriously, it moo-ed. The horn had a lever you pulled to RELEASE THE MOO. I thought that was the wildest idea ever. True éclat. Needless to say I was the only kid in town with one. 

MOO!!  "Ralph's here."

One feature I didn't add -- only because I wasn't aware of its existence -- was a coffee-maker. In 1959 -- I SWEAR TO GOD YOU CAN CHECK ME ON THIS -- Volkswagen offered the option of a coffee-maker mounted on the dashboard (Hertella Auto Kaffeemachine). Drivers could harness car electricity to brew a cup of Joe. Matching porcelain coffee cups had magnets in their base to stay attached to metal holders while driving. In case you don't believe me, here's a photograph of the device. I invite skeptics to do their own research and confirm this.

"Would you like cream or sugar with that?"  :)



6 comments:

  1. I am pretty sure "Volkswagen" means "people's car." My dad had a yellow bug in the mid-80s - that loud VW muffler sound will always be so recognizable to me! I would totally go for the coffeemaker attachment!

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    1. Yes it does; yes you would. :) Thanks for the story. Almost everyone has a personal connection to this ubiquitous automobile.

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  2. I always wanted a purple Beetle! Mind you, I never learnt to drive so that'd be little use to me!
    The coffee maker is hilarious but CAN IT MAKE TEA?????? It's a bit James Bond!
    Your car sounded amazing!!!! I especially like the shag rug idea!!! Kezzie xx

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  3. I am still sad I didn't get to inherit my grandfather's bug. Unfortunately it had Problems with a capital P, and he sold it off before I got my license. You couldn’t turn off the heater, the speedometer was broken, and to be honest I can't drive a stick! Lol! But it was burnt orange with a blue headlight fender thing where my uncle had wrecked it in the 90s maybe?

    My very old kitty would push open the side windows and sneak inside during cold winter days because he didn't want to come inside but liked the car.

    I still miss it and I'll admit I looked at the new ones when looking at cars.

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  4. I'm surprised the 6 volt dynamo put out enough to power a kettle!

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