Friday
we settled in at VA BBQ for the weekly cruise managed by Fredericksburg Classic
and Muscle Car Club. A lot of the usual
suspects rolled in along with a few new rides too. The deep wine ’39 Chevy was perfect….it
didn’t stand out till you started checking it closely. So much attention to detail, it was just
amazing. And the orange ’37 Ford that I
walked by thinking it was Special Ed’s orange ’39….they look similar with a
quick glance. I have to talk to the
owner next time! There were about 45
cars at the cruise….a nice night. Our
little cluster of friends kept talking through the awards, the 50/50 and almost
all the cars leaving before we noticed we were nearly the last ones in the
lot! The weather was perfect, the
company was engaging….they say ‘time fly’s when you are having fun’. I can’t think of a more pleasant way to spend
a few hours with friends and hot rods.
The Princess & I cruised home remarking what a cool hobby this is….
Saturday
we launched from Stafford, VA on our 67 mile cruise to Gordonsville, VA and the
Barbeque Exchange Restaurant. Ever since
our friend Bill told us about this place, we try to visit it as often as we
can. Denny & Betty left the WAWA
with us and Dan & Ramona joined in on the way out of Stafford. When we cruised past Culpeper, Fred &
Debie joined with us in our quest for food.
This is always a lazy, non confrontational cruise through the rolling
hills of the Virginia Countryside. The
Princess takes pictures along the way to try to give you a flavor of its
grandeur….but you need to go with us sometime to absorb the full impact of what
God has put here for us to enjoy.
Cruising
along is fun….until….we reach Gordonsville….and the circle of death. In order to proceed through Gordonsville VDOT
decided to install a traffic circle, or round-about! I think these medieval devices are just a
clever way for the government to subliminally train us to be more aggressive
drivers. One has only two choices once
you get to the queue of the circle of death.
You can wait till someone in the whirling dervish of vehicles lets you
enter the fray….but most of the time your driver’s license will expire before
that happens. Or….you can just
aggressively push into the melee and hope you hit something smaller than you as
you merge with the crush of metal mayhem.
Once in the swirl you have to keep uncomfortably close to the person in
front of you lest any other driver dare merge in front of you. All the while you have to keep track of where
your exit is located so you can jump off the mind numbing marry-go-round
without getting trapped. This part of
the exercise is very important because if you wimp out you will be sentenced to
a life of driving around in circles. This
is when I usually think about that old Kingston Trio song….the one about the
MTA.
So
we all make it through the circle of death and into Gordonsville proper. It’s a quaint old town with architecture from
the 1800’s. Its name came from the
original postmaster, Nathaniel Gordon, who purchased the land in
1787 from a cousin of President James Madison.
He opened the post office in 1813 and the town’s name was changed from
‘Newville’ to Gordonsville at that time.
Gordonsville is also a hub of three major highways and has a railroad
running through it too. It was and is an
important crossroad town for commerce as well as travelers.
1 comment:
Chuck,
Each time you mention traffic circles in your post, I think of Chevy chase driving around for hours in a London circle in the movie European Vacation.
Bill McPhail
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