[tcb] Re: side bar on trip report

  • From: Mark Sawyer <mechmark@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: tcb@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Wed, 23 May 2007 18:20:57 -0700 (PDT)

Sammie, Is this a blue and white bus with pull out drawers where the rocker 
panels use to be. If so, I met him many years ago at Buses Near the Arch. We 
called it the bondo condo. He had just gotten back on the road after being run 
off the road by an 18 wheeler some where up north. Tall, skinny guy that spoke 
very softly. Showed us an ID for Nasa where he was some kind of engineer. 

sammie smith <bugcollections@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:    Went to the Mtn View 
show.  Saw the greatest bus ever, even better than Murray.  Sorry that everyone 
on the TCB list did not get to see this bus.  Driver/owner John Lago from 
Oshkosh WI.  Quote from sign on windshield.  "Daily Driver for 40+ years.  
Totaled twice, on fire 3 times, and dropped through the ice once.  How many 
miles?  Only the Shadow knows.  From Florida to the Yukon, and close to both 
coasts.  Been through 2 trannys, many motors.  Recently a 2000 mile two-week 
trip to Georgia.  Before that, a 5,000 mile ride to Newfoundland.  Was there 
ever trouble?  Sometimes you're the bug and sometimes you are the windshield."
   
  The bus is a 62 Kombi that the owner bought as a youngster in 1966.  He has 
modified this bus for roughing it in the Yukon and ice fishing in Wisconsin.  
It has a wood stove made from stainless steel to heat the interior and cooking 
when camping.  It has a stainless steel trap door in the cargo floor for 
drilling through the ice and ice fishing.  There is no interior in the rear 
except for a home made bunk along the left rear wall of the bus.  Front seats, 
driver and passenger, are aluminum and web lawn chairs.  Interior toilet is a 
hardwood seat with hole that holds a zip lock baggy.  Fishing rods are mounted 
on the interior roof.  Roof rack for carrying canoe.  No front bumper cept for 
spare tire that hangs on the nose.  Rear bumper home made from heavy steel.  
Rope pull start mounted on crank pulley of engine as taken from a 4 cylinder 
snow mobile.  Works like a charm and starts on first pull as demonstrated by 
the owner.  Every nook and cranny of the interior of the
 bus is designed to hold something useful for the owner who takes extended 
trips and literally lives out of the bus and off of the land.
   
  Owner has also written a book about the bus, philosophy of life, and whatever 
else came to mind.  Read it completely at almost one sitting.  If you are 
interested it is $15 and available at Lunchbreak Press, PO Box 703, Oshkosh WI 
54903.  Appears to be a self published book and has no ISBN on the book.  Worth 
the read for guys who like busses.  Not sure about the gals.  Book written 
under name of John Bock.  According to John, because that's his favorite beer.
   
  He is supposed to be at the Funfest in Effington IL in a couple of weeks if 
anyone on the list is going and want to catch some interesting conversation 
with John, buy his book and look at his bus.  Should have his traveling 
companion with him, very large brown Collie mix dog.
   
  Meeting John and the bus made the trip, even without all of the other things 
that you normally get traveling a long way in a VW and though the mountains of 
hillbilly hollow AR to a VW show. 
   
   

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