1969 Econoline
I’ve always owned vans. The first one I got was a 1969 Ford Econoline. I paid for it in some minimal amount of cash and half a pound of Mexican brick weed, the kind that gets smuggled across the boarder crunched into its densest possible form and inserted into something innocuous, like a car driven by a drug dealer. I also bought a dog with the same currency during this period of my life. This speaks as much to the proprietors of the establishments I shopped at as it does to who I was at the time.
The van was metallic green with a yellow Starskey and Hutch stripe on each side – think of a more angular Nike swoosh. The grill and round headlights spoke of it’s age, as did the font of it’s logo. It had the obligatory shag carpeting on the floor, walls and ceiling. Homemade benches and camping utilities and captains chairs. By the time I came into possession of this vintage love-machine, it was 1993, and the carpet had absorbed the sordid events of dirty hippies, metal heads and deteriorating dreams for a quarter of a century. I had delusions of rebuilding the green machine to its former glory, but these disintegrated in clouds of pot smoke at a slightly faster rate then the sheet metal of the Econoline was disintegrating into rust.
The steering linkage was so worn out that one could turn the wheel 180 degrees without affecting the direction of the tires. This didn’t stop me from sailing it home from
The van should not have been on a highway. The aforementioned steering issue and long stretches of
I should also mention, that the van contained everything I owned, as upon leaving
I found housing with friends and the Econoline slowly faded from use. I can’t exactly recall what became of that van. It’s lost in smoke to me. Perhaps it did finally evaporate. Perhaps I sold it to some naïve sap. Maybe it’s been reborn into new purpose and identity as I have in the many years since we parted company. Most likely, it’s rusting in a field somewhere in