HAPPY FATHER'S DAY!
Correction – June 12th: Three time trials were cancelled, not three days of time trials.
Correction – June 12th: Three time trials were cancelled, not three days of time trials.
Friday, June 14, 2013
Upon arrival in Yekaterinburg, the teams were billeted at the Hyatt
Hotel. From all reports, accommodations and food were the best, so far, since
they left China. However, team #55 did not fully enjoy what the Hyatt had to
offer.
According to Brett, Little Red drives, but to John it still was not
“just right.” After the repair (13 hours of labor) at Novosibirsk, John and a
few other team members noticed that Little Red’s back side was a bit too high,
so upon arrival in Ufa, into a local garage she went. They were in the garage
from 7:30 p.m. to 11:30 p.m. and missed dinner. Two other teams also visited the
garage: Car #98 - 1965 Mustang and Car #75 – 1960 Rover.
It
frustrated John not to be able to communicate well with the Russian
mechanics, it was stressing him out. The man speaks four languages and
Russian is not one of them! Luckily he found the shop owner, who spoke German, so they were able to communicate. As they enter Europe, should they have to
take
Little Red into a garage (and one does not wish it), John should be able
to
articulate any problems and needed repairs.
When
adjustments were not completed by 11:30 p.m., the mechanics
suggested that John and Brett return to the hotel for some sleep. With
reluctance, at least on John's part, they finally left the garage.
Later, I chatted
with Brett (via Facebook), who informed me that John had gone upstairs
to bed, but
has set his alarm for 1:30 a.m. to check on the car. Surely enough, John
was back
down just after 1:30 a.m. and wanted to go and see the car. Pacing
around,
Brett sent him to call the garage. Little Red was not ready, but the
mechanics
assured him that work will continue throughout the night in order for
her to be ready in the morning. Ringing off, John asked one of the other
teams
if they were going to the garage. The response was that all the drivers
and
navigators work on their cars too much and too hard, they forget that
they need
service just as the cars do; they service the cars too much and ignore
themselves. He went back to bed, setting the alarm for 3 hours and 15
minutes later.
With little sleep, team #55 returned to the garage a few hours later. When
asked how much the work on the car cost, the mechanic replied, “$3.00 dollars”.
Incredulous, John asked why it cost so little; after all, they had the car all
night. The mechanic, in his best English, explained that working with old cars
is a hobby, and that he looked forward to having old cars in his garage. For
the pleasure of working on Little Red, it cost $1.00 for suspension, $1.00 for
the alignment, and $1.00 for washing the car. John asked if they had a Tip Box
for the employees, but there was none and the mechanic absolutely refused to
accept more payment. Cars #98 and #75 were also charged only $3.00 each. We cannot
thank the mechanics enough for their assistance.
The day, from Yekaterinburg to Ufa, stretched on, longer than the
itinerary indicated. The day was not without incident, though. For the second
time, John was stopped by a police officer. His offence? Overtaking a
truck whilst going downhill! In hand gestures and limited English, John
discovered that one can only overtake when driving uphill on this stretch of
road.
Once again, the Peking to Paris papers had to be produced. The officer
then took a coin from his pocket and demanded, “Money! Money!” as he tapped the
coin on Little Red. John and Brett had heard stories about officers demanding
money and knew that they were going to have to part with some of their
rubles. They took out some cash, but the officer responded with, “Nyet! Nyet!” as he
continued to tap the coin on the car. They then realized that all that the
officer wanted was an American coin as a souvenir, and since neither John nor
Brett had any, they were waved off. Incidentally, the warning about not overtaking downhill was in the
navigator’s notes so John held Brett responsible for the stop.
No time trials today and no passage or main time controls missed, so #55 remains in 4th place overall, 10 minutes behind # 87, the Citroen DS23, and 20 minutes ahead of #51, "Max the Datsun"
No time trials today and no passage or main time controls missed, so #55 remains in 4th place overall, 10 minutes behind # 87, the Citroen DS23, and 20 minutes ahead of #51, "Max the Datsun"
The first two shots were taken at the border where Asia meets Europe, in Russia.
John
Brett
The road towards Ufa.
Where is Little Red?
Lunch break!
Day 18 Rally Reports: http://www2.endurorally.com/pp2013/reports.html
More P2P photos - this time from Russian photographer Alex Polezahev:http://www.flickr.com/photos/sashapo/sets/72157634116848318/