I have seen several nice easily restored cars that the owner would not sell for any reasonable price. And they all became rust piles. One that I really wanted to get because you do not see them anymore, a '58 Ford two door sedan. It was body perfect, and I knew of a 312 engine and manual tranny ready to slip into it. It had belonged to an old couple who had it shedded after the engine and transmission failed. The dude that bought it towed it out into a vacant lot, where I saw it, and tried to buy it several times thereafter. Last time I saw it before moving away, bottom panels were rusting through from sitting on the ground. And a tree had grown up through the transmission panel, which was removed, and was doing its damage. Such a waste.
@@BattleBoundThey say they will sell it if the right solution ever came up. But you are not it, or "Not today". They claim they will sell, but never do. It is theirs, they know you want it, and they just are not going to let that happen. I almost think it is similar to what a hoarder goes through mentally.
Can't say I blame her for freaking out. the car doesn't have a scratch on it, well until now. Most guys carry blocking for just that reason. Most cars are low and expensive to fix, so get used to folks getting antsy when this happens. Or carry some pieces of 2x6.
Something similar happened in front of my home a few years back. A dump truck (going 55-60) t-boned a small car and it ended up in my yard. Unfortunately the driver and passenger did not make it. They were 65 year old twins. Very sad. Do u know if everyone was okay?
It's good to see you I'm going to come over to your stream and watch some more videos I've just been super busy and some stuff came up with my RU-vid channel where it wasn't working
Maybe they did some work on the line and had to flush out the system so everyone doesn't have muddy water. Tbh, I'd just ask the guy doing the work. You can win most anyone over by telling them you are jealous of their job, smiling and being polite.
Yes and no we pay for it in our taxes fire hydrant water is part of the water that goes in the homes and businesses it falls under the maintenance tax that they send out on your water bill very wasteful people
@@junkyardhillbillyThat & the undiagnosed leaks underground on the way to homes. But I don't think they bill it that way here. Actual labor & equipment but then the usage & more vague runoff tax to cover the engineering & build out of areas to corral large volumes of water.