We had a little Sechs volt meeting prior to the trip to plan some details. For me this was the first time driving a old VW outside scandinavia, and I must admit that I was a little nervous at times. The Abarth carburators had not played very well the last week before take off, and some small things showed up at the 12 th hour. But setting the goal for Hessisch Oldendorf 3 years ago, I was determined that it was the only way to go. And it would be a huge set back not running the Abarths down. As always, it all fell into place the night before. We had enough spareparts among us to build a new car if something broke, and even Oval 57 brought more than the OG tool kit this time.
Then the day was finally there, and everyone showed up at the ferry terminal in Oslo. Øystein of the screwdrivers had just got the coachbuild together, and the crowd was hard to keep away. We were 10 cars leaving for Germany, a very decent group of old VW's. Oval 57 was in charge of booking, and as always everything was according to plan.
We loaded the cars on the ferry and set for Copenhagen. It was without doubt worth the money for the ferry ticket. It was nice to kick back with a few beers and share some old Vw stories. Life can be forgiving sometimes =)
As we passed Hamburg on the way south, we stopped by the Prototyp Museum. And was it all worth it? We were drooling around for an hour and a half, until the museum locked up and kicked us out. It was also good with a little stretch of the legs here. We had a crazy rainweather from Puttgarden, and the Zwitter had about 5 cm of water on the floor as we reached Hamburg. Someone had forgotten to block of the heater inlets under the rear seat.... At this point it was good to have a "race" car without carpets.
Fianlly ready for registration at the HO headquarter. It felt good to be here, and the car parked in the streets of the famous Hessisch Oldendorf.
After lunch friday we had a oportunity to visist the Grundmann collection, a massive VW collection owned by the organizers of HO treffen. Hard to describe in words, as every car in there could easily have a full "feature". Hope to be back here some day... amazing!
Obviosly the town had been hit by vikings at some time in history, and they had put out a warning sign in the shop windows. I'm not sure what they did, but they sure had a decent ride.
Friday evening we took a walk around the camping ground, in a park area just some minutes from the main street. Here we found a lot of friends and cool cars. Among these, Peter Nielsen of the VW Bluehats.
There were lots of cars to see, and some interestng swaps to be found as well. Also had the oportunity to see the kempes barndoor for the first time, the star of the show. The coolest car in a long time...
Saturday was showday no 1, and the streets were filled with cars. Not any kind, pre 57 cars ONLY. I was parked in the split-street, a whole street trough most of the town centre with splits only. Then there were a street or a square for every kind from KDF's to Type 34 Ghias.
I rounded of the saturdays show with a photoshoot together with Igor of vau-max.de. This was a new experience for me, and quite cool to learn some new techniques. He was impressed by the comfort level of the car travelling over 1000 km... NOT =)
Finally we had the oportunity to see the car that everyone have heard about for some time. Paul Rui was on a trip in Germany, and took the effort of stopping by HO with his mindblowing 1950 Porsche. It really give you gossebumps, as it's to good to be true...
The swap market is toghether with Bad Camberg probably the best VW market in the world(?), and maybe also the priciest. But as always there are bargains to be found. The other good thing is that if you really WANT something, you will find it here, even things you didn't know existed.
This is how it looked from above, before the crowd set in. I'm not quite familiar with the numbers, but numbers of 10 thousands were mentioned. Beuatiful surroundings everywhere.
Almost a week after we left the motherland, we had to pack up and head north again. We were so impressed with the meeting and atmosphere in HO, that it was a hard time saying goobye. Poor Fürsten had to take a nap in the Zwitter recliners... Outlavw style =)
After a trouble free trip from Grömitz, were we took a sleepover, we finally reached the ferry in Copenhagen and it was time to lower the shoulders and kick back in the bar. From the ferry and back to my garage it's only a 30 min drive. Somehow it was good to be back with everything intact =)
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