To All The Cars I've Loved Before: Classic Car Restoration, JDM, and Automotive History
The ultimate automotive history and classic car restoration podcast exploring the motoring memories behind iconic vehicles. Hosted by Carly, Doug and Dave, we trade technical specs for the unfiltered stories and family car history that reveal the soul of car culture. Join us every #TorqueTuesday for a deep dive into automotive nostalgia with restoration junkies and vintage vehicle enthusiasts. 🏎️🛠️
To All The Cars I've Loved Before: Classic Car Restoration, JDM, and Automotive History
Air-Cooled VW Culture: Women Restoring Classic Volkswagens 🍃🚗
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Air-cooled VW culture and women in classic car restoration. Restoring Volkswagen Beetles and the "Muth" Super Beetle...
“Every car tells a story, and those stories reveal exactly who we are.”
In this episode, Doug and Dave welcome professional corporate and lifestyle photographer Marla Aufmuth into the virtual garage. While Marla has documented landmark cultural events for brands like Nike and TED Talks, her heart belongs to the air-cooled Volkswagen community. 🏎️💨
Marla shares the history of "Muth"—the 1976 sunflower yellow Super Beetle convertible her father bought in Germany and shipped home nearly 50 years ago. Named after the German word for "strength" or "courage," the car became Marla’s classroom for life, where she mastered the clutch on the daunting hills of San Francisco. 🇩🇪✨
Inside This Episode:
- 📸 The VW Women Project: How Marla turned a pandemic hiatus into a mission to photograph and interview 40 women across 10 states to acknowledge their place in car culture.
- 🌻 Sensory Nostalgia: Why the smell of horsehair, vinyl, and a hint of gasoline serves as a sensory time machine for vintage VW owners.
- 🚐 Forbidden Fruit: Marla reveals her ultimate dream car: the European VW California—a hybrid "three-room" apartment on wheels that isn't available in the States.
- 🇯🇵 The 25-Year Rule: Dave explains how the 25-year cutoff allowed him to import his own Japanese Kei van and how others can do the same.
- 📐 Automotive Logistics: A hilarious debate on whether Marla's 6’3” husband can actually fit comfortably into a tiny Japanese Kei car.
Don't miss Marla's favorite episode with Guinevere from Freccia Brothers, The air-cooled auto specialists in the North East. https://buzzsprout.com/2316026/episodes/16886205
Our full conversation with @marlaaufmuth from @vwwomen is officially live! We’re talking about the "thrum" of an air-cooled engine and why Marla is skipping the ID Buzz for a hybrid VW California camper. 📸🇩🇪
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From mastering San Francisco's hills to hearing about 28-bus restoration shops in Nevada, this episode is a deep dive into why we love the metal that shapes our lives. 🚐📐
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Whether you are a lifelong "VW person" or just love a story about the metal that shapes our lives, this episode is a love letter to heritage, community, and the courage to stay in the driver's seat. 🎙️🛠️
Connect with Marla:
- Website: vwwomen.com 📸
- Instagram: @marlaaufmuth 🌻
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Welcome And Personal Car Updates
DougWelcome back to All the Cars I've Loved Before the podcast where we park the specs and the stats at the door to focus on the stories that really matter. You know what time it is. It's time to throw on that faded car t-shirt or hat. Get a little grease under your nails and step back in time. We're here to talk to you about that very first car. A sense of pure freedom with the windows down, maybe the convertible top down, music pen, and your best friends piled in the back. Every car tells a story, and those stories reveal exactly who we are. Whether it's your forgotten beater, a lifelong project, or the one that got away. And we're driving that personal history behind the metal. I'm Doug, and I'm here with my co-host Dave.
DaveLet's get into it. Dave, how are you? I am doing very well, thank you. Thank you for having me back again, and I'm glad to be here.
DougYeah.
DaveAlways a pleasure, sir.
DougOh, of course. What's new in your world? Any car related activities?
DaveWell, now that all the ice has melted, if anybody's on the East Coast, they know that it took a while for that to happen. I've uh got to rearrange my parking situation, but I haven't actually turned any wrenches as of late. Still waiting for it to warm up a little bit more, but at least now that the ice is gone, I can put vehicles back where they're supposed to be. But uh how about you?
Museum Trip And Racing Sim Adventure
DougSo I think two exciting things. I went to the America on Wheels Museum in Allentown. If anybody's never heard of Allentown PA, you probably know the Billy Joel song. That's Allentown. I brought my uh 14-year-old son and my 84-year-old mother. I think the highlight of that trip for her was sitting in the Model T in the back with my son and I sitting up front, and they let you honk the horn and just a great picture experience. But as I mentioned to you, Dave, on the on the uh they had a Nash Metropolitan exhibit, they had a Dodge Viper exhibit going on. Those are from car clubs, but really nice small museum right near the w river. So uh good times. And then kind of the highlight of my weekend was yesterday I went to P1 Racing Simulator. It's uh a digital racing like you see in the movies. It's in Annapolis, Maryland, where I live, and uh got to race a Cayman on a track and just me independently, but it was a lot of fun. I I wrecked the car a bunch of times, but I had the option of stick shift or automatic, PDK. But there were siblings racing against each other. There was a father-son doing like a F1 style setup, but you get a lot of feedback. It really was a ton of fun. I highly recommend it to anyone. We're gonna have the guys on the show, so I don't want to reveal too much, the co-owners, but tons of fun.
Guest Intro: Marla And VW Roots
DaveI know seeing the pictures that you sent me made me want to go immediately. So I'm definitely gonna be checking it out very soon. And uh can't wait to talk to the guys from there too, because I'd I'd like to know how they got into that. Super exciting. I have a car themed article of clothing on today. I have my Volkswagen hat because who we're talking to today is a big Volkswagen person, and we're gonna get into that in a minute. And I know that Doug, if you're watching this on the YouTube, has a Beatles shirt on, which he got in California, and that actually also happens to be where our guest is from. So it's all tying in together. We got Volkswagens, we got California, we got everything coming together, and I can't wait to get into this. So, speaking of, um, we're gonna do a real quick podcast update. If you've listened uh to our podcast, the last one that just was released was a heartwarming uh father and son project who actually wrote a book about their experience called From Clunker to Summit. Uh they restored a 1998 Acura Integra and uh took it to Mount Evans. So um if you're back, thank you for coming back. If you're new here, go back and listen when this one's over. I think you'll really enjoy their story. They were really uh good people to talk to. And The Sun actually left a review after it and said uh this is a quote from the review: a super genuine and authentic host that makes the podcast feel like chat with friends. Their content is easy to connect with and enjoyable, would highly recommend. So thank you, Neil, for doing that for us. And I appreciate the feedback. It's gonna help us grow. But uh now we got to get to the good stuff, and that's gonna be Doug. How did this lovely guest get into our virtual garage?
DougMarla offmoot. She was a referral from one of our wonderful other Volkswagen loving guests, Guinevere Fresha from Fresha Brothers in Connecticut. And uh, I'll let Marla do a good intro, but just to pave the way, if you will. Marla is a professional corporate portrait and lifestyle photographer who has documented landmark cultural events and figures for major brands, including Nike and TED Talks. And outside of her corporate work, she is a lifelong air-cooled Volkswagen enthusiast who has started her own Volkswagen-focused photography called You Can Find It Online, VWwomen.com. But let's introduce Marla. Marla, thanks for coming to the show.
Speaker 2Thanks for having me.
DougWe're very excited, as we were talking in the pre-show, about, you know, you have another, I haven't owned a Volkswagen, but I've heard great things. And there is a cult, and that is a very common thing. When we talk to people, it's either Volkswagen or Jeep. Those are like the two very common cars, vehicles, if you will, that people want. And uh we have Dave here, of course. He's named his car as many, many of as you, as well as many of the women you've interviewed for your photographic site have also named. Tell us more about yourself, what you do, how you got into the whole Volkswagen life, and then we'll jump into some questions.
Smog Tests And Vintage Car Survival
Speaker 2Okay. Well, it started, I think, in I guess the summer of 1976.
MarlaMy dad flew to Germany, bought a sunflower yellow Volkswagen Super Beetle convertible, and spent that summer driving around Europe. And then he shipped it back and he named it Moot, as in our last name Auf Moot, which also means of strength in German. And um, so it was his daily driver for years. So I grew up in the back of Moot. I learned to drive on Moot in my 20s. I mastered the clutch on the hills of San Francisco as I lived there. And then eventually after university, he finally gave me the car, so it became mine. And now every year I pray biannually as it will pass California smog tests because it's a 76.
DougI I was really pulling for that Leno's law.
MarlaI is it gonna go through? I hope it goes through.
DougI I think I heard it didn't, that it but maybe maybe I'm wrong, maybe it's looped back through because uh as we mentioned earlier, I'd like to live in California and I want to bring my 1981 DeLorean out there, which maybe it could pass smog. I doubt it would, but uh all my DeLorean buddies out there who live out there, that's like a common thing. Oh, I just passed smog, like it's a it's a bragging rights, if you will.
Speaker 2So no, I spend probably two to three months and I go to the smog place and befriend them and I find the mechanic to go tweak it while it's on the smog machine.
DougYep. It's and it's uh probably anxiety provoking in some ways too. You had a you had a challenge.
Speaker 2So I'm like, okay, I'm going to the mechanic, and my husband's like, okay, I'll see you at for dinner because he knows I'll be gone all day long.
DaveI'm not 100%, I'm not 100% um familiar. I know of smog tests, but it is it that vigor uh rigorous that it's like hard to get the older cars through? Is are they never?
Speaker 2Every county has different levels, so it depends on what county you're in. And the irony is the smog guy at the end, my car would barely run. It was limping up. The guy who tested it, oil is pouring out the back of the engine, and it passed smog.
DaveWow.
Speaker 2So even the smog guy was like, it's just a moneymaker for California.
Speaker 3Obviously, my car is not environmentally okay. So oil is pouring out.
DougI learned um California was the first state in the country under Ronald Reagan as governor to implement that. The uh CARP, California Air Resources Board, I think.
Speaker 2Well, it's kind of ironic if you're driving an old car, you're gonna keep it going no matter what, which I will do. So they should just sort of grandfather them out. Like, I just learned that my car is 50 years old this year. So I feel like if you have a car that old, maybe they could just change those dates to be a little higher.
DaveBecause in Maryland, that would be his not even historic, it would be antique at that point. I think um antique starts at the 30 or 35 year mark. Um, and they're not sub, you know, subject to any tests or anything, as long as it can, you know, if you it has a steering wheel and a pedal and four wheels or even three wheels, depending on what kind of car it is. Um, it you can drive it. So like I'm I'm surprised that uh that California is so strict, even though it's a 50-year-old car. But like you said, every every county has its own little regulations, which Maryland has some sections that have vehicle emissions and and other sections don't. So like where I'm living, I don't have vehicle emissions. But yeah, Doug.
Learning Stick And Life With “Moot”
DougOh, yeah, I didn't know that. In a in Annapolis we do, but between my all-electric car and my Goulorian, which does not have to be smog tested, it's has not been a problem for me.
unknownYeah.
Speaker 2Well, Dave, I might be hitting you up to register my car at your house.
DougThere you go. Dave, I see a scam going on here.
DaveHey, if she lives here part-time and that happens to be, you know, stop by that. Dave, I see a side I see a side hustle brewing here. That's what I meant to say.
Speaker 2Awesome, James. You can come to California.
DaveThere you go. Go uh go experience the uh the California hills for once in my life. Exactly.
DougYou might not want you might not want to come back. It's a great place. If um I don't know how far we got into your introduction with uh with all the nice chatter. Did you did you talk about your Volkswagen photography?
Speaker 2No, so we didn't get there. So I have a 76 Super Beetle. And then um, during the pandemic, since I am a corporate photographer, my work just stopped. So I had lots of time to think and lots of time to work on my Volkswagen. And Dave, as you know, every time you're with a bug, someone comes up to tell you a story about a Volkswagen. So I decided, I was like, why am I not photographing women in their air-cooled Volkswagens? It seems like an obvious project. So the idea was kind of conceived during COVID, and then I was like, okay, how do I find these women? So I started going on Facebook, I've discovered the whole Volkswagen community, which is so expansive, and started reaching out to local clubs. And someone put me in touch with a woman. We did my first photo shoot. It was awesome. And then it just kind of has grown from there. Over the last, I think, three years, I've photographed 40 different women in 10 states. Um, there's five different models of Volkswagens from the buses to the Beatles to the things, squarebacks, and Gias. Um, and then it's just keep going. And every time I meet a woman, I'm just so amazed by their story, their love for their car. And everyone has a Volkswagen story to tell.
DougSo they do. Maybe we should change the podcast, Dave, to be every Volkswagen has a story.
DaveEverybody has a Volkswagen story. But that's just because they were so prevalent everywhere you went. It didn't matter if you were in Europe or America. Like those when they when they made their their debut in the gas uh shortage era, they they stuck because they were so reliable, being air cooled, they were easy to keep running. Like, you know, my story about keeping it mine running with a literal penny and a piece of duct tape because they're that resilient that you know you can figure it out. And since then it it started, as you mentioned, kind of like that cult following, even though we never try to, you know, we don't lean into that. We just go, oh, look, another Volkswagen. But 100% every time you're out driving, somebody's gonna have a story or a question or a comment or something, or even just a smile and a wave because they love them, right?
Speaker 2The Beetle was the most longest produced car and best-selling car ever.
Dave23 million Beatles were produced. Like that's a crazy amount of cars.
City Driving, Work Cars, And Accidents
DougI think number two was uh Model T Ford. Yeah, and the Beetle behind, but still, what and what it what a difference. We're talking about polar opposites. So uh I do have to just throw out, since even though I'm not a Volkswagen guy, I don't own a Volkswagen, my DeLorean does have something common in common with the Volkswagen. This is a quiz. What do you guys think? I'm gonna let Marla go first.
Speaker 2In common.
DougSomething in common.
Speaker 2I've only seen a DeLorean from the outside. Okay.
DougIt has something to do with what's behind the driver's seat.
Speaker 2Oh, I know. I I get it. With the engines in the back?
DougIt is. Okay. I I actually went to a car show uh just downtown Annapolis, Cars and Coffee, and somebody said, I thought the I thought the DeLorean engine was in the front. I'm like, no. He's like, Are you sure? I'm like, that's the way it came.
DaveFrom the factory.
DougSo anyway.
DaveI don't think I'd ever put two and two together on that myself. Like, I of course, you know, Volkswagens are notorious for having rear engine, but I never like we looked at yours last time I saw it and you were showing me the stuff that you were doing, but I didn't it didn't click like, oh, look, it's a rear engine car too.
DougMarla, maybe we can uh chat about your first car a little bit, how you got it, you know, our our standard uh spiel, if you will, for the podcast, and we'll we'll dive into some more questions.
Speaker 2So my first car was moot. I learned to drive on him. And it was interesting hearing people talk about learning to drive on stick shift. And I don't remember we just did it. I don't think it was really a thought since it was my dad's main car. Like we just got in and I learned it. We went. So I wasn't allowed to drive moot to high school, but I could drive him to work after that. So that was my car, and then when it became mine around 94-5, my dad actually his co-worker was selling the 77 Super Beetle that was orange convertible. So he actually bought that. So even though he gave me the yellow bug, he ended up with an orange bug. So I might get rid of the Beatles.
DougSo he kind of traded up.
Speaker 2Yeah, yeah, one year.
DougAnd uh in the meantime, right, you did have another car, period.
Speaker 2So I moved to San Francisco, was driving it there, was working as a photo assistant, and I would show up on photo shoots to assist photographers. And an assistant goes, they go to the equipment rental store and gets all this heavy equipment and piles it in their car. And I remember showing up to a chute with my top down with five 10-foot holes for lighting and gear just piled in there. Because when you put the top down, you can actually put a lot of stuff in there. But I was like, okay, maybe I shouldn't be going to photo shoots in my bug with all this gear piled in there. The photographers thought it was funny, but you know, you can't lock it, it could fly out. There's lots of things that could go wrong. So my second car, I did inherit from my sister via my grandparents' uh Honda Accord. Okay. That became my work car. Keeping it in the family again. And that car was jinxed. It got in so many accidents. I think it was champagne colored that no one could see. Two people you turn into me. I had someone parked in front of me at a light or stopped at a light just back into me, like just weird accidents. So I ended up selling that and then have my Nissan Ultima now that I've had since 08. Okay.
DougThat's it. That's it. So you've had the Volkswagen Super Beetle the whole time. Uh and that's it.
Speaker 2Yeah.
DougThree year, three cars in your whole life.
Speaker 2Three cars in my whole life.
DougYeah.
Keeping Classics Running And Storage Hacks
Speaker 2Um, I think living in the city, in a city, you don't you don't really have room to have more. I mean, I already have two. Um, I go and visit these women that live out in Nevada that have like they basically bought plots of land so that they can have their 28 buses and whatnot. Um, we just don't have that space.
DaveSo does you do you have a garage for a moot? No. So I have room in the driveway. Okay. Well, you know, hey, you gotta do what you gotta do. I was just curious because my Alice has never really seen an inside of a garage either. But, you know, it's one of those things where you gotta do what you gotta do. Right? How often do you get moot out?
Speaker 2So usually when it's nicer weather, like it's raining right now, he's having a bit of a battery drain issue. So I kind of like unplugged the battery, like we've just been gone for two weeks, so I haven't plugged him quite back in because it's pouring rain. But definitely a lot more in the summer. Although he doesn't like to go very far, so it's more like 10 block radius right now.
DougAnd definitely less of a less of a rust issue out there. I know in I know in SoCal, Southern California, it's like you see cars just last forever that would have disintegrated on the East Coast long ago.
Speaker 2He's rusted on one paint job, but nothing like you guys have on the east coast because we don't have salt humidity or anything like that.
DaveMan.
Speaker 2Like it was funny because I was I whenever I travel for work or my corporate jobs, I always tag on some Volkswagen women. And I started late fall. And luckily last year, like organized some women, and this weather was really nice because they're like, Yeah, we put our cars away. And I was like, Oh, I didn't realize that's what you have to do on them away.
Speaker 3Yeah.
DaveAnd the the battery drain is a thing in the Volkswagen world. I have a marine battery disconnect on mine. So like if I know I'm gonna be parking it for more than a couple days, I go under the seat and I disconnect, and it's it's a quick disconnect, so it's you know, just stops the battery from draining.
Speaker 2Oh, maybe I need to do that.
DaveLook into the marine battery disconnect. It's it works really well.
Speaker 2I've gotten a solar, like slow trickle charge that I'm it's kind of more of a pain.
The Joy Of Driving And Convertibles
DougSo thinking back, Dave and I were talking about this earlier. I I know you grew up with moot. Is there something that you just loved about it, like that attracted in my case, pop-up headlights, and that was a big thing. But is it is there something about moot, whether it's the basic dash, the round headlights?
Speaker 2Uh I feel like when I get in moot, I you're driving. You're actually driving a car. And I always joke, like people complain, like, I don't want to never want stick shift, there's too much traffic. But I am convinced that if everyone drove stick shift, traffic would flow more fluidly because people just like slam on the gas and then the brake now, so it's all like but if you have to shift and actually get up to something, I think traffic would just like ebb and flow in a much more fluid, lovely way. I love driving. I love and then I love putting on a winter jacket, putting the top down, and just driving with that air. And that just there's nothing else like that.
DougNothing nothing beats a convertible, and I I own many and I don't want to take your thunder. But what I've said is like worst the worst car that's a convertible is the best car on a nice day. I don't care if you cut the roof off yourself, it's still the best car.
DaveI've never owned a convertible, so I can't speak to that. Well, Dave, we could cut the roof off your car if you like. I I think I know somebody. I was gonna say, not Alice, but we could definitely get a different car and cut the roof off.
DougYou could just get a convertible. Or we could do that too. It it it is funny, and I just remembered this story when I was probably post-high school. I had the opportunity to buy a five Beetle convertible. Uh and my dad, who helped me with so many different things, his comment was I don't know anything about Volkswagens. And he's a smart guy. It just he was a you know, American V8 front engine, rear-wheel drive guy, and it was just so foreign to him. Of course, it's the simplest car in the world to work on.
Speaker 2I feel like there is that divide though between the American cars and then the old vintage Volkswagens.
DaveI had a cousin that was um a lifelong mechanic. Well, he's still alive, but he's retired now. Um, but he uh he would refuse to work on a Volkswagen. And it wasn't a big because of it was a Volkswagen, it was because of the way that it was engineered. Because, you know, like the passenger side um lug nuts, you'll turn one way, and then the driver's side turn another, you know, and like those kind of things. And he was just like, no, I won't work on a Volkswagen. And so I had to work on my Volkswagen by myself, but he would work on every other car with me, just not the not the Volkswagen. You gotta know the ins and outs of the Volkswagens, as you know. You can you can get yourself in in a heap of trouble if you don't know what you're doing, but at the same time, once you learn it and find the simplest the simplicity, it's like, oh, well, that was you know, super simple.
DougThough you've only had three cars, you did mention what your dream car is, and uh then I want to circle back to talk more about your photography. Tell everybody about your dream car because I hadn't heard of this particular model.
Mechanics, Myths, And VW Quirks
Speaker 2Okay, so talking to all these women who have buses, they have so much fun camping and road trips. In their buses, that I was like, I really want a Volkswagen bus. But honestly, like having two vintage cars keeps me busy enough, like taking care of him. So I was like, I would love, I was like, okay, maybe the ID buzz will be cool, but I feel like Volkswagen did not quite pull that one off. And one of the women actually goes to a lot of the Volkswagen shows over in Europe. And she always rents this Volkswagen, California. And so Volkswagen has basically done a hybrid version of like a modern version of the Volkswagen bus. So it has a pop-up top, it has a full kitchen inside, it has sliding doors on both sides. So you can like go through all the whole bus. They call it like three rooms. So like both side awnings become living spaces with the Volkswagen camper van itself as like part of your home. And so to have something that's modern but still actually reflect those earlier buses in Westphalia's and Riviera's like that you could sleep in would be ideal. And then it's a hybrid, so it's electric, but yet you could still go off-road or go wherever you need to go and not worry. So that would be my dream car.
DaveActually, I was looking at those earlier myself, and it, you know, it does definitely hail back to the Westphalia days with the, you know, the square nose volt vans, the vanigans, which you know, because they changed it to the vanigan after a while. And it would be cool to have one of those myself, but at the same time, I don't go far enough that I would need it. But it it's a Volkswagen, so I'd own it anyway.
Speaker 3And you can't get them here because they're only in Europe.
DaveYou could definitely import one of the older ones now, uh, because if it's over uh 25 is the cutoff. So if it came out in in twin 2000, 2000, uh you can own one of the old ones, ship it over.
Speaker 2Actually, that's a good idea.
DaveThat's how I got my little van. I uh shipped it from Japanese.
Speaker 2Oh, I know. I went on that website that you had talked about to look at all the K cars.
DougIt's it's dangerous. And uh of course when the tariffs went up, that was like I was thinking about buying one. I'm like, nah, this is a re good reason not to.
Speaker 2So my husband's 6'3, do you think he'd fit in one of those K cars?
DaveOoh, depends on which one, because my my van, the seats all the way back, I'm six foot, so he's got and my knees just brush the the dashboard. So six three might be might be a touch and like a little bit mate mainly uncomfortable. He could definitely fit, just not for a long period of time. We'll put it that way. Yeah. For sure.
DougWell, you never know. We might we might have to have Marla back with the maybe with her husband.
DaveOne more question about the vintage Volkswagen. I'm curious. So we've talked about all the positives. What's one thing you wish would be different or like the worst part of owning an old old air-cooled? And I'm pretty sure I know the answer.
Speaker 2But we'll we'll add fuel injected. Okay. So that adds a little quirk to people fixing it. Um, I don't work on my own engine, so it's finding the mechanics who actually won't lie to you and say they don't know how to work on them, and we'll actually do it. Because I know I've been driving that car for what, I don't know, 40 plus years. So I know every sound it makes, so I know when it's not running right. So it's finding that person, and they have to be like in their 70s or 80s. I feel like those old mechanics are the only ones that know. And luckily I have one right now, so knock on wood. Around for a while longer, but it's probably me not knowing how to do enough to tweak it to keep it going.
Dream Rigs: Buses, Buzz, And California
DaveUnderstood. That's it, that's a solid answer. Not what I was thinking, actually, but uh solid answer. I was thinking it was gonna be the trying to get it through smog every year or every two years, like you were talking about. Obviously, the newer the car is probably gonna be easier because the computers are worrying about getting it through where this one is somebody's gonna have to turn a wrench or a screwdriver somewhere and get it through. Um, but that makes a lot of sense. I'm a little blessed because less than probably 20 minutes or 30 minutes drive from me is an actual Volkswagen specialist. And uh he has what's called the the auto house, and he only works on old Volkswagens. So, like now, granted, he's getting up in age, like you mentioned. So at the moment, knock on wood, I have somebody that I can call and and or take my Beetle to if I need it. Um I try to do a lot of it myself, but it is a it's a it's a dying art for the Volkswagen, the air-cooled world.
DougI wanted to loop back and hear more about the BWwomen.com. You started sharing about it being a pandemic endeavor, right? Taken off since then and continue.
Speaker 2It's totally grown, and it's been great because through these different clubs, I'll find women who I will reach out to, see if they're interested, share with them the project. And you know, it takes a lot of trust to have some strangers show up with you in your car and interview you and photograph you. And so so many women have trusted me to like tell their story, right, and for them to share their story with me. So that's just been lovely. And what's great is I never really know their story beforehand. I just kind of go on a leap of faith that this will work out. So, and having no idea what these stories are, I am always so excited. I get in the car after, I like call my husband. I'm like, you're not gonna believe this story. Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. And so it's just been really fun to slowly roll these stories out from Guinevere, who you met, who's fifth generation repair Volkswagen repair shop owner. Um, and she actually had a fear of driving her car until she started getting in her beetle and could just like concentrate on driving. So to see her kind of persevere and work through that has been amazing. Um, another woman is um Sarah, and she has a, what does she have? A 67 Riviera conversion bus named River, and she drives the Shasta snow trip every year. Um, do you guys know what that is? I've never heard of that myself. Okay, so every February, it just actually happened. So during in California winter, all these old buses, all air-cooled buses, get together and they drive 300 to 500 miles all off-road around Sha Mount Shasta. So it's through snow, it's through rivers, buses are sliding off the hillsides. Like it's crazy and off the grid. And they've been doing it for a long time, like 25 years now or something. And she's one of the few women that does it. And she's like dropped her engine in the middle of like some dirt road to fix something. Like, she's amazing. I meet people like that, and I'm like, oh wow, okay, I got a lot to do.
DaveIt's intimidating when you have people like that too, because you're thinking, like, I know some stuff, and then you hear, oh, well, I was, you know, 300 miles deep in the wood and did this. I was like, you know what? Never mind.
Speaker 2She does it by herself, which is even more incredible. Like lots of couples go and she's doing it by herself.
DougAnd where is Mount Shasta?
Speaker 2So it's in Northern California.
VWWomen.com: Stories Behind The Cars
DougI'm just amazed thinking about the buses. I always think about the the 60s and whatnot. Like, what was it like to take one of those on a road trip? They're underpowered, they're not safe. Nothing was safe back then by by today's standards, of course. But no air conditioning, right? Just little stick shift and going uphill. I can just imagine. Maybe that's why the 60s worked out so well. It's that people were not in a rush, whether chemically induced rush or or not. They were just very laid back. Just doesn't sound like a uh fun travel vehicle, but back in the day they they made it work and uh they continue doing it. It's still in homage. I'm look I'm looking at your site while we're talking. I'm sure Dave have had I think Dave mentioned Cora and the double cab. No, yeah. One that caught his eye.
MarlaYeah.
DougMy dream caught.
MarlaShe started collecting Volkswagens. She got into them because of her brother, and then ended up with eight buses, and then met Mitch, who she ended up marrying, and they ended up with 28 buses, and now they have a whole restoration shop they've built on this piece of land.
DougAnd when where where is that?
MarlaWhere outside of Reno in Nevada.
DougOkay.
MarlaUm, it's a really pretty valley up there. Um, and they have like a Volkswagen camp out that they invite all their friends in their Volkswagens every, I think, August or spring, and just have really delved into the whole Volkswagen community, and they do drives and they go to gentle car shows together. Um it's pretty cool to see what they've built.
unknownWow.
Speaker 2That's awesome.
DaveAnd it's the sanctuary for Volkswagens too, because you know, Nevada is famous for having some of the cleanest Volkswagens, because like we were talking about with no rust, you know, like it's such a dry environment and everything. So I'm sure all of their their buses are gorgeous. But the ones that were restored.
MarlaThere's some yass shells out there too.
DaveThe the donor ones aren't as pretty, but they're still in my world, they're still like, yeah, they we could do something with that.
MarlaThey'll get used in somehow, some way.
DougRight. And there's a wonderful sisterhood from looking at your looking at your website, vwwomen.com, of you know, all different ages who love these cars and they've found something common, whether it's growing up with one like you did. Or Cora mentioned that her brother was interested in in Volkswagens, and that's how she got kind of pulled into it. And he ended up living with her, and that made the connection stronger with Volkswagens. And uh, she met her husband, and he liked Volkswagen buses, so 28 buses later, there you go. But where where do you see your hobby going? It does doesn't seem to be stopping anytime soon.
MarlaUh yeah, I mean, there's so many more women. I have a list of women I haven't even met yet, so it'll definitely keep going. I would love to see it be in a book so that more access to these stories. I think it'd be really fun to go to car shows and camp outs and everything in the Volkswagen community and like sell the book and share these stories. Yeah. Monterey here has Monterey Car Week in August where the concourse to elegance is. And it's a whole week of events. And I would love to be part of the like the little car show and have a bunch of women show up in their Volkswagens and men too, and show up with these Volkswagens that are kind of the opposite of what shows up at the Concourse to Elegance, but still I think to be respected in their own right and do a parade out there. So I think that would be my where I'd love to see it go.
DougThat sounds pretty exciting. I was hoping you would say starting a cars and coffee, right? Just something something fun that just spreads the word and continues the love of Volkswagen.
Shasta Snow Trip And Grit
DaveBring the community together. I really appreciate you. Of course, I'm a Volkswagen fan, but even if you were doing just bringing more acknowledgement and notoriety to the the females in our in our car cultures that are out there doing their own thing, like your friend that does the the snow drive, like that's amazing that she's out there, even if it, you know, it for anybody going out there alone is is impressive. But someone that you mentioned in your bio on your website that a lot of times in the car culture it feels like women are minimized or even sexualized. And there's a lot of us out there that that appreciate that there's more than just the typical car show mentality where we try to be as welcoming as we can for everybody. It's one of those things where I I really love your project and I'm I can't wait to keep following it along myself just to see who else you meet and their stories, because obviously I'm a big fan of car stories anyway. Here we are right now.
DougI Dave, um, I guess we just need to have keep having more Voltwogging people on to keep keep you entertained. Here's the next one. I did want to ask before uh Dave does the window, how does your husband feel about this? Is he allowed and is he allowed to drive up?
MarlaSo I don't think he's ever driven my Volkswagen.
DougBut he's been a passenger, right?
MarlaHe's been a passenger plenty of times. I think I even asked he knows how to drive stick. I've even asked once, and I think he's kind of like, no. Um, but he has actually been my biggest advocate for this project.
DougI bet.
MarlaUm, so it's been you know hard to find some women at first, and then once I figured it out, they've come together. But we'll go to a coffee shop and I'll come out with our coffees and he'll be talking to some woman, and he's like, Oh, this is Brenda, she has a Carmen Gia. You guys should talk. Or he'll be on a bike ride and he'll be like, Oh, I found the square back in the shed. It's Lynette's, you got a caller.
DougAnd I'm like, So it's been great to have him be so excited and supportive. But he but he is not a car guy, but he is a Marla guy. He likes his cars in his own way, so we talked about the two cars you have is the Ultima his as well, or he has his own.
MarlaNo, he has a big uh Toyota truck that's even older than my Nissan. But in preparation for this, I was like, what is your dream car? And he to have a Volvo, like a late 60s Volvo, the really boxy square ones, and he's decided that's what he'd like to find again.
DougOkay.
DaveThey're still around.
DougVolvo did have that P1600, which looked a lot like uh Carmingia. I always I always think they look very similar.
MarlaThere's a few I feel like that kind of look similar of that era, and I can't remember what else, but yeah.
DougMaybe maybe we'll have your husband on next time. Maybe we could do a joint joint interview if he'd like to join us.
MarlaWe'll ask him.
DougHe is a little shy, so we'll just hopefully uh you can uh twist his twist his arm now that we broke the ice a little bit. But but yeah, we'd love we'd love to have him, if if anything, just to talk about how much he enjoys helping you.
Big Collections And A VW Sanctuary
MarlaYeah, it was great. He actually got to come and witness one of my interviews. And sometimes, you know, the women get really emotional and cry, and I've done this. And then he actually witnessed it and he was like, wow, like those wagons mean so much to so many people, and to see that it's just incredible.
DaveSo that's funny because that was going to be my follow-up question. Is when you go traveling to do these interviews and photo shoots, does he go with you?
MarlaNo, I do most of them on my own. He's only been to one. Yeah, no, it they take a lot of time. So like I have to meet the person, kind of build their trust, and then I go to wherever they are, scout the location because I want it to be easy for them. So somewhere close. I need to find a location where I won't get like run over or I won't get squid. Which is actually a lot harder than I thought it would be. Like I didn't really kind of think that part through when I came up with this idea. And then, you know, they take like an hour or an hour and a half sometimes. Sometimes the Volkswagens don't run. Like I had one woman call her neighbors first thing in the morning to push it out of her driveway or out of her garage up the driveway so we could do the shoot because she wanted to be part of the project so much. So people have been through a lot of effort to make this happen, and I need to thank them all.
DaveWell, the uh the adventure is is part of that too. If you don't know what to expect, then you're going into it knowing what you want the outcome to be, but how we get there is the adventure too, and that's my outlook on it, at least.
MarlaOh, it's so true. And this one woman who pushed it up the driveway, she's like, Well, it's not starting, so if it works, it works. If not, then just come over and I'll make you some beignets and we'll have coffee. And I'm like, okay, yeah, you say go to bed.
Where The Project Goes Next
DaveGreat deal. I feel like it's time to head towards the proverbial off-ramp. I want to say thank you to Marla for coming on the show with us and having this wonderful conversation. Please keep up the good work that what you're doing. And if anybody, I encourage everybody listening, go to vwwomen.com, read these stories, see the gorgeous pictures that Marla's taking. She really does have a knack for her photography. She's doing good things and having awesome stories. So thank you for Marla for being here and check out vwwomen.com. And that has been uh the show. You've been riding shotgun with to all the cars I've loved before, the podcast celebrating the metal that shapes our lives and the stories that keep them running. If today's episode sparked a memory of your own first ride or a project gathering dust in the garage, we want to hear about it. He's Doug. Reach him at Doug at Carslove.com. And I'm Dave. You can find me at Dave at Carslove.com. Again, special thanks to Marla. Check out her cool stories, pictures, and stories. And if you enjoyed the trip down memory lane today, please follow us and tell a friend. Leave a review on the Apple Podcast is the best way to help our community grow. And you can find everything you need from us and our social links and everything to our pod, our past pod episodes at our link tree, L I N K T R dot E slash Cars Loved. And until next time, keep the windows down and the stories moving.