When I moved to New York City to live as an adult more than
20 years ago now, one of the things I most looked forward to was being able to
live without a car. The 10 years of being a car owner had been miserable. My
first car broke down a lot and was finally consumed by flames in an engine fire.
I replaced it with a 15-seat passenger van I purchased from an inebriated
redneck in the back woods of Northeast Georgia. The van also broke down a lot.
The drive shaft fell off on Highway 285 in Atlanta and I give it to charity in
hopes of getting a tax write-off rather than try to sell it.
But time and life circumstances change, and six years ago my
then fiancé and I decided to get a vehicle together as we were building our new
life. I was playing a lot of punk rock shows at the time and we needed
something affordable but that would carry a lot of musical equipment as well as
be suitable for camping and hunting. We couldn’t afford much, but we managed to
find something that fit the bill and was reliable at an affordable price: a
full-length pickup truck that we named Big Bertha.
The name was an homage to my then-finance-now-wife’s great grandmother
Bertha. It was also an alliterative reference to BlueBetty, an ill-fated blue van that I came to possess for several
months and was able to use for only one punk rock show. Driving a
barely-functioning van from Suffolk County to Brooklyn while having to shift
into neutral at every stop to keep it from stalling out is a harrowing
experience that builds character. How that van made it as far as it did is a
miracle. We were never able to get it working and eventually sold it for scrap
metal and got $300 for it, which didn’t fully cover what I had spent to insure
it.
Big Bertha performed flawlessly for every punk rock show,
every camping trip. When my wife and I went on our honeymoon, we drove Big
Bertha to Maine. A missed highway exit took us through Lowell, Massachusetts,
where we stopped by to visit Jack Kerouac’s grave (“You don’t look like typical
Kerouacers,” the woman at the cemetery office told us, which we took as a
compliment). When my wife was pregnant with twins, she found it convenient to
use the truck. When our twins were born, Big Bertha enabled us to take our
offspring home from the hospital safely.
Perhaps the greatest immediate benefit was ease of getting
to shows with equipment when playing music. When my band Blackout Shoppers
came home from playing Philadelphia and needed to blast some classic Whitesnake to
the hipster-infested Lower East Side, Big Bertha had the power. When we did a
short tour with TwoMan Advantage, Big Bertha took us through the bitter cold. I
somehow managed to park the nearly 20-foot truck in the East Village when we
opened for Joe Coffee and 45 Adapters at Bowery Electric.
Driving and parking in New York City is not easy. It is
especially difficult to do with a large vehicle. Where we live in Queens makes
owning a car a bit easier, as street parking is possible and there are
residential streets with more available parking than other places. Owning a
vehicle as large as Big Bertha would be impossible in Manhattan and more
popular parts of Brooklyn.
Our punk rock pickup truck persevered, until it didn’t. Its
transmission, which was never 100%, began to decline rapidly over these last
months. When I attempted to drive it to see SLAYER
at Jones Beach, I had to quickly change plans and use the family minivan for
the trip.
We had Big Bertha towed to our mechanic and the prognosis
was not good. Bertha’s transmission was gone and it would be costly to replace.
She had taken her last ride and it was on the back of a flatbed pickup truck.
Luckily, our friend Amy Jackson
happened to be looking for a buyer for her Jeep Grand Cherokee, and we could
not find a better person to help replace our truck. Amy is a photographer and
adventurer. When a friend of hers was seriously ill a few years ago, she
quickly organized and produced the Gentlemen of Punk Rock calendar to raise
money. She accepted our offer and will
be using the money to fund her trip to Antarctica. Amy Jr. will be part of our family
and while she will never have the enormous presence of Big Bertha, she will be
a lot easier to park.
Like many aspects of city living, owning a car is tougher
here than elsewhere, but we find our ways to make it work. A decade ago I never
thought I would own a vehicle again, and now I have two vehicles registered in
my name. Wish us, Amy, and Amy Jr. good luck and smooth travels.
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