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Promoting the 18 th Annual Columbia Valley Classsics Car Show Promoting the 18 th Annual Columbia Valley Classsics Car Show COLUMBIA VALLE Y PIONEER AUTOMOTIVE SEC TION #35 - 109 Industrial Rd. #2 Invermere, BC Phone 342-9696 Fax: 342-9699
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• Marine & Auto Detailing • Custom Vehicle Accessories includes installation #35 - 109 Industrial Rd. #2 Invermere, BC Phone 342-9696 Fax: 342-9699 COLUMBIA VALLEY PIONEER AUTOMOTIVE SECTION Promoting the 18 th Annual Columbia Valley Classsics Car Show Promoting the 18 th Annual Columbia Valley Classsics Car Show
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Page 1: vol4issue36_carshow

• Marine & Auto Detailing• Custom Vehicle Accessories

includes installation#35 - 109 Industrial Rd. #2

Invermere, BCPhone 342-9696 Fax: 342-9699

C O L U M B I A V A L L E Y P I O N E E R A U T O M O T I V E S E C T I O N

Promoting the 18th Annual Columbia Valley Classsics Car ShowPromoting the 18th Annual Columbia Valley Classsics Car Show

Page 2: vol4issue36_carshow

2 • Show & Shine 2007 September 7, 2007

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Ladies and gentlemen,start your engines!

By Cayla GabruckPioneer Staff

Th e Columbia Valley Classics Car Club is getting revved up for their annual Show and Shine in Radi-um Hot Springs, on Saturday, September 15th at Th e Springs driving range.

Th is is the show’s 18th year in Radium and car club president Mitch Jopp is hoping for good weather and a great turnout.

“If it weren’t for the volunteers and the work put in, it would not be the success it is,” Mitch said.

Last year, even in the midst of the chilly weather, the car show had more than 400 registrants and Mitch said they have had up to 600 registrants.

Th e Columbia Valley Classics was launched 18 years ago by a group of locals, including Mitch.

“We all have old cars,” Mitch said. “We thought it was something we would give a try to and see what happened.”

Mitch’s prize automobile is a 1940 Plymouth Coupe that he has owned for 20 years. He bought the car, which he has now painted an eye-catching “purple passion,” from Mickey Maione of Edgewater.

“He used it as a hunting buggy,” Mitch said. “I just liked the look of it.”

When he fi rst set eyes on his future pride and joy, Mitch said he was looking for something older than 1950.

He took the car apart twice - once so he could drive it, and again so he could paint it. After he put

it back together for the sec-ond time, the car spent a year in the upholstery shop. It took him two-

and-a-half years in

total to turn his car from a rusty old hunting buggy to the sleek piece of machinery you will see if you visit the car show.

Mitch has lived in the valley for 40 years.“I was 15 years old when I came here,” he said.Along with building a new house outside Edge-

water, Mitch is employed as an excavating contractor “at this particular time in my life.” He lives there with his wife Kerry and has two children - Virginia, 31, and Blaine, 26. He also has two stepchildren, Jesse, 19; and Jaik, 17.

Mitch said Jaik is a very talented artist and recent-ly showed his work at Pynelogs Cultural Centre.

Th e car club has around 40 members. Th at’s 30 more than the original 10 who started the club back in 1989.

“It’s just socializing with people who have simi-lar interests,” Mitch said. “We have a wide variety of members.”

Th e club has members from British Columbia, Alberta and Saskatchewan - even some in the United States. Th e best thing about the car club is that you do not even have to own a classic car to be a member.

Mitch is adamant about the fact that if it were not for the hard work of the members, the car show would not happen.

Th e 18th annual Columbia Classics car show is to be held on September 15th at Th e Springs golf course driving range in Radium Hot Springs. If you would like to register your car, go to the Radium Hall on Friday, September 14th from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.; or Sat-urday morning at Th e Springs driving range, where the event will be held starting at 9 a.m.

Everyone is welcome to attend the car show and there will be door prizes and various vendors present.

For more information, call Mitch at 342-1245.

Car club member Mitch Jopp shows off his 1940 Plymouth Coupe.

Page 3: vol4issue36_carshow

Show & Shine 2007 • 3September 7, 2007

RADIUM HOT SPRINGS ESSO

7507 Main St. West, Radium Hot Springs • 250-347-9726

27 years of Classic Service

• GAS • DIESEL • PROPANE • ICE • CONVENIENCE STORE• PARTS • TIRE REPAIR

Full Service Mechanics on duty seven days a weeks

GREYHOUNDYour One Stop Service Shop in Radium

So you thinkyou want

a classic car!Owning and operating a classic car isn’t for every-

one. Here are a few tips to help you decide if you have what it takes.

• Determine what you’ll be using the classic car for. If it’ll be used as a daily driver there is no need to fi nd a “show condition” vehicle.

If you plan on entering classic car competitions you’ll have to fi nd something all original and spend slightly more. If you know the model you are inter-ested in, narrow it down to two or three years (e.g., Corvette 1963-1965). Th is will help with your search. If you don’t know, research what changes were made each year and what suits your needs/wants best.

• Know the classic you are interested in, and re-search what “problem areas” the vehicle may have and check if the problem has been resolved (e.g., many Eu-ropean classics have electrical problems so check that the components are in working order).

• Check with local classic car clubs for any people who own, or have owned the type of classic you are interested in. Th ey may be able to help you determine what to buy and what to avoid.

• Have a vehicle appraiser look at the car. Th ey may be able to tell if it’s been in an accident, or if the engine, transmission and other vital components are not original. Th is will alter the value of the vehicle.

• Do a used vehicle history report on the car to make sure it has not been stolen and to check how many people owned the car previously. Th is can be completed online. Don’t sell your wife and buy the classic car, because the car is very expensive!

• Try to buy something with full service records. Th is will give you some peace of mind.

• If you buy something rare, be prepared to pay more for parts. In many cases you’ll have to get parts custom made which can be very expensive. You may also be able to buy used parts from someone who is “chopping” up a similar model. You can check online auctions for general availability of such parts.

• Check that the VINs (Vehicle Identifi cation Number) match. Check that the VIN on the car’s title matches the offi cial VIN tag. Th e offi cial VIN tag is typically located at base of the windshield, but in older cars may be in the driver’s side door sill or the in the engine compartment. If they do not match, then the vehicle may have been in a severe accident. VIN prob-lems are also signs of bogus classics and stolen cars. Be very careful in this part of the buying process.

• Be aware that classic vehicles require eff ort to stay in the shape they are. Many people buy a classic with the thought, “Wouldn’t it be fun to drive that after work every day.” Realistically, there will always be something that needs fi xing.

Keeping your classic car in peak condition means many hours of work and repair, which is not for everyone.

Page 4: vol4issue36_carshow

4 • Show & Shine 2007 September 7, 2007

By Cayla GabruckPioneer Staff

Bryan Barkley saved up for years to buy the rusty, midnight blue 1965 Pontiac GTO.

Bryan knew he loved that car from the fi rst time he saw it parked in a yard in Wilmer when he was ten years old.

“He knew it was a muscle car and that was what attracted him to it,” said Bryan’s father Cliff Barkley, who lives in Juniper Heights.

“It was a chick magnet for him,” said his mother, Linda.

He fi nally saved up enough money and bought it when he was 14. His older sister Tia had to drive him around in it until he got his driver’s licence.

“His car was his baby. I got in trouble many times for not driving it correctly,” Tia said.

After he got his licence, he owned the car for another two years. “In that period of time he put 42,000 miles on it,” said Cliff .

Cliff and Bryan worked on the car in their garage in Athalmer every night for fi ve months to get the car in working order.

“Th ere were lots of fi ghts, because Dad knew

better, and Bryan thought he did,” Tia said.“He always used to complain about how it

wouldn’t go,” Cliff said, chuckling. “It has a fi ve-power set-up, a three-carb multiple carb setup, and I jimmied it so only one carb would ever work. He never knew that.”

Even though they put a lot of work into that GTO, Bryan never had a very good battery in it and was always pushing it to start it.

He painted it a new shade of blue, a little lighter than the original midnight blue, but suits the car just as well, if not better. He named his car “Wild Th ing.”

“He used to think he wanted a Dukes of Haz-zard car,” Tia said, with a laugh.

“He went through this phase where you could only get in his car if you went through the win-dow. Th at was until he broke the armrest off and found out that armrests are really expensive and hard to fi nd. We were allowed to use the doors after that.”

One day, Bryan had a realization.“He said to me: ‘Ma, next year I am going to take it in the car show,’” Linda said.

A week later, on September 26, 1992, Bryan was killed in a car accident outside

of Radium Hot Springs. He wasn’t driving his favourite car.

Th e blue GTO sitting in their yard is a physi-cal memory of the hopes and dreams of a brother, a son and a friend.

Bryan’s family remembers him as having a way with people, and most of all for the laughter he brought.

“It was Bryan’s car,” Cliff said. “It will always be Bryan’s car.”

Every year, the Barkleys put the car in the Co-lumbia Valley Classic’s Show and Shine in memory of Bryan.

Th e Show and Shine is on September 15 at Th e Springs driving range.

Brian got his love for cars from his father, who also has two other classic cars - a yellow 1930 Chevrolet Coupe, and a white 1959 Mercury.

Every year they lend their rusty-red 1956 GMC pickup to Th e Pioneer staff to drive in the Santa Claus parade.

“Growing up in this family, you have no choice but to be into cars,” Tia laughs.

“Otherwise, you’re sort of on an iceberg, afl oat, all by yourself because nobody will talk to you!”

Bryan’s car a special memento

Car club member Cliff Barkley and his daughter Tia pose with Bryan Barkley’s beloved 1965 Pontiac GTO.

Page 5: vol4issue36_carshow

Show & Shine 2007 • 5September 7, 2007

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VISIT OUR PARTS & SERVICE DEPARTMENTMONDAY - FRIDAY 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.

SATURDAY 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.“The Preferred Service Providers”

For more information contact:Dan McConnell, Daniel Powell or Rick Prasad.

We would be pleased to help.

Always a Class ActAlways a Class Act

Th e Pioneer brings the quality of yesteryear to the newspaper of today.

N E W S P A P E R

Th e community’s FREE weekly newspaper containing local news, events, valley history, shopping, dining and real estate information.

www.columbiavalleypioneer.comE-mail: [email protected]

Phone: 341-6299SPIT AND POLISH - Th e weather hasn’t always cooperated, but rain doesn’t deter hundreds of car buff s who turn out to admire the gleaming fi nish on these beauties.

Page 6: vol4issue36_carshow

6 • Show & Shine 2007 September 7, 2007

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342-9933Th e valley’s only locally owned, locally operated newspaper

�T H E P I O N E E R�

A labour of mechanical loveBy Cayla GabruckPioneer Staff

David Murray loves cars. He has always loved cars.Th at’s one of the reasons he owned nine would-

be classic cars when he was young. “Th is was in 1967, when you could buy them

cheap,” David said. “I wish you could do that now.”David has lived in Wilmer for most of his life.

His parents moved here from Saskatchewan when he was eight years old. He has worked at the sawmill in Radium for almost 36 years. He and his wife Kathy have a son named Shawn.

But Kathy and Shawn are not the only loves in David’s life.

He also has a 1955 Chevrolet Belair that he built from the ground up. Th e car is com-plete with a V8 engine and in fact, was the

fi rst everyday car with a V8 engine that Chevy ever manufactured.

A beautiful car, the Chevy took David fi ve years to get into the peak condition it is in now.

“I had every nut and bolt off it,” he said. Th e car is built with original parts and is painted

a glowing “harvest gold” and “Indy ivory.”David overcame a terrible injury he suff ered in a

car accident just before his 20th birthday, when he lost the use of one arm.

In the early 1990s, he decided he wanted to fi x up an old car again, and so he began searching for his perfect candidate.

In 1995 he found it. Well, them.

David bought two identical cars, one from Cal-gary and one from Golden, and took parts off each so he could assemble one fantastic two-door hardtop.

“I never had a hardtop before,” David said, “and I was always looking.”

After the initial purchase of the cars, he collected parts from as far away as Florida to make sure that his completed car was 100-percent original.

Day and night he worked on his masterpiece, tak-ing the occasional month-long break

when he would get frustrated.“I spend a lot of hours work-

ing on that car,” David said. “Lots of people do not realize what’s involved in fi xing up a car.”

Continued on Page 7

Car club member David Murraywith his 1955 Chevrolet Belair.

Page 7: vol4issue36_carshow

Show & Shine 2007 • 7September 7, 2007

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Continued from Page 6

Th e hard work, time and love put into the reconstruction is apparent in his vehicle.

You can see it for yourself at the Co-lumbia Valley Classics Show and Shine in Radium Hot Springs on Saturday, September 15.

David has recently purchased an-other classic car. It is a 1940 Plymouth Convertible that he plans to paint burnt orange.

“It’s a really odd-looking car,” Da-vid said.

Watch out for it too at the Show and Shine . . . when he’s fi nished work-ing on it, in about fi ve years.

Even the dashboard of David Murray’s car is beautiful.

Page 8: vol4issue36_carshow

8 • Show & Shine 2007 September 7, 2007

Moments from Show & Shine 2007

This is the scene you can expect to enjoy at the Show and Shine on Saturday, September 15.

Photos by Elinor Florence