Reynard
Guru
- Location
- Cambridgeshire, UK
It was sunny earlier, then it rained quite heavily for ¼hr (as our Fengineer noted). Now it's back to cloudy sunshine.
Fengineer.
Me likey.

It was sunny earlier, then it rained quite heavily for ¼hr (as our Fengineer noted). Now it's back to cloudy sunshine.
i love the way you describe your meals,makes my sarnies quite tame.So therefore you are now the Cycle Chat food critic.All in favour say aye.Had a lovely luncheon of two slices of wholemeal toast, one with extra mature Cheddar and pineapple chutney, and the other with sliced avocado, plus a pear, a tangerine and two
We had a shower of biblical proportions while eating lunch. At least I won't need to water anything this afternoon.
i love the way you describe your meals,makes my sarnies quite tame.So therefore you are now the Cycle Chat food critic.All in favour say aye.
Watching the start of the TDF on ITV4.
my nose runs more than i do.Well, to celebrate the arrival of July - very nearly half the year in- I'm running a bath.
According to an article I remember reading by LJK Setright, all these "conversions" had their origin in the coach-built days of the 1920s when rich people's old knackered saloons were re-worked by the local coach builder to fulfil a new function - an estate was for landowners to drive around their estate in with space to carry whatever they needed to carry. A station wagon was for picking visitors up from the local railway station. A shooting brake was used to transport shooting parties. Car manufacturers started to spot a niche in the market by selling their own versions, probably coach built in small numbers hence the timber framing. Things like the Morris Traveller (and there were bigger versions of it too I think based on larger models like the Oxford, just not so common) were e just a continuation of the theme and an attempt to appear upmarket by aping what the aristocracy had been doing before the war.
Both gardening and cycling are a pleasure.
I recall a friend at school whose father had a RR with a wooden body, much like the Morris 1000 traveller. There was a certain amount of mockery, but seeing my father didn't even have a car ....
Edited to add a picture of what I think it may have looked like.
View attachment 651108
It looks lovely, but apart from maintenance, all that would break into sharpened stakes in the event of an accident.