| Rufus And The Summer Blues | ||
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by Rufus J. Flywheel (07 Jul 06) A familiar gloom has come over me. As I write this, it is the height of summer, and I object to summer. For a start, there is far too much sport going on, a situation exacerbated this year because of the World Cup. A single football match is enough to give me the jitters, but three weeks of them are close to intolerable. The Green Nut Who Lives Next Door actually has three cars in his household, which is more than I usually have, but the fact that he always has the same ones while mine keep changing makes a difference for some reason that he has never adequately explained. When I express surprise that a Green Nut should have even one car, never mind three, he tells me that "personal transportation liberates the masses". So that's okay then. Summer this year has also brought a spate of convertibles. Not many years ago, manufacturers had a habit of sending me these exclusively in the winter months, while providing me with off-roaders between June and September. Although this seemed peculiar, it did at least give me an excuse not to put the roof down. I detest al fresco driving, and the threat of having the Flywheel features pebble-dashed by hailstones was a good reason to avoid it. Now that the convertibles are appearing in mid-year, there is astonishing pressure from those around me to make full use of their convertibleness. Relatives, friends and onlookers are forever urging me to fold away the roof myself (in the ever-decreasing number of cases where this is a manual job) or to press the button that does the job for me (if the car in question is a coupé-cabriolet). Even the Green Nut Who Lives Next Door says I should be doing this so that I can "commune with nature". I would have thought he would rather I left the car in the garage, or preferably destroy it to appease the wrath of Gaia, but perhaps he wants me to push it to the top of the hills near where I live and then hop in and coast down the other side to enjoy my dose of nature-communing. All things considered, I can't wait for the summer to be over. But further horrors await later in the year. Sweeping up dead leaves is just too depressing for words. |





