She was a pretty clean car when I got her and over the course of about 4 or 5 years I made her into what she is to this day. A sweet looking, great driving, seasonal fun car.
I mention all of this as a prelude to my subject line: "Have Our Spiders Reached a Turning Point?" The realization that something has changed. No, not the car, it is what it has always been. But how she is seen and viewed by the public.
Both when I had my 1500 in the late `60s and all the years I have had the 124 she was generally viewed as a pretty car. A sporty car. Much as most people back then viewed MGs and Triumphs. Nice cars, but little more. Certainly nothing special.
Now that seems to have changed. This year like never before my Spider is eliciting comments. "Wow, what a beautiful car! Is it an antique?" "Nice Fiat!" "Hey, what year is that? She as beauty!" "Great Fiat! Is it mostly original?"
Those four comments, each asked by a different passer by, were among many made within less than ten minuets as I sat in my Spider this morning waiting for my wife to come out of a shop.
Another couple, themselves driving a classic `90s Mercedes SL, stopped to admire her. The gentleman wanted to talk classic cars, the lady colors. Both were totally enamored by the Spider. (She, I got the impression, was ready to make a trade. "She likes yellow" was her husband's explanation.)
No more, it seems, is my 124 just another "foreign job" as people often referred to cars like the Spider back in the `60s and `70s. Now she is seen as something very, very special. A rarity. An eye-catching jewel. A privilege to even view, much less actually own and drive.
Are others here experiencing something similar?
-don
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