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Love That Car |
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Courtesy Charles Wetherill |
this aging, oft-welded 1972 Volvo “never died except in capital cities”—and during a drive across the Sahara,
frequently axle-deep in sand, such vehicular devotion
is rare. As Charles Wetherill says, “Every time
the car died in an urban center, close to services,
I knelt down and gratefully kissed its tarnished hubcaps.”
Purchased from its original owner in Ghana with 10 hundred-dollar
bills, Little Car took Wetherill north across the desert
through Mauritania, then Morocco, and on to the Spanish
coast at Malaga, where it fumed its last. Wetherill
had decided to hit the road and the off-road after he
finished filming a documentary about a Ghanaian fishing
village. He snapped this photo, using his camera’s
timer, when an elderly hitchhiker he had picked up asked
to stop so that he could complete one of his daily prayers.
Wetherill now lives in Finland, teaching English and
trying to market Yesterday Is Tomorrow at film festivals.
His barkless basenji companion Akos, whose name means
Friday-born, runs through snow as happily as she used
to run through sand.
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