Why do you own a Land Rover?
I wouldnt say "chick magnet" but I have received more than one comment saying that we "looked like you had fun" when we pull into the gas station with the rovers covered in mud.
Having a chocolate lab puppy in the backseat looking all cute and cuddly tends to draw the women in, only to have them be repelled just as quickly by the smell of the swamp water and wet dog (odd that the rover, the rover-owner, and the dog all have the same attraction to foul smelling bodies of water...)
Having a chocolate lab puppy in the backseat looking all cute and cuddly tends to draw the women in, only to have them be repelled just as quickly by the smell of the swamp water and wet dog (odd that the rover, the rover-owner, and the dog all have the same attraction to foul smelling bodies of water...)
Last edited by pilsner; Mar 2, 2010 at 08:13 PM.
I got the weirdest look from the guy when he tired to give me $80 (all the cash he had on him) and I wouldn't take his money. I just told him I was having fun, wanted to test my rig, and that he could just pay it forward and help someone else somehow.
Because there are too many Hybrid cars around Seattle and someone's got to use all this gas we have laying around!
I fell in love with the look of the Disco long before I could drive, with the high roof, all the windows, and straight edges. It looks like it belongs perfectly in the African plains or a ski lodge.

I fell in love with the look of the Disco long before I could drive, with the high roof, all the windows, and straight edges. It looks like it belongs perfectly in the African plains or a ski lodge.
Keep the tyre side down-
d2lvr -
Come on down to the Ft Lewis WA area sometime. I can show you a couple of mud holes that have eaten my Army-issued Stryker, much less my rover. Ask Valkeyre about the swamp he had to winch me out of - swamp water up to the center of the spare tire. Oddly enough my rover STILL smells like swamp water when I park her in the sun and that was 2 years ago...
Come on down to the Ft Lewis WA area sometime. I can show you a couple of mud holes that have eaten my Army-issued Stryker, much less my rover. Ask Valkeyre about the swamp he had to winch me out of - swamp water up to the center of the spare tire. Oddly enough my rover STILL smells like swamp water when I park her in the sun and that was 2 years ago...
My brother was critical of my choice of vehicle, citing that it was a gas hog etc. Last night the phone rang late and it was him. He is moving this weekend and put his camper-van in a outbuilding for the winter. It has about 8 inches of snow going to it on grass and he thought he could make it out. The van slid down an embankment and was about a foot from the house.
I had him out in about 10 minutes and he is now glad for my choice of vehicle.
I had him out in about 10 minutes and he is now glad for my choice of vehicle.
I was only a little kid, probably 6 or 8 when my parents decided to "take me to see their family in England" (that is where they started out, moved to Canada before I was born).
We met family and friends of theirs. Was driven in Rolls Royce, many fancy cars, and one Land Rover. That Land Rover was the most fun I've had-- with the exception of my honeymoon <cough cough>-- and I've wanted one ever since.
Always assumed that they'd be too expensive for me to own, and ended up with an 96 Ford Explorer, 02 Chevy Trailblazer, and borrowed my brother-in-law's Hummer "original" once too. Then, the wife and I were looking for a new vehicle that had to meet three basic requirements:
1) Carry more than 5 people (a military requirement)
2) Tow more than 7000 lbs -- without feeling like we would die at any moment
3) Go off-road without the constant fear of a tranny failure (a la Ford Explorer) while being polite on the road
4) This was an unofficial one that my wife will deny: It had to be comfortable inside in the same way that a private jet is comfortable inside...
I didn't really care what this magic vehicle looked like or who made it. It just needed to work. It had to be an on-road and off-road dream, tow heavy stuff, carry far too many people, and be fully featured and comfortable.
Land Rover was the only truck that met all the requirements. There was another, but I promised that I'd never own another of that brand... so LR it was.
I've loved it ever since. Biggest problem is who gets to drive. The wife always wants to be driving when we go off-road and now she's started to threaten that she wants to try with the trailer too.
<cry>
Heated front window and second row seats... 5 position radio control and separate audio with headphones... headroom in the third row seats to make it comfortable for a 6' 3" fussy guy... A ton of inside space with complete flexibility of seats to storage...
Land Rover, who'd have thunk it?
(I finally own the truck of my dreams. It looks great sitting beside our second vehicle, the VW Eos Convertible-- so, WHAT would you drive on the sunny beautiful day? The convertible or find an off-road pool somewhere and take the LR?)
We met family and friends of theirs. Was driven in Rolls Royce, many fancy cars, and one Land Rover. That Land Rover was the most fun I've had-- with the exception of my honeymoon <cough cough>-- and I've wanted one ever since.
Always assumed that they'd be too expensive for me to own, and ended up with an 96 Ford Explorer, 02 Chevy Trailblazer, and borrowed my brother-in-law's Hummer "original" once too. Then, the wife and I were looking for a new vehicle that had to meet three basic requirements:
1) Carry more than 5 people (a military requirement)
2) Tow more than 7000 lbs -- without feeling like we would die at any moment
3) Go off-road without the constant fear of a tranny failure (a la Ford Explorer) while being polite on the road
4) This was an unofficial one that my wife will deny: It had to be comfortable inside in the same way that a private jet is comfortable inside...
I didn't really care what this magic vehicle looked like or who made it. It just needed to work. It had to be an on-road and off-road dream, tow heavy stuff, carry far too many people, and be fully featured and comfortable.
Land Rover was the only truck that met all the requirements. There was another, but I promised that I'd never own another of that brand... so LR it was.
I've loved it ever since. Biggest problem is who gets to drive. The wife always wants to be driving when we go off-road and now she's started to threaten that she wants to try with the trailer too.
<cry>
Heated front window and second row seats... 5 position radio control and separate audio with headphones... headroom in the third row seats to make it comfortable for a 6' 3" fussy guy... A ton of inside space with complete flexibility of seats to storage...
Land Rover, who'd have thunk it?
(I finally own the truck of my dreams. It looks great sitting beside our second vehicle, the VW Eos Convertible-- so, WHAT would you drive on the sunny beautiful day? The convertible or find an off-road pool somewhere and take the LR?)


