Land Rover Monthly

It’s a keeper

2020 was always going to be an important year for Range Rover fans, but for Gary Pusey 2021 is the year that really matters…

- PICTURES: NICK DIMBLEBY AND GARY PUSEY

Gary Pusey talks us through his first Range Rover which he’s owned 30 years

AUGUST 24, 1991. The day I became a Range Rover owner. I remember the day as if it were last week. I’d spent a lot of time researchin­g and working out what I could afford, scouring the off-road magazines in those distant, pre-internet days. And now I thought I’d found what I wanted at my local main dealer, Taunton Garages in Somerset. It seemed to tick all the boxes and the price was only slightly above my budget.

Owning a Range Rover was an itch I’d needed to scratch since I was a teenager in the mid-1970s, when I first saw one in London and thought it was the coolest thing. I had to wait a long time, but now the day had come. That 1987 Ascot Green 3.5 Range Rover was going to be mine. I’d made up my mind. This was the one. And I had an appointmen­t to take if for a test drive.

I’m sure the salesman could tell that he wasn’t going to have to work too hard to secure this particular sale. He knew he had me on the hook the minute I turned the key and the gorgeous V8 burbled into life. When we got back to the showroom he played his trump card, casually suggesting that before I made up my mind perhaps I’d like a spin in their 1990 3.9 auto demonstrat­or? Needless to say, it was no contest! Despite exceeding my budget by a considerab­le margin, with a scribble of the pen on the hire purchase agreement I bought H939 SYD. I probably wasn’t the first person to go out with the intention of buying something very specific and coming home with something different.

But I was in heaven. The company car found

unloved on the driveway and the new-to-me Range Rover became my vehicle of choice. Needless to say, it was soon christened Syd, for fairly obvious reasons. I devoured every book I could find on off-road driving techniques, and I took my first drives along the local greenlanes. I knew the lanes were tame because I’d walked them many times, but it was great fun to be driving them in my Range Rover.

The salesman at Taunton Garages had thrown in a free day at the new Land Rover Experience off-road centre at the Solihull factory site, and that’s where I had my first introducti­on to serious off-road driving a couple of months later, courtesy of an LRE Range Rover and an instructor who just happened to be Roger Crathorne. I was immediatel­y, utterly, hooked. I needed to get some more of this!

I signed-up to join an off-road Challenge Weekend at David Mitchell’s in North Wales, and there met a very youthful Nick Dimbleby who was photograph­ing the event for LRO. It turned out that Nick lived with his parents just outside Taunton, a few miles from me, and we soon came up with the idea that we should collaborat­e on a series of articles on the theme of learning to drive off-road, which would involve us visiting many of the growing number of off-road training centres that were springing-up all over the UK.

LRO’S editor, Richard Thomas, who would later become the founding editor of LRM, was delighted to accept the proposal. After all, where else was he going to find someone daft enough to take their nearly-new Range Rover to a dozen off-road driving schools, drive through everything they had to offer, allow himself to be photograph­ed and published in various degrees of embarrassi­ng stuckness, and pay for his own repairs? But it was tremendous fun, and I was really only doing what it said on the tin. And I certainly learned a lot in a short space of time.

Those off-road driving schools ranged from purpose-built facilities to open hillside, from forestry tracks and muddy fields to redundant quarries, run by experience­d pioneers in off-road driving or relative newcomers who’d spotted the increasing interest and jumped on the bandwagon. Each school was different, and every visit taught me something new. The Range Rover acquired some honourable battle scars along the way, but after the first scratch and dent you stop worrying and get on with the fun. And the car looked even cooler with all the evidence that it was being used as its makers intended. Not many were. Even fewer are today.

Syd also evolved quickly in the light of the experience, losing its front spoiler and bumper endcaps very quickly, and gaining a modified rear tow hitch with improved departure angle, a set of BF Goodrich Trac-edge tyres, protection for the steering and front diff, and a very neat winch installati­on courtesy of David Bowyer. When the standard exhaust got bent beyond salvation it was replaced by a bespoke, stainless steel big bore that meant I could be heard miles before I arrived. The only thing I drew the line at was hacking at the body panels to fit a snorkel, mainly because enquiries at the factory suggested that to avoid strangling the engine the plumbing would have to be the diameter of a dustbin.

Greenlanin­g trips became a passion as well, including some competitiv­e events on private ground, but after just one All Wheel Drive Club trial I decided that these weren’t really for me, although I continued to participat­e with a work colleague in his V8-powered Series I trialler.

Some of the greenlanin­g trips were spectacula­r, including David Bowyer’s three-day Secret Wales expedition­s, which were tremendous fun, as was a coast-to-coast off-road Trans

"The Range Rover acquired some honourable battle scars off-roading, but after the first scratch and dent you stop worrying and get on with the fun"

Scotland jaunt. Then there was the trip to the famous Val d’isère 4x4 show, which included driving from Paris to the French Alps off-road, pretty much all the way, and several more Challenge Weekends in North Wales.

Without a doubt the pinnacle was a trip to Iceland in 1993 that we organised ourselves, obtaining sponsorshi­p and discounts from airlines, shipping companies, camping equipment manufactur­ers and clothing firms. Close friend Chris and his wife Roberta took little persuasion to join us with their 1984 Range Rover, which was notable for being a Nissan turbodiese­l conversion. We modified off-the-shelf roof racks with the help of renowned off-road instructor and expedition­ist Keith Hart, fabricated our own storage boxes out of plastic bottle crates, and tailored everything to fit in the rear of the two Range Rovers.

Roberta took charge of food and drink, and my girlfriend, Fiona, later to become my wife, took care of the medical supplies. It was handy to have a career nurse on the team. Nick Dimbleby wasn’t going to miss it for the world, and neither was his then girlfriend, Claire. The fully-loaded vehicles were delivered to the port at Immingham, and several days later six of us flew from Heathrow to Reykjavik, courtesy of Icelandair. It felt like a tremendous adventure and the culminatio­n of everything I’d learned since acquiring Syd.

And an adventure is exactly what it turned out to be! The off-road tourism industry was in its infancy back then, and once we were away from the capital we saw very few vehicles at all. We spent the next ten days completing a double traverse of the island as well as driving long stretches of the stunning coastal roads, camping wild every night as the temperatur­e dropped to well below freezing. There were endless river crossings, mostly relatively shallow and easy, but we were surprised several times by deep, fast-flowing water that required care and concentrat­ion. If we deemed it necessary, Nick could usually be persuaded to wade out to test the depth.

Occasional­ly it snowed, including on one memorable day when I deviated from the track to explore a distant lake and promptly found myself sinking to the sills in a semi-liquid morass of black volcanic sand. The ensuing recovery took many hours and proved so challengin­g that at times I wondered if we would ever extricate ourselves. Just before dark it started to snow, and the recovery was completed in darkness and a swirling blizzard. Never was I so pleased and relieved to crawl into a tent!

The brake pipe on Chris and Roberta’s Range Rover rubbed against the chassis and perforated, so he lost braking on all four wheels, something that was discovered quite by chance when I stopped on the track for a routine map check

and Chris sailed past me, franticall­y pumping the pedal. We were struggling through an attempted repair when, as if by magic, two German registered 110s appeared out of nowhere that turned out to be crewed by a team of REME chaps assigned to 7 Signals Regiment, under the command of Captain Mike Reynolds. Mike swiftly allocated a repair detail to us and eventually we had brakes on the front wheels, enough to allow us to finish the expedition and return to the docks at Reykjavik.

By then, Syd’s shock absorbers were shot and the rear diff was grumbling its displeasur­e at being asked to turn the wheels. Neverthele­ss, both vehicles made it home safely from Immingham to Somerset.

All of these escapades became articles in LRO, with a total of 36 separate features appearing between December 1992 and March 1995, all accompanie­d by Nick’s wonderful photograph­s. But by then I was fully occupied with a new job, a house move, marriage and the birth of our first child, and Syd was relegated to trips to the DIY store or the dump. With every passing year, getting an MOT was becoming more and more difficult. And expensive.

Finally, in 2004 and with 107,960 miles on the clock, it was clear that the continual attempts at patching-up and makingdo were not sustainabl­e, and the final straw came when the exhaust manifold cracked badly. Protesting noisily, Syd was reversed gently into a crumbling old outbuildin­g. At that time there was no way a proper renovation could even be considered: there were neither the funds nor the time. The only thing I had to offer was a roof, and my priority was simply to keep the Range Rover tucked away, slow the deteriorat­ion as best I could, and hope that one day a resurrecti­on might be possible. More than a few voices told me to cut my losses and scrap it, but Syd was a keeper and, the way I saw it, saving it was the only acceptable option. It would be another four years before the doors on the outbuildin­g were opened, but that’s another story.

 ??  ??
 ?? LAND ROVER MONTHLY ??
LAND ROVER MONTHLY
 ??  ?? This particular greenlane became rather narrower than expected and required great care
This particular greenlane became rather narrower than expected and required great care
 ??  ?? A photo taken just a few weeks after Gary collected SYD from Taunton Garages in 1991
A photo taken just a few weeks after Gary collected SYD from Taunton Garages in 1991
 ?? LAND ROVER MONTHLY ?? Magnificen­t Lake District greenlanes
LAND ROVER MONTHLY Magnificen­t Lake District greenlanes
 ??  ?? Icelandic wild camping
Icelandic wild camping
 ??  ?? Several hours of recovery effort followed this silly mistake
Several hours of recovery effort followed this silly mistake
 ??  ?? Trans-scotland trip included this lengthy 45 degree slope
Trans-scotland trip included this lengthy 45 degree slope
 ?? LAND ROVER MONTHLY ?? If you do just one overseas off-road journey, make sure it is in Iceland
LAND ROVER MONTHLY If you do just one overseas off-road journey, make sure it is in Iceland

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom