I will try and get some pictures up Tony but I really do struggle with this IT stuff and at times wish I had a very large catapult outside the back door that I could happily use to hurl this infuriating device down the paddock and out of sight. I can't even find where you shovel the coal into it!!
To make matters worse my photo collection is in total dis-array and as we are in the throes of serious renovations on the house (which by the way I should be working on) they are mostly in amongst a huge pile of boxes and stripey bags in the garage.
In the meantime. There was a documentary produced on the ANZAC Tour titled 'Driving to D-Day', that went to air in Australia and I think NZ on the History Channel on the 6th of June last. There is a web site to do with this doco and in the photo file is a picture of my truck taken in Mulhouse France. Mulhouse is well known as the home of the French national car museum which includes the Schlumff collection and also of the national railway museum, neither of which rates a mention but are world class displays.
I and my Chev are well known to some of the regular forum contributors and when the Chev went unrecognised as happened in a previous thread where it was pictured in Alice Springs I was somewhat puzzled. In that thread the cab was mis-identified by someone as being a Holden built one when it is in fact American. The mistake was understandable because of a reflection that made it look like it had quarter vent windows. At that time I didn't know how to post, only look, so couldn't correct but I thought that someone who knew the truck would have at least identified the owner.
The only way I know how to put information in a post is to type it so will close this and find the 'Driving to D-Day' website and put it in another post.
David
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