We
were on our way to play at the
Vail Hilton in December of 1975 (for $650/week plus room and meals -
that's for
the whole band...) .
I was driving the bus - our first bus, the
1960 International Harvester which had already fallen on its side in
Evergreen
-
and we had just come out of the Eisenhower Tunnel on I-70, below
Loveland
Pass. If you've ever traveled that way, you know that there is a
7%
grade for six miles; truck drivers are warned to USE LOW GEAR to avoid
"runaways"
-
a situation where a heavy vehicle can not stop or slow down because
the brakes heat up and fade,
and engine braking is not enough to
overcome the
vehicle's weight. I think there are runaway ramps now, but there
were
none at the time.
A few hundred yards down the mountain, I went to touch the brakes,
and...
my foot went to the floorboard. No brakes.
I announced our
predicament
to the fellows. We quickly devised a plan: Someone would
pull
on the parking brake lever enough to slow down so that I could shift
down
to a lower gear. Then, we would repeat the maneuver until
we were
in
low gear. Thank God, it worked.
Finally,
I got the bus stopped by steering into the mountain at the side of the
highway.
Had we been a little farther down the slope, we would not have been
able
to stop without serious damage to us and the bus. We were
towed
into
Vail.
The
Winnebago.
After Mike Roark's accident and our near-death experience with
brake
failure - not to mention the fact that the bus's six-cylinder engine
wasn't
adequate for long stretches of highway and pulling us up mountain sides
-
we procured a Winnebago. Not a big one, but big enough to haul us
in comfort while pulling a trailer with our gear in it. 418
cubic
inches
of Mopar V-8 power, walls of styrofoam, and best of all, air
conditioning.
The
boys and the Winnebago. Looks like Hays, Kansas as I recall it.
Here
are Andy (emulating the cover of Bobby Bland's Two Steps from the
Blues
album) and Carol with the Winnebago in July 1976.
Here are "the
boys"
sporting during a break in the comfortable confines of said Winnebago:
<>
1976.
Our primary goal in 1976 was to stay
busy
enough to keep going.
We played pretty much wherever we could -
Kansas,
Colorado, Oklahoma, Texas, Missouri...
and we were very popular in
Kalamazoo,
Michigan, for some reason.