Subaru Forester (up to 2005)

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Comments

  • ateixeiraateixeira Member Posts: 72,587
    It's probably gear oil. Let the dealer take a close look at it. I'd even ask if they could go ahead and flush and refill the gear oil, since you may want to do that at the 30k service anyway.

    -juice
  • kenskens Member Posts: 5,869
    Sounds like a leaky axle seal. I don't think it's a major problem, but let the dealer decide that.

    If anything I would be concerned about getting the grease removed to prevent any smell from the grease burning off.

    Ken
  • ateixeiraateixeira Member Posts: 72,587
    Yeah, eau du gear oil stinks to the high heavens. Even working close to it you'll smell for days.

    -juice
  • ken_from_njken_from_nj Member Posts: 105
    when taking trip to VT we put some luggage on the roof rack (mine has the rub strips on top) but the left/right front to rear side rails don't have any hole/point to hook a bungee cord hook so you can only hook it to the crossbars. this unfortunately lead to the hook sliding along the crossbar and the load shifting. does anyone know if subaru or somewhere else makes an after-market adaptor that connects to the siderails providing a point of tiedown/connection? think earlier forester models had built in holes at the front & rear of the left/right side rails but the 2003 definitely does not (bad design "improvement" if you ask me) thoughts?
  • ateixeiraateixeira Member Posts: 72,587
    I had to look at my catalog - yeah, my 1998 has those handles front and rear, which I use all the time as tie-downs.

    Bummer to lose those. Maybe they removed them for aesthetics?

    I do know that the new roof rails are aluminum, while my '98 were steel.

    -juice
  • jtm4jtm4 Member Posts: 60
    crowplus, I had a CVJ boot crack once. The grease leaked out onto the muffler. The smell was nauseating. I got it fixed pretty quick. More because of the smell than the bearing. The bearing was fine. They just slipped a new boot on and re packed it.

    98 Forester L
  • jimbob17jimbob17 Member Posts: 77
    Lou I test drove the vehicles above. I wanted a vehicle that would overcome the limitations of the 87 Subaru GL I traded in, headroom, leg and seat comfort and ground clearance. The 87 was one of the best cars I ever had. I liked the Imprezza but I felt cramped in it. The Forester is comfortable with plenty of headroom and seat adjustments. There was also more ground clearance. I thought the CRV was trucky and had visibility issues. The Forester had much more visibility and the stability was great.
    I started out expecting a CRV and wound up buying the 03 X Forester.
  • xccoachlouxccoachlou Member Posts: 245
    Jim, and everyone...

    Thanks for your feedback. I called my insurance company and got some quotes for insurance. The base Outback with auto will cost me $150 more a year than my present car. The XS Forester with auto will cost $300 more a year to insure.

    Too bad I just can't hit lotto and buy the H6 VDC...

    A friend told me that Hertz does rent Subarus so I am going to call them tomorrow and find out what they have and see about renting one for a weekend.

    I showed some folks at work the IIHS crash test results and they were very favorably impressed.

    The worst thing I have heard about the Subaru's came from a friend who said that they were not "chick magnets". LOL
  • pnassmacpnassmac Member Posts: 37
    MLP1,

    I was in the same boat just a couple of months ago and ultimately decided to get a 2003 Forester X 5spd. I wanted a car that would seat two adults comfortably (firm seats/good lumbar), excellent safety, excellent range (for an AWD vehicle), usable interior space for larger objects, less than 20K ( w/o tax and after negotiating) and something fun,fun,fun to drive. In a nutshell, a fun,fun,fun-to-drive AWD station wagon under 20K. Given these boards, I also expected the car to be a higher maintenance item vs my experiences I mention below.

    I've driven Honda products and continue to own a 2000 Accord 5spd. My wife and I are not motor geeks, routinely go thousands of miles beyond basic maintenance deadlines such as oil and fluid changes and completely skip those 30K, 60K, etc. suggested maintenance stops that cost hundreds. In short, we neglect our vehicles inside and out.

    Our biggest unscheduled repair bills to date have been related to an oil pan and manifold (?) gasket repair (<$150> on the '93 Accord. Our '89 Civic had 135K, '93 Accord had 176K at trade-in for the X, and 2000 Accord has currently 50K. As far as clutch replacement goes, the '89 at 110K and '93 was still original. I'm also married, no children. So there's our baseline.

    My assumption is you're interested in the CRV-EX 5spd vs. the Forester X 5spd. If you're interested in usable space (utility), longevity/reliability with a minimum amount of effort on the part of the owner and of course (passive/collision) safety , then I'd probably go with the CRV. You'll also get the sunroof, 6cd changer and that picnic table int the back. Of course, this car should also cost about $1700 more than the Forester X 5spd given the CRV's current demand.

    If you're interested in active safety (full-time AWD and lower-center-of-gravity (less likely to roll in emergency maneuver)), better passive safety (head airbags), better fuel mileage (21/27 vs 21/25) with greater range between fill-ups (~380 vs 429 miles), cheaper price (without tax, my X was about 19,800 vs 21600 for the CRV), and finally roof accessibily (roof-rack closer to ground ('cause I'm not that tall)) and fun-to-drive factor, then the Forester is for you.

    If you're interested in the XS, then I'm not sure what I'd recommend.

    Frankly, after the "new-ness" has worn off, I just want the car to work and absolutely not be a hassle. What constitutes a hassle? Visiting the dealer for service items not at all related to routine maintenance. And after three Hondas, the baseline has been established for the my X. So far, it's doing well.

    I'll say well because I'm having the same rotten-egg smell others have talked about on this site (and frankly, I think the "bad gas" explanation is bogus as no other car I've driven as rentals(Cheverolets, Fords, Suzukis, Mitsubishis,DMX's and Hondasa)for month-long periods (1K miles/month) and fueled at the same stations have NOT had this problem))as well as a shimmy in the steering wheel that I'm sure is related to wheel balancing even though the local Subaru dealership has balanced and rotated them once and on the second visit for the same issue it was explained to me that it was normal. So, off I go to another Subaru dealership to see if they can't fix the challenging items on a car with less than 6K on the odometer.

    Both issues are more of an annoyance, but we're not exactly off to a stellar start because I've been to a dealership now twice and expect to be at one more in the next couple of weeks. That will be a total of two more visits than I experienced with the Hondas in the past ~13 years (remember the gaskets (3-1=2)), again, for issues not related to routine maintenance.

    Now some will step in and say I'm just a "one-off" or I'm unlucky and that you may be just as likely to have problems with Hondas - and that is absolutely true. Statistically though, if you rank Japanese brands...

    I continue to enjoy owning the X and I'm hopeful in the long-run these problems will be fixed. But it's also the long-run that will determine whether I can recommend this car to anyone. Given my experiences, I'm open ...
  • capybaracapybara Member Posts: 10
    I remember reading on some post a while ago that there were lots of Forrester rentals in Hawaii. Does anyone know which company rents out Forresters?
  • ateixeiraateixeira Member Posts: 72,587
    I had an axle boot crack on our 626, had to fix that and the 02 sensor, which got covered with the grease and shorted out.

    Definitely rent one if you can, before buying. What a great idea.

    They may not attract materialistic, shallow, fickle females, but do you even want to? I picked up my wife in a scooter on our first date. 125cc Honda Elite, hang on good lookin'!

    That rotten egg smell was, in my case, eau de Subaru, or what I like to call "Subaru New Car Stench". It's the undercoating applied at the factory, burning off parts of the exhaust. Mine took months to go away. Washing the undercarriage helped, FWIW.

    Not to minimize your experience, but statistically Consumer Reports put Subaru and Toyota on top, ahead of Honda. That's today. I happen to think that Hondas have gone down hill a bit, you'll notice the Civic is only rated "Average" in reliability and has already suffered a whopping 6 recalls.

    Honda also had 24000 tranny failures (per an Automotive News article I read), though at least they extended the warranty and covered those.

    The CR-V is still much better than average, but the new one had a couple of hiccups - seats that rocked in their base (even after a TSB fix), noisy brakes, other driveline noises (steering), etc.

    Subaru is definitely not perfect, but both Honda and Subaru are better than average. Noone is having stalling engines or fires, or anything as bad as some other sport/cutes.

    In fact reading these boards can be a bad thing - with tens of thousands of these things on the road, you're bound to have more than a few bad experiences. In fact, people with a problem are likely to seek out help at this Town Hall, if you think about it.

    -juice
  • jtm4jtm4 Member Posts: 60
    ateixeira, since you own a 98 Forester, I have a question for you. It's been raining pretty hard the last few days. I use my rear wiper quite a bit. I noticed last night it's making a squeaking noise on every pass. I thought it might be the blade, even though it's new. I checked it when I got home and it's coming from the motor shaft. It seems to be rubbing against the rubber bushing that's between the wiper arm and the rear hatch. I'm gonna spray some silicone on it and see if it stops. Have you had this happen on your 98?

    98 Forester L
  • sdonadiosdonadio Member Posts: 2
    Has anybody had the problem of a burning "plastic" smell coming from their Forester. Several months after we bought our car we noticed this smell When getting an oil changed at a local garage we asked them just to see if they could see any problems. They informed us that a plastic bag burned on the engine to cause the smell. Well to make a long story short the smell never completely went away and when visiting the Subaru dealer to have a recall fixed they told us we have a leak in our engine that is causing the smell. Now they are telling us that the transmission needs to be replaced at over 3K. Because we are over 60,000 it is not covered eventhough it happened months after we got the car. Has anybody else experienced this problem. Please let me know.
    Thanks
    S.Donadio@snet.com
  • kenskens Member Posts: 5,869
    jtm4,

    I also own a 98 Forester and I notice that the rear motor will squeek for a short time if it hasn't been used in a long time. Since I live in CA, I can go 6 months without rain.

    My guess is that the oil dries up a bit from disuse and a few revolutions helps to re-lube the internals.

    Try letting it run for a few minutes. Does that make it quieter?

    Ken
  • illinoiscentraillinoiscentra Member Posts: 67
    Anybody know anything about the new Subaru that can seat 7?

    For what it worth, I cannot get three car seats in the back of our Forester S.
  • jtm4jtm4 Member Posts: 60
    Kens,

    That may have been it. I went out today and sprayed some silicone on the shaft and bushing. It's quiet again. If I hear it again I'll lube it up again. The motor is working fine. It was just that annoying squeak I wanted to get rid of.

    Update on the CEL: It hasn't come back on. Maybe the seal on the gas cap is wearing. I always turn it several clicks to make sure it's tight. Maybe four years of that has worn the seal.

    I'd like to know about a seven passenger Subaru. Is it supposed to be a bigger Forester? We're thinking our next vehicle might be a 4Runner but if Subaru comes out with a bigger SUV, we will definitely give it a look. We were always Toyota/Honda people, until we bought our Subaru. We feel Honda has dropped a notch. Based on our experience with our Forester, it's Subaru and Toyota now.
  • rangerron7rangerron7 Member Posts: 317
    After having the dealer mechanic diagnose my pinging, poor acceleration and rotten egg exhaust smell as "spark knock" due to "bad gas", I thought I would give an update on how things are progressing.
    About a week ago (after leaving the dealer) I topped off the tank with just over 6 gallons of BP 89 octane. Although the knock/pinging was still present, I did notice that it was not as loud as previously. Gas mileage for this tankfull increased to 23.1 mpg althought half of the miles were strictly highway miles running at 70 - 75 mph.
    Over the weekend, the wife and I went on a 300+ mile trip. I took the opportunity to run the tank down and filled up with 13.2 gallons of Shell 87 octane. The result was no pinging and no rotten egg smell.
    I am encouraged with these early results. I'll continue to monitor the mileage over the next few tankfulls now that we are back to our normal driving pattern (mostly city). I'll give another update after a few fillups.
    Ron
  • ateixeiraateixeira Member Posts: 72,587
    Sorry, James, mine is quiet. We've had constant rain for the past 3 weeks or so, so I've used it a lot, too.

    Go ahead and use lithium grease (but not WD40).

    donadio: I don't see a link between the oil leak and the tranny (?), but I bet any engine oil leak is caused by the front main seals. Go ahead and change the timing belt while you're at it, they are in the same place and the labor is paid for.

    If it's leaking gear oil, that's a different story. I have heard of cases where local Jiffy Lubes drained the tranny gear oil instead of the engine oil, since both drain plugs are at the bottom, and the engine oil plug is sort of behind that plastic cover. You sure that oil place didn't screw up?

    We all anxiously await Subaru's 7 seater. Until a couple of months ago, it was going to go on a GM platform. Plans changed, now it'll be Subaru exclusive (whew!). But at this point it's all speculation, since it'll be based on the next Outback chassis, probably extended a few inches.

    Ron: glad to hear it, thanks for keeping us posted.

    -juice
  • goldencouple1goldencouple1 Member Posts: 209
    Took a little trip last week. Las Cruces, NM to Tampa, FL. Yuki, the ever faithful Forester, was a dream. Best tank was in FL, 33.5 mpg (probably averaging 65 mph)between Lake City and Tampa (Ruskin, actually, but know one knows where Ruskin is any more.) Worst tank, 26.5 mpg. in Louisiana at large: if they are not working on the roads, they should be; and lots of traffic on the interstate to pass or get stuck behind. Overall average: 28.5 mpg, and that was trying to run at about 70 mph.

    Yuki sits in my parents' garage -- it was quite a trick getting them to do that. I'll be picking her up in a few weeks (I flew back to NM). My wife and I are quitting NM to move back to FL. We will revel once more in the glories of North-central Florida: green and shady; sweating in the Swamp watching Gator football (though that is not so glorious at the moment), and the outdoor life on the oak-shaded and pine-scented trails (look out Apalachicola, White Springs, Paynes Pairie, Ocala,Withlacoochee, Croom, Gran Canyon, Balm-Boyette, Morris Bridge Road, Myakka, etc, etc.)
  • ateixeiraateixeira Member Posts: 72,587
    I was just there in February, drove from Tampa to Cocoa beach a couple of times. I love how fast you can go on Florida's highways, 75-85 cruising.

    And hey - you've just doubled the Subaru population in Florida! LOL

    Actually, Subaru's market share in the sun belt is just 0.4%, compared to 6% in snowy Vermont!

    -juice
  • goldencouple1goldencouple1 Member Posts: 209
    Gainesville, G'ville, the Ville, Hogtown -- that's where we'll be, and there are a number of Subies around town, even a dealer. The University of Florida is there, and, as we know, with intellectual power come the Subarus!

    So, from Tampa to Cocoa -- you've seen the dark secret of Florida then (pronounced FLOR'da, by the way; that's the rural, native way of saying it), that Florida is farms and cattle between the suburban coastal margins. Pick-ups, cowboy boots, and wide open spaces.

    And yes, Florida is a good place to speed. I used to travel between Naples and G'ville on a regular basis (every two weeks like clock-work) and I did it at a high rate of speed. All it took was a steady hand, a keen eye, and a song in my heart. No tickets, hardly a close call.

    Speaking of danger, keep your head down, Juice.
  • ateixeiraateixeira Member Posts: 72,587
    I bet all the University professors drive 'em.

    -juice (ducking and walking diagonally in DC)
  • joseph50joseph50 Member Posts: 235
    Super exchange of postings!
    But Flor'da for me is flat out, flat boring. And humidity and bugs and jumping frogs sticking to your windows and swampy things rebelling at being paved over.
    33.5 m.p.g.: Is that the new record here on this board? Could only happen in flat Flor'da.....
  • grahampetersgrahampeters Member Posts: 1,786
    G'day

    You bet - Subarus are not chick magnets. Mind you, from the perspective of 44 and a long time happily married, this seems like a good idea.

    My wife reminds me that I first took her out in a 1974 Mitsubishi Galant Station Wagon. The fact that it was lime green/yellow with non adjustable tombstone backed, front seats, has stuck in her memory. She swears that it was an awful car, although I was rather fond of it (it had four wheels and ran most of the time so met the essential pre-requisites for student transport).

    However, the key point about the Galant was that my dog was happy in it. She even approved of Judy by climbing on to her lap - a rare occurrence. One other girlfriend went by the way-side when the dog climbed over the front seat, over the back seat and sat in the luggage area, studiously looking out the rear window. The dog had taste.

    Judy has just wandered by and pointed out that, for her part, she never went out with any bloke with a chick magnet, considering them offensive. Maybe they are selectively magnetic. If so, I guess I've been lucky.

    Cheers

    Graham
  • paisanpaisan Member Posts: 21,181
    Isn't that were people from NY/NJ go to wait to die? AKA Heaven's Waiting Room! Hee Hee

    I've only been there once in '98 Drove down in my Rodeo. The roads were great smooth and flat, but boring as all get-up. I did however make it from FLL to Tampa and back in 8.5hrs. The weather was way way too hot and humid for me even in January.

    -mike
  • lumbarlumbar Member Posts: 421
    A bit OT, but I'd hate for paisan to go through life thinking Florida is still geriatric central.
    *If* you like the ocean, boating, water sports (no, not that kind), these areas are now very nice, and do not at all fit the stereotype of Florida as one big old folks home. Hot, yes, but that they be more from the influx of gorgeous women, latin and otherwise.
  • lilbluewgn02lilbluewgn02 Member Posts: 1,089
    Actually, the median age is in the 30s...I live in Coral Springs, which is a magnet for young families...known for the best schools in Broward County...reaching buildout in a couple of years (good for home values, which have already shot up in the last couple of years), lots of new public parks, over 600 organized sports teams, with Little League and soccer being the most popular.
    Of course, we can't vote and the roads are boring.
  • ateixeiraateixeira Member Posts: 72,587
    Yes, I think 33.5 mpg is a record. I've hit 30.4, I think Frank got 31. Anyone else? What is your record?

    The dog had taste... LOL!

    Florida is fun, just get out of Disney La La Land once in a while. We over-dosed on Orlando, that's why we ended up driving to Cocoa Beach - twice!

    But Tampa is fun, what's it called, Ybor City, something like that? Key Biscane, lots of interesting places if you get away from the tourist traps.

    -juice
  • goldencouple1goldencouple1 Member Posts: 209
    West Coast: Midwesterners. East Coast: Northeasterners. Naples: a mixing point. Tampa: Spanish, Italians, Cubans and other natives of the Caribbean, mixed with the old native Floridians and Midwesterners. On the West Coast the fishing families were mostly from the Carolinas. Ybor City! Baby! And, of course, in Tampa, Cuban sandwiches on Cuban bread (actually invented in Tampa) -- there's a contest every year for best sandwich. The Panhandle is more like Alabama, it's older and more cultured (sort of). The interior is dotted with towns like Wachula, Wakulla, Myakka, Micanopi, Immokolee, Bowling Green, etc. where the old native Floridians live -- the old farm and ranch families. Polk County (East of Tampa) is mining country -- big strip mines that extract phosphate, and their aftermath (hills, ponds, groves of farm-trees) -- and it's good Subaru country. I used to hunt fossils there with my Dad -- he worked in the phosphate industry for 30 years, I worked in it for 4 years. Lots of roads where all four wheels are needed to drive you forward.

    Hot and humid, oh, yes! Boring? Boring is in the eye of the beholder: flat straight roads, yes. But if you know where you're going -- lots of places to get lost on purpose. And fishing, hunting, sand roads, hills in the interier. Dark forests. Wide prairies. The perfect little small towns, like those mentioned -- or Lakeland, an exquisite little college town; or Leesburg, a postcard quality downtown where there's music playing on hidden speakers. There's the Old South, and modern chrome and glass cities. And there is a great mix of cultures - grits and cornbread, hot sauce and deviled crabs, a Latin tradition going back more than a hundred years.
    And a great place to own a Subaru: those sand roads, those back roads to lakes and winding black-water rivers, to forests and sinkholes. And blinding rain in the summer -- crack of doom storms that turn the horizon black, with white storm-birds circling before them.

    Anyway. FLOR'da, my old new home. When I was a kid, I went to sleep listening to the frogs screaming and the cars speeding to and from the beach bars.
  • boba6boba6 Member Posts: 18
    My hometown. Still have lots of family there andy might not have bought the Forester if there wasn't a dealer there. No need for it yet, though. Sounds like you're the outdoors type. Great place for canoes, SOT kayaks, bikes, and all sorts of other things you can haul in the Forester. Enjoy.
  • joseph50joseph50 Member Posts: 235
    I, too, had a 30.4 mpg (9.1 gallons into 277 miles driving around Southern New Jersey). This was in the first few months after buying my then new 2001 Auto S. I was elated. But then a CEL had to be corrected, and haven't gone that high since. grrrrr.....
    We've done FLor'da. Anyone here up to composing an ode to New Jersey as a Forester state? Or any other home territory?
  • ateixeiraateixeira Member Posts: 72,587
    You shoulda put some black tape over the light! ;-)

    Vermont wins in terms of market share: 6% are Subies. Average is 1.1% nationwide, just 0.4% in the sun belt.

    Other big states are Montana and Alaska (5%), and then a bunch of states with 4%, including Colorado.

    -juice
  • kenskens Member Posts: 5,869
    I've hit somewhere close to 30mpg, but never 33mpg!

    Conversely, the worst tank I've gotten was 21mpg -- it always happens after an ECU reset.

    Ken
  • joseph50joseph50 Member Posts: 235
    Juice,
    Your percentages are for Subies in general, are there any stats for Foresters in particular, per state or region?
  • ateixeiraateixeira Member Posts: 72,587
    Correct, that is for Subaru overall. The numbers I saw were not broken down.

    If anything, I would expect the numbers to swell even more towards the snow belt and northeastern states, because the WRX is popular in SoCal and Florida due to its performance.

    -juice
  • caperosiercaperosier Member Posts: 58
    "Foresters In Florida"--a new Tom and Jerry cartoon?
    How can anyone live without fall colors, the smell and warmth of a wood stove,ice on the cove, a fresh snowfall under a full moon, sailing under a reef in Penobscot Bay ? .......The poetry goes on and on.
    And, don't tell anyone .
    Bless us.
  • yellowbikedon1yellowbikedon1 Member Posts: 94
    does have its merits. The weather makes it possible for those who enjoy the outdoors lifestyle to be active all year 'round. And, for those who like to bicycle (especially those with aging knees), the place is really hard to beat. Coming from the Chicago area about a year and a half ago, it's hard to imagine I'd be able to be within a hair of 5,000 road miles on my bike this year. Now, if only there were a way to keep the "snowbirds" from decending upon us each year, we'd really have it good. And besides, where else can one get a great reception from the local Subaru dealer who's overjoyed to welcome an owner!

    Don
  • goldencouple1goldencouple1 Member Posts: 209
    leaves turn color and fall in North Florida. And I've walked of an evening with the smell of wood smoke from fireplaces in the air. The air can get nippy. I saw snow once. And you wait through the gray, branchy winter to spring when the azaleas bloom. And the dogwood. Wow! I can hardly wait to get home now!

    And in the place of nativity, Tampa Bay, well...how can you live a good life if you haven't run your boat up river before dawn when the temperature drops below freezing and fish for snook? The bitter wind in your face, the outboard screaming...the fire on the river strand to warm your hands...the satisfying plunk! of the jig hitting the glass smooth water, working it, working it, working it...and the strike! Man, feel it pull, fighting, fighting, fighting...and you see the dull flash of the fish in the dark water...and you get it closer...and you pull it up to the sand and you put you hand on it, cold as ice and so alive, silver muscle and that bright eye... Or stalking the canal banks and throwing a castnet over a bunch of tilopia -- I got about thirty pounds in one throw once.

    And picking Brazilian holly at Christmas. And playing football at the Christmas picnic. Sitting with Uncle Bill -- everyone has an Uncle Bill, don't they? listening to the snook fishing secrets, the sure-fire places and baits. How about water sking in December? Just don't fall...and the hypothermia fades as you dry out and the sun warms you.
  • steverstever Guest Posts: 52,454
    You forgot jigging for crabs with chicken necks tied to strings in Destin.

    Steve, Host
  • xccoachlouxccoachlou Member Posts: 245
    Maine has to have almost as many Subarus as Vermont. Every time I cross the Maine state line, it seems like every other car is a Subaru. Same with Vehmahnt.

    There are a lot of Subarus here in NJ. Methuselah, my neighbor across the street, drives an early 90's Legacy wagon, and he's been driving it for years. Lots of Subarus in Hoboken, especially Outbacks and Legacy's.
  • rshollandrsholland Member Posts: 19,788
    << Lots of Subarus in Hoboken >>

    I wonder if Tony Soprano secretly wishes for a Forester, instead of his Suburban?

    Bob
  • paisanpaisan Member Posts: 21,181
    Tony IMHO would want a Grand-Legacy-GT You know a big big white one, like the size of an S8 with an H6 or H8 Turbo engine. And of course enough room in the trunk for at least 3 stiffs! :)

    -mike

    PS: We kept freaking out the luxury car people @ the last NY Auto Show cause Hypov and I kept throwing Tree Killa into the trunk of them and asking "How many do you think we can fit in there" the reps loved that!
  • storytellerstoryteller Member Posts: 476
    Juice: do you recall Subie ownership numbers for us up here in the Great White North?

    Steve
  • ateixeiraateixeira Member Posts: 72,587
    Don: you mean biking? Haven't been on mine for a while, getting too cold, especially for the 3 year old to ride with me.

    Uncle Bill? Let's see, that's William, Guilherme in Portuguese. Yes, I have one, guess everyone indeed does have an Uncle Bill.

    The whole NE was over-represented in the break down per state that I saw, all 2-5%. MN was up there too.

    I wish I had saved the link now. It seems to make everyone curious.

    -juice
  • goldencouple1goldencouple1 Member Posts: 209
    Steve, yes! Chicken necks on strings! Pulling them in little bit by little bit. A classic story involving my Cousin Mary Grace -- the put-the-crabs-in-boiling-water-not-cold-water-that-you-heat-up story: big blue crabs all over the kitchen.
  • steverstever Guest Posts: 52,454
    lol, there's an Annie Hall image.

    Steve, Host
  • ateixeiraateixeira Member Posts: 72,587
    We went crabbing like that in the Bay, in MD. Blue crabs, yum.

    -juice
  • joseph50joseph50 Member Posts: 235
    Goldencouple1:
    My Uncle Bill, my Godfather, passed away in Vero Beach, Florida, this past September.
    Uncle Bills, Daves owning Foresters; you have hit on something.
  • lumbarlumbar Member Posts: 421
    Did something happen like St Patty driving the snakes out of Ireland? Or did the bitter cold in the winter kill em all?
  • storytellerstoryteller Member Posts: 476
    Did you mean Saint Paddy? Or the one we all worship here, Saint Patti?

    Steve
This discussion has been closed.

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