I’m Back From Goodwood And Here’s The Car With The Worst Nickname There: Cold Start

Cs Suckyp 1
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I’m back! Last night my airship moored at the Cape Hatteras Lighthouse Dirigible Station, and I was released on zipline down to thunk solidly on the ground once again. It was an amazing trip, and I still need to go through all of the videos and photos and tell you all the goings-on, but we’ll get to that. First, I just want to show you something important: the car there that had what is, arguably, the worst nickname in the whole place.

The vehicle saddled with the unfortunate appellation was this charming British Racing Green Morris Oxford delivery van. I’m not terribly up on my Oxfords, but I think this is a late ’50s one, possibly a Series II. They’re really appealing old-school looking delivery vehicles, adapted from the Morris Oxford saloon, and are full of all kinds of charm and dignity. Maybe that’s why I was a bit thrown to see this as its nickname:

Cs Suckyp 2

Yep, “Sucky P!” I know British English has all kinds of weird slang and other words for everything, kind of like how I can barely process the words on this…cake? Malt loaf? That I saw at a grocery store there:

Cs Maltloaf

“Deliciously Squidgy Energy?” The hell is that? Is it dangerous?

Anyway, if there’s some other way to take being called “sucky,” that doesn’t involve something, you know, that sucks, I’d love to know about it.

And that lone “P” isn’t really doing anyone any favors, either. It just seems like this old workhorse might deserve a bit better name? Unless, who knows, maybe it’s just what it sounds like and this thing earned that name. By being sucky.

Oh one other quick thing about Goodwood: they absolutely bring it when it comes to making everything fit the up-to-1966 period theme. Utility vehicles are all period cars, the cars that shuttle you from place to place were all of the era, I bet you could catch period-correct venereal diseases if you were dedicated enough, and for things that weren’t period, they did a good job disguising them, like their golf carts:

Cs Goodwood Cart

…which were re-bodied in this sort of late ’30s, early ’40s style, complete with waterfall faux-grille and faux woody rear bed.

It was all amazing. More on Goodwood to come!

 

66 thoughts on “I’m Back From Goodwood And Here’s The Car With The Worst Nickname There: Cold Start

  1. I truly hope that Goodwood won’t join the other dozen or so promised stories that have yet to appear. I won’t bother to list them, you know them better than I do!

  2. This tops my usual “almost but not quite completely unlike” English description of Australian.
    Then again I can translate Glasgow even if I can’t speak it.

  3. That Morris is indeed a Series II, which puts it at 54-56. The bonnet shape is the giveaway; the series I was a lot taller, the series III being more shapely, the Series II being the ‘bugger it, lets just knock off early” flatter shape.

  4. I remember when they moved the Cape Hatteras Lighthouse Dirigible Station. A few unlucky trans-Atlantic airships didn’t get the memo. They completely missed the new location-which was only half a mile further inland-and ended up wandering into South Carolina. The passengers and crews were never seen again.

  5. “Deliciously Squidgy Energy! – SOREEN The Original Malt Loaf!”

    Jason, are you putting up a picture of something you got at Omega Mart on the January LA road trip and passing it off as a real British thing?!?

    But seriously, from the lead pic I thought it was going to be a Morris Isis van.

    1. Package says…
      Energy = British has 670 kJ
      Calories = US has 158 kcal

      Wow. We Americans got it all wrong with the whole low-cal diet thing and counting calories, blah blah…Just call the “sucky” sweets Energy.

      Obesity problem solved and US Dept. of Energy has a wonderful new addition.
      You’re welcome.

    1. Makes sense. The British seem to love infantilizing things. “Does babums want a suck-wucky for him’s widdle tum tum? Is sweetums feeling squidgy in his jim jams?”

    2. Sucky has not meant sweets in any part of England I’ve lived in.

      But that doesn’t mean that usage is:
      a) wrong.
      or
      b) certain to result in an unexpected outcome that you won’t enjoy.

  6. Slightly more distressing is the reference to being “the Original MALT LOAF”. Apparently there are malt loaf impersonators out there.

    I had a Soreen once, but my doctor took care of it.

  7. A long, long time ago, I worked grocery retail. The store I worked for did a massive rebrand and as part of that, dedicated a whole aisle to international foods. This was way before everyone become adventurous foodies and it was more out of the norm back then.

    Anyway, the British section had canned Spotted Dick, which is apparently some sort of sponge pudding. I truly think the British have given us some of the worst cuisine this planet has to offer.

    1. As a counter to that, a friend of mine moved to England a few years ago and she posted photos of the “American” section of her local market. It was basically Velveeta, Pop Tarts, Fruit Loops and Mac n’ Cheese. So we aren’t exactly the inspiring the world with haute cuisine either.

      1. I lived in the Netherlands for 2 years back around 2005. I can confirm this is about what they had. This, and Oreos. Finding Franks Red Hot was impossible, and we had to have people send it to us.

      2. I spent an extended time in Scotland many years ago. The Sainsbury I shopped at had a “Mexican” section that was entirely Old El Paso products. Being from San Antonio, I threw up in my mouth a bit.

          1. Always support the locals!

            Plus, haggis is a great excuse to indulge in a wee dram of whisky. (Not that an excuse is ever necessary there).

            Plus, plus, there was a chippy shop a couple of blocks from my flat that served deep-fried haggis. Anything can be made tasty when deep-fried.

                1. I’ve been to El Paso. Good BBQ and DIY steak joints, the rest of it seemed an endless, free range scrapyard, then nothing but desert. I’m not sure deep frying would make much of a difference.

                  It beats its neighbor Juarez, the murder capital of the world though.

        1. As a Scot that moved to Texas, I can tell you that the difference between the Mexican food I grew up on and the local food I first tried when I moved here was so eye opening I still can’t believe it. My family that still lives in Scotland can’t understand why I can eat Mexican food 5 days a week. It’s amazing that the British basically tried to conquer the world for spice, only to end up finding paprika ‘spicy’

            1. Feed them pepper if you really want to see some heads explode haha. Years of living in Texas and cooking food for a living has been amazing for me with the massive variety of different things to experience.

      3. My sister lives in Sydney, Australia, and cannot find Velveeta for love nor money. Her step-daughter developed a taste for queso while visiting the US and cannot find a locally available acceptable substitute.

        So every time my sister visits, she tries to leave enough space in her luggage for a few brick of that squidgy gold.

      4. But those things are all delicious!* I won’t stand for impugning the honor of American junk food! Now excuse me while I go throw some disgusting Earl Grey tea in the lake (I’m not anywhere near a harbor, sorry). 😛

        *: Except some flavors of Pop Tarts, which are truly awful. I’ve actually found that some of the generic brand flavors at my local grocery store are better than the more expensive namebrand Pop Tarts.

      1. From what I recall Mary Poppins was written in Australia by an Australian, British woman, PL Travers. Maryborough in Queensland claim her as one of their own, with all sorts of Mary Poppins memorabilia.

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