Home » Let’s Look At Some Cars From Petaluma And A Crazy Coincidence: Cold Start

Let’s Look At Some Cars From Petaluma And A Crazy Coincidence: Cold Start

Cs Peta Top
ADVERTISEMENT

Earlier today was the “drive experience” for the new 2025 Volkswagen ID.Buzz, which is just PR talk for we got to drive the thing. I’m not allowed to discuss my thoughts on what driving it was like until the 21st, but I can show you a bunch of other interesting cars I happened to drive by in Petaluma, California, one of which demonstrated a very odd coincidence, a strange confluence of chance and location that I firmly believe means something, though I have no idea what.

The place I drove by seems to be The Garage, a west Petaluma repair shop that specializes in VW, Mercedes-Benz, BMW, and Volvo motor-conveyances. The place caught my eye because they had a large number of Vanagons and other VW buses out there, so I figured it’d be great to get some pictures of this re-born bus among some of its notable ancestors.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

The people at The Garage were nice enough to let me take some pictures of the interesting cars there, and it’s my sworn duty to show you interesting cars, so here we go.

Oh, but first! Let me show you the coincidence! So, back in 2022, I went to Copenhagen to drive the ID.Buzz short-wheelbase version when it was launched for the European market. While there, I happened to see this charming little Citroën 2CV Charleston, and took a picture of the Buzz next to the 2CV:

Img 2430 Large

ADVERTISEMENT

That’s fun, right? Well, look what I saw when I stopped in Petaluma:

Cs Peta 2cv 2

Yes, another two-tone gray Citreoën 2CV Charleston!

Cs Peta 2cv

What are the odds? Do ID.Buzzes have some strange ability to attract Citroën 2CV Charlestons, or are they, perhaps just drawn to them? Either way, it seems like a pretty good selling point and I hope VW really hypes this up in the marketing.

ADVERTISEMENT

Most of the vehicles parked at this garage were VW Type 2s, primarily Vanagon-era cars, including some that looked like all-wheel drive Syncro ones.

Cs Peta Buses

There were some earlier bay-window buses as well, of course:

Cs Peta Bus

That one is sporting a textbook example of the nose-mounted spare tire, a very common modification to these old buses, and, I think, a way to enhance the safety of these things in a measurable way. Tires make pretty good bumpers!

ADVERTISEMENT

But I think the real jewel in this Type 2 crown has to be this pickup version:

Cs Peta T2pickup

I know the double-cab variant of these is often called a Doka, but I’m not sure if the single cab has a nickname, too? These are real Swiss Army Knife vehicles, capable of doing just about any task. It has a huge bed where all three sides can be opened, and that huge storage locker under the bed. These are cool as hell.

Cs Peta T3

There was also this dirty but remarkably straight and complete Type 3 Squareback; I think this may be a ’65. I’ve always loved these marvels of packaging design, and this one feels like a prime candidate for restoration.

ADVERTISEMENT

Cs Peta Beetles

There were some Beetles here, too, like that very shiny ’66 with gleaming chrome, and a very beige ’71 behind it, also with some extremely shiny chrome. 1966 happens to be my favorite Beetle year, so this was a treat.

You know what car feels at home amongst a whole pack of old air-cooled VWs? One of these:

Cs Peta 544

Yes, a Volvo PV544! Mechanically, these are far more conventional than VWs of this era, but the body design that seems to be right out of the 1940s definitely fits, visually, among all the old Beetles and Type 3s. These 544s were charming, rugged cars, and had a lot of racing and rallying successes, despite what its shape may lead you to believe.

ADVERTISEMENT

So many hidden, filthy treasures!

Share on facebook
Facebook
Share on whatsapp
WhatsApp
Share on twitter
Twitter
Share on linkedin
LinkedIn
Share on reddit
Reddit
Subscribe
Notify of
35 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Jakob K's Garage
Jakob K's Garage
1 month ago

Over here (DK VW community), we’ve always called the single cab VW Transporter a “SiKa”

But like with so many other old VW terms, I have no idea if it’s something official or home made 😉

Dodsworth
Dodsworth
1 month ago

Maybe the 2CV is stalking you like Herbie stalked Jim Douglas.

Mark Hughes
Mark Hughes
1 month ago

I would take the Syncro, Though I already have a T2 and T3, I do have the drive space though 🙂

PRNDL
PRNDL
1 month ago

I live in Petalum The Garage was originallly run by an old school German mechanic named Art. He worked on my Volkswagens beginning in the mid 1980s with my ’71 type 2 Bus, VR6 GTI, and ’89 Vanagon. He was old school and would fix what needed fixing and tell you what to “keep an eye on” but wasn’t immediately necessary, to save you money. The guys running the shop now first worked for Art and when he retired, bought the business. They’re big into BMW E30 race cars as well. It’s always been a cool shop.

Last edited 1 month ago by PRNDL
Dudeoutwest
Dudeoutwest
1 month ago

I used to live in Marin County and saw all manner of expensive new stuff. Now I live in Sonoma and I get to see way more interesting vehicles, almost always cool old stuff.

Glad you could come visit us up here in wine country, Torch.

Angry Shawn
Angry Shawn
1 month ago

Torch, you are in my neck of the woods, if you need any local recommendations lmk, hell i’d be happy to buy you a heart healthy lunch. Hope you enjoy your time here!

Beer-light Guidance
Beer-light Guidance
1 month ago

That silver and red paint job is giving me some great Ultraman flashbacks.

Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
1 month ago

Needs a Beta capsule.

Martin Ibert
Martin Ibert
1 month ago

You didn’t mention it, so I’ll add it: “Doka” is short for “Doppelkabine” or “crew cab”; literally, “double cab”.

Twobox Designgineer
Twobox Designgineer
1 month ago

Do ID.Buzzes have some strange ability to attract Citroën 2CV Charlestons

I believe its is the opposite — Citroën 2CV Charlestons have some strange ability to attract ID.Buzzes. Or, certainly, Torchinskys.

Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
1 month ago

He’s being stalked, very slowly.

Root
Root
1 month ago

Maybe this isn’t the time or place for a defense of the Type 3 Squareback, but I’m curious why Jason considers it a marvel of packaging? I mean it has that huge bonnet up front that is empty, meanwhile the cargo area in the rear is compromised by having an engine back there. Don’t get me wrong, I think they’re cool, but in what way are these “marvels of packaging design”?

Root
Root
1 month ago

PLENTY, eh? So you admit that all of the space ahead of the firewall is wasted? (I’m just yanking your chain…)

Dale Mitchell
Dale Mitchell
1 month ago
Reply to  Root

Abe Lincoln voice:

“Upon my chain you surely do yank”

Last edited 1 month ago by Dale Mitchell
Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
1 month ago
Reply to  Root

All things are possible in the Marvel multiverse.

Last edited 1 month ago by Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
1 month ago

Speaking of 2CVs, what’s the Motorious SWG doing with the Tin Snail he picked up a few months back?

Last edited 1 month ago by Canopysaurus
Chronometric
Chronometric
1 month ago
Reply to  Canopysaurus

That nickname works on multiple levels. Double baguette kudos.

Frank Wrench
Frank Wrench
1 month ago

What a candy store of cool cars! Thanks for sharing, Jason. Reminds me that I need to get my 86 Westy’s electrical problems sorted over the winter for some camping next year.

John E runberg
John E runberg
1 month ago

FWIW there’s one Syncro in that pic w/ the Mercedes. The other Vanagon looks to be a 83-85 (round headlights), most likely on the earlier side. It *could* be a diesel but can’t tell from the front. There’s a gray 86+ behind it with what looks like fairly nice paint.

The nickname you’re looking for is Sinka for the single cab.

Fez Whatley
Fez Whatley
1 month ago

Why is the VW bus thing taking so long to be sold here?

Nlpnt
Nlpnt
1 month ago
Reply to  Fez Whatley

Production capacity would be my best guess. That being said, VW’s been teasing some sort of retro bus revival for a full quarter century while offering US van customers either nothing at all or a rebadged Chrysler.

It’s nice to see them finally do something with the style theme but I really feel like they missed the market a retro-bus could’ve had in the late ’90s throughout the ’00s when the later Boomers were in their prime kid-having-and-schlepping years.

Andrew Daisuke
Andrew Daisuke
1 month ago
Reply to  Fez Whatley

volkswagen idiocy

StillNotATony
StillNotATony
1 month ago

Jason, it’s an odd coincidence that you encountered that particular model Citroën while driving the idBuzz on two different continents, but I may have you beat.

At two of the last three funerals I have been to, the son-in-law of the deceased person fell into the grave of said deceased person. At the one funeral where no one fell into the grave, the daughters were unmarried, so no son-in-law present.

Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
1 month ago
Reply to  StillNotATony

That’s what I call a grave danger.

Collegiate Autodidact
Collegiate Autodidact
1 month ago
Reply to  StillNotATony

“At the one funeral where no one fell into the grave, the daughters were unmarried, so no son-in-law present.”
Yeah, hence the expression “grave and present danger.”

Totally not a robot
Totally not a robot
1 month ago
Reply to  StillNotATony

I’m not saying it’s entirely your fault, but I’m not not saying that you seem to be the common factor among these funerals.

StillNotATony
StillNotATony
1 month ago

Does it change things if I’m one of the sons-in-law who fell into the grave?

A grave that I had to dig myself?

Argentine Utop
Argentine Utop
1 month ago
Reply to  StillNotATony

Please elaborate?

StillNotATony
StillNotATony
1 month ago
Reply to  Argentine Utop

My FIL was buried in a cemetery in a very small town. When we asked the caretaker what we needed to do to bury him, he said “You got a shovel?”

Fortunately, we were only burying a small chest containing his cremated remains, his dog’s collar, some Bud Light, and a cap from his favorite football team.

My BIL and I set to digging in his plot. After we’d dug down deep enough to get below the frost line, I went to test if it was deep enough to fit the chest. I overbalanced and went in head first. It was deep enough that I went in past my shoulders, but I jammed my elbows against the sides of the hole, so I didn’t fall all the way in.

However, unless I dropped the somewhat fragile chest (SIL would kill me if I broke it), I couldn’t get myself out. BIL was literally rolling on the ground laughing. He eventually recovered and hauled me out.

And so it goes…

Argentine Utop
Argentine Utop
1 month ago
Reply to  StillNotATony

This is gold comedy. I’m sorry for your loss, but I’m glad you have this awesome memory.

Chronometric
Chronometric
1 month ago
Reply to  StillNotATony

I think you should give your funeral attendance the Deep 6.

Mechjaz
Mechjaz
1 month ago
Reply to  StillNotATony

“Damn! I never was good at avoiding falling into small and readily avoidable holes, especially ones where ceremony and decorum dictate that I be especially careful not to fall into them!”

Flyingstitch
Flyingstitch
1 month ago
Reply to  StillNotATony

These are the wages of too many in-law jokes. Let us all take note.

Urban Runabout
Urban Runabout
1 month ago

That silver and red Buzz very suddenly reminds me of the Ford Aerostar XLT long that my manager purchased in 1989 or 90….

Meanwhile, you might want to do a pilgrimage to El Cajon…
https://www.californiawestys.com/

35
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x