Like everyone, I started surfing Craigslist because I wanted to snag sweet deals. Though I was initially a bit worried about meeting randos from the internet, after seven years of hard-core Craigslisting, I can honestly say, the site has changed my life. Here are some of my best stories of buying stuff from everyone’s favorite car-buying site.
Craigslist is the great equalizer; everyone from every social class or race wants to save money, and because of that, I’ve met some incredible people and seen some places I never would otherwise have explored.
I’m not talking about the “personals” section of Craigslist. You know, the one filled with bizarro missed connection stories about “.” That’s not the kind of Craigslist I’m talking about.
I’m talking about that sad woman who sold me her ex-boyfriend’s motorcycle helmet, that recent divorcee trying to make some money by parting out his Cherokee, that millionaire trying to get his jack stands out of his enormous garage when he finished restoring his father’s old Camaro, and that young kid who’s headed off to college next month and can’t bring the car.
Most of these people I probably would never have otherwise run into. But I did, and I learned about their lifestyles, their families, problems they face everyday, cool places they’ve been, and experiences they’ve been through.
See what I mean about enriching my life? Here are my five favorite Craigslist adventures.
My favorite Craigslist story is the . It began last summer, as I was driving from Michigan to a friend’s place in Fayetteville, North Carolina.
I surfed Craigslist at a truck stop along the way, and came upon a J10 pickup, a vehicle I had been lusting after for years. And it had an inline-six and a four-speed manual—just what I was looking for!
I got ahold of the owner, and he told me to stop by on my way home. A few days passed, and I headed towards the guy’s farm in Yadkinville. But I couldn’t get in touch with anyone. The town was small, so I figured I’d just drive around and ask random people if they knew someone selling a Jeep pickup.
I can across an old man sitting on his front porch. He must have been 90 years old, just sitting on his rocking chair bare-chested with huge globs of food all over his belly. For whatever reason, I remember those globs.
I asked him about the truck, and he just started making noises that sounded somewhat like English, but not enough to tell me what the hell he was talking about. I was saved from the awkward situation by a teenage boy, who was riding his lawnmower down the street. Apparently, the kid was obsessed with modifying riding lawnmowers, and they were his main modes of transportation around town.
The Four Young Farmers In The Middle Of Nowhere, Michigan
The CJ-2A project—which I’ve written about —took me to an old farm in Michigan, where I met four bearded young farmers out working their fields. There’s one of them on the right in the picture above.
Though they were men of few words, they asked me what I did for a living, and told me how they’d never met someone who gets paid to write about cars. We talked about their trucks, their tractors, and their farm, which—based on the plaque by their house—had been in the family for many, many generations.
The guys were very kind and honest about the Jeep. They told me what they knew, we agreed to a price, they pushed the Willys onto the flatbed, and we headed out.
It was a confluence of two disparate social spheres that, had it not been for Craigslist, would otherwise never have happened. There’s no way I would have ever gone out into Podunk, Nowhere and seen this old farm if I hadn’t spotted that old CJ-2a on Craigslist. And though it doesn’t seem like a life-altering story, just getting insight into the way these guys live was something I’ll never forget.
You can how blowing up my Jeep engine led to a wild alcohol-fueled crazy off-road adventure with a bunch of guys out in the country.
I drove out in the dark through some woods, and wound up at a big barn filled with giant off-road trucks, and young guys like me just wrenching the night away with music blaring in the background. It was heaven.
It became even more heavenly when the group took me for an off-road adventure on their own off-road trail.
I’ve still got their numbers, so I should probably go back out there and see how does on those trails.
To prepare for my Moab trip, I had to grab some spare parts, so I found a local guy selling transfer cases and axles off Jeep XJs. I went to his place one evening, and what I found was a bit scary.
It was scary in that it almost felt like I was looking at a guy who was me in three years. It was the dead of winter, and freezing outside. And this young guy was filthy from head to toe, wearing coveralls and wrenching in a tiny windowless garage warmed by a propane torpedo heater.
As the heater blared and shot red-hot flames into the room, the guy motioned us in, and we looked in awe at four or five 4.0-liter inline-sixes and tons of AW4 transmissions crowding us in that small garage. This guy had gone off the deep end.
The guy wanted $200 for the transfer case and axles, so I gave it to him. But before we left, he told us about the tough times he was going through, that he didn’t have a job, and just wanted to get back on his feet.
He saw me peek at his 4.0-liter sitting on the engine stand. “I’ll sell that to you for $150.” I told him I had too many projects already. “$100, and it’s yours!”
$100 for an engine would have been a steal, but I couldn’t do it. The guy loaded up the axles and transfer case into our truck, and we drove off, watching him in our mirror walk through the snow and retreat into his tiny lair.
I’ve still got his contact info for when I need more parts. Hopefully he’s back on his feet.
And then there was , a man who lives very far off the grid in a house in the middle of the woods in central Michigan. I’ve visited his property many times in search of Jeep parts, and with every visit, he tells stories about his upbringing in Toledo, his love for Jeeps, and the history of every car on his property.
How many old Jeeps does my new hero Ron Hattner have on his northeast Michigan property? He stopped
Sometimes I’ll see him at Jeep events, and I’ll say hi. He’s a guy whose goal in life is to keep Jeeps from the scrapyard, and though much of his collection is well weathered, Ron sells what he can with hope that eventually some of these vehicles will get back on (and off) the road.
My first experience shopping for cars on Craigslist happened in 2009. I was headed to college that summer, and was hoping to get a car so I could visit my brother at James Madison University about an hour away.
We always liked the Grand Wagoneer (okay, I was obsessed), so we called up a guy on Craigslist who was selling his 1987.
I recall the guy living in a part of Kansas City I’d never visited. One that, at one point, was an affluent suburban neighborhood, but had since become a lower-income area.
The guy was very nice and down to earth. He was open with us about the Jeep, admitting that the thing had been sitting so long, and that he’s not sure what all is wrong with it.
After ogling over the Jeep, and the fact that it was only $500, we found a deal-breaker: a huge rust hole in the frame on both sides:
Then we saw a motorcycle in the corner, and our young, naive eyes nearly bought that from the guy. But we resisted. Somehow.
Still after all these years, I can picture the guy’s house, and that Grand Wagoneer with years and years of dust caked to its paint left an imprint I’ll never be rid of.
And it’s the same way with the random lawnmower-riding kid in North Carolina, the four young bearded farmers in Michigan, the random beer-drinking off-roaders in rural Michigan, the sad Jeep parts hoarder wrenching in his tiny garage in the winter and the Jeep hoarder trying to save precious history—they all left impressions on me, and showed me places and lifestyles I had never known.