This quality unit is my winter beater, and I am awful proud of it, for a car that cost a mere $1,000. Aside from the cheap price, it was also the newest Chevy Wagon I could find. You may think, “I bet it needed a ton of work though”. Quite the contrary! It was due for an oil change and new rear rotors and pads, but that’s about it. I did get new winter tires, as front wheel drive cars do’t tend to do well on unplowed, snow-covered roads without them. If it wasn’t for the obvious rust throughout the car’s body, the Malibu would be worth much more.
So far, the Malibu has served me very well, even though I ask a lot of it at times. I’ve already got it stuck twice. The first was in an overflow parking lot at a ski resort that turned out to be an old field. The second was off of a section of road in a blizzard. There was heavy snow in the parking lot of a former gas station that was, like the roads, unplowed. There was tracks from a large truck that almost got through, so I figured I’d make it, seeing as my vehicle weighed probably half of what his weighed.
I got myself quite stuck. A passerby offered to pull me out with the tow chains I always kept in the trunk, but realized he didn’t want to be responsible for anything that broke on the vehicle when he did so. Nobody else stopped to help, so I got out the shovel I keep in the trunk and started digging. Before long, I had myself a path that would get my trusty steed out of there. I hopped in, backed up as far as I could, and hit the throttle. Sure as Surfers in California, I got out of there and headed home.
My clapped-out, rusty Chevy Wagon has served me loyally, and I intend to drive it until it catastrophically fails (or I can get my hands an a cheap 4×4 Chevy truck!).
