Far, far away, in a sleepy little town in southern France, there was a Motor Festival, which celebrated anything with an engine, old or new, stationary, wet, winged, or wheeled. While Avignon is a modest and picturesque town, best known for inspiring painters (most notably Picasso and his earth-shaking Demoiselles d'Avignon), the local Expo Center transforms annually into Gearhead Disneyland, with the intention of having 'something for everyone', even the kids.
The press kit lays out the facts: 50,000 square meters of exhibit space, more than half covered, 360 exhibitor spaces, 140 clubs, 2500 vintage vehicles, plus parking lots filled with cool vintage cars. All 11 halls were filled to overflowing with new and old motorcycles, trucks, tractors, planes, boats, and military hardware, and this year the main hall was stuffed with a rich mix of Matras and Moto Guzzis. Perhaps the most important display of Guzzis outside Italy, ever? (More on the Moto Guzzi display here.)
Formula racing cigars and LeMans slippery fish, all French Racing Blue, were a stunning display, and curiously, in the fairly humble surroundings of the Avignon Expo Center, the cars and motorcycles felt completely approachable. How is it that a relatively unknown Motor Festival in the south of France had such a breadth of fascinating displays? Clearly, somebody is on the ball, and has the connections to bring world-class hardware to Avignon. In days past, Retromobile was the place to see the 'good stuff' in France, but as that show has almost abandoned motorcycles, it seems the party, and the bikes, have headed south.
Plenty of old bikes cropped up individually in ‘car’ club stands, but several local motorcycle clubs had great selections of interesting and rare bikes, from the always-irresistible Lightweight Brigade of 50cc gems, to 70s heavyweights like Ducati round-case 750 Sports and Bol d'Or production racers. The locals have some cool gear.
A true Concours d'Elegance, with 'appropriate' dress required!
Curated parking lots meant the show continued outside, with Renault Alpines and Gordinis, Simcas and Salmsons, 70s Rally cars and Citroens of every vintage, plus hordes of ridden-in vintage motorcycles, which became their own display.
The du Bucheron sisters left a trail of smitten onlookers, driving their father's Bugatti Type37A like the family car it is.
A hoped-for seat on a Bugatti Type 35 didn’t materialize, as I’d placed my order long after the passenger seats were filled. Still, I had the pleasure of following the Tour and taking photos, breathing the tang of vintage exhaust with the off-beat drone of competing supercharged straight 4s, 6s, and 8s. Heady stuff.
A drive through the white limestone cliffs and outcrops of the Alpilles meant passing numerous Roman ruins and aqueducts, as our wheels trod over routes in use for millennia. Bugattis, Roman architecture, wild horses…pinch me.
For those whom 1920s sports cars are too new, the Motor Festival included a rare demonstration of a replica of the world’s first automobile, the Cugnot 'Fardier' steam tricycle of 1769. That’s not a typo; we’ve been working at going fast on wheels for 250 years…and as mentioned in a previous post, it technically falls into the motorcycle camp, having 3 wheels... In 1990s parlance, to drive the Cugnot is to be ‘stoked’, as the big steam boiler requires a lot of metal-rod poking to build up a head of steam. And while the steam piston engine is familiar in many respects, the rack-and-gearwheel-and-giant-chain drive is unique. The massive front wheel (and yes, the French invented front wheel drive…180 years before the Citroen TA) also acts as flywheel, and while there is no clutch, a meter-long lever controls the steam pressure and releases forward drive.
The Cugnot also bears the weight of the world’s first auto accident, as, in a clear case of driver ‘object fixation’, it lumbered out of control one day and demolished a stone wall, as documented by a period etching, the 18th-century insurance adjuster’s ‘Polaroid’ (below).
Lacking gloss and mega-dollar hype, the Avignon show appealed to everyday motor enthusiasts, who were treated to a mind-blowing array of hardware, at a close, even intimate range. The unpretentious displays celebrated mechanical intrigue, encouraged respect, and even awe (in the case of the Guzzi V8 and Matra F1cars), while utterly lacking the class-conscious trappings associated with luxury-branded pandering to mega-rich investors/owners. In short, very old fashioned to the point of time-warp, back to 1970s events, when such vehicles were affordable, and only eccentrics spent their weekends underneath an old car or bike. See this show before it is 'discovered'!
Farm equipment with olfactory embellishments...
Peekaboogatti
Bugatti steering gear
Bugatti braking gear
New bikes too; the first Ducati Diavel I've seen in person
Lots of superVintage fixies!
Dressed up for the Concours d'Elegance
One of the many gem-like 50s; an ItalJet in this case.
Zundapp military sidecar outfit with howitzers, and Sherman tank!
Not a 16H or M20 - a Terrot military model from WW2.
Brand new Vespa Ape electric passenger trike.
Matra F1; all pipes
Yep, airplanes too.
Who knew painted-up semi's were a 'thing' in France?
Nobody seemed to mind the open pipes...
Amilcar roadster, looking very much like the inspiration for a lot of 50s American hotrods!
The Terrot military engine dep't, a sidevalve 500cc with total-loss oiling system.
250cc Griffon twin with Peugeot panel van
Changing the spark plugs on a Bugatti Type 13
MG-Monaco TA, supercharged, of Michel Loreille, organizer of the vintage Grand Prix de Tours
Bugatti Type 37
A team of desert-tan Ford Model T's invaded the Rally