So, back to the question - is divorce imminent or can Rust Valley live happily ever after (for at least one more season) on History? The least I could do for my family was try and clean up some of the mess while I’m still here.” “Nobody wants to have to deal with my 40- or 50-year car addiction. I’m getting my first old-age pension check. “We added it up and I had almost 600 cars,” Mike said. It was widely reported in October that Mike sold most of the cars in his Field of Dreams in an auction that is central to season 4 storylines. “I think these episodes are some of the best,” Mike said. The 1971 Dodge Super Bee, 1955 American La France fire truck and 1964 Pontiac Parisienne Station Wagon are among the many vehicles viewers will see this season. They’ll look at me for half an hour before they finally say, ‘I know you from somewhere.’ I’ll say, ‘Well, have you watched Rust Valley Restorers?’ And then it all clicks.”Įpisode 1 includes the attempted air rescue of a Volkswagen double cab transporter truck that was abandoned in a mine in the Kootenays in the late 1960s. “I get lots of sideways glances and lots of people that look at me. “They stick out like sore thumbs that have been whacked with hammers. “I kind of blend into the background more so than my dad and Avery,” Connor said of his brush with fame. The dreadlocked 65-year-old - his nickname, the Rasta Blasta, a nod to his hair and day job dynamiting rocks - noted this season will highlight the talents of James West of Dubs Kustoms (1271-b Salish Rd.) and Dustin Thomas of Active Care Auto (1658 Valleyview Dr.).Įxecutive producers Matt Shewchuk and Tyson Hepburn, Rust Valley’s creators, are responsible for the Halls’ unexpected TV-personality turns. Mike, who grew up in Brocklehurst and graduated from NorKam secondary, said season 4 will include ample Tournament Capital-and-area scenery, along with good publicity for local businesses. Kamloops has featured plenty since the show debuted in 2018, exposure that has reached a worldwide audience since Netflix acquired streaming rights in 2019. #RUST VALLEY RESTORERS SERIES#The documentary series revolves around life at Rust Bros Restorations in Tappen, its engine room classic car builds and the big personalities of Mike Hall and Avery Shoaf, along with the relationship between Mike and son Connor. “I can’t give out too many details, but it was a good day out at Rust Bros,” Connor said. The Kamloops couple was recently hitched and footage of the knot-tying festivities will be seen on season 4 of the hit show, with Episode 1 set to premiere at 9 p.m. Perhaps Connor Hall, one of the show’s stars, and wife, Jada, are taking notes. #RUST VALLEY RESTORERS TV#In TV land, four seasons is equivalent to decades of wedlock, a marriage that has stood the test of time in a world where many end in annulment. Landis said a portion of the Barracuda’s metamorphosis was captured on camera, so it is expected to make a brief appearance during Season 4 of the popular series.Rust Valley Restorers and Corus Entertainment constitute a productive union. The Barracuda, like the previous two vehicles Habitat raffled, was restored by Tappen’s Rust Valley Restorers of History Channel Canada and Netflix fame. The raffle was a success for Habitat, with some profit left after all the costs were handled, he added. “They couldn’t believe it was blue like all their cars,” Landis said. Though not a Chev, the Plymouth Barricuda turned out to be a perfect fit. Landis said the Moore family is “a Chev family” and they have three other collector vehicles between them. 17 to try out the car, the first drive was with his father in the passenger seat. True to his word, when Moore came to Salmon Arm on Jan. When Landis asked him what his plans were for the $62,000 metallic blue vehicle, Moore said the first thing would be taking his dad for a ride. Moore, 27, is from Coquitlam but is living in Merritt where he’d like to stay, as he’s working on becoming a firefighter. Rex Landis, procurement and donations co-ordinator with Habitat for Humanity Kamloops, recounts Moore was so excited when Landis told him he was the raffle winner, they decided to talk again in 10 minutes after he’d had time to catch his breath. When Brendon Moore received a phone call telling him he was the winner of Habitat for Humanity’s Classic Car Raffle for a ‘69 Barracuda convertible, it quite literally took his breath away.
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