No sooner had the listing appeared, I got 4 phone calls. I posted the listing late Friday evening for $1,200 with a note of the mileage and that the A/C did not work. It had 220k miles and ran well, but the tin worm had taken its toll after 8 years of road salt on the NY Thruway. I wanted to sell my 05 Ford Escape on Craigslist instead of an add in the local paper. So, finally, the QOTD: What’s the craziest Craigslist kook you ever dealt with as a buyer or seller? I was relieved that I didn’t need to confront him or call the cops. 30 minutes after that, after I had closed up the blinds and turned off the lights in the living room, I stepped out for a breath of fresh air, and the guy was still there, now with his parking lights on.įinally about an hour and a half after our initial five-minute meeting, he pulled away from the curb and drifted down the street into the cold night. I texted the guy that he was in a spot our neighbors use to park, but he just sat there with the engine idling all the same. I told her what had transpired, and she suggested that I stop using our house as a meeting point for whack-jobs on Craigslist. 30 minutes later, my wife pulled into the driveway, and the guy was still sitting there in his car. Bizarre, I thought, but I didn’t think too much about it, and went back to the kitchen for a beer. Fifteen minutes later, it was dark, and I walked to the front of my house only to discover that the guy was still sitting in his car. Glad to be done with the awkwardness of a botched sale, I went to the fridge and started preparing dinner for my wife and myself. The man walked back to his car, which was parked in front of my house, and started the engine. In the end, when it was clear that he wasn’t going to buy it, I thanked him for coming and told him goodbye, walked back into my house.īy now, the sun had started its descent, the sky was turning a crepuscular shade of purple, and the air began to grow cold. He made a couple of lowball offers that I refused, and then he offered to trade me the box he already had on his car. I demurred and tried to steer the conversation back to the business at hand. He made odd small talk about nothing in particular and offered me some “homemade granola” from a bag he had been eating from. He was a small, muscular guy, and something about him struck me as off. Without ringing my doorbell or calling me, he began walking around and inspecting the box on my Subaru (which I guess isn’t that abnormal). I found it odd that he came to look at my roof box when he already had one on his roof, along with a bike up there and some other stuff. The guy showed up a few minutes late in one of those Honda Prius clones that was loaded to the gills with crap on the roof. Whoops! I put the box up for sale on Craigslist and had a few feelers before finding a guy who arranged to come down later in the evening. Much to my chagrin, I later noticed that I couldn’t get the rear hatch up more than 1/3 of the way with the box on the roof, even after playing with the location of the roof bars. I connected it to my roof rack and drove home uneventfully. The guy I bought it from on Craigslist was a perfectly nice fellow, and he sold it to me for a song because it had a small dent in the fiberglass. Once I purchased a cargo box for my Subaru Outback. I counted my blessings that our acquaintanceship ended there. He muttered some choice words under his breath and took off in a huff. I thanked him for meeting me and offered him a handshake, which he rebuffed. When he pressed me on why and I told him that I was looking for one “a little less chewed up,” he about lost it. When he finally mercifully returned us to the parking lot, I told him his van was not for me. During the test ride, Van-Man fulminated about the evils of the government and laid on some heavy conspiracy theory jive. I had no intention to purchase the van, but I decided to humor him. The guy refused to let me drive it until I bought it, but insisted on taking me for a ride so I could see how well the van performed. In spite of the low mileage, the van’s insides were thrashed and all kinds of nasty. When he opened the van up to let me see the inside, I immediately decided I wouldn’t buy it – that is, if I hadn’t already come to that decision. Van-Man explained that the van did not agree with him and that he needed to sell it before it did him in. It was a blue, mid-90s Ford Econoline Conversion van with silver and black trim, and it had the raised roof – more or less what I had been looking for.Īn hour and a half later, when he pulled into the fast food lot where we agreed to meet, I could see he had dinged up the body more than a little bit. The pictures he posted online were shadowy, but the van looked straight.
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