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VIDEO: Car collectors come out in droves for drive through Fort Langley

A 鈥榮pontaneous鈥 drive replaces annual May Day Parade, surprising village residents and shoppers alike

The plug has been pulled on most every car show in the Lower Mainland for 2020 due to COVID-19.

The long-standing May Day parade鈥 that always draws thousands to Fort Langley on Victoria Day, Monday, May 18 鈥揾ad to be cancelled.

And with sunny skies promised on the statutory holiday, classic car enthusiasts were 鈥渋tching鈥 to get out for a drive.

The solution, car enthusiasts and May Day committee members Russ Townsend and Steve Williams pulled out their Rolodex 鈥 speaking to their age 鈥 and began calling their friend. They dialed a few dozen members of Lower Mainland car clubs and asked if they wanted to be part of an impromptu drive through the village of Fort Langley today.

The answer was a resounding 鈥測es,鈥 Williams said, noting some 75-plus custom and classic cars lined the back streets of Fort Langley Monday morning. And at exactly 11 a.m. 鈥 the start time of the annual parade 鈥 they started their engines and rumbled and rolled through the centre of the village.

鈥淲ith what鈥檚 going on with our current situation [the coronavirus], we cannot have a parade. So, what we are doing is a spontaneous appreciation drive through Fort Langley to show appreciation to the community and to show that we 鈥 the May Day committee and the parade supporters 鈥 are still here,鈥 he said.

They called it a non-May Day Parade, a tribute drive for the 98th annual May Day.

It was all low key and last-minute happening, the emphasis being on social distancing and nothing official or formal, Townsend said.

It鈥檚 just an impromptu drive with no warning to the public until all the cars started arriving, Williams added. He noted that the non-parade was lead by Emergency Health Services and the Township of Langley Firefighters鈥 Charitable Society (TLFCS), with Fort Langley resident and Township Mayor Jack Froese social distancing inside the fire truck, waving to those along the route. A fistful of police cruisers were in the village and expecting to participate as well, but were called off just moments before the drive began.

鈥淎ll in all, it was very well received,鈥 said Williams, who noted how a few area residents set up chair in their front yards to watch as the vehicles drove down the back streets.

鈥淧eople were running out of their homes, and yelling 鈥榯hank you.鈥 It was wonderful,鈥 Williams added. Townsend, who鈥檚 been parade marshall for May Day for years, was equally thrilled to see the turnout and the reaction.

Likewise, people strolling through the village stopped along the sidewalk and watched as the entourage drove down Glover Road.

鈥淭here was a little bit of noise, a lot of chrome, and a lot of flashy cars. It was fun,鈥 Williams said of the event, noting he could have likely tripled the turn out if he鈥檇 spent more than one day spreading the word to collectors.

鈥淗appy May Day 2020,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd we鈥檒l see you back here, May Day 2021.鈥

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21581281_web1_200518-LAT-MayDayNonParade-MayDay2_1
A non-May Day parade through Fort Langley on Monday, May 18, 2020. (Roxanne Hooper/Langley Advance Times)
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A non-May Day parade through Fort Langley on Monday, May 18, 2020. (Roxanne Hooper/Langley Advance Times)
21581281_web1_200518-LAT-MayDayNonParade-MayDay4_1
A non-May Day parade through Fort Langley on Monday, May 18, 2020. (Roxanne Hooper/Langley Advance Times)
21581281_web1_200518-LAT-MayDayNonParade-MayDay5_1
A non-May Day parade through Fort Langley on Monday, May 18, 2020. (Roxanne Hooper/Langley Advance Times)
21581281_web1_200518-LAT-MayDayNonParade-MayDay6_1
A non-May Day parade through Fort Langley on Monday, May 18, 2020. (Roxanne Hooper/Langley Advance Times)


Roxanne Hooper

About the Author: Roxanne Hooper

I began in the news industry at age 15, but honestly, I knew I wanted to be a community journalist even before that.
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