My cousin got married on Epiphany. It was incredibly cold, over 20 degrees below zero (Celsius). We had planned to travel 165 km from Kaarina to Helsinki in the family's newest car, my brother's diesel Audi. My mother, grandmother, little sister and I set off on the journey.
After the wedding, we were driving home on a dark country road when the car froze and could no longer respond to pressing the gas pedal. We stopped on the side of the road and after idling for a while, the car seemed to be revving normally again and we continued our journey.
The car did not work for long when it froze again and after warming up from idling it worked normally again.
When the car had to be stopped for the third time, we decided to try calling my brother, the owner of the car. Note: no mobile phones had yet been invented. At the place where we stopped, on top of a hill a little way from the road, there was an individual house. We walked to the house in the beautiful light of the full moon and asked to call.
On the phone, my brother gave me instructions on how to remove the fuel filter and how to bleed the fuel system after removing the filter. I borrowed a tool and a flashlight from the house and thought that it was lucky that there was a full moon, because there was no other lighting on the road.
When I stepped outside into the freezing cold, the world was completely dark. Then I remembered: today is a lunar eclipse and it is exactly this time of day.
By the light of the flashlight, I stumbled down the hill to the road, opened the car door and lifted the hood. The work was slow because it was difficult to use the screwdriver in leather mittens, so I had to work with my bare hands. I had to stop every now and then and put my hands in the warm mittens
I got the fuel filter out, closed the so-called glass bowl and started bleeding the system, when suddenly the entire world was brightly lit.
A police car had stopped in front of the car, its headlights pointed directly at the nose of our car. Two police officers got out of the car and came to ask what was going on. It turned out that my brother had called the police, who had sent a mobile police unit to help us.
I explained to the police that the fuel filter had been removed and that since the car was a diesel, the fuel system needed to be bled before the car could be started.
They asked me to step back and they would do the job.
As they leaned over the engine, they asked each other what to do. I tried to say from the side that you just bleed the system with the pump lever. They paid no attention to me, but discussed the matter among themselves until they finally asked how to bleed it. I pointed to the lever and things proceeded smoothly.
The car started, I went to get my family from the house, I thanked the police and we continued on our way.
We didn't get very far when the car froze again, and now there was nothing more to do. Luckily, the lunar eclipse was over, so I left my family in the car and went hitchhiking in the moonlight. I got a ride pretty soon. The plan was to hitchhike to a bus and tourist stop about 10 km away, where there was a restaurant. Once there, I would call a taxi to pick up my family.
At the restaurant, they called me a taxi and we started driving in the direction I came from. I assured the taxi driver that there was a car on the side of the road about 10 km from the restaurant and that we would pick up my family.
The taxi was driving in the dark, and there were no cars on the side of the road. After we had been driving for a long time, I said that we should turn back. What made me nervous was that I didn’t have any money to pay for the taxi ride. All the money we had with us was in my grandmother’s handbag in the trunk of the frozen car, the lock of which was frozen shut.
Luckily, when we got to the restaurant, our car was there too. Mom had managed to get it to idle and warm up so that they could drive on.
Now we still had to pay for the taxi ride. Since the money was behind the frozen lock, we kindly asked the taxi driver to thaw the lock on our tailgate. He was annoyed, but he had to help, because otherwise he wouldn't get paid.
Hot water in a plastic bag was pressed against the lock until it thawed. And all this in temperatures over 20 degrees below zero.
We toraveled the rest of the trip by bus, which luckily was still running at that time of night.
It made me laugh when I thought about how many things can go wrong on a single car trip. The craziest thing was the timing of the lunar eclipse.