[QUOTE=Innuendo;113038]That's one way to treat a Ford!
I'm not to sure what you mean innuendo ...if you are meaning the sundowner it's not a ford it's a boat.
The reason that people travelled on the left side of the road is due to horses. To mount a horse you get on the left side of the animal, for some reason they dislike being mounted from the right. Mounting a horse in the road or from the side of the road meant having the horse on the left of the road and mounting from the outside of the road, his dates back to the Romans and was spread everywhere they conquered. The origin of some countries travelling on the right and some on the left comes from Napoleon, he detested the English so much that he changed the side of the road that people travelled on in France and then all the countries in Europe that he conquered, just to be different from England. The USA followed suit after the War of Independence as a way of sticking it up the British, as well as honouring the French who were supportive of the Americans n the war. A lot of countries followed what their neighbours did as it was easier for travel and trade to be the same. The distribution around the world is due to colonization, if you were a British colony then you drive on the left, except Canada, they had French and British colonization and being next to America, it was easier to be the same.
HQ Glacier White Belmont Ute
Wanted Lanspeed accessories for Holden Grey engines, twin carb manifolds, extractors, rocker cover, 3 speed floor shift.
Yes mate, that was the joke!
Yup that sounds more like it. Countries sticking up the British. The Yanks are bad for it and for their own good reasons I guess. Changing every vowel sound in words to the opposite etc. They to this day go out of their way to be different to the British.
Selling HJ 253 Engine
Engine Number QR718*** | 19M5 Clock Casting at 6 O'Clock
19th December 1975 Suit HJ Late Dec 1975 to April 1976
Mounting a horse from the left is purely because you carried your sword on your left side in its scabbed and drew it with your right hand. It’s impossible to throw your leg over a horse with a from the right with a sword on your left hip. That’s also why they rode on the left of the track. You held your sword in your right hand and it was the natural way to fight and more difficult to reach over your horse and hold the reins.
The horse doesn’t care what side you get on.
Thanks for the answers and discussion guys, Dick61 seems to have nailed it. After attending early morning track work on Wednesday morning at Ascot [WA] I can confirm that wbute is correct in stating that horses don't give a sh!t if being mounted from either left or right side - that's straight from the horses mouth............
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