In Wheel Time Car Talk

On the RV Road: The Skeleton's RV Journey and a Deep Dive into Bizarre Traffic Laws

In Wheel Time Car Talk Season 2023 Episode 279

For those who've ever daydreamed about a life untethered, living full-time on the road, you won't want to miss John and Susan Skeleton's RV journey tales. Embarking on their nomadic lifestyle in June 2022, they've since logged an impressive 14, 500 miles in their Fifth Wheel camper. But what's it really like out there on the open road? From the unexpected temperature shifts in Virgil, Utah, and Colorado to the challenges of steering a 41-foot vehicle, they pull back the curtain on the realities of the RV life.

In our feature segment, Jeff Dziekan takes a look at some of strangest traffic laws across the country. Well, buckle up because we're going full throttle into the bizarre traffic laws that may catch you off guard. Plus, we're revving up our engines to discuss all the thrilling racing events from NASCAR to Formula One during the Race Card feature.  

The In Wheel Time Car Talk Show that promises to keep you in the driver's seat of all things automotive. Join us every Saturday morning for a live broadcast 8a - 11aCT, where we bring you captivating interviews, new car reviews, and a look back at This Week in Auto History. Whether you're a professional mechanic or a casual car enthusiast, be sure to tune in to our award-winning show on In Wheel Time family of programing on iHeartRadio app, or YouTube, Facebook, Twitter and Twitch.

You can also find our our weekly 30-minute podcast episodes on your favorite podcast provider!

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Speaker 1:

Welcome to another In Wheel Time Podcast, a 30 minute mini version of the In Wheel Time car show that airs live every Saturday morning 8 to 11am. Central Podcast Channel From the Sugar Shack World Headquarters. It's the In Wheel Time car talk show. Just ahead we're going to talk to Jessica Gonzalez from Informed IQ about AI. Ai is founding dealer fraud. Well, wait, just a minute. Did I mess this?

Speaker 2:

up. I think you might have had one page too many.

Speaker 1:

No, I don't. Yeah, I had one page too many. That's what it is. Well, I apologize. Let me go over here to Mr Marr's sheet. First we're going to talk to John Skeleton. There you go, full time RV world. I think it's fitting, because so many of our fellow car enthusiasts pack up in an RV, go to a car show, maybe trailering a car behind them. There's some sort of a draw Don't ask me what it is, but there's some sort of a draw to the RV lifestyle Freedom. Is that what it is?

Speaker 1:

I think so.

Speaker 3:

You know, travel, travel the country, see the country or run in from the law.

Speaker 1:

Those are my two. That's his no permanent address. Well, no, I think that they do have that nailed down.

Speaker 3:

And I'll bet you they have it nailed down in a state that doesn't have state income tax. Well, let's just find out.

Speaker 1:

Let's just find out right now, joining us now, john Skeleton, full time RVer with life on the road, how to pack wheel bearings Good morning, john, you got somebody looking a lot better than you right next to you. Who's that?

Speaker 4:

Yeah, that is Susan. That is my wife and partner in crime.

Speaker 2:

See, I knew they were running from the law.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, Okay. My first question is do you know George Skeleton?

Speaker 4:

I do know George Skeleton. We've never met face to face, but we have communicated frequently for many years now.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, so are you talking to us from your RV.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, we're talking to you from the back of the camper. We have a fifth wheel, so we're right here in the back of the camper. That's what you see behind us is our camper.

Speaker 1:

Do you have a permanent home as well?

Speaker 4:

No, I mean, we have a permanent address, like you guys are talking about, but this is our home. This is where we live every second of every day.

Speaker 1:

Now, do you have a home base that you parked this place, that parked this thing? No, nope, we park it wherever we park it. How long have you guys been on the road?

Speaker 4:

We started June 3rd of 22.

Speaker 1:

Oh, wow, okay, so you're more than a year into this. I had a cousin. He and his wife did the same thing. I think that they were on the road for, I don't know, six or seven years. I never really asked them why they ended, but they sold the fifth wheel. They got caught.

Speaker 4:

Well there's that.

Speaker 1:

There is that they sold the fifth wheel and moved back into a permanent residence up in Janesville, wisconsin. But, matter of fact, penny just said to me this past week how much they absolutely loved the lifestyle and traveling and all the people that they met.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, that is true, we do. I mean, we really love it. Like I said, we've only been doing it for 14, 15, 16 months, whatever the math is, but we've seen things and done things that we never would have thought we would do. You know? I mean, what is it? That's what? 65 weeks, something like that, 70 weeks.

Speaker 2:

Do you keep a journal or?

Speaker 4:

It would have taken me, it would have taken us, 15 years of vacations to see the things that we've just done.

Speaker 1:

So when you sold, where was your house that you sold to start this lifestyle?

Speaker 4:

Back in it was in Central Indiana, just west of Indianapolis, central Indiana.

Speaker 1:

Okay, so my family heritage is in Terre Haute Indiana.

Speaker 4:

Hold down.

Speaker 1:

Well, your last name is not Armstrong, is it it?

Speaker 4:

is not.

Speaker 1:

It's Morris. Did you ever know any Armstrong's? Maybe, Good answer, with your husband sitting right next to you.

Speaker 3:

We don't admit to knowing Don either. We don't know that.

Speaker 1:

Northside or Southside, I don't know any of that. Actually, I've never been to Terre Haute Indiana, but all I can tell you is is that if you search the name Armstrong at least in my family it goes to Terre Haute Indiana. So there's that. Well, we'll move on from that.

Speaker 3:

Well, I would think one of the important things in your lifestyle is that, whoever your travel partner is, you guys get along pretty well, because you don't get away from each other very much.

Speaker 4:

Well, I think we do. I mean, maybe we need to be put in separate rooms and ask that question, I don't know. But about the only thing I feel like we're not always eye to eye on is temperature. I like things hot, you know. I like, you know, the hot weather, hot.

Speaker 1:

Where are you right now, John?

Speaker 4:

We're in Virgil Utah, okay, well, the north corner.

Speaker 1:

Okay, it'll take you about two, three days to get here, but we've had over well over a month of 105 degree days, so come on down.

Speaker 2:

She's shaking her head.

Speaker 4:

No, no, no no.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, it's he sitting there in a sweatshirt and she's got a t-shirt on. I should tell you something.

Speaker 4:

Well, we're leaving for your race as soon as we get down here. We're leaving for your race, Colorado, and I think the high temperature a couple of days is only going to be in the upper 50s.

Speaker 2:

There you go, 60. Do you keep a journal or have you logged miles? How many miles do you know or estimate that you've traveled?

Speaker 4:

Well, we have 14,500 miles roughly on the camper itself and we have about 52,000 miles on the truck.

Speaker 1:

What kind of truck?

Speaker 4:

There's a 22 Ram 3500. Uh duly.

Speaker 1:

Has he got the Cubbins diesel in it? Oh yeah, it does. And how's that working out for you?

Speaker 4:

It's an awesome truck. It really is. I mean, we have a this camper weighs probably eight and a half nine tons, something like that, and you know, that truck gets us over the Rockies, Doesn't even really break a sweat.

Speaker 3:

And who does? Who does the majority of the driving? I'll let the drive, yeah.

Speaker 4:

Every single second.

Speaker 1:

So whose idea was this? To sell the house and started this RV thing? Yours, John.

Speaker 4:

Well, I mean I, it was my idea, I brought it up, oh come on.

Speaker 1:

John. Now be honest.

Speaker 4:

It's your fault, let me give you the entire. There's a look of surprise on your wife's face. I can squeeze in this entire decision making process in about one sentence. We're watching TV in November of 19, 2019. And I don't know. I think we're watching something on the national parks and I looked at Susan and I said would you ever think about just selling everything and travel the country she goes?

Speaker 1:

yeah, that was it that was our decision making process so well, but you're, so you're in central Indiana. I mean, what did you do there for a living? Apparently, you worked at some point.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, and I still do. I work full time as well. I'm a banker, so I do bank things.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, do you have a teller window notched in?

Speaker 3:

the side of the RV, right back there in the back, say that window back there.

Speaker 2:

They're sitting on a stack of money.

Speaker 4:

No, no, no, no, now you know, why he's running Do you.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, you do.

Speaker 3:

Focus on any type of areas to visit. I know you said you're in Utah right now and I know Utah's got some stunning national parks, but is that is the national park still a theme that you're trying to visit as many of them as you can while you're traveling?

Speaker 4:

I wouldn't say that visiting all the national parks is necessarily our goal, but the thing is, the national parks are just so beautiful that that if you get close to one, you can't not go Right.

Speaker 2:

Right.

Speaker 4:

But we so, like I said, we left in June of 22 was when we left Indiana and we have basically not completely but almost exclusively spent the entire time west of the Mississippi. So we've been in most of the states west of the Mississippi. Now next year we're going to do most of the states east of the Mississippi, um, and then the year after that I think we're going to try to spend the summer up in Alaska.

Speaker 1:

Oh wow. So do you have any plans to, after you've got done with all of this touring with the fifth wheel, of hanging up the fifth wheel or parking it somewhere and getting back to real life?

Speaker 4:

Yeah, we've talked about that, you know. Um, where do we want to? You know, put down roots, permanent roots. You know we've narrowed it down to a couple of states and three states. What?

Speaker 1:

are those? What are those states?

Speaker 4:

Uh, south Carolina and New Mexico or top are the the top of the pack right now.

Speaker 1:

Okay.

Speaker 3:

Why? That's pretty wide range between their geographic range.

Speaker 4:

Again, it goes back to our differences of of climate. You know I like hot and humid, so South Carolina is my, is my jam. Um, she doesn't like hot and humid, so that's where North or where New Mexico comes in. So, and they're both awesome states, we've been both of them. Um, they're both awesome states. We love them. In fact, we're headed to New Mexico right now, here in the next month, for the uh balloon fiesta.

Speaker 1:

So what, what kind of uh RV do you have there?

Speaker 4:

We have a 2022 Jaco pinnacle. It's a 41 foot fifth wheel bath and a half Slide outs. Slide outs we have three slides.

Speaker 3:

And Jaco seems to be kind of one of the more popular versions of fifth wheel travel trailers on the market. Is that correct?

Speaker 4:

Yeah, that is right, jaco is very popular. Of course, just like any manufacturer of anything, you have different levels and we have a pinnacle and those are good full time. For people who live in it full time and travel a lot, jaco pinnacle is really a solid build. As opposed to somebody maybe only does it over the summer or they live in it, but they live in it at a permanent location for a long period of time, john.

Speaker 1:

All I know is that it can be a lot of work. Yeah, once you get to where you're going I mean you're going to work half a day get the thing set up.

Speaker 4:

Well, you know, setting it up actually is really a piece of cake. It's the tear down that takes a little bit longer, okay.

Speaker 1:

Whatever, but I mean there's a lot of work involved in that. Here's the other thing. Huh, 41 feet behind my car, let's see, can I make that right hand turn in downtown Terre Haute?

Speaker 4:

Yeah, that is the challenge. And also when we go east next year I'll be looking real closely at overhead because we're 13 foot four inches high and you go out in the east and sometimes those overpasses not on the interstates, but when you get off the interstates sometimes those overpasses aren't that high. So you have to put some thought into it and there's software, of course.

Speaker 3:

So there is an app that'll talk to you about low clearance.

Speaker 1:

How about that five foot nine bridge video that you see people trying to put their vehicle, like yours, underneath? That wipes all of the air conditioning off the top of it as they go underneath it.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, in our hometown of Avon, where we were before we started, there's a low railroad overpass. Two, three times a year you'll see some UPS truck or some delivery truck to shear the top off of it. They have to shut it down for a day to fix it.

Speaker 2:

Is there any maintenance that you need to do on that part of it, that motorhome or the travel?

Speaker 4:

trailer. Oh yeah, constant maintenance, constant maintenance. You know well, your last week, you know, we repacked the bearings. That's super important. I was up on the roof this past week, you know, cleaning the condenser and evaporator coils on all three of the air conditioning units. Next week I have to clean and treat the roof itself because it was been out for a year and a half from the UV and the dirt and the sap and everything like that. So I go up there and clean and kind of put a protective coating down over that, you know. So there is a lot of maintenance. It doesn't just pitch it up and go and forget about it.

Speaker 1:

And Susan, not only I'm sure that you probably take care of the inside of it, but then you have to put up with him after he's been up on the top of that thing all afternoon.

Speaker 4:

That's, he's not too bad about that. Not too bad, not too bad?

Speaker 3:

Yeah, so do you. Well, I have a friend who has who RVs and he talks about having to make appointments or schedule into different RV parks around the country and how some of them are. You know, a booked up for a year in advance. How do you deal with getting to an area, because I'm sure you have to plan on if you're going into the Yosemite area, where you're going to stay, and how far in advance Do you have to book that. And then, once you get there, how long do you typically stay?

Speaker 4:

Yeah, that's a long answer to that. So when we QR planning, you know, the first thing I look at is can we have a clear view of the sky? Because I use starlink to stay connected. Do my job.

Speaker 4:

So I have to have a clear view of the sky. It can't be under tree. We have not run into I don't think very often have we run into a place where we couldn't get in. Now some of them are busy, but we also plan it out a long time in advance. I mean, we've already kind of sketched out our 2024 plan. You know, here in the next two or three months Susan will start calling them and making the reservations. But we haven't really run into that as far as not being able to get where we want to go. But we usually stay somewhere a week to two weeks, maybe a little longer, but usually we get in on a Saturday, we leave the next Saturday or the following Saturday.

Speaker 1:

Do you feel like you're going broke at any time on this adventure? No, he's a banker.

Speaker 2:

He's got money in his fingertips.

Speaker 1:

Well, I'm, all I can think of is he's a banker, and so he's got his finger on the money pulse, if you will.

Speaker 4:

Check your account no we, you know, not really. I don't really feel like we're going broke. You know we're financially conservative people and so you know we were able to excuse me. You know we heard our house free and clear, so when we sold it, that's what we used to. So we wrote a check for the camper, wrote a check for the truck, so we don't owe anybody anything. So you know we don't have a house or car payment, no real estate taxes, no utilities or anything like that.

Speaker 1:

So yeah, but those hookup fees in some of these parks that you guys visit can be pretty pricey at times.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, they sure can. They've gotten really expensive over the last two or three years, you know. So we get full hookups, meaning water, sewer, electrical and you know we're probably paying I don't know, I haven't done the math because I'm kind of afraid to but you know we're paying probably 50 to $60 a night to stay somewhere Cheaper to hotel, yeah, but every night.

Speaker 1:

I mean they have no other place. I mean you don't pull that thing up in front of my house here and stay in that for a week. True, so it's every. Every night it's 50, 60 bucks.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, 30, 30 nights a week. You know we're paying 50 to $60 a night every night, but that still isn't you know and that's still you know our mortgage payment and real estate taxes and utilities and stuff like that. I mean, I guess you know, it's kind of a break even.

Speaker 3:

How do you deal with the mail when you're on the road?

Speaker 4:

So we have a mail service in Livingston Texas that handles all of that for us. So all of our mail goes there. That's our official residence. So on our tax forms, driver's licenses, everything with my employer, everything is listed as Livingston Texas. So all the mail goes there. You know, any mail that's important they send it to you via email. Most of the stuff that goes to that place is junk by and large not always, but most of us junk. Susan calls every couple of weeks goes over with them. Hey, what's in our mailbox? Either try ship or send it to us and then we give them the address of whatever park we're going to be at next week.

Speaker 3:

And I noticed you chose a state with no state income tax.

Speaker 4:

Well, that was an actor. That was absolutely a factor, I'm not going to lie. But also another, a bigger factor is you know some states, to be a resident state you have to actually live in that state at a certain number of nights. Texas doesn't have that requirement, At least not yet. They might, but they don't right now. So we can be official Texas residents and we can never spend a night in Texas. Not every state is like that.

Speaker 3:

Well, you don't know what you're missing if you've never spent a night in Texas. We love Texas.

Speaker 4:

Now we do spend about. We do spend about a month every year in Texas because that's where our dentist is, that's where various doctors appointments are. We have to register all that kind of good stuff. So we, we love Texas, but we don't have to meet it.

Speaker 1:

Well, you know, there was one question that I wanted to ask and I don't have time to go over it now. Well, kind of Do you ever run into any car guys or people that have a trailer behind, say their pusher, motor coach or something like that, that they've got it all loaded up with cars, race cars.

Speaker 4:

I'll tell you. When we were here the first couple of days we were here right across the street from us some guy pulled in and backed his Lamborghini out of this trailer and he just parked it right here. So we were looking at a Lamborghini for three or four days.

Speaker 2:

Oh, that goes to neighborhood.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, well, that's good to know that they're out there with you, because obviously we're car people. John, susan, it's great to talk to you guys. Thanks for sharing some fun, fun stuff with us when it comes to a full time RV or in the lifestyle that you've chosen for yourselves.

Speaker 4:

Awesome. Thanks, guys, have a good day.

Speaker 1:

Thank you, you do the same. Travel safe. Yeah, travel safe. If you'd like to get in touch with us, our email address here is info at in wheel timecom, and don't send us a bunch of junk mail. Time now for the in wheel time race card. And Conrad has the race card. We're in the heart of the season, winding down, actually, now.

Speaker 3:

So next weekend there at Maple Grove in Pennsylvania, the NHRA is. Nascar is at Kansas this weekend. They're at Bristol for Saturday night race next weekend and then they're at Fort Worth, texas, on the 24th of September. Formula one is in Singapore next weekend. They're in Japan on the 24th. Indy M6, excuse me is at the Indy Road course next weekend, which will be fun to watch. You know, that's kind of coming to the end of their season. And the Cadillac GTP cars and the Corvette program. The Corvette program is coming to an end because they're going to sell a GT4 version of the Corvette publicly and then Indy cars this weekend or at Laguna Seca, which is always a fun track to watch. Watch them come off that corkscrew. That's a, that's a iconic racetrack. Um, and that's it Cool.

Speaker 1:

All right, thank you, sir. Uh, by the way, the in wheel time race card sponsored by Texas nostalgia, modified production. Yep, all right, you know some states, well, probably every state has at least one or two weird traffic laws, and Jeff has done some research and has a feature today on weird traffic laws.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, let's get this started. And I've got all all the states, uh, handle here, and I'm just going to pick one. For instance, alabama there's a law that says no driving while blind folded. Yep, okay. Alaska, it's illegal to tie a dog to the roof of your car, but not your mother law, uh, I made that up. Arkansas do not honk your horn anywhere that serves cold drinks or sandwiches after 9pm. Here's a good one. It's my favorite. It's against the law for a woman to drive in a house coat, and that's in California. Have you seen some of them? Women, you know, you could, you could, you could no, there's no pictures.

Speaker 3:

We just the housewives of.

Speaker 2:

OC. Yeah, Kansas, you can't transport dead poultry in that state. So if you've got a chicken in your trunk, you better get married. Don't put it Louisiana. A woman's husband is required by law to wave a flag in front of her car before she can drive it. Get the heck out of the way.

Speaker 1:

Oh my God.

Speaker 2:

Here's some. Here's a couple of my favorites Nebraska by law drivers on mountains should drive with caution near the right edge of the highway, even though there are no mountains in Nebraska. So remember that. Nevada it's illegal to ride a camel on a highway. New Hampshire it's against the law to inhale bush fumes with the intent of inducing euphoria.

Speaker 1:

Have you ever had any fume? Well, no, I'm not bad enough. Put that there Now. I'm not even going to, I'm not even going to go there with the question.

Speaker 3:

Build models, oh yeah.

Speaker 1:

Testors glue, and that's what's wrong with you now. Can you still buy testors, lou? I think so, yeah.

Speaker 3:

Is that the thing? Yeah, but you gotta, you gotta show ID to do it. Lord In New.

Speaker 2:

York, you should. You're from New York. It's against the law to disrobe in your car in Sag Habba, sag Habba. Don't disrobe in your car, so that means you can't be saggy in your Habba. Oklahoma is another one for you, Conrad. It's illegal to read a comic book while driving. Well, that makes sense. Yeah Well, I don't know how many can read there, but by law in Oregon you must yield to pedestrians when driving on the sidewalk. Who would have thought?

Speaker 1:

Driving on the sidewalk.

Speaker 2:

Tennessee, it's illegal to shoot any game other than whales from a moving car.

Speaker 3:

In Tennessee like there's so many whales in Tennessee.

Speaker 2:

Have you seen some of those people? Texas you must have a windshield wiper to register a car, although having a windshield is optional. Virginia women are prohibited from driving a car on Main Street unless her husband is walking in front of the car waving a red flag. We did that same one in Louisiana. It's against the law in Wisconsin for a person to ride a bicycle with their hands off the handlebars.

Speaker 3:

See all those years as a kid Don riding that hands free on the bicycle. You were breaking the law.

Speaker 1:

Yeah Well, yes, I was. You're going to say something, nope.

Speaker 2:

Okay.

Speaker 1:

It's up to you. I have. I have Heming's price schedule, no sold cars roundup, and here's one I know Kathy's out looking for a car. Yep, I got one, for it's sold. But I think that's something to consider for the future. A 1956 Ford F 350 fire truck. It's sold. The fire truck sold for $21,000. There you go. All right, take that. She might bring that home today. A 1971 Kaiser Jeep I didn't, I guess. I kind of knew that there was such a thing as a Kaiser Jeep. Looks like a military vehicle to me. $17,000, and it gets what? Two miles to the gallon, maybe for you, sir. I have here a 1967 very clean looking Oldsmobile, 442. Oh yeah, it's sold for $36,690. It's beautiful.

Speaker 3:

They all are Okay, not all of them, but he's not partial.

Speaker 1:

I really pared it down this week. I have one here that stood out a 1966 Volkswagen micro bus. Oh guess, is anybody?

Speaker 3:

$65,000. I was going to say 40.

Speaker 1:

Jeff wins $63,000 for that ugly 13 window with the sky panel roofs on it.

Speaker 2:

Well, the 13 windows, not the selected one. It's the one with more windows.

Speaker 1:

Well, I guess that's what it is oh, yeah, the 21 window, the $100,000.

Speaker 3:

There, you go.

Speaker 1:

No, no, I guess it's because I live the era. Those were not something that anybody wanted. They had those to haul people around it.

Speaker 3:

Do you ever watch Jay Leno's garage and the one guy, fluffy the comedian yeah, he's got a huge collection of Volkswagen buses. Yeah.

Speaker 1:

And finally for Mr Mars, you can guess how much this car is it is a 1961. Plymouth, four door, valiant, this has got your name written all over it. Yes, $2,200.

Speaker 2:

What kind of shape?

Speaker 1:

is it? It looks like it rolled right out of the showroom.

Speaker 3:

Push button automatic slant six A 1961, plymouth, valiant.

Speaker 1:

Your guess is to how much that car sold for I'm doing my car neck impression over here.

Speaker 3:

Let's hear it, I'm gonna go for 22.5. You $22,000. $14,000. $8,000. P. This one is smoking crack. That's a four door. It's a four door why.

Speaker 1:

Why? Because nobody wants it. Come on.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, holy, what an ugly car. Those cars need love too.

Speaker 3:

The proverbial beater. To me when I was in high school and college. The proverbial beater was any Chrysler product with a slant six. Yes, and if it had the push button automatic, all the better, because he could sit there and rev it up and push the button and drive.

Speaker 1:

I know this because my buddy had a 57 something. I don't remember what it was, but it was a Plymouth or something along those lines. It was a two door Ugly, but that's the way it was. You want him with the pink insert? No it would die. But over here on the left it had that little box that had the push button on it, but Don still had his red pumps.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and he would floor that thing and hit the drive button and there's back tires. That just go crazy Cool, all right. The In Wheel Time car talk show is available 24 seven through the iHeart app. Just look for In Wheel Time car talk to your friends. We also video stream on Facebook, youtube at inwheeltimecom and podcasts at your fingertips and over a dozen of the most popular podcast outlets.

Speaker 1:

The In Wheel Time car talk show continues right after these messages, the original group of loopy tortilla restaurants will have you telling your family and friends just what the original recipes mean when it comes to the best fajitas in Southeast Texas. Founder Stan Holt invite you to visit the original loopy tortilla near I-10 and Highway 6. Here's the original house that inspired the design of all the rest and the original charm that helped make loopy tortilla the go-to destination for Houston Tex-Mex. Speaking of original, nothing can compete with the original lime pepper marinade that everyone will agree makes loopy tortilla award winning beef fajitas the best anywhere. Loopy tortilla Katie is another location that gives you the same quality and service Houstonians have come to expect at loopies. It's located just off I-10 in the Grand Parkway. At Kingsland Boulevard in Katie, find yourself an Aggie land. Head to the loopy tortilla college station, located just around the corner from Kyle Field. It's a great place to enjoy those famous frozen margaritas before or after the game. Head to East, to Louisiana. Stop in at the loopy tortilla in Beaumont. It twos on I-10, you can't miss it. The original group of loopy tortilla restaurants invites you in for the best Tex-Mex.

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Anywhere you own a car you love, why not let Gulf Coast Auto Shield protect it? Houstonian John Gray invites you to his state of the art facility to introduce you to his specialist team of auto enthusiasts. We promise you'll be impressed. Whether you're looking to massage your original paint to a like new appearance, apply a ceramic coating, install a paint protection film, nanoceramic window tint or new windshield protection called ExoShield, gulf Coast Auto Shield is where Houston's car people go. Curb your wheels instead of buying new one. I'd have them repaired. How about a professionally installed radar detector? Gulf Coast Auto Shield does that too. Get a peek inside the shop and look at the services offered by getting online and heading to GCautoshieldcom. Better yet, stop by their facility at 11275 South Sam Houston Tullway, just south of the Southwest Freeway, and get a personal tour. Gulf Coast Auto Shield is your place to go for all things exterior. Call them today 832-930-5655 or GCautoshieldcom.

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The award-winning in-wheel time car talk show is available on the most popular podcast channels out there in 30-minute episodes. We realize our three-hour live show can be difficult to catch in its entirety, so now you can listen every day to a convenient, fresh 30-minute episode. Check us out on Apple Podcasts, spotify, google Podcasts, amazon Music and Audible, along with a dozen more. In-wheel time has the most informative automotive guest interviews and new car reviews, along with popular features including Conrad's car clinic and this week in auto history, along with automotive news headlines. Our live broadcast airs every Saturday 8 to 11, central on InWheelTimecom, the iHeart app and on YouTube. Be sure to say hello when we're broadcasting from the tailpipe syntacos cruise in Auto-Rama and the Houston Auto Show, among others.

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Now it's easier than ever to hear about all things automotive all week long. You're invited to join fellow car enthusiasts in becoming part of the ever-growing in-wheel time car talk family. Don't forget those 30-minute podcast episodes on your favorite podcast channel. That's it for this podcast episode of the InWheelTime Car Show. I'm Don Armstrong, inviting you to join us for our live show every Saturday morning 8 to 11 am, central on Facebook, YouTube, twitch and our InWheelTimecom website. Podcasts are available on Apple Podcasts, spotify, stitcher, iheart Podcast Attic TuneIn Pandora.

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