![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgFyBMz6RUXi5hjN_XrVbNApnbtyBkDr3VSG5VSqfLXhPnch91QTJD8x8xSjS-K-d3_1B3fbqeqN-nffWlx8sAGvsSg4oy-kBoxDa0MwDBdPL6JEmOPCrlzvowBp22hglngOL1uCQ/s320/Green+Camper+van.jpg)
I got it from the lovely boys at Eastfalia, down in Surrey yesterday. I knew I was doomed to make the purchase before I even got there - all the other vans I'd seen for sale had something that wasn't quite right, not to mention the fact that the 80s vans seem to be snapped up faster than the older models at the moment.
The one downer for me was the slightly grotty interior. My childhood memories are of brand new vans with spankingly clean interiors, but this one not only had a fair few dinks and frayed edges, it also had 25 years' worth of grot and a mouldy ceiling (which the previous owner had made worse by painting over the flocked finish, preserving the mildew AND ruining the fluffy feel).
But I can't help being ever so slightly pleased that the interior needs a spruce up. I know that keeping the original features is important for campervans and I don't want to be responsible for ruining the 80s interior in the same way that Victorian home interiors were ruined by people in the 80s (a pox on whoever decided to rip out the best bits from my flat and Artex the walls), but I reckon I can get the place looking like (mobile) home without making any irreversible changes. At least, that's what I'm telling myself. If I get too carried away, I'll just have to hide it from Antony at Eastfalia who will probably be appalled at the sacrilege.
I smell a Campervan blog on the horizon...
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