Chuckeroon has been posting an interesting series on Brooklands, the racing circuit in the UK, and home of one of the golden ages of motorsport. There have been many of these, although I don't think we are in one now. After the Big Bentleys from Brooklands we had the era of Fangio, Ascari and Nuvolari with blood red Maseratis and Ferraris against the silver Auto Unions and Mercedes.
This was bridged by the likes of brits such as Stirling Moss (perhaps the greatest) and the tragic Mike Hailwood into the age that I regard as the real golden age of F1, if only because I manged to rub shoulders with it courtesy of my father. This was the time of Clark, Hill (Phil and Graham), Brabham, Gurney and many others. Reason for this post is a memory of another of the ranks, Jo Siffert from Switzerland. A DVD is out now - a fascinating documemtary for motor racing fans - "Live Fast - Die Young" - about the man from Fribourg. The title is unecessarily sensational, but the documentary footage is a must for anyone interested in motorsport
Siffert died in a sports car crash in 1971. His friend the Swiss artist Jean Tinguely was allowed to use the wreckage of the car for a sculpture in memoriam, which is in the Tinguely museum in Basel
On my first visit, I was - enchanted, transported - to see this Lotus 25. The car that in my opinion, through the design genius of Colin Chapman and the driving skill of Jim Clark, changed F1 for ever