If you have any concerns about what you see in comments, email the editor in the link above. We won't censor or delete comments unless they contain off-topic statements or links, unnecessary vulgarity, false facts, spam or obviously fake profiles. We welcome your comments and opinions on our stories but play nice. You can also submit photos, videos or news tips to the newsroom and be entered to win a monthly prize draw. To contact a reporter for this story, email Carli Berry or call 25 or email the editor. Additional information has been added to clarify where the new season of the show can be viewed. 13, 2021 to clarify Hall is selling his cars and has not yet sold them. Watch Rust Valley Restorers on the History Channel in Canada and Motor Trend in the U.S. Hall will be keeping mostly muscle cars and a dodge convertible.įor more information on the auction, visit the Electric Garage website. What do you do? There are no guarantees in life, I could drop dead tomorrow and then what’s going to happen with the cars?” he said. I mean, I’m kind of sad but like, I don’t know.
“Forty years of my life is going to vanish in one day. “I’ll let you know the day of the auction when they’re all gone.” Hall said the feeling of leaving the property hasn’t sunk in yet. I’m turning 65… so I’ll keep 20 or 30 and see what happens but we’re still filming this year,” he said.Īttracting a massive fan base for its unique approach to restoration, Rust Valley Restorers is a Top 10 program amongst men ages 25 to 54, according to Corus Studios, which owns the History Channel. He doesn’t know if the show will continue. The auction will be taped live for the show, which received a green light for season four back in May. Two seasons of the show are also available on Netflix.
Now, Hall said the “field of dreams” has finally been sold and an Electric Garage auction for the cars will be held at the property, Oct. A crew of car lovers at a garage in the Rocky Mountains transforms abandoned heaps of rust into collectible classics.
#RUST VALLEY RESTORERS TV#
After more than four decades of collecting classic cars, reality TV star Mike Hall of Tappen, B.C., says. READ MORE: Rasta Blasta blasting onto television with 'Rust Valley Restorers' set in Shuswap Rust Valley Restorers star sells 'field of dreams' collection of 500 rusting vintage cars. Episodes focus on the team trying to restore broken-down cars to their former glory. The show Rust Valley Restorers stars Hall, better know as the Rasta Blasta, and his crew of auto mechanics. The catch? It was filled with more than 500 cars Hall had collected in the last 40 years. Mike Hall became a local celebrity back in 2017 when he tried to sell his five-acre parcel of land in the Shuswap.
The host of a popular History Channel show is finally selling his Tappen property and roughly 500 cars after years of planning to retire. Search for businesses in Vernon, Salmon Arm, Revelstoke and Areas