Bad Assumptions

The real reason why you shouldn’t store water in gasoline containers.

Bad Assumptions
Photo by Madelynn Woods / Unsplash

The real reason why you shouldn’t store water in gasoline containers

My translator’s mother, who had a broken leg at the time, hops into the small Russian-made car, which is basically a cheap ripoff of a 1970s Toyota Corolla. Her grown daughters also make their way in. We pull out of the parking lot and fifty yards down the narrow snow-packed road, the engine stops, and I know why.

At this point, the oldest daughter informs me, in her direct I-will-kill-you Russian way, to make the car “go.”

“Make it go American!” She motions with her arm to make the car go because one, we’re all hungry and two, her mom has limited walking ability. She can’t understand just why I let the car engine die in the first place.

It’s my fault, and I know it. This poor lady is going to have to wrestle her way out of this little car, shuffle across the very slippery snow and ice with crutches in sub-zero weather, and make it safely back to shelter before she either falls and breaks her other leg or smacks me over the head with her crutches.

Which I do not want.

It all started with a very bad assumption a day earlier.

The car had been parked in the garage for the winter, which lasts about 98 months out of the year in northern Russia. Below the floor of the garage is a small dirt basement. Which seems to me like a great place to hide from Commies, drink vodka, and listen to Radio Free America.

The car was out of gas. But in the small dirt basement below, there were full gasoline containers.

My translator’s dad had filled them with something but was unavailable to confirm the exact contents of the containers.

I opened one container and smelled the contents. This, of course, can be dangerous. When I was little, one of my evil sisters tricked me into sniffing some smelling salts. I nearly passed out. No, died. I almost died. Also, I don’t know why we had smelling salts. Maybe we were all prone to falling over like fainting goats.

Anyway, because the containers smelled like gasoline, I made the tactical decision to fill up the car, and let’s get going, Comrade.

We were off, but only for about 50 yards. After the engine died, we pushed it back to the garage and determined that the liquid was not, in fact, gasoline, as it should have been, but water.

Water!

Let’s just stop here and contemplate that. To this day, I do not know why a grown, somewhat rational, man would store water in gasoline containers instead of, say, GASOLINE. I mean, there’s PLENTY of solid water everywhere so there’s no need to hoard water. But I digress.

I tried siphoning out the excess water, but much stayed in the tank. Too much. So, because I am really smart, once I got to the gas station, I added lots of gas to dilute the water.

Yes. Really.

To my surprise, the little car would actually start and stay running, as long as I left the ignition on. This is what I had done the morning in question, which eventually consumed all the gasoline in the tank and left only — water and a dead engine.

The subzero arctic temperatures didn’t make for a pleasant walk the two miles back through the polar-bear-lined streets to their home either.

Did you know polar bears will kill and eat you?

Eventually (and by eventually I mean a week later), some nice Russian mechanics, in exchange for a few quarts of Vodka and the joy of ridiculing me, removed the gas tank and poured out the water.

Those several days were not pleasant. But they were certainly a few days of misery that I could have avoided by simply paying more attention and assuming less. Maybe I could have lit a match and ...

Or maybe not…

Subscribe to Mistakes were Made

Don’t miss out on the latest issues. Sign up now to get access to the library of members-only issues.
jamie@example.com
Subscribe