For this Pahrump car enthusiast, the Mecum Las Vegas auction represents a chance to selland reunite with friends – Las Vegas Weekly

Posted: October 7, 2021 at 3:32 pm

In 2011, Roger Baggett retired from his 37-year career working in the oilfields of Northern Alaska with a couple of goals in mind. One was to explore his longtime interest in collecting and restoring cars, a hobby for which the icy Alaskan climate was anything but conducive. He also wanted to make a major lifestyle change after decades of performing industrial electrical maintenance in the oil production facilities at Prudhoe Bay, where temperatures could dip to 40-below zero.

One of my goals in retirement was to never wear long pants again, and Im doing a darn fine job of it, Baggett says.

Baggetts twin objectives led him to an extreme environment of a different type, but one that fit his needs perfectlythe Southern Nevada desert, where he has spent the past 10 years as a shorts-wearing car hobbyist in Pahrump. There, in a 1,050-square-foot shop equipped with a vehicle lift, he spends hours doing mechanical work on the small fleet of classic and vintage cars hes collected. The desert heat doesnt faze him, he says.

Weathers weather. I worked in the cold, and I can work in the shop when its 110 degrees. It sounds ridiculous, but I just figure, Yep, its hot. I just suck it up and do what I want.

His vehicles include a 1950s Willys Jeepster, a sort of mashup between a Jeep and a convertible sedan, and a 1929 Ford Model A delivery panel van. Both cars are modified with modern engines, automatic transmissions and special touches like electric bucket seats in the Jeepster.

Baggetts approach to collecting is to resurrect cars he can drive anytime he feels like it, not to create museum pieces. My cars are in the $20,000 range, he says. I dont have $100,000 cars that Id be afraid to drive.

When Baggett isnt wrenching in the shop, hes often traveling with his wife, Jennifer, to car auctions. The two are planning to attend the Mecum Las Vegas auction October 7-9 at the Las Vegas Convention Center, where Baggett is selling three vehiclesa 1954 Chevrolet Bel Air coupe, a 1964 Ford Thunderbird and a 1991 Mercedes-Benz 350SDL sedan that was Jennifers daily ride until she recently got a GMC Yukon SUV with a custom interior and exterior panels that make it resemble a classic woodie-style wagon.

Shed had the Mercedes since 2015 but didnt like it anymore since it didnt have good cupholders, Baggett says, laughing.

The couple are partial to Mecum eventsBaggett says the company provides exceptionally cordial and professional customer service to bidders and sellers. He also likes Mecums approach of offering vehicles at a broad range of prices, as opposed to catering exclusively to the high-end collector market.

Then theres the social aspect of being around other car enthusiasts. I have friends in Erie, Pennsylvania, who go mostly to [Mecums] East Coast auctions. We have friends down in Texas who we see all the time, people in Canada, friends in Australia, he says. You start chit-chatting and you strike up a friendship.

At the Las Vegas auction, Baggett will set up in his normal seat, near the front by the stage, where hell be wearing his standard outfit of a tie-dyed shirt and Birkenstock sandals.

And shorts, of course. Always shorts.

Mecum Las VegasAbout 1,000 vehicles, including muscle cars, customs and exotics, will go on the block during Mecums fifth-annual Las Vegas auction, scheduled for October 7-9 at the Las Vegas Convention Center. Gates open daily at 8 a.m., with auctioning starting at 10 a.m.

The general public is invited, and bidding isnt required. Tickets cost $20 in advance and $30 at the gate once auctioning begins.

For more information, visit mecum.com.

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For this Pahrump car enthusiast, the Mecum Las Vegas auction represents a chance to selland reunite with friends - Las Vegas Weekly

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