My dad's first car was a 29 Model A that he bought with paper route money when he was 14. Having the car for delivering papers enabled him to buy a horse (a dun colored working cow pony named Sand). And that's what defined his life.
While his Class of 43 friends were off in Europe or the Pacific, he was in the Army breaking horses and mules in Front Royal, VA.
He had some cool cars and some appliances. He liked cars but only superficially compared to us. He loved to tell the story of the 53 Dodge coupe with the Red Ram hemi he owned in Arizona. That's the only car I ever heard of him racing, and just one time.
Cadillacs were the big gun of the day in high speed road racing and he had someone brake checking and generally harassing him on a long mountain descent. He backed off and took flat out run at it. Caddy driver tried to catch him, blew out a bunch of smoke and was done.
We had 57 Crown Victoria convertible for a few weeks, but it had a bad engine and wasn't around long. Several years with a 63 VW van, which I learned to drive in. Also had a 63 Coupe DeVille, bought with a cracked block, gone soon.
There was a 60 Plymouth Suburban, two door wagon that became my first car. Here's the same model, same color. Not a cool car then, but sure would be today. First year for the slant six.
Caddy was replaced with a 69 Ambassador SST coupe with a 390. Think of an optioned up, sleeper version of a Rebel Machine. That's when I got my license, scared myself in it when I expected it to stop like it would go.
He replaced that with a thoroughly boring Matador sedan with a 304, followed by an Omni wagon, diesel Toyota pickup, and a last year of production slant six van. Finished out with a Caprice wagon, Nissan minivan and the 95 P71 I gave him until he couldn't drive any more.
So, horses. He became an equine portrait painter. Mostly Standardbreds, which was my first career. His best work was the Thoroughbred paintings he did in the 80s.