An offspring of the Antique Snowmobile Club of America

Canada is known for its constantly snowy weather and frigid temperatures during the winter months.  Visitors and tourists come from all around north America to exploit the awesome powder that is available for winter sports and out of doors activities.  Snowmobiling is one of the most popular winter activities that residents and vacationers enjoy in the provinces of Canada.  As a consequence, an organization has formed that is dedicated to snowmobiling enthusiasts who want to preserve the nation’s rich history re snowmobiling.  The Antique and Classic Snowmobile Club of Canada ( ACSCC ) is also curious about keeping the available land and trails intact so they can continue to be used to absolutely enjoy the various winter sports that residents and frequent holiday makers are accustomed to. 
One of the main activities the ACSCC enjoys is finding snowmobiles and equipment that were built in the time when the snowmobiling industry first started.  The organization enjoys rebuilding these machines and, in some examples, putting them on display to show off the development of the machine’s flexibility.  Additionally, members pleasure in picking up rare and vintage snowmobiles from previous decades together with those that have been used for racing.  Snowmobile memorabilia is also picked up to show the growth and popularity of the snowmobile sub-culture whose members are typically known as’slednecks.’

The ACSCC began in Ontario in 1982 as an offspring of the Antique Snowmobile Club of America ( ASCOA ).  Canadian members from the ASCOA made a decision to form their own club to have a forum in which to collect to speak about, collect, and share their love and eagerness for the game of snowmobiling.  The members of the new ACSCC informally congregated and shared stories and appreciate the old snowmobiles that other members of the organization purchased.  The group acquired a financier shortly after – the Ontario Snowmobile Dealer’s organisation – which afforded them the opportunity to hire a booth at Toronto’s snowmobile show later that very same year. 

though the ASCOA considered themselves to be the ultimate authoritative snowmobile group in North America and took exception to their Canadian members breaking away, there had been never an intention of ill-will in the actions of the ACSCC.  The ACSCC was formed not out of an intention to break off from the North American model of the ASCOA, but it was rather an organization formed due to convenience.  The Canadian members of the ASCOA simply wanted to form a similar group that was closer to their hometown so they wouldn’t have to travel so far in order to share their snowmobile fervour with similar-minded folk.  In reality, the ACSCC holds a great appreciation for the ASCOA because it is the organizational model to which they try to stick in their own group. 

Since that first show in Toronto, the ACSCC has flourished as one of the premier snowmobiling clubs in not only Canada, but also in north America.  Now, members of these 2 main affiliations together with others enjoy the opportunities to gather at swat meets, races, and snowmobile shows to understand the kit and memorabilia that other snowmobile fans have bought.  The ACSCC also sponsors snowmobiling events that occur year round rather than being limited to just the winter months.  Some have puzzled about their excitement over machinery that hasn’t been around long enough to be considered antique, but that does not stop the ACSCC from constantly gaining new members and snowmobile-related equipment and mementos.  The organization has come a good way from their beginnings, particularly considering that it was begun on an impulse without a focus or vision for what they meant to do.

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