Drag Illustrated Issue 125, September 2017 | Page 86
CLOSE-UP
Mel & Johanne Bush
Enjoying
the Ride
M
el Bush spent 45 years running his
construction company before retiring last
year. Rather than spend his well-deserved
time off on the golf course or relaxing the day
away in a retirement community, he and wife Johanne can
be found in the PDRA Pro Extreme pits. The owners of the
Mel Bush Motorsports ’15 Corvette driven by Tommy D’Aprile,
the Bushes have been nursing a decades-long addiction to
the thrill and camaraderie offered by the sport of drag racing.
“We keep saying we want to get out of it – we’re getting old
– but it’s so hard because you become friends with so many
people out here,” Mel says. “And they’re not just competitors,
they’re real friends. Jason Scruggs, Brandon Snider – there
are just so many people we’ve become really good friends
with over the years, and it’s hard to walk away from that. We
keep saying, ‘Well, this is going to be our last year.’ We just
keep going and going. It’s a lot of work in between races, but
once you get to the track, it’s so worth it. It’s just so much fun.
I don’t know how I would react to not doing it anymore. I’d
be like a lost soul.”
Mel and Johanne have been going to the dragstrip together
since the early Sixties. Mel drove a ’62 Chevy 409 in Super
Stock, racing in New York with the likes of “Dyno Don” Nich-
olson, Shirley Muldowney, and Bill Lawton, driver of the leg-
endary Tasca Ford entries. Bush stepped away from the sport
in the late Sixties to raise his family and didn’t return until
2001, starting out with a fast bracket car and progressing to
Top Sportsman. With D’Aprile behind the wheel, Bush moved
up to ADRL Pro Extreme and NHRA Pro Mod competition
before settling into the team’s current home in PDRA Pro
Extreme, doing it all with Johanne by his side.
“My wife is so supportive of this,” Mel stresses. “People can’t
believe that she still likes this drag racing. She loves it. She
wouldn’t miss it for the world.”
“Well, I married into it,” Johanne laughingly replies. “We
used to drag race before sanctions were around. We used to
drag race on Genesee Street in Utica, New York, before we
were even married. If we didn’t drag race, there would be
nothing else for us to do because we’re retired. We want to
keep motivated and keep our minds active.”
With one of the most professional operations in the Pro
Extreme pits, Bush is certainly kept motivated and active as
he oversees the operations of his screw-blown Corvette, which
won this year’s season-opening PDRA Southern Extreme
Nationals and reached the final round at the next two races,
GALOT and Darlington. “You can allow this drag racing to
consume as much time as you want. In my case, I just love it.
I eat, sleep and breath it 24/7,” Bush adds.
And while Bush feels the side effects of the sport – namely,
the rising costs associated with fielding a top-tier Pro Extreme
car – he finds the positives far outweigh the negatives. He
realizes there will come a time when he will need to back
away from the sport again, but he’s delaying that departure
for as long as possible.
“I don’t think there’s another sport where there’s such ca-
maraderie with the participants. I’ll run into people I raced
against 15 years ago and they talk to me like we raced against
each other yesterday. It’s a real bonding that you get with these
people. I’ve never experienced anything else like it. It’s just
been phenomenal – and that’s what scares me about leaving
it,” Mel openly admits. “It’s been a real good trip for us.”
– NATE VAN WAGNEN
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