

However, the job forces Avery to crash in his new role.


Then, after Mike loosens his grip on the shop’s steering wheel and appoints Avery as manager, the crew works with one of Rust Valley’s most oddball residents for a major restoration of a 1966 Pontiac Parisienne. The 12-episode season features all-new projects from the unique restoration shop in the “Rust Valley”, Tappen B.C., where shop owner Mike Hall and his trusted team, Avery Shoaf and son Connor Hall, use their impressive skills and experience to restore, trade, and sell classic cars – transforming piles of rust into vibrant collectible car treasures.įiring up the second season, the Rust Bros crew make a bold comeback when they tackle a 1968 Camaro and a 1966 Dodge Super Bee restoration that brings back demons from Mike’s past. Hall found many of the vehicles as he travelled around B.C., working as a rock scaling contractor, he explained.HISTORY®’s top-rated* Canadian-original series Rust Valley Restorers (12×60) returns for a revved up second season on Thursday, November 21 at 10 p.m. Hall started buying up cars in his early 20s, and has since sought out hundreds of cars and trucks from the '50s, '60s and '70s and hauled them home. His obsession with classic cars dates back more than four decades. Hall said the last thing he thought he'd be doing in his sixties was starring in a reality TV series, but his boundless energy, self-deprecating wit and striking appearance - he's a giant of a man with blond dreadlocks hanging down past his shoulders - make him a compelling character. The series, filmed in Tappen, documents Hall's adventures fixing up many of the vintage vehicles on his yard and selling them off. Hall's obsession with vintage cars and reluctance to give them up is one of the main themes of the reality TV show, Rust Valley Restorers. series centred around his life in Tappen, B.C. Mike Hall's obsession with vintage cars and his reluctance to part with them is one of the main themes on Rust Valley Restorers, a reality T.V.
