326 lines
9.6 KiB
Plaintext
326 lines
9.6 KiB
Plaintext
From slcpi!govt.shearson.com!mjohnsto@uunet.UU.NET Mon Jan 7 17:27:35 1991
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To: wordy@Corp
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Subject: chapter-28
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ESCAPE FROM THE CITY
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#28 in the second online CAA series
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by
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Steven K. Roberts, HtN (WORDY)
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Pigeon Point, CA; 12,140 miles
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May 15, 1987
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F I N A L L Y ! ! !
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I'm on the beach at Half Moon Bay, the evening calm almost disquieting
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after the unrelenting noise of the City. It feels good, damn good... Maggie
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and I grin at each other every few minutes, gush something about being back on
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the road at last, then fall into each other's arms for a trembling hug. Three
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months we stayed in Palo Alto -- and despite all the productivity of the
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layover, this return to movement has the sweet flavor of liberation.
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Our new porta-condo, all 108 square feet of it, is sprawled in a field of
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purple and white flowers. Maggie's over there, backing her trailer into one of
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the garages (the tent's vestibules are large enough to hold our rolling
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chests-of-drawers and still allow bodies to pass). Birds twitter and scree;
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surf rumbles; small planes buzz the beach; my toes dig like autonomous prairie
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dogs into the soft, welcoming sand. We're doing it, we're finally doing it!
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It began as any other pedaling day: we let all the conflicting snippets
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of road advice null each other out, meandered through residential areas as long
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as possible, spent a misleadingly lazy hour on Canada Road, then hit 92.
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Whoosh! Big-time motorized urgency! Though this is the easiest pass over the
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mountains for our atrophied cycle-legs, it's also the busiest -- freeway-like
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traffic on a winding 2-lane road with shoulders that vary from adequate to
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nonexistent. You can almost live with that, except when the pavement abruptly
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disappears on right-hand switchbacks and the wheels of a Big Rig drop into your
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space... or when some redneck (yes, even in California) leans on his horn while
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crowding you into the glass-sparkled gravel, the seconds of his life so
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precious that he gladly risks all of yours to make each one of his count.
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Ahem. But those are just moments. In Half Moon Bay, the crowd was
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delightful, plying us with smiles and the addresses of distant friends while
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marveling and tsk-tsking at our survival of 92. The obligatory small-town
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newspaper interview, the shopping for provisions, the surprise offer of free
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tooth-cleaning by a young local dentist <flashy grin>...
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And then a surprise. At the State Park campground's check-in station, we
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paid our $2 for space in the hiker-biker area and were informed by the guard
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that there was a surprise in store -- whereupon she produced a cooler and
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handed it over the counter. Inside, on ice: bananas, oranges, watermelon, and
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Gatorade... a gift from Melissa of the Pigeon Point Hostel, 25 miles down the
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road.
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* * *
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We awoke comfortable, well-rested. The camping experience has changed
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completely since last I wrote of it -- with roughly 20 cubic feet of pack
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space, we now carry folding stools, the megatent, and even, yes, even a pair of
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big fluffy feather pillows. This all seems insane, decadent, a violent
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departure from the spirit of camping (whatever that is), but hey, why not be
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comfy? I never was the macho outdoorsman type anyway...
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We emerged lazily and fed stale danish to a bead-encrusted drifter who,
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the night before, had circled the camground seeking "doob" then crashed
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unfulfilled under a picnic table. Our own breakfast was a celebration of the
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50th anniversary of canned porcine DAF (dead animal flesh) with a classic Spam
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'n eggs breakfast: on the road, every little event, even an embarrassing
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repast like that, is flavored by the exotic spices of Change.
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After rolling back into Half Moon Bay for Dr. Leupp's dental work, we hit
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the road again -- sun baking shoulders, sweat glistening on bellies not yet
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road-lean, the hills of California rewarding hours of 4-mph effort with minutes
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of 40-mph ecstasy. The usual ratio. But there were great sweeping vistas of
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surf and sun, vegetation that would cost $50 per square foot in potted form
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back east, waves from passing cars, and thumbs-ups from leathered bikers. We
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stopped at every temptation, whether an alluring beach, a hint of tidepools, a
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particularly breathtaking view, or the flower raised like a toast by the
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weathered hairy chap in purple jogging suit who spoke cryptically of Magic
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Elixirs.
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I rode along, making bike-notes in a file called FIX and comments for this
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article in one called GE28... and then came to the hostel.
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Ah, hostels. I'm always delighted by these places, these dynamic
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monuments to the wandering spirit. Much of their appeal lies in absolute
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unpredictability -- hostels are quite the opposite of motels. If you seek
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plastic key fobs that you can drop in any mailbox, split- image postcards with
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both aerial and in-room views, wake-up calls, bolted-down TV sets, and little
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paper strips that are Sanitized For Your Protection... go ring a bell for
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service and plop down a credit card. But if you want unpredictable roommates,
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a melange of languages, morning chores, dubious mattresses, no security, and a
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lights-out curfew -- all for only $6/night -- try a hostel.
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Why go through this? Why prefer crowding and confusion to, say, the
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Regency Hyatt with its grossly overpriced veneer of luxury? Well...
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The vaporous community of travelers condenses every night, forming circles
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around campfires real or imagined -- all over the planet. Stories flow as
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friendships form; even the part-time nomads swap equipment tips, road advice,
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addresses, and snippets of their native culture. The net effect? A sense of
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family that keeps the mad anonymous rushing unknowns of the highway at bay.
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Safety. Warmth. Home.
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The same need touches everyone on the road, even business travelers:
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watch the action in a Holiday Inn cocktail lounge sometime as people struggle
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with internal battles between loneliness and shyness, tipping the odds by
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tipping the elbow, hoping someone else will make the first move.
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But hostels make it easy. There are no more walls than necessary.
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Pigeon Point is a delightful discovery. We're living at the base of a
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115-year-old lighthouse perched on a cliff, a place steeped in maritime history
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and named after the most famous of a series of shipwrecks on the foam-swirling
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black rocks jutting offshore (the Carrier Pigeon, lost in 1853). Lashing the
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foggy night at 10-second intervals, the light has become one of the best-known
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navigational features of the Pacific coast. It's been automated for years, of
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course, so the cluster of former Coast Guard housing surrounding the tower is
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now a hostel.
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And what a hostel it is! Last night we arrived in a flurry of excitement,
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the rapid-fire questions and comments colored by the speech patterns of a
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half-dozen different countries. Natural drinks from Odwalla in Davenport
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("Juice for Humans"). Bright, alive faces; knowing smiles; other cyclists.
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Melissa of cooler fame, shaking her head and grinning. And as we all walked to
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cliff edge for sunset and stood amid the ice plants and rocks with the
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lighthouse towering behind us, I recalled once again the hosteling allure that
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almost always makes them ideal places to stay. (Imagine instant rapport and
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food-sharing with a community of guests in a Motel 6 along the freeway...)
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Night. I sprawled in the hot tub with three pretty women -- a German, an
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Aussie, and a Buckeye. The German, young and new at this, had been uncertain
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(asking in broken English if she should bring soap). The Australian, a wise
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and confident traveler named Lynora, was an emigre of the computer business who
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felt, at age 30, that it was time to start thinking about her own life before
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iff, tang legs in rumbling hot water while gazing out
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over the rumbling cold.
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Beside us, heaps of clothes glowed a ghostly green in the indirect
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lighting. Above us, starlight danced its way through a 3- mile refractive
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jumble after light-years of perfect clarity. Seaward, their glittering
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pinpoints softened into mist, then disappeared behind a cloak of fog that
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seemed the product of our own tub-generated steam. And through it all, insanely
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surreal like the set of a science-fiction movie, lashed the thick
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680,000-candlepower beam of the Pigeon Point lighthouse, beginning immediately
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over our heads and ending somewhere out there, sweeping the horizon. Every ten
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seconds the cycle repeated, arresting, intriguing, as much an intensification
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of NIGHT as a busy Air Force Base or a head full of Magic Elixir. The German,
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the Aussie, and the Buckeye lay their heads back on the deck, half out of the
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luminous froth, gazing quietly skyward as light played gently across smooth wet
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skin -- as soft breath merged with the steam, merged with the mist, and merged
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us all into a single pulsing universe of light and color.
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* * *
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It's so easy to forget this in the swirl of distraction, noise, and
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responsibility. So easy to forget the infinite range of possibilities; so easy
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to believe the fiction about America's media- driven homogeniety. We may have
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a lot of the same icons and newsjokes, but there's a diversity out here that
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quite outdistances the imagination. Why, ANYTHING is possible in a land where,
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in a single month, one man can collect $8 million by claiming that God will
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kill him if he fails and another can lose a presidency by being accused of
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doing what any man would love to do. It's a strange land, as limitless as life
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itself, and I'm delighted to announce that I'm once again loose in it.
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The doors of the shop are closed. We're on the road.
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