Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach
As I mentioned in my last post, I’d planned to hitchhike for a couple days. My plan was to hitch up to Grant’s Pass, Oregon to go to the bachelor party for a good friend. This is the guy who was instrumental in my getting a job a couple years ago as a sport salmon fishing guide on the Kenai River. He’s maybe thirty or thirty-five, marrying a woman he met in high school, first marriage for both. Besides, in all my life I’d never been to a bachelor party.
I decided to hitchhike because my wife and daughter would be coming to the wedding, and I didn’t want to take two cars. At least that’s what I said. Really, I wanted to be on the road again. I’ve hitchhiked up and down this coast from San Diego to Seattle, I love the open highway.
People’s reactions were a bit of a surprise to me. Not one person said “Man, that sounds like a great trip.” Instead, “Really?” was the most common response, with a tone suggesting I’d departed my senses. “Take your pepper spray” or other advice to protect myself and be careful came in second. Nobody seemed to think it was a sane plan in the slightest. No one thought it would be fun. They all were concerned for my safety.
But I’ve hitchhiked thousands and thousands of miles, including coast to coast and Canada to Mexico, and I’ve never once felt physically threatened or even been scared when I was hitchhiking. Hundreds and hundreds of rides without incident or fear for my safety.
It reminded me, though, of the ways that we keep ourselves from adventures. Sure, something could happen on my next ride, past performance is no guarantee of future success. But I refuse to let the fear of that kind of outcome rule my life, it’s a long-standing matter of principle with me.
So early on Wednesday, my wife dropped me off on Highway 1, and I started hitching north. I needed to be in Grants Pass by 5 PM the next day. It’s about 460 miles to get there (750km). I had decided to take the Coast Highway rather than Highway 101 because none of it is freeway, you can’t hitch on the freeway, and I hate hitchhiking at the freeway on-ramps. Plus I fished commercially for many years along the coast and I love to see it again. But most of all … it is stunningly beautiful, while Highway 101 is nowhere near as spectacular. I went for the beauty and for the ocean. Here’s my gear at my takeoff point.
I didn’t have to wait too long for the first ride, maybe 45 minutes. It was a short ride, about four miles into Bodega Bay. But I was really glad to get the ride, because I’d forgotten one crucial item—sunscreen. I was already frying.
There’s an art to hitchhiking, and I’m a lifelong student of that art. First, the sign is crucial. The best signage in my history was when I’d just gotten out of high school. Me and a friend wanted to get to Santa Cruz. I stood in front with a big sign saying “SANTA CRUZ OR BUST”. My buddy stood just a bit further down the road with a sign saying “WE’LL TAKE EITHER”.
In any case, I had a great sign for this trip. On one side it said “OREGON WEDDING”. But I knew once I got to Oregon that wouldn’t mean much, so the other side of the sign said “GRANTS PASS WEDDING”. It was made of thick cardboard, and it was specially cut so it folded up and went into the pocket on my guitar case. It was held up by my little wheelie bag, which is hidden behind and holding up the sign in the picture. So I didn’t have to hold it or keep it from flopping in the wind.
Next, the guitar. A man carrying a guitar is a whole lot more likely to get picked up. Plus I wanted to play guitar with the groom, although that never came to pass, he was a little busy. In any case, the guitar was an indispensable prop, and it’s great playing it to ward off boredom while hitching. I have a guitar case with backpack straps, so it’s easy to carry.
Next, the clothes. You need to look clean-cut, shaved, and showered. You don’t have to be any of those things, but it is essential that you look the part, and it’s easier if you really are all of those.
Next, luggage. Smaller is better, especially with the current crop of small cars. My little wheelie bag was small enough to hide behind my sign.
Next, the “NO”s. No sunglasses, people can’t see your eyes. No floppy hats, same reason. No shorts, no sandals, no weird attire. No walking stick, it looks like a weapon.
Finally, location, location, location. You can stand all day in the wrong spot. Level ground is best. The advantage is psychological. If it’s on a downhill, people don’t want to stop ’cause they’re rolling downhill, and if it’s uphill, they want to keep going to make it to the top. Also, sight lines are critical. The drivers need to be able to see you in time to judge you and make a decision. So you can’t be too close to a bend. But on the other hand, it’s a Goldilocks deal—too short a sight line is bad, but if they have too long to make the decision, they may slow down and then change their minds and speed up again. You also need an open place for them to pull off the road safely. Picking your spot is critical, and when I find a good one, I don’t leave.
I found a decent spot across the road from the little store where I got the sunscreen. But it wasn’t the best, and so after an hour with no luck I walked a quarter-mile to where I knew the situation was more favorable. After about a half hour, I caught a ride with a middle-aged man going to work. He took me about 25 miles, to just past Fort Ross. He was taciturn, unusual for someone picking up a hitchhiker. I drew him out as best I could.
He dropped me off north of Fort Ross. The location was abysmal, no sight lines where the turnout was. So I started to walk. After walking a quarter-hour, I found an OK place, but the turnout was small and not very visible. I hitched a bit, then started walking again. I found a slightly better place for the turnout, but it was close to a corner, not enough time for the drivers to make up their minds. I again tried for a bit with no luck, and set out walking again. I walked about a mile, and was passing through a very bad spot for walking, a twisty section with almost no room on the verge to get off the road. A car pulled up beside me and stopped. It was the man who had given me the last ride. I jumped in as quickly as I could, it was a blind corner and he took a chance to pick me up.
I rode with him to the town of Gualala, about 25 miles. He had gotten injured on the job the previous week, and now he had to go to the doctor. We had a bit more time to talk, and besides we were now old friends twice met. He sounded a number of themes that I was to hear repeated throughout the trip.
One was a lack of belief that the climate was going to harm us. When I said that the climate was warming, and had been for centuries, that was no surprise to most of the people who picked me up. When I said that I thought people could and did affect the climate by cutting down forests, people agreed. When I said that black carbon soot could warm the northern regions by melting snow and ice, people said that seemed reasonable. When I said that a slight warming wouldn’t be a problem, not one person demurred. And when I said that CO2 level wasn’t what controlled the temperature of the earth, the general response was on the lines of “Yeah, I didn’t think so.”
Now, this is the attitude that is generally associated with Republicans. Me, I’m a climate heretic and an independent who has always voted against the Republican candidate, which should not be mistaken for voting for the Democratic candidate. My grandmother and my mother raised me, and both of them were strong FDR style Democrats. A joke current in the family when I was younger was about the guy hitchhiking in the Great Depression times. He sticks out his thumb, and a big Cadillac pulls over. The driver says “Son, are you a Republican or a Democrat”. “I’m a Democrat like my mom and my grandma, and proud of it” comes the reply, and the car pulls away without him.
After a bit, another car pulls over, and the driver says, “Son, what’s your political persuasion”. “Well, I’m pretty sure I’m a Democrat, although lately that hasn’t been panning out so well.” The driver snorts, and again the car drives away. The guy starts hitchhiking again.
When the third car pulls over, he can’t believe his eyes. It’s a beautiful woman in a red dress, driving a Lincoln convertible. “My good man,” she says, “which political party do you favor?”
Being a typical victim of testosterone poisoning, the answer is foreordained. He swallows his pride and says “Ma’am, I do believe I just became a Republican.” “Hop in”, she says. “We’ll go for a ride.”
He can’t help looking at her, she’s gorgeous. The wind is tossing her hair as she drives along, and she doesn’t seem to notice that it’s blowing her dress higher and higher up her legs. He can’t stop himself from looking and imagining, staring … suddenly, he shakes his head as if awakening from a dream, and shouts “Stop the car! Stop the car!”.
“What’s the matter?”, the woman asks.
“I’ve only been a Republican for ten minutes”, he replies, “and already I want to screw somebody.”
Now, there’s a point to my telling this story. Do you know how I can tell that that’s a joke, and not really something that might have actually happened?
Because Republicans don’t pick up hitchhikers.
Oh, back in the day, the odd Republican farmer or fishermen or carpenter might pick up a hitchhiker. But by and large, you know who has picked me up my entire life?
Poor people. Perhaps not poor right now, but people who have been poor. People who know what it is to sleep rough. And by and large, these days those are Democrats and not Republicans.
Here’s what the folks who picked me up had in common.
1. They all supported the Occupy Wall Street protests. I didn’t push to see why, I’m a guest in their car. The common thread expressed was anger that the people who brought the economy down had gone unpunished.
2. Curiously, only one person thought climate change was even a slightly important issue. The general sense about the question was “meh” or “whatever”.
3. Not a Republican in the bunch.
4. They all were very disappointed by Obama. Different reasons were given, but not one person was happy with his performance.
5. Like me, they all either were or had been dirt poor in their lives.
But I’m getting ahead of my story. The day was clear, with a few of those high hooked clouds that scientists call “cirrus spissatus” and fishermen call “mares tails”, and the sea is beautiful in Gualala, so I filled my time by feasting my eyes on the world. After a while, two surfers picked me up, headed up to Point Arena. I’m a surfer myself, so that works. One was interested in sharks, so I entertained him with tales of various friends’ encounters with sharks. The surfers didn’t care about the economy, Wall Street, Main Street, or any street that didn’t lead to the beach. They thought that the earth would solve the climate problem.
There seems to be some unwritten rule in hitchhiking that nobody is going to the far side of town. You always seem to get dropped off on this side of town, and you have to walk to the far side. Point Arena was no different, the surfers dropped me at the south end. However, a most curious succession of events took place there. I was walking through town when a guy came up smoking a cigarette and started talking to me. This is what hitchhiking is about for me, taking the pulse of the people and the place, meeting new people, listening to their stories.
So we talked for a few minutes, about this and that. Suddenly, he says “Do you smoke dope?”
Hmmm … how to answer. What are his motives? Hmmm. My brain is racing, I’m sure I’ve got the deer in the headlights look.
So I figure I’ll stick to the truth, in a pinch I’ve found that works best. As I’ve mentioned elsewhere, in the past I have indeed partaken of a wide variety of psychoactive substances. So I confessed as much to him. However, for the obvious reason I did not say that I hadn’t inhaled.
“Well, did you leave home with any weed? You really should have some when you’re on the road.”, he said. He seemed concerned.
This man wants to sell me something, I thought. I expected his next words to be “Herb, don’t leave home without it.” I admitted to him that somehow, that oh-so-essential item had slipped my mind when I was preparing for the trip, leaving me woefully and totally unprepared for the harsh crush of drug-free reality. Then I waited for his sales pitch, to see how this would all play out.
“Man, you should have some with you. My friend gave me these six baggies when I was leaving the house this morning. Here, let me lay one on you,” he says. He pulls out six baggies, picks one out, and stuffs it in my coat pocket.
I see. He’s not a salesman. He’s my new friend. He’s just given me a bag of weed. In downtown Point Arena. On the sidewalk of the main street, which is Highway 1. In broad daylight. I belatedly notice that the cigarette he’s smoking is hand-rolled …
But as Bokonon says, “Peculiar travel suggestions are just dancing lessons from God,” and he should know. So I thanked my new friend for his dancing lesson, and I walked on down to the far end of town, wondering just how on earth this dance was going to play out. Up on the hill at the top of town, I found a perfect location for hitchhiking, the dream location. Here’s a picture:
The traffic cone was already there, we have a post to highlight my guitar case, plenty of space to stop, just the right distance the other way for people to look me over, it was great. Plus in California it’s illegal to hitchhike on the pavement, and there was a legal sidewalk there to stand on … with a baggie of dope in my pocket …
I stood there for maybe an hour. It was getting late. Finally, a car with a couple of guys in their 20’s stopped. Unfortunately, they were only going about 15 minutes outside of town, and night was not too far off. I said I wanted to stay in Point Arena if I couldn’t get to another town, I didn’t want to sleep rough. “C’mon,” one guy said, “hop in, I want to hear you play guitar.”
“Can’t do it,” I said. “But actually,” I told them, “I think that the real reason you pulled over was not so that you could give me a ride. It was so that I could give you this.” I pulled the baggie out of my pocket and handed it to the passenger. He didn’t immediately recognize it. When he did, he looked up at me, and then back down at the baggie, and up at me, and back down again. I could see the gears stripping in his brain. They’d pulled over to give a ride to some random white guy in his sixties, and the guy has just handed him a bag full of dope, and thanked them for their kind offer of a ride. “You sure?” he said.
“Yeah, I’m sure”, I said.
“Wow. Thanks”
“My pleasure”, I said, and he didn’t likely realize what a great pleasure it was indeed to be rid of it, gone to a happy home. They drove off all smiles. I stuck out my thumb, feeling much lighter.
It took a while to get a ride at Point Arena. As happened for the whole trip, people loved the plot of my story. They loved the guy hitching to the wedding. They loved the guitar. They thought the sign was great. They just didn’t stop. Say what?
Finally a charming middle-aged woman pulled over. She was going to the town of Manchester, if a single store and a post office can be called a town. It’s rare to be picked up by a woman, so I hopped in, even though I knew it meant I might spend a real cold night.
She worked at whatever jobs came down the pike, she said, supporting her three sons. The local economy was moribund except for the people legally growing marijuana under California’s medical marijuana act. Fishing and logging were both dead before the current depression, and now tourism is dead as well. She didn’t grow herself, her friends made $20 per hour “trimming the buds” as she called it, clipping off all of the leaves. She cleaned houses. She did landscaping. She scraped by. She said people were unhappy with Obama because he was breaking his word and arresting legal marijuana growers. Go figure.
When I told her what had happened in Point Arena, she cracked up. “Oh, that’s just P.A., it’s always like that.” Always like what, I thought? What else is “like” what just happened to me?
When we got out to Manchester, she said she lived in the KOA, the Kampgrounds of America chain of camping sites … with her three sons, 15, 13, and 12. I said my mom had four sons and I didn’t realize until I grew up what toil and heartache that meant. I thanked her for the kind offer, and said I was going to be on the road for as long as it took.
It took a while. The sun was just setting when I got my final ride of the day. The driver was a fascinating guy. He’d been a Peace Corps Volunteer in Senegal in the nineties. Well, in the eighties I’d done an in-country inspection and assessment of a number of Peace Corps projects in Senegal, so that worked. We laughed about living by the salt flats at Kaolack. He talked about how he’d started a garden project supplying vegetables to the local hotels. I told him I’d assessed a similar project in Papua New Guinea, and we discussed the difficulty of making a project succeed in the third world.
He wasn’t surprised by my views on climate. “The climate has always changed”, he said. He didn’t think we had much to do with it. He drove me all the way to Fort Bragg.
I spent the night in a motel. In the morning, I had a choice.
Highway 1 goes along the coast then inland (blue line) from Fort Bragg (A) and connects to Highway 101. There’s also Highway 20 from Fort Bragg which connects to Highway 101 in Willits. There’s a bus to Willits in the morning at 7:30, and there’s very little traffic on Highway 1 north of Fort Bragg. I chose the bus, $3.75, and rolled into Willits early. Of course, the bus goes to the south end of town, and that town is a long sucker. I walked forever, guitar on my back, towing my wheelie bag behind me.
And then I waited. And waited. Lots more traffic than on Highway 1, that’s the good part. Nobody stopping, that’s the bad part. Finally, a woman stopped without me seeing her, and then honked her horn. I gathered up my junk and walked to her car. She was a lawyer who had been working on social causes of various kinds her whole life. It turned out that both she and I had been arrested in the same peaceful sit-in at the Oakland Induction Center in 1967, so that worked. I was convicted of disturbing the peace, although we called it disturbing the war. A lifelong Democrat, she was upset with Obama for his lack of action against what she saw in very 1960’s terms as the pluted bloatocrats plundering the public purse, or something like that. Whatever it was, she was very against it and she felt Obama hadn’t done a thing about it.
Of all the rides I got, she was the only one who thought that climate might cause problems in the future. She admitted that she wasn’t sure what those problems might be. But it didn’t seem to be much of an issue to her. She was passionate about the Native American tribes she represented. She wasn’t passionate about climate.
She dropped me off in Laytonville. And there I stood. And stood. And stood.
I was reminded during this time of what is often the most difficult part of hitchhiking. For me the hardest part is to not blame the people who don’t pick me up, to wish them well instead. Here’s the problem. As the person is driving by, you turn and watch them, and suppose you think “Yer a heartless wanker to pass me by like that” or the like. When you turn back to face the next car, that anger and bitterness is still in your face, and people can see that from afar.
One of the most important parts of hitchhiking is looking people in the eye. You want them to see you as a real person, not as a generic hitchhiker. You want them to know you are honest, that you can honestly look a man or woman in the eye. One of the drivers said to me “I never pick up someone looking at the ground.”
And if when you turn to look the next driver in the eye, your face is full of frustration and anger, the driver will say “That guy looks angry”, which is a double-plus ungood thing for a hitchhiker. People are afraid of angry men, and with good reason.
So my practice is to look the driver in the face as they approach. If they turn me down, I want them to do it to my face. And then when I see that they have chosen not to pick me up, I pull in my thumb and I give them a nice wave and a big smile, and I truly wish them well. Nor is it a sham or a pretence, I don’t want anything bad to happen to those folks, and I am truly at ease with their decision not to pick me up.
It is a sort of meditative practice for me, scoping out the people and wishing them all the best regardless. Often I can tell early that they’re not going to pick me up, and they seem genuinely surprised when I just wave and smile. Some people seem unable to look at me. Some older women seemed to take it almost as a personal affront, that a man of my age and mode of dress would stoop to hitchhiking. Some women just cracked up laughing at my sign and my scene, and pointed me out to the other people in the cars. But they all passed me … and I wished them all good speed.
Finally, I thought “Dang … I may not make it”. I can divide as well as the next man. From Laytonville it’s about five hours run to Grant’s Pass. It was ten AM. The bachelor party was at five PM. Closer and closer, tick tick tick, another hour went by … and then, amazingly, an 18-wheeler truck stopped and the guy said “I don’t know if we can fit all your gear, I don’t have a sleeper. Where are you going?”
“Grants Pass”, I said. “I’m going right through there”, he said. “I’ll carry my gear on my lap, I’ll fit it in.”
The trucker was great. Most truckers these days won’t pick you up. About my age, he had a most curious history. Every business he’d ever worked for had folded. He’d run away from home at 14 because his stepfather beat him, and hitchhiked all around the US. He’d worked for a whole string of sawmills on the West Coast, moving from one to another as each one went under. Then he got into trucking, and every concern he’d worked for had gone under. He said he could read the writing on the wall, he was hauling construction materials, and the construction industry in California is in the dumper … his company is in trouble, they’ve let most workers go. He was only still employed because like me, he’s a generalist. There’s not enough work for a truck driver, but for a truck driver who can work in the shop and can drive forklift around the yard there’s just enough work.
But he’s happy as a clam. He’d built a shovel-head suicide-clutch Harley Davidson from parts. That’s a bike I rode a bit in my youth, I knew that bitch of a ride, so that worked. We talked jobs, and biking, and women. He’s been in hiding from his ex, who went nuts when he wanted a divorce. She trashed the whole house, scratched up her face, and then claimed he tried to rape her. He finally was able to prove that he wasn’t even in town when it happened, but by the time he could come up with the proof he’d already been ordered to go to anger management classes. Then she started stalking the classes. The cops warned him she was after him, so he’d finished the classes and moved to another town to escape her. But he had a new girlfriend, and she had her own motorcycle. He said he was actually even thinking of adding a back seat to his Harley for her. I said if he was willing to make that sacrifice for her, she must be a fine woman indeed.
He told me about hitchhiking on the freeway in Illinois as a kid, and being ordered off the freeway by a cop. The cop wouldn’t give him a ride, just made him walk a mile through waist deep snow … the stories rolled back and forth as the miles rolled by. He was upset with Obama just because he didn’t seem to the driver to be getting things done. He didn’t believe in man-made climate change, seemed he thought God wouldn’t allow man to be that powerful.
So at forty minutes before five o’clock, he dropped me off on the side of the highway in Grant’s Pass. I almost forgot my sign in his truck, I jumped up and beat on the door as he was leaving. He handed it to me with a knowing look, and said “Here’s yer sign …” I cracked up and said I knew that song, and I did, too. He was lots of fun to ride with, he was what hitchhiking is all about.
Of course, I wasn’t quite there yet. I still had three point six miles (5.8 km) to go to the bachelor party according to my phone GPS. So I started walking. I figured I’d just about get there. I had a feeling that the groom or some of my friends would be coming along the road, so I turned around when I could, but mostly I just walked, pulling my little bag and carrying my guitar.
I arrived at what I thought was the address. A lady was driving out. I walked towards her car to ask if I had the right place. She seemed frightened, put up her hand to stop me, and backed up her driveway. Egads … am I that scary? I flatter myself that I’m five foot eleven tall (180 cm), and I weigh maybe a buck sixty (72 kg) soaking wet, hardly an imposing figure. Maybe she was just having a bad hair day. Maybe I’m uglier than I think, perhaps my habit of avoiding mirrors has a downside, I didn’t know what scared her.
But the next house proved to be the one. I walked into the party at about ten minutes after five. I hadn’t told anyone I was coming, and a couple of them had passed me while I was walking from town to the party, and as a result much hilarity ensued. Everyone was smoking some kind of big panatella cigars, I don’t know if they were Cuban, but they gave me one and said they were fifty dollars a box or something. It was a very easy-smoking cigar.
Or at least that’s what they told me, I can’t say because I didn’t inhale … they said the lady next door was a Deputy Sheriff. I asked them to explain the strange visitor next time they spoke to her, I felt bad about scaring her.
Anyhow, that’s where I’ve been. The bachelor party, well, that’s a whole other story that ends up with the best man’s best friend, who is 80 years old, getting bitten by a camel. And the wedding was outrageous, outdoors in the sunshine right down by the Rogue River, a portentous place for a fisherman and his lady-love. The groom’s party arrived in a boat with the groom at the oars. The party included his grandfather (who was his best man), his father, two sisters, a brother, and the couple’s two-year old son. Grandfather for your best man, father, and son at your wedding, that’s something special for me to see. I got to dance with my 19-year-old daughter, that was special too, life doesn’t get much better.
Today we drove back. I’m not sure what my conclusions are from my trip. I went in part to see what’s going on out there. I found that there are a lot of frightened people in America these days. It’s much harder to hitchhike than it has ever been, people are more afraid of strangers, my theory is they watch too many cop shows.
But they’re also afraid on a deeper level, afraid for their jobs, afraid that Congress has sold out to the lobbyists, afraid that money talks and they don’t have much, afraid that their town or county will go bankrupt paying obscene pensions, afraid that their leaders have failed them and that the American dream is dying and they don’t know why. They don’t care much about what the climate will do by 2050. They are concerned with getting through the month.
I fear I have no magic plan to fix that. All I can do is continue my practice, to look each passing man or woman in the face, to hope they breast the tide of their fears and go venturing and adventuring in this marvelous, mysterious world, and to wish them well on their journey wherever their dancing lessons might take them.
My regards to everyone, we now return you to your regularly scheduled programming.
w.
… from Willis’s upcoming autobiography, entitled “Retire Early … and Often” …




The guitar is definitely a good prop and you are right about the adventures and stories hitchhiking generates. I toted a banjo all over Europe in the mid 1960s and the only places I didn’t get to were Finland and Portugal. Oh, I didn’t do much singing in East Germany which I unwittingly entered illegally coming down from Denmark (I don’t know why I wasn’t stopped at the border – I was the only one on foot and it looked pretty quiet when I walked through – there was a signpost saying ‘Berlin’ but it was the wrong Berlin) and when I finally got picked up it was by a military patrol and taken to East Berlin. When they let me go the next day, determining that I was just a stupid kid, instead of letting me cross into West Berlin, they took me under armed guard all the way back to where I entered so that I had to make up all that distance and more in West Germany. I paid my way busking from one end to the other – bluegrass and folk banjo was definitely a novelty in the places I went through. I finally ran out of cars in Tito’s Yugoslavia. I bought a donkey in Skopje and road it down to Lake Ochrid at the corners of Yugoslavia, Albania and Greece where I resold it taking a substantial loss in the marketplace in a rainstorm (paid 8000 dinar – about 10 bucks and sold it 4000 dinar). It was the best holiday the donkey had ever been on – I couldn’t restrain him from stopping and eating fallen apples along the road over a stretch of about 10 km to a place called Gostivar in Macedonia. When I finally got to the Greek border walking 8 kilometres south from Bitola I was sent by the border guard to walk back and turn myself in to the police. The police informed me I had a 3 day transit Visa from Trieste and I had been in the country for about two months. I had to go to court and pay a fine – about another 10 bucks and then walked back to the border, hitched to Thessaloniki, sold a pint of blood for 10 bucks, hitched to Athens, sold another pint of blood and then lay on the beach to recuperate for a couple of days. This thumbnail sketch of a couple of years in my life skipped over a lifetime of great stories – coming almost face to face with Kruschev when he was (unbeknownst to me) on a state visit to Denmark – I took his pic with his hands clasped over his head grinning at the crowd; getting arrested by the Yugoslav military in the mountains near the Albanian border (yeah, a bearded guy with patched clothes on a donkey claiming he was a tourist), arriving in Athens to crowds waving at a horse drawn carriage containing King Paul and his new bride Anna Maria of Denmark, climbing the Dents du Midi mountain in Switzerland and learning how to ski (I was from the prairies), and, unable to afford to buy a ticket back home, took a job with the Geological Survey of Nigeria for three years (in time for a series of military coups, violent riots in Hausaland, and a civil war (Biafaran War I think the western press called it).
April E. Coggins says:
October 18, 2011 at 12:57 pm
LOL
Alexander Feht says:
October 18, 2011 at 12:22 pm (Edit)
Oh, slope off. I’ve worked and travelled all over the world, I’ve been in the poorest parts of the planet, I’ve seen things no man should ever see. Your claim to unique knowledge is just rampant egotism. Alexander the Great was really great. You’re just Alexander the Guy, you’ve let your name go to your head.
Siberian prostitutes? Nobody but Russians does things from sheer necessity? I think you’ve lost the thread here, my friend.
Alexander, I said absolutely nothing to diminish your bravery, nor to diminish your experiences, nor to say that you weren’t hungry. But your claim that that somehow your hard times makes you right, that your past hunger keeps you from making stupid claims, no matter what you say???
You really ought to re-examine that idea, that somehow suffering makes a man’s ideas automatically correct and beyond criticism. It’s not doing you any good.
w.
Willis: Your subliminal legerdemain is laudable – a quick (averted vision) glance at the photo of your sign reveals its true message – “OREGON WEDGING”. Who could not resist assisting such a worthy cause?
T-Man
Alexander Feht says:
October 18, 2011 at 12:40 pm
I have recounted my experience about who picked me up over a lifetime of hitchhiking as honestly as I can, Alexander. I’m sorry you don’t like it, but it’s still what I experienced. Nor is my experience changed, as you seem to think, by how much a car costs. How could it be? That makes no sense.
As to your advice, “don’t try to pretend it was a joke now”, why on earth would I do that? Have you seen even the slightest indication that I have said anything to “pretend it was a joke”? I don’t do that. You should Google the psychiatric term “projection”, Alexander. I don’t pretend that a serious statement is a joke to avoid responsibility, I own up to my errors. But it is very telling that you think, with absolutely no evidence, that I would do so … projection, my friend, rampant projection. Perhaps they don’t know about that wherever you said you escaped from, but you really should check it out.
That’s good to hear, Alexander. Usually people accuse me of small errors. I’m glad to know I’ve made it into the big leagues.
w.
April E. Coggins says:
October 18, 2011 at 12:50 pm
Thanks, April. I love the double-entendre, nicely turned. If we’re just speaking about hitchhiking, I’d agree with you, that’s been my experience.
But having seen the number of corporations, including conservative corporations, struggling to get on the government gravy train for a free ride, lining up for subsidies and tax breaks, I’d have to say that Republicans can hold their own in that regard.
A pox on both their houses, I say …
w.
thepompousgit says:
October 18, 2011 at 12:28 pm
While people aren’t simply leftists, or rightists, but distributed along a spectrum, generally (in the US) they are either Republicans or Democrats … is that a “false dichotomy” or a real one?
My thanks for all your contributions, Git,
w.
A very interesting – and moving – article. Thank you, Willis.
The last hitchhiker I picked up was when I was selling stuff door to door for tuition $$$$. I was driving through IOWA in my hand-me-down ’69 Chevy and picked up a South Dakotan who was also a full blooded Indian (his claim). He asked me to play some music on the radio. I responded, “I’ve worked on it several times, but it hasn’t worked for two years.”
He looked at me with a very disquieting far-off gaze and said, “It will now.”
It did. Drove him to Wallace, Neb. Gave him $20. (How’s that for a Repub) He got out of the car and shut the door. I drove about ten feet and the radio quit working. Never worked again.
True story.
Willis, have you considered why Republican, Libertarian, John Birchers don’t stop?
Because we’re realists. You’re an idealist.
I see what has and can happen (along with the odds).
You see what you hope will happen.
Those of us who tend to vote republican are by nature sceptical, and that’s why we read this blog. It maybe we are less likely to pick up hitch hikers than democrats because of this trait, although I am very sceptical of this claim. I live in the Sierra foothills largely with poor republicans, I work for people in the Bay Area who are largely wealthy Democrats. I’m one of those guys who looks like a Democrat, but largely vote Republican; but mostly for any politician that favors fewer laws, taxes and regulations. I happens that most of those politicians are Republican even though I have to hold my nose on some of their social ideas. I always get the wink and nod from Democrats that think all republicans are Nazis and that the entire Bush administration should be in jail. Don’t say anything because a)won’t make a bit of difference and b) don’t offend your customers even if they’ve created the offense in their own minds. So I find wealthy republicans in the SF Bay area to be rare as unicorns.
As for the story, nice work Willis, fun thought provoking read so keep it up. For the rest of you with your man panties in a wad, relax a little. It’s just Willis’ slice of life and it’s all good.
Now I have to work on a friend of mine who left home from Capetown SA at 17 with 40 bucks in his pocket in 1978 and hitchhiked to England and back, to put the story in words. By the way, made the trip safe and only didn’t have a place to sleep twice. He did it with charm and good humor, something Willis seems capable of, and I envy him for it.
Willis Eschenbach said @ur momisugly October 18, 2011 at 1:26 pm
“While people aren’t simply leftists, or rightists, but distributed along a spectrum, generally (in the US) they are either Republicans or Democrats … is that a “false dichotomy” or a real one?
My thanks for all your contributions, Git,”
Willis, if people were either Republican/Democrat, there would be little change in voting from election to election. The fact that often large swings occur is indicative that there is a significant proportion of the electorate whose political needs are not met by a two party system. The concept that one must be one, or t’other is the false dichotomy. Your statement about “the lesser of two weevils” (equivalent to my Tweedle Dumb vs Tweedle Dumber) indicate to me that you know this is the case.
Willis, I remain in your debt for teaching me about fiddle plots these several years ago. And unlike some contributors to this fascinating thread, I enjoy being challenged to think. Great Minds Like a Think, I always say 🙂
Willis said: “I was talking about my real experience of real people, not some fairy-tale fantasy about imaginary “Big Oil paid Deniers”. If you think about it, I’m sure you’ll see the difference. ”
Hmmmm…I would have thought that you of all people would have been able to grasp the allegory/abstraction. It was an allegory to illustrate why some of your audience might have found it insulting/disconcerting, whatever adjective you choose to apply. Reading comprehension? Where did I say I prefered faery tales? Or that I expected you to write them? Did you really find it hard to grasp the “if you were reading something like this and found this kind of snark, as a skeptic, might not you understand the reaction?” I was merely pointing out why some people would have problems with it, you are free to write whatever you want, and to potentially piss off half of your audience if you desire. We obviously have different opinions as to the desireability of doing so,
Honestly, given your responses, I have gone from thinking you didn’t think about how it would play with half your audience, to thinking you don’t care, to thinking that pissing off people was the goal. If that’s a mistake on my part, perhaps you should step away from the keyboard until you calm down, you’re going out of your way to get snarky with people who haven’t been chastising you, and I don’t think it’s helping your case.
Tim Clark says:
October 18, 2011 at 1:34 pm
Thanks for your comment, Tim. I see your point, and that may mean you don’t go bungee jumping.
By your lights, since lots of people have been murdered in their own beds, when you look at “what has and can happen”, you are a realist, you’d run the numbers and you’d advise us all to sleep on the floor, hardly anyone’s been murdered there.
And since most murders are committed by family members, by your lights, no one should marry, any realist can see what has and can happen with that, and it ain’t pretty …
Me, I hold a totally indefensible position, which is that everything that happens in my life happens because I chose for it to happen. Doesn’t mean I remember choosing it, doesn’t mean I did so consciously. But I accept that I chose it, and I act accordingly. Don’t bother attacking the idea, I told you it’s indefensible.
But it works for me, it can keep me from blaming people when things go wrong, and it opens the door to all kinds of outrageous possibilities. It also relieves me from worrying that I will be murdered in my bed, despite the fact that (as you point out) that it “can and will happen” …
It also gives me the freedom to have radical adventures and stretch my wings … and for me, that’s worth a reasonable amount of risk.
My point is simple. You have your judgement of what’s risky and what is not, and you act accordingly.
But claiming that your personal risk judgement is “realism”? Sorry, the world is much more real than that. To misquote the Bard, “There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your realism.”
w.
thepompousgit says:
October 18, 2011 at 2:05 pm
Or it could mean that people tend to vote the man rather than the party …
Thanks for all,
w.
Noelene said @ur momisugly October 18, 2011 at 3:10 am
“The pompous git
I did not make myself clear,I am not talking about travelling in buses in cities,I am talking about travelling on buses between cities(and I don’t mean tour buses).”
Noelene, you were perfectly clear and I wasn’t talking about buses in cities. The bus I caught to the city of Hobart had me debouching 32 miles from where it picked me up. I travelled in the city either by shanks’ pony, or taxi, depending on distance and weather. I also travelled between the cities of Hobart, Launceston, Burnie and Devonport by bus. These were privately owned buses, too, not the government-owned Metropolitan Transport Trust.
In the most expensive year I spent ~$2,500, somewhat less than the cost of parking a car. My mother taught me how to do sums…
If it were voting the man, then why has congress enjoyed a 90% re-election rate for 50 years? I’m not saying you don’t have a point. I’m saying, yes, people do (foolishly) vote strictly on party lines when it comes to the areas of politics they don’t want to think about on any regular basis. I don’t begrudge them this since compromise is taxing on the brain. It is headache inducing. However, the two-party system entrenches itself with the fact that most people want to be part of a winning team and all stray viewpoints can be fairly quickly co-opted with enough money and organization (see: Tea Party and OWS).
Willis,
Enjoyed your piece greatly even though we are probably not of the same set of cultural values.
Hitched from LA to San Francisco in 1970 and met my first “environmentalist”. A long haired hippie who was smoking “herbs” and bitched at me for throwing my straight cigarette butt on the ground when I was done. Non-filter, very bio-degradable. Will never forget that hitching experience. CA was already on the downslide and it has continued ever since. Born a Democrat but saw the error of my ways at age 26. JFK was the last of the Democrat presidents who had it right. Life member of the NRA, anti-communist, and believed in reducing taxes to jump start the economy. That stuff still works. Hard work and family are the answer to many of today’s problems. The problem is that they are now much less the norm due to the “progressive” views promulgated today, many born on the left coast.
All this talk about Republicans. I am most concerned about your stereotyping surfer dudes.
Willis wrote:
“I fear I have no magic plan to fix that.”
=============================================================================
Try reading:
http://www.henrygeorge.org/pcontents.htm
and:
http://schalkenbach.org/library/henry-george/social-problems/spcont.html
The state of the economy can affect social interactions and attitudes. When “times are good” people are in their comfort zone, the workd is a rosy place and their fellow man is tolerable.
Great story! Hitching is also a great way to see the world.
Love bikes. Never had a Harley, never wanted one, currently scooting a BMW K100 🙂
A fascinating story; I kept reading right to the end. It gave an interesting insight into the US of A
for this Englishwoman. I have to admit that I don’t pick up hitchhikers these days. In addition, many of them don’t have the sense to hitch where it’s safe for a driver to stop.
As far as Climate Change worries are concerned, I have met no one around here who believes the Warmist guff. While understanding that we live on an ever-changing planet, and should not waste resources and pollute, none the less no one is in the slightest bit amused by the tax scams being imposed on us in the name of “Tackling Climate Change”.
i wouldn’t expect to find many republicans around this part of the left coast during the season, willis. i’m sure you know the DA’s personal guru is baba ram dass.
thousands of transients around this time of year for a couple months, depending on rain.
you were deep in the heart of lala land, my friend. it doesn’t get thicker than laytonville. turn on the local axx radio and get a dose. after listening to the petition drives to block new ordinances about growing, enjoy a slew of dietary cults, reflect on mother gaia’s dreams, thrill to casino-american politics (when they’re not infighting and backstabbing, they are often declaring some construction project as ‘sacred land’ to extort attention and a fee), relax organic gardening and global warming advice from lady sunshine – stack up the acronyms calling for support and condemnation, appeals for funding for each of the above acronyms – all served fresh daily. to hear sociology explain physics is nearly as hilarious as turpentining a spastic.
you have to shake the phone off your hand around here. even this keyboard is sticky.
like road stories? http://www.roadjunky.com/article/624/work-in-california-clipping-marijuana
i’d hazard a guess that virtually every ride you didn’t get were of the same general political idiosyncracies as the ones who gave you a lift.
Willis Eschenbach says:
October 18, 2011 at 11:44 am
This is great. Before, you two were all on my case because I said that by and large, Republicans don’t pick up hitchhikers.
Now, without comment, you’ve both switched to trying to explain why it is that by and large, Republicans don’t pick up hitchhikers.
I love it when people do that, clandestinely switch to the other side of the debate and hope no one notices … anyhow, let me know if you find out the answer.
In my initial comment I merely inquired into the basis of your assertion as a point of information. You responded with a recitation of how effortless it is discern several blatant stereotypes and closed by stating again that this was just “your experience”
In my second comment I pointed out that what you wrote in your post was not nearly so qualified and though I did suggest one possibility why your one man sample might not be entirely representative, in neither comment did I take any position on the general question “Republicans don’t pick up hitchhikers.” In fact I never actually challenged your perception of your personal experience, only asking after its evidenciary basis.
You seem to be incapable of seeing the logical difference between saying Republicans never pick me up versus Republicans never pick anybody up. I rather reluctantly entered this thread because I have a great disdain for sweeping generalities based on ignorant stereotypes. Your condescending and unconvincing responses suggest that is a disdain you don’t share.
Hi Willis,
great stuff mate. I was a frequent hitch-hiker here in New Zealand back in the late 70’s and early 80’s. Mainly through the no car/broken car routine. Your ‘rules of hiking,’ was missing one important thing. Nobody likes to pick up someone who appears wet! If it is only a brief shower get under cover then get your thumb back out there looking nice and dry. Tough if it is raining for a prolonged period or if there is no decent cover handy.
Location is very important as you say. You have to make it easy for them. Having said that I was picked up halfway up a winding hill by a family in an old car that struggled to get going again.
My most memorable ride would have to be easter 1979. Coming back from an unintended trip to Auckland where I ended up going to a Bob Marley concert. The Rasta movement was very strong amongst the Maori & Polynessian communities in those days, and so were their herbal sacrements by all accounts.Being an unplanned journey I hitched back own through the centre of the North Island to end up on the south side of Lake Taupo (renowned trout fishing area) just near sunset. I started walking out of the town I was at for about 45 minutes. I guess mid-April in N.Z. is a bit like where you are now, weather wise, although snow would be very rare.
I wasn’t really keen on sleepng in the bush so I kept plugging on. It was starting to get darkish when all of a sudden a fast moving Japennese sporty type car applied it’s breaks and came to a stop about 100 metres past me. I started running towards the car, hoping that the driver wasn’t playing some cruel joke. I jumped in and found the driver was going to Wellington which suited me as I could get off about 100 miles north of there for a 20 mile hop to home.
The area south of the lake crosses a fairly high, barren, volcanic plateau named the Desert Road. It isn’t really a desert but that is what we call it. There are a series of ravines that haven’t been bridged, and probably never will be thanks to the Greenies, that make for good driving if you like that sort of thing. The driver wasn’t much of a conversationalist, but he made up with it with his driving skills. When he dropped off at the junction of Highway 1 & 3 I figured he had passed everyone who had driven past me a few hours earlier! Sure enough the old car that picked me up a few minutes later was amazed to see me there and asked if it had been me up by the lake, and was I in that flying red car? I answered affirmative to both questions. In the end I figured that the gentleman driving must have done that journey innumerable times to know the road so well (even our main Highway 1 down through the length of N.Z. had a lot of windy sections along it in those days). On that basis his most likely profession was a drug courier for the infamous Mr Asia syndicate. It may sound far-fetched to some, but it had all the hallmarks of that sort of operation for the time.
Having hitched it easy for one to have empathy for those on the side of the road. In saying that, the rules are the rules. Last night while I was heading to my home out in the country i passed my old hitching spot near the city boundary. An area with plenty of pull-over room. A spot where the cars passing ARE heading your way and where the cars haven’t yet sped up! Plenty of sight distance too. Well sure enough there was someone on the side of the road. One young 20 year old breaking a cardinal rule. Not only did he have his back to me as he was walking, he was totally preoccupied with texting on his cell phone. Close, but no prise.
Thanks again Willis, maybe I should do a similar state of the hitching nation review sometime.
Cheers, Coops.
Don E says:
October 18, 2011 at 2:47 pm
Yeah, by gosh, what’s up with that. As a representative of the Surfer Party myself, I object in advance to any humor, levity, or jokes of any fashion about members of the Party, including humor that I, a lifelong Surfer Party member, originate myself. I mean, Willis, when you said above that the Surfers “… didn’t care about the economy, Wall Street, Main Street, or any street that didn’t lead to the beach,” isn’t that being just a touch patronistic? I can’t bear these kinds of insults to true Surfers, they make me so upset and furious. I mean, people capitalize the words Republican and Democrat, but do they capitalize Surfer? No way, dude. Willis, your behaviour in this is absolutely reprehensible, you’ve committed the Mother of All Blunders …
Someone actually said that. Mother of all blunders.
Thanks, Don, I needed that.
w.
Hi Willis,
I think that I can tell you why some republicans got offended by your post, and why this thread has become a discussion on whether those words, which are a really small part of the story, were appropiate or not. Although most probably you have already figured it out.
FIrst, I think that when you kind of try to explain yourself saying that you were just providing your own experience, you are lying at yourself. Yes, you were doing that, but you were not just doing that. You were trying to make a point, even if you don’t realise or don’t want to admit it. Someone who were just providing his own experience would say “curiously or not, most of the rides I got by hitching in my entire life happened to be with democrats”. Or even more accurate: “they looked to me like they voted the democrats”, which is really the information that you have. As you have already told in comments, you only inferred that idea, they didn’t normally say it openly. If I told you about my views of the world in a half hour chat, you would also think I’m a democrat (I mean, voting for the democrats) although actually I am not. So, firtst of all, you may be a little bit prisoner of what you think that a republican voter thinks about any issue. Guess what, the republican politicians speech is just the view of some kind of average republican, but only a small fanatic minority would agree on every single issue with their leaders. And I bet the same is true for the democrats. Individual people’s views are sooo different. And also there are so many people that vote more ‘against’ than ‘for’ someone.
But the thing is that the way you presented the topic suggests that you wanted to make a point about the republicans. You don’t just comment the think. You go and say “and guess what? They were mostly poor, and therefore democrats!”. Sorry for the quotes, those were not your words, I know that you said it longer. But that is what it looked like. It looked like you meant that them not being republicans would be anyone’s logical prediction about who they would get picked by if they thought about it for a second. Which was actually your point, yet something that can be easily misunderstood as a suggestion by you that republicans will hardly ever help other people, if you think about it. Which is not what you said at all. Only what it can easily look like.
Now, the thing is that when people misinterpreted your words and got offended, instead of introducing some kind of disclaimer like “I didn’t mean that republicans are all bad guys, only that they don’t pick people like me on the road, for whatever the reasons”, you went defensive. Now, there are a hundred reasons why republicans would pick you less often than democrats would, without it meaning that they are bad guys. And I am sure that you can figure out a lot of them on your own. Yet you didn’t provide any of that to just let the issue die. You went defensive. “These are my words and I will stick to them, nothing needs any further explaining” kinda argument, sometimes including insults and/or disdain for whoever got it wrong. Which will only strengthen their incorrect belief that they actually got it right, and make it a never ending discussion about republicans being this or the other.
Funny to read, for a while, but then it starts to get boring.
My 2 cents.