Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach

“Ranger” Rick Kaufman, 1949-2012
I’ve had the privilege of living in a wide variety of countries and societies. And having not always been entirely sane myself, one way that I judge societies is by how they handle their crazy folks. “Back in the day”, as they say, I lived in a town called Olema, and I was loosely associated with a group of people called the “Diggers”. The Diggers had a commune on a ranch up the hill from my place. Peter Coyote lived up there. It was a lovely secluded old place, with a constantly changing cast of outrageous characters living and passing through the ranch. Among them was one of the crazy folks. I’ll call him Billy because that wasn’t his name.
Like many crazy people, Billy cycled into and out of his illness. When he started acting up, people would talk to him about it. When it got bad, he’d retreat to his one-room shack behind the main house where he lived. He’d go into his shack for a while, and wouldn’t come out.
So people fed him. When the dinner meal was cooked and everyone sat down to eat together, someone would take him a plate, and he’d open the old wood-panel door to the shack, but hardly talk, take the plate and close the door. And when he got really mental, he’d pull the bottom panel out of the door, and people would just put the plate in through the open panel, and take out the dirty dishes. After a while, he’d hit bottom, and the first sign of him coming back was he’d put the bottom panel back in the door, and open the door for his food.
Then after a longer while, he’d start to talk to people, a bit at first, and finally, maybe a month after he’d first shut himself up, he’d come back out and join the group for dinner and the like. He’d talk to people about where he had gone—it didn’t make much sense, but people listened and tried to explain things as best they could. No one thought of him as special, he was just crazy Billy.
That was one of the most compassionate acts by a group of people that I had seen, and the memory of it has stuck with me.
I was reminded of the Diggers, and of Crazy Billy, by the recent death of a man whom everyone around Occidental called “Ranger Rick”.
I live near a little town called Occidental in the redwood-covered hills of coastal Northern California. It’s not a city, just a “Census Designated Place”. It has no city government. It’s known for its Italian restaurants and not much else. There are maybe a dozen or so businesses.
And somehow, over the last quarter century or more, Ranger Rick became the unofficial mayor of Occidental. Or maybe the town greeter. Or perhaps just the street sweeper. He didn’t do much, he didn’t have any official job, and he drank too much, but he was the spirit of the town.
Ranger Rick was nobody’s fool … but he looked at the world from some very different place than you and I. He could be kind and gentle one minute and raging angry the next, but he never hurt a fly. He watched over the town like some benign and slightly demented elf.
A local guy let Rick sleep in an old cabin on his land. Some of the town merchants kicked in a few bucks a month for a stipend. People who had restaurants gave him the odd meal. He walked from his cabin to town every morning. If you drove through town too fast, he’d shout at you. Sometimes he was not entirely coherent. He pruned the town trees and planted daffodils on the hillside. But mostly, he just wandered the town, back and forth, side to side, helping people who looked lost, keeping an eye on the kids getting on and off the school bus, talking to the tourists. He was the public face of the town, the common thread over the years, the often-inebriated town greeter, both cranky and kind, sweeping the streets and muttering to himself.
And finally, sadly, I suppose inevitably, the alcohol caught up with Ranger Rick last week, and he died peacefully in his sleep.
I bring this up because far too often we are reminded of man’s inhumanity to man. I bring it up because I want to commend and celebrate the spirit of the people of the town of Occidental. Any place else, Ranger Rick might just have been despised as the town drunk; but the people of Occidental made room in our town for a strange, lonely, eccentric and somewhat demented man to have a full and meaningful life. And to me, that’s an important measure of any society, what we do with our crazy folks.
My best wishes to all, hug your lovers and your folks and your kids, life is far too short, and always remember Phlebas …
Phlebas the Phoenician, a fortnight dead,
Forgot the cry of gulls, and the deep seas swell
And the profit and loss.
A current under sea
Picked his bones in whispers. As he rose and fell
He passed the stages of his age and youth
Entering the whirlpool.
Gentile or Jew
O you who turn the wheel and look to windward,
Consider Phlebas, who was once handsome and tall as you.
–T.S. Elliot
A memorial service for Ranger Rick will be held at 11 a.m. on March 3, 2012 at St. Philip Church in Occidental.
[CODA]
I went today to our town of Occidental for Ranger Rick’s memorial service. The yellow daffodils he planted were blooming all over town, a gorgeous sight. Rick’s mother and his two grown daughters were there. I think they were surprised by how well-loved he was … and by the host of strange folk, young and old, who were his friends.
Occidental is a time-warp kind of place, a hidden landscape of the mind rather than a geographical location, full of vestigial hippies and other refugees from the 1960s. It’s not even a town. People came from miles around to honor Rick, and to tell stories of how he had touched their lives.
A little girl, maybe five years old, stood up at the microphone and said “I liked Ranger Rick. He was my friend. One day he stopped us from having a food fight, and gave us bouncy balls instead.” From the mouths of babes … kids were always his favorite.
Occidental for a while had a couple of resident chickens, a rooster and a hen. They just wandered around town, kind of town pets. A local merchant told his tale of the Ranger.
“When I came to town to open my pub, Rick started coming around. I asked some of the other merchants who he was. They said ‘He’s the Mayor of Occidental’. ‘Mayor?’ I said. ‘Occidental’s not even a town, it’s just a ‘census designated place’, it doesn’t have a Mayor.’
‘Rick’s the Mayor anyhow’, I was told. So when I saw Rick again I said ‘So I’m told you’re the Mayor of Occidental.’ ‘No, I’m not,’ Ranger said. ‘The Mayor of Occidental is the rooster.’ He was perfectly serious.”
Another man who was living in another town told of taking a job in Occidental. At his first lunch break he went to a local store to get some food.
“I was standing at the counter when I heard the door open. A man who was mostly beard stuck his head in and said ‘Hey … come with me.’ I looked around, no one else was there, he must have been talking to me. I didn’t know what to do, so I turned away, and I heard the door close. In a few minutes it opened again, and the strange man was there again. ‘Hey … come with me.’
I truly didn’t know what was happening. I paid for my food. When I went outside, he was there and said “Come with me!”. He disappeared around the corner of the building. I didn’t know the town, I didn’t know him … people had warned me about Occidental, and now four hours in town and I was already going down the rabbit hole. I peered around the corner. He was just going around the next corner. I followed him out to the edge of town where he had stopped under a tree.
‘It’s here’, he said. ‘What’s here?’ I said. ‘I mean right here on this spot’ he said. ‘What is it that’s here?’ I asked. ‘It’s the Yum-Yum tree’, he said, and pointed upwards. I looked up and to my amazement, the tree was full of ripe pomelos. Rick started pulling them off and piling them in my arms.
He loaded up as well, and we went through a back trail to the main road. ‘Great’, I thought, ‘I just got to town and I’m already a criminal with a demented accessory’. When we got to the road Rick said excitedly, ‘It’s up there!’ and pointed up the road. ‘What’s up there?’ I asked, mystified. ‘It’s big, it erupts out of the ground’, he said. ‘That’s a fire hydrant’ I objected.
‘Exactly’, he said, ‘let’s get it,’ and he started bowling pomelos, uphill, at the fire hydrant. I had no choice at that point—there was nothing left to do but embrace the suck, so I joined in the bowling. I ended up good friends with Rick, and I have to add there’s one thing he did for me that nobody had ever done.
He really improved my pomelo bowling …”
Yeah, that’s Occidental all right—spend half a day there and you end up pomelo bowling with a genial madman … the next guy got up.
“I went over in the morning after Rick died. I took his stash because I didn’t want the police to find it, and I put it in a safe place. So after I finish talking here, I’m going across the street and anyone who wants can help honor Rick … and his stash …”
He drifted off. I saw him later across the street with a half-dozen folks. As sometimes happens in Occidental, the atmosphere in their immediate vicinity had gotten kind of hazy, I think it might be something to do with naturally generated aerosols or something. They were laughing, talking about the Ranger, honoring their fallen friend in their own manner.
So the stories flowed, one hour, two hours, people talking, people weeping, stories from the kids and the dads and the moms. One woman said she’d let Rick sleep on her couch sometimes. She said he never asked for much, but occasionally she’d give him clean socks when he asked for them. Another man stood up and said “I thought I was the only one giving him clean socks”. Yet another man stood and said the same … socks, go figure.
Occidental is a town where the people gave a lost man clean socks … and it is a town where that’s pretty much all he asked for. People gave him the rest without his asking, because in his madness, he worked hard every day at keeping the town sane.
Lots of folks were wearing Ranger Rick t-shirts today, with no words on them, just his face in black and white with his piercing blue eyes. And there was a sign up on a table that said “Everything I need to know I learned from Ranger Rick”, with his photo, and a place for people to write their wishes … and there were pages and pages of good wishes for Rick.
There’s a statue in Occidental of Ranger Rick wearing his worn San Francisco Giants cap, by Patrick Amiot, a local artist. It is fittingly perched on top of one of the trash cans that he used to keep filled.

Ah, Occidental. It’s that kind of town. The daffodils were blooming today in Occidental. Rick planted most of them. He cared for the flowers and talked with them and gave them water. We cared for him and talked with him and gave him clean socks.
Sometimes, life actually is that simple.
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Larry, you’re thinking of the Mayor of Carlsbad. He would walk down to the main intersection in town and greet all of the traffic going north on the Coast Highway. I think it was US101 but I’m not sure. I lived in Santa Ana at the time.
It strikes me that the professional “caring” types – emphatically those on various government payrolls, direct or at some grant-seeking NGO’s remove – never want such eccentrics to be left under their own respective vine and fig tree, and concentrate fiercely upon their victims’ psychiatrization to ensure that the critters in question get “properly medicated” by way of the pharma industry’s blockbuster nostrums, emphasis on the neuroleptics and the mood stabilizers.
Having dealt over the decades with the medical problems of these mentally disabled but largely harmless folk (for such is invariably the job of us lowest-on-the-pay-scale primary care grunts), I’ve gotten to know perhaps more than my share of “Ranger Rick” types as well as more than I like of the professional “carers.”
As civil government intrudes more and more into the private lives of all Americans – for our own good, it’s always argued – I get the impression that our society is less and less interpersonally connected, with people becoming almost completely unfamiliar with the lives of those around them, insulated each from the other by thickening layers of bureaucracy which desensitize us to the needs of our neighbors while denying us knowledge of our responsibilities as well as understanding of our ability to act purposefully and effectively in aid thereof.
I can’t help but think that while this is not a matter of planned policy, the effect is very pleasing to the career politicians who batten upon our loss of genuine community and the increasing vulnerability that loss imposes upon us as a people.
I got it wrong as usual, the man that I knew as The Mayor was in Laguna Beach here along with some others. Maybe my first comment can be dumped.
WILLIS: I would like to know what is your basis for this love of your neighbor/friend? Is it some “feeling?” Is it some “”religion?”
It is definitely right, IMHO, but I am very interested in JUST WHY YOU think it is important to discuss the crazy man here?
Here in Louisville, Colorado, our “Ranger Rick” was a man named John Breaux. He spent the last eight years of his life riding his bicycle all around Louisville and neighboring Lafayette, picking up trash, opening doors for shoppers and generally lifting the spirits of all who came in contact with him. Sadly, tragically, his life ended three years ago after being struck by a car.
http://www.coloradodaily.com/ci_14302783#axzz1nYAJdwBl
A great story – and perhaps a good lesson, especially now. One about being more accepting, setting asides differences and peculiarities, agreeing to disagree and understanding that being different isn’t always bad ….
Our AGW opponents could use a good dose of that today – but so can we all at times.
This story is particularly special to me, as we had our own Ranger Rick as I grew up. He too was from a slightly different planet at times, and was, like Ranger Rick, our local ambassador, honorary mayor, and ultimately, famous resident celebrity.
His name was Jim. Although he had some developmental disabilities he was friendly and often sharp as a tack. He would patrol the city, and got to where he knew most locals, adults and children alike, by name. The community adopted Jim, and made sure he was taken care of and treated well. An acquaintance of mine decided Jim needed business cards, as the official “Roving Ambassador” to the city. From that day he never left home without a stack. Gave him a I think real sense of worth and pride. That simple gesture, was really a repayment to his loyalty and kindness to the community. There were many others along the way, who tried to repay the commitment he made, and service he gave, to the community..
When his family passed away locals stepped in again. Jim needed a responsible adult to escape the care home every day – and a local resident made sure that happened every day.
Jim, as it sounds so to did Ranger Rick, touched a lotta folks lives – most in ways they never realized. Even today, while I haven’t thought of him for years, I remember him with a smile and certain fondness.
One day in June of ’64, as he told the story, Jim snuck into the crowd of about 300 at Big Reggies Danceland to catch a bit of the band. Playing that day was a cat named Mick and his new band the Rolling Stones.
The next day at Bacon’s Drug store, Mick was having a prescription filled, and Jim ran into him again in line at the soda fountain. Jim ordered a cherry coke, but they told him they were outta cherry syrup, and Jim told Mick it was ok, that “you can’t always get what you want.”
Several years later Mick would do the song “You can’t Always get What You Want” – which included lyrics of “went down to the drugstore … to get my prescription filled … was standing in line with Mr. Jimmy … decided that we would have a soda … My favorite flavor, cherry red … I sung my song to Mr. Jimmy … I said to him …You can’t always get what you want.”
Mick has never commented to my knowledge. Mr. Jimmy was at Mick Jaggers next concert in the Twin Cities. Long after I once had a chance and asked him personally,d he just smiled and said – “you can’t always get what you want.”
Some have tried to debunk Mr. Jimmy’s story, but he was unwavering for 40+ years. Some said it had to be true – that Jimmy wasn’t capable of making it up – and I always thought that at the time too. Today I’m not so sure – Mr. Jimmy always had a wry smile, and sometimes a keen sense of humor.
What I do know for sure is he did see Jagger then, was at the next Rolling Stones show, and the lyrics all fit. Unlikely, but just maybe Mr Jimmy did pull one over on us. No one care though, as the story – true or not – perfectly fits who and what Mr Jimmy was … its completely believable it could have happened that way. I guess in a way that’s all we really “need.”
And that is the lesson Ranger Rick and “Mister Jimmy” types can teach us …through their simple lives – their acceptance of, and giving to, others … you can’t always get what you want … sometimes you get what you need …
Mr Jimmy passed away peacefully in 2007 after a long struggle with diabetes. Like I imagine Ranger Rick’s, his memory has a permanent place in the local history and hearts.
Thanks for the post reminding me of this Willis.
Eschenbach’s eagle and Watt’s eagle soar ever higher. I have so many tears in my eyes that I can hardly see to type even after reading the wonderful comments which induced even more tears. Thank you willis. Thank you Antho,y.
Se I wrote I couldn”t type. Try Anthony.
Thank you for posting. R. I. P.
I’m thinking there were enough in Southern California that we might all have been remembering different ones.
To Ranger Rick, who never hurt a fly. And to the good people of Occidental who had the decency and respect to let a man live until he died.
Tucci78 said @ur momisugly February 26, 2012 at 7:30 pm
Never say never Tucci78. My very good friend Jerry from San Francisco worked for many years to achieve as much freedom and independence as possible for the mentally ill with considerable success. He didn’t prescribe drugs, preferring to teach them how to meditate. He’s dying now and I am going to miss him very badly.
Thanks for the story Willis. Living in a rural community we have our share of Ranger Ricks and yes, we care for them. Never got around to making one a mayor though. I host a story about our Lord Mayor and Lady Mayoress from a few years ago, both now sadly deceased.
jae says:
February 26, 2012 at 7:40 pm
Heck, I don’t know, jae. I don’t overthink this stuff, or spend time considering my motives. I can’t say what leads me to pick one subject over another. I write about what is important to me at the time. I’m not a Christian, if that’s your question, I’m a shamanist.
I think it is important to take death as my adviser, because death never gives bad advice. Death always says the same thing in different ways. Sometimes death says “But at my back I always hear, time’s winged chariot hurrying near”, sometimes it’s “Produce, produce, for the night is coming wherein no man can produce”, but whatever death says, it’s always good advice.
Next, I think it is important to celebrate the unquenchable human spirit. I think it is as important to pay attention to our wins as it is to understand our losses. We reasonably spend lots of time trying to figure out what we’re doing wrong, but generally too little time trying to figure out what we’re doing right.
Finally, having spent some time in a couple of nuthouses myself, I have great compassion for those whose spinal telegraph is not quite wired according to the usual blueprints, those whose neural messages may never make it to the intended recipient. So how we treat our crazy folks is of interest to me for personal reasons, because I’ve been on the receiving end of said treatment in the past.
Not sure if this answers your question, but like I said, jae, I generally just choose a path and take it without much pondering the whys and the wherefores. From my perspective, Rick died, and I chose to write about it, and not much happened in between …
Thanks,
w.
PS—Was my feeling for Rick “love of [my] neighbor”? No way. It was respect for a man who was making the best hand he could out of a bad deal of the cards.
I think the community treatment of both Crazy Billy and Ranger Rick is a function of “community size”. In my experience, individuals everywhere and on average tend to be kind and compassionate in their one-on-one dealings with other individuals. Small communities generally replicate individual values and behavior in that regard. Institutional behavior is a different matter entirely and so is individual behavior within the context of an institution.
Large communities inevitably institutionalize most everything, including the care, shelter and feeding of “the crazy ones”. Individuals in such an institutionalized community cease to feel personally responsible for those less fortunate. They rationally suppose (and are assured) that others are being paid with their tax dollars to handle such matters and if they see evidence said affairs are not being properly handled, individuals respond with anger toward the responsible institution rather than compassion and direct assistance for “the crazy ones”.
Big cities suck! But that’s where fame, fortune and most jobs reside.
A kind hearted eulogy, Willis!
I think there’s a bit of Ranger Rick in each and every one of us. Those of us who don’t deny it, recognize bits of him in others also. And when we come face to face with real Ranger Ricks, that small part of us drives our compassion to acknowledge them and show them kindness.
May God bless the kind hearted everywhere ….and carefully cup the Ranger Ricks in His hands of grace.
Thanks Willis, yes it was moving. And thank you Anthony for posting this.
I can’t but think if Occidental had a couple of leftard knowalls, they would have wanted to “help” Rick by mandating the town to “provide” this that and the other for him, for his benefit of course….of course.
I spend a fair amount of time in assisted living and skilled nursing facilities for the elderly. Most of the latter have “lockdown” sections where the severe dementia patients are housed. I also live in a relatively rural area. I’m not sure the approach used for “Crazy Billy” would work for these folks, who would surely wander out in front of a bus, or die from exposure after they’ve wandered off from their homes. Some of these people have family who visit them, some don’t.
Is there a better way to deal with such folks? I don’t know, but I do know you just can’t leave them to their own devices, unless letting them die is an option.
Thanks for sharing.
“I thought long and hard about whether I should publish this one…”
As Sir Anthony thuswise publicly fears his id embodied by Wild Man Willis, he holds Greatness, who anxiously pines to be invited in from the cold, at bay…far away.
Willis Eschenbach said @ur momisugly February 26, 2012 at 8:52 pm
Dunno about you Willis, but for me and several writers I know, writing is (poor analogy) akin to scratching an itch. You don’t seem to have much in the way of choice. I often enough wake in the early hours of the morning and it’s as if I’m being dragged to the keyboard. But that’s more of a what than a why. And I refrained from using my usual analogy ‘cos it’s a bit TMI.
Hope you enjoyed the story about Bronco.
Awesome. I knew a guy like this on an island off the coast on N.C. my wife have vacationed on for almost 15 years. From our (tourist) point of view, he was a little ‘funny’ – he seemed to show up everywhere we were, I suppose because he was much like Ranger Rick – he was kind of the face of the town from our point of view and many of the locals. I recall one trip where it rained really hard, really fast – one of those sudden thunderstorms common on the Outer Banks of NC in the summer. The streets were partially flooded & I saw Doug – up to his shoulder – laying in a huge puddle pulling debris out of one of the only ‘storm’ drains so the water could go the 2 feet or so below the sea level of the street to a small creek. We asked him why he was doing this & he replied ‘because no one else will’. From that time on, I’d buy him a beer everywhere we met & let him have a few of my smokes. Instant respect. We saw him every year for about 10 years until we heard he died in his trailer behind on of the local bait shops in a terrible fire. Supposedly from a propane/cigarette mishap. That to this day still remains a true mystery – although the locals have all kinds of conspiracy theories.
Doug was an odd bird, but he somehow made us feel at home. I still miss that guy – odd as he was – every time we visit & tip a cold beer in his memory.
Jeff Alberts says:
February 26, 2012 at 9:08 pm
Thanks, Jeff, you do difficult and often unrewarding work, my acknowledgements to you.
Certainly there are people who should be locked up, so that the don’t hurt either themselves or someone else. Again, however, the question of how we treat them arises. Unfortunately, we lack the facilities, so some of them end up homeless on the streets.
I watched my Grandma die of dementia, and there was no way she could be allowed out on the street. We were lucky in that my mom and aunt had enough money to keep her in a nursing home.
So as is often the case, I fear I have no magic solutions, except to treat our less fortunate citizens with respect.
w.
Thank you Anthony for allowing this in and to you Willis you made my day brighter and my heart lighter. 🙂
NikFromNYC says:
February 26, 2012 at 9:23 pm
Whaaaa? Anthony thinks long and hard about everything that gets posted here, his good judgement one of the reason the site just won the SciTech and Lifetime Bloggie awards. And since he just won both, it’s hard to claim Anthony is holding greatness at bay …
I note also that after consideration, Anthony published it … hard to argue with success.
All the best,
w.
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