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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Thanks for this post. Great story, and a nice break from all the climate craziness of the last two weeks. Thanks also for having the wisdom not to try and turn the post into some stretched and strained commentary or analogy on climate stuff — just acknowledge that it’s got nothing to do with it and move on — the story is about society and about life.
Thanks for sharing.
I have an enormous respect for this site. You can not only open people’s minds to the truth but also their hearts. Thank you Willis.
This was a nice memorial to an interesting charcter.
Well done.
Eschenbach”s eagle soars yet again!!!!
Thanks Willis,
In Calgary, we have about 3000 homeless people. We do a fair job of accommodating them in decent, friendly shelters and more permanent accommodations. I was discussing our homeless situation over lunch in Houston last week, while I attended the NAPE oilman’s convention.
Surprising to some, oilmen often do discuss these humanitarian matters – it’s not the heartless, greedy Steven Seagall idiot movie script that the leftists would have you believe. To me, providing a humanitarian, friendly environment for our homeless people and helping the more functional ones get back on their feet is just the right thing to do.
For those who have no compassion for the homeless, I explain it this way: If we had 3000 homeless people in our city streets competing for food, shelter and spare change, our petty crime rate would soar, and costs for everything from policing to hospitals to insurance to building security would soar. At a modest cost, our society provides for these people. The functional ones get back on their feet quickly. The less functional ones, whether they be mentally-ill or substance-addicted, may never get a job or pay taxes again. But they stay out of jail and they don’t hurt anyone. Our homeless support program is a significant net benefit to our society, and costs much less to society than having our large homeless population fend for themselves.
So, in conclusion, the compassion is free – it costs us nothing to do the right thing.
Could we do better for the homeless? Yes we could, at greater cost. When the politicians opened the mental hospitals years ago, they realized that these people did not vote, and tossed them into the streets – and now they live in our homeless shelters.
Our neighbourhood has its own homeless guy named Steve, who hangs out at Safeway and Starbucks and lives off our handouts. Steve is polite, articulate, and invariably cheerful – except when talking with other homeless guys, when he can be more direct. Steve is not interested In the shelters – he sleeps outdoors or finds a warm place on the coldest nights. There are several hundred Steve’s in our city. They don’t do well on really cold nights, and usually die at about age 50.
Regards, Allan
Anthony, you say you thought long and hard about publishing this.
I applaud your decision, Willis I always look forward to your pieces, I find them thought provoking yet stimulating.
This one I really enjoyed, I once worked with a gentleman like this, on one occasion he kissed me fair on the lips then just walked away, I was dumbfoundead to say the least. On another occasion he was singing softly to himself as he swept the workshop floor, when I joined in with his singing, he dropped the broom strode over threatening me with a knuckle sandwitch if I didn’t stop singing, the song he said was his and only his.
In Russia every village, and virtually every quarter in a big city has its own “beloved drunk” who gets fed, helped, talked to, given money, etc. Very kind of the Russians, you would think. But it doesn’t help their society as a whole, and the same “kind” Russians would beat black and blue somebody who does better than they do, looks cleaner, talks in more literate way, or shows some education. If they can, they would burn your house if it looks nicer than their dirty houses.
It is better, of course, to have some kind of a traditional ancient kindness than none. However, kindness toward “the lowest of the low,” characteristic of any savage Medieval and Oriental society, is often a form of feeling better about yourself without doing much. Something akin to watching horror movies in order to come out from the movie theater and feel a relief: your life is not that bad!
I know, I know. I am a “poisonous worm spreading around vile ideas,” as Mr. Eschenbach put it so kindly. A specialist in kindness, Mr. Eschenbach, isn’t he?
jae says:
February 26, 2012 at 7:40 pm
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?”
————
Hiya jae
My Grandpa told me, “There was a time when a question like this was never thought of”… “It was part of a moral compass and social integrity”. He went on to say, ” Now a days, people question your motives for doing an act of compassion or even taking an ethical stand”. [ Kinda like when Mr Watts told Mr Jones about some passwords on a server – I think ]. “When people ask or question motives these days…it shows how society has become calloused”, he said.
“Why should a question, like this, even be asked… that is the heart of the matter, isn’t it?”
I think, he may have a point?
Maybe we should think about Gleick in this context. A ‘genius’ who has suddenly become self destructive. There is a scientist in the man, it may be deeply hidden but I think its still theie Maybe, just maybe Gleick has had a revelation that his entire world view was predicated on lies. Depressed people often become self destructive and a little compassion in our comments may be in order. Sorry if it sounds like psycobabble, but Its the way I feel anyway…people are just people.
Good on you, Willis, for honoring this man’s life and the town where he lived it. And good on you, Anthony, for giving us this little time and place to help Willis perform the honors. His writing, your publishing, our reading, are all pieces of the same ceremony.
BEN ARONOFF’s photo of RIck Kaufman above should be nominated for whatever portrait photography prizes are going. He has captured the essence of a man who had lived a pretty hard life, but did so with a sense of humour and kindness.
Thank you Willis and Anthony.
I think all of us know some person like Ranger Rick. Sometimes just somebody, but often a former schoolmate or even a family member. A story like this is quite moving and hopefully makes us all a little better. Life is not just climate, but we all breath the same air.
Hari Seldon says:
February 27, 2012 at 12:36 am
[“……………………………………..”]
I alway thought a “genus” was smarter than me 🙂
Do you understand the differences between compassion and false compassion?
One of the best explanations I’ve heard is by this man.
http://www.mikeadkins.com/article/bishop-fulton-sheen-on-false-compassionpart-i/
http://www.mikeadkins.com/article/bishop-fulton-sheen-on-false-compassionpart-ii/
Granted, the presentation is by a religious..but then again, I’ve been known to read NASA and IPCC reports. 🙂
Trying again…it ate my other post 🙂
Hari Seldon says:
February 27, 2012 at 12:36 am
………………….”
I always thought “geniuses” were smarter than me 🙂
There is a difference between compassion and false compassion. I gave a link in my last post to a presentation – it might have been what sent my post to the spam bin. Do a google for – sheen false compassion 1 & 2
Alexander Feht says:
February 27, 2012 at 12:18 am
Dang, Alexander, did someone poop in your porridge or something? That is the most depressing view of human charity I’ve ever read. And I’m sorry to hear that your Russian friends would “burn your house if it looks nicer than their dirty houses”, my Russian friends wouldn’t do that, but I’m sure you’re not kidding about your friends, the sincerity is obvious … I certainly hope your life improves, it sounds terribly dreary.
Say what? A google search for the phrase returns
so the Internet seems remarkably short of support for your claim.
I don’t know what I said before that has you all lathered up, Alexander but whatever it was, you are misrepresenting it now, and trying to put words in my mouth that I never said, both of which are very ugly habits. Which makes me suspect that you richly deserved whatever it is I actually did say.
Short version? Bad Alexander, no cookies.
w.
PS—Am I a “specialist in kindness” as you sneer? Heck, no. I am just a fool trying to take an honest human path through the mysteries of the planet, and having to defend myself from witless attacks from charming folk such as yourself along the way. I have plenty of compassion, but not a scrap of pity. You make your bed, you lie in it, that’s true for the both of us.
Thank you Mr Eschenbach, and Mr Watts. You are both true gentlemen.
Johnny in NQ
Hari Seldon says:
February 27, 2012 at 12:36 am
First, gotta love your screen name.
Next, I’ve been thinking about Gleick. My conclusion is that he truly didn’t understand why the skeptics are winning. I mean, there have been billions of dollars spent on trying to establish the AGW hypothesis, and still there are lots of scientists who don’t believe it. That seems to be a huge puzzle to some.
Now, there’s two ways to understand that. I understand it as a predictable result of the Climategate folks lying and conning people. People hate to be conned, and it will be a long time before they trust the conmen again.
On the other hand, Judith Curry and many others get all exercised and claim it’s a problem of scientific communication, and how this is a huge communications failure. But there have been billions spent, and communication still failing. Why is that?
The obvious answer for an AGW supporter is treachery, that is to say bad actors on the other side. Skeptical people who do all this terrible stuff to screw with decent, honest scientists. And of course, there has to be some evil mastermind who is behind what is always described as the “well-financed” opposition to AGW …
So I think Dr. Gleick was convinced that by scamming Heartland he truly would uncover the secret Protocol of the Elders of Skepticism, that he was going to find the financial wellsprings of the entire foul nest of disbelievers that were always getting in the way of decent science. I think he truly believed that he would discover things so bad it would discredit the skeptics forever … but he found nothing. Even the Koch brothers weren’t funding climate activism.
I also suspect that when he found that there was no smoking gun in the Heartland docs, he couldn’t resist sexing it up by writing the fake document. As evidence, Mosh picked Gleick out of 7 billion people on the planet as the author of the fake, and made a public prediction based on the stylistic peculiarities of Gleick’s writing alone. That counts for a lot.
And anyone who is convinced enough that there is some secret skeptic cabal financing the whole deal that they would commit wire fraud to try to prove it, they would likely go with the old “fake but accurate” idea once Plan A fell through. He’d tried to get the data for what he was 100% positive must be going on, but even though he didn’t find it, that doesn’t mean it’s not going on, absence of evidence is not evidence of absence after all … so he just solved the pesky absence of evidence problem.
Sigh … the only upside is that he’s given a clear demonstration of the moral bankruptcy of far too many of the AGW supporters …
w.
Alexander Feht said @ur momisugly February 27, 2012 at 12:18 am
Mr Feht, I am inclined to agree with you. And Willis. You are [behaving like] a poisonous little worm.
When the Git first arrived in the little village of Franklin with his future wife, we were poor. Not quite “too poor to have a pot to piss in” as the saying goes, but we had spent every last cent we could muster to purchase a hovel on 10 acres of land. My first act on the day we moved in was to knock on the next door neighbour’s door to say I would be happy to help fight the bushfires that were raging around the valley. Monday saw me helping as much as someone who never did such things before could. It was an interesting introduction to country life and I came to know a little about our neighbours and they about us.
The following week saw Jimmy Hay bringing us a great slab of frozen squid and six “point-of -lay hens” that had all turned out to be male, rather than female. The next door neighbour, Ivan, lent us some irrigation pipe and an electric fence energiser so I could start a garden. His brother gave me several dozen bales of spoiled hay so I could make compost. Over time we managed to build a comfortable life in this community. I was president of the volunteer fire brigade for several years. Mrs Git was treasurer of the community youth support scheme and obtained a huge number of tree seedlings for planting out on the foreshore. I could go on…
Today we live in a small luxurious home that attracted people from as far away as Canada to come and help me build it. We now live in a community that has gone from being shabby and downtrodden to being spick and span and proud of its achievements. Mrs Git and I are far from solely responsible for this, but when we pitched in and did things “the way they used to be done” enough followed suit to reverse the melancholy. And we helped newcomers who wanted to learn “country ways” how to join in.
Mr Feht, you do not have to behave like a poisonous little worm. You could instead help build a better world. While the statists want to keep rescuing people from the river, some of us venture upstream to find out what, or who is pushing them in. In the immortal words of Frank Zappa, paraphrasing Jesus’ declaration that the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand: “You better dig it while it’s happening”.
I wish you no ill will Mr Feht. The “People’s Paradise” you describe reminds me very much of Camp Hill housing estate in Nuneaton where I spent the first thirteen years of my life. Happily, I left it behind. Don’t you think it’s time to leave Russia behind?
My own Ranger Rick was called Siddy Martin. He had been seriously shell shocked in WW1 and spent his time between conducting bayonet charges on our local beach and picking up litter in our village and binning it. He often picked up things that were not left or lost, including my mothers bicycle on many occasions. He pushed his life along in a pram and lived in a galvanised tin shack with a stove in the middle and a hole in the roof for the smoke. We kids would join the bayonet charges across the beach, sometimes twenty of us with all the holiday people joining in. We used to go with father to dig up mothers bike from Siddys back garden, and redistribute all the other things he had collected. Father would give him a lift up the steep hill from the beach on his motorbike, with the pram towing behind.
Not many places left for the Siddys and Ranger Ricks.
(Add extra commas, dashes, and parenthesis to taste)
Willis Eschenbach said @ur momisugly February 27, 2012 at 1:59 am
Communication is an exchange of ideas. It requires listening to and absorbing what the other says. I don’t think that Judith gets this yet, but there’s hope 🙂
All too often I think that we forget the undeniable truth that it does not matter how smart you are (or not perhaps). What matters is how you apply this. You can choose to live a good life and do good things. Or you can choose to do bad things.
As a scientist for instance, you can choose to ignore evidence and sell your (scientific soul) as Gleick et al do and just like they say: “The road to hell is paved with good intentions” and boy is the slope slippery.
If you always attempt to do the right thing or attempt to always tell the truth and are willing to always admit to say you are wrong, then you will never back yourself into a corner like Glieck.
In this instance, that was his problem…he was not willing to admit defeat or that he was wrong. This is why the tale of Ranger Rick could be beneficial to him and others.
Here is a man who overcame everything and still did good and still made a name for himself in his corner of the world. We must all work within our own limitations. We are not all Gods and/or perfect. The first time you admit that and admit that you might be wrong, that is the first time you realize that you do make mistakes and that you might be wrong about your positions.
I think applying this story to the AGW scientists would go along those lines, but as a stand-alone story the story is powerful enough by itself to show that we can all accomplish quite a bit by ourselves within our own limitations. The secret is to realize our limitations but then to make a difference despite this. Then go that extra mile. It is never enough to just settle for par.
Great story of one of those people who make a difference but too often never get told. I would much rather hear about him then celebrities myself.
Thanks for the account. Very moving.
And it seems from the comments that there are many parallel figures around the globe; and as many good people who display tolerance, kindness, compassion and the good sense to give the man space and freedom. To be his own nutty self.
Not all is lost in this Vale of Tears…
RIP Ranger Rick.
Thank you Willis and Anthony, and for the reminders from others of man’s humanity to man, which like hospitality I’ve found the world over.
Mr. Sturm (“The Pompous Git”),
I don’t know, what you are talking about, but it is obvious that you are not talking about anything I’ve said. I don’t live in Russia, the Russians I discussed are not my friends, and I never said they were.
You know nothing — zero, zilch — about who, how, and how much I help. Unlike you, though, I would never boast about it in public. Your pitiful self-praise is quite disgusting.
As to the “poisonous worm spreading vile ideas,” Mr. Eschenbach posted here on October 20, 2011 at 12:07 pm, the following: “…you unpleasant little worm…You are a slimy person, Alexander,… your vile ideas and nasty claims poison the very air around you.”
Now he says this: “I don’t know what I said before that has you all lathered up, Alexander but whatever it was, you are misrepresenting it now, and trying to put words in my mouth that I never said, both of which are very ugly habits.”
[snip]
Willis,
You knew the Olema Diggers? I visited there for a few weeks. I was there for the Rolling Thunder exorcism. I was more involved with the Briceland Branch. Samurai Bob and I were tight. And of course me and Grizzle. I heard a year or two back that Bob is gone. I hope his spirit is where it needs to be. And who could forget Peter…. I also spent a few weeks at Black Bear.
Contact me if you like.