<<
Previous
Home
<< Previous |
Virginia: First Steps -- Blisters
“Road trip,” for millions of college students there are no
sweeter words than these, even 'free pizza' pales in comparison. Whether
it's from the boondocks to the big city or the big city to the middle
of nowhere, everyone feels the pull of unexplored territory at some point
in their lives.
The fall of my senior year at UVA, my friend Jerrod came to my room one
afternoon and asked if I wanted to go on a road trip after we graduated.
Did I ever. I immediately went out and bought a giant map of the United
States. I gave each of my friends little arrows of different colors to
designate the places they wanted to go on our trip. After winter break,
we would sit down together and finalize our itinerary.
That didn't happen. Every one of my potential travel companions returned
with the news that they wouldn't be able to do the trip. They had to concentrate
on graduating, passing the remaining semester, finding a job in the "real
world."
My problem was that I didn't feel that I'd experienced enough of the "real
world" to settle in it yet. The more I thought about it, the more
I realized that my institutional education hadn’t prepared me for
anything more than continued education. I felt gypped and I felt angry.
I was an English major -- granted, not the most practical of majors if
you want real life experience. I spent four years sitting in front of
a computer typing out papers and in classrooms listening to professors
talk. I had been all over Europe, but never further West than Chicago.
It was time to see my own country, and the more I thought about it, the
more I decided that traveling by car would not be sufficient. After all,
how different is watching the landscape pass by in a car than watching
a movie of the same?
Still, I probably would have driven if I’d found a way to do so.
I looked into the car courier services where you drive people's cars across
the country for them, but found none that suited me. I considered biking
across, but I'd done long bike rides before and knew what a literal pain
in the butt they could be. I like to walk. So . . .
Though I hadn’t done any backpacking since Girl Scouts in elementary
school, hiking became more and more the only way to go. I did some research
– something my English major had definitely prepared me for. The
day I found the American Discovery Trail was the day I knew I'd do it.
The ADT is a trail-in-progress that will eventually go from the East to
the West coast,. If someone else thought that hiking across the continent
was possible enough to make a trail, I knew I could blaze my own.
Knowing that I was going to walk across the country was as much a fearful
discovery as it was joyful. I did a lot of uncontrollable shivering. The
first thing I did was e-mail everyone I knew with my plan, thus cementing
my resolve to do so. The responses varied greatly. Friend Adam replied
with a hundred, "Go for it go for it go for it"s and suggested
that I take a gun.
Mom concluded, "Hypoglycemia. Will send more chocolate."
Dad affirmed, "You can do whatever you put your mind to. How can
I help?"
I continued my research and started buying the things that eventually
made up the list below. The day I spent $120 on a back pack was the day
I knew there’d be no turning back. It was the biggest credit card
purchase I’d ever made. I never spent money lightly; that buy cemented
the deal. Three months later I kissed my family goodbye the night after
graduation and went to stare at the monstrous pile of supplies on my unmade
bed:
5 pairs nylon panties
1 pair Moving Comfort shorts
2 white T-shirts
5 pairs each Smartwool socks and liner socks
1 pair surgical scrub pants (for sleeping)
2 bandannas - 1 red, 1 white
Dark blue Poncho
Ugly but very functional beige hat
Blue-and-beige checked flannel shirt that got lost early -- I still miss
it
Compass/thermometer key ring
Gerber (like a Swiss Army knife, only better)
~5 feet of parachute tape (like duct tape, only better) wrapped around
the plastic bottle
Blue Kazoo sleeping bag
Therm-A-Rest Staytek Lite 3/4 Sleeping Pad
Whisperlite International stove with 2 bottles fuel
Kitchen matches
Maps -- trimmed and highlighted to show just the route I'd chosen
Eureka! Gossamer tent
Lowe Alpine Oxbow pack
Vasque Clarion hiking boots
2 Platypus water bags
32 oz. generic plastic water jug
~20 feet of parachute cord
Small bottle iodine tablets
Whistle
First Aid Kit: Band-Aids of all sizes, foot care of all types, 2 snap-cold
packs, 2 Army-issue gauze packs
Bullfrog 36 SPF All-Day Waterproof Sunblock
Prescription glasses and sunglasses
Hard glasses case
Lip balm
Flashlight with extra batteries
$100 in traveler's checks
Credit card for emergencies
Nokia cell phone with leather case
Small spiral-bound notebook with electric blue cover
Suddenly, I realized that I was still wearing my graduation dress --
I couldn’t take that with me. I stripped the dress off, pulled on
the shorts and T-shirt, and ran down to the parking lot with them. My
extended family was thankfully still there trying to figure out how to
fit the kids in on top of all my stuff. When they drove off, I straightened
my T-shirt and realized that I had just tricked myself into the uniform
I'd be wearing daily for who knew how long. As ready as I was to start
this trip, parts of me apparently still needed coaxing.
Telling people that I'm doing this for no greater cause than that of self-enrichment
usually just convinces them further that I am crazy. I looked into getting
funding from a couple of the big-name brands on my gear, but the red tape
involved in that seemed more hassle than it was worth. I feel a twinge
of guilt every so often knowing that there are hundreds of social, political,
and environmental causes that I could support with this undertaking. I
have to believe that I am a worthy enough cause to walk for. Besides,
people consider what I’m doing so dangerous that even the non-profits
probably wouldn't touch me. After five months of doubtful, fearful, and
cynical reactions, I've heard every con argument there is.
"If you do this, you will die."
"America is huge, and boring. You should go to Europe if you want
to hike."
"If you really want a life experience, why don't you go into the
Peace Corps?"
I've never considered myself much of a patriot, but the negative comments
about America annoyed me more than I thought they would. I was bothered
enough a couple of times to ask, “If America is so dangerous, why
do you live here?”
The answer: “Well, it’s not as dangerous as other countries,
but it is dangerous.”
Others pointed to the fact that I'd never hiked solo in my life. In my
teen angst years, I developed a walking habit. When things at home and
in my head got too bad, I went walking -- sometimes for six or seven hours
at a time. I never got further than the local diner.
I had camped out only a few times, and always with friends or family.
I'd never been further west than Chicago -- last summer's experiment to
see if I could make it on my own in the “real world.” I went
to Chicago knowing one person, who helped me find an apartment to rent.
I lived there for three months -- found a job, paid bills, got to know
my way around. Battling the city wasn't easy, but at the end of the three
months I knew that I could do it.
I've never been to the desert. I've never seen mountains more than 4,000
feet high.
I’m going.
"Well, you're going to bring a gun, aren't you?"
No. The only weapons I have are two weeks of intensive self-defense classes
and a cell phone that I had yet to discover was useless in the places
I’m most likely to need it. Tomorrow, I go.
May 18
This morning I woke up at 7 AM – the third morning in a row that
I've woken up at 7 AM. 7,7,7 -- I keep thinking about God, though I'm
a devout Agnostic. My spiritual friend Keith said simply, "Confirmation."
At nine, the crew from "CBS Sunday Morning" arrived. The cameraman
found me as I was walking back to my room and asked, "What are you
doing?"
"I was just emptying my wastebasket."
"Um, could you do that again?"
"Ah, I don't think so."
Channel 29 News called to say that their news crew had been delayed. Would
I mind waiting another half-hour before I left?
"I'm sorry," I said. "I've got twenty-six miles to cover
today."
I wanted to make it clear from the start that I am not trying to get anyone's
attention with this walk. However, word gets around when you've been hiking
around campus for three months with a bright green backpack almost as
big as you are. I've heard myself referred to as, "that pack girl."
With the cameras rolling, I hugged my friends Josh, Kate, Nicole, and
Steve goodbye. Then I walked carefully down the steep Monroe Hill staircase
without looking back.
Before I could celebrate my freedom too much, the Channel 29 News truck
made their late appearance.
“I’m walking,” I said. “And I’m not going
to stop.”
The cameraman took up the challenge with enthusiasm -- the newscaster
walked beside me and he paced slowly backwards in front of us all during
the interview. I have no idea how they edited the “curb!”
and “tree!” warnings that I couldn’t help giving. I
was told later that the piece got 30 seconds at the end of the 5 o’clock
news, which I guess answers that question.
When the news crew left, and as I reached the edge of town, I was suddenly
overcome by a wave of euphoria so great that it nearly brought me to my
knees. I was doing it! At that moment, every doubt and fear still hiding
inside me fled – if only for the moment. What replaced it was a
powerfully sure feeling that I was doing the right thing. The tears I
hadn’t shed in leaving my friends came now as tears of joy and of
relief. Tears – such a human thing – they are the soul’s
way of overflowing, happy or sad.
I took my first pit stop in a building supply store at the fifteen mile
mark. In the parking lot, a bearded man in a shiny maroon truck pulled
up and asked how far I’m going.
I said, "San Francisco."
Instead of laughing, the man looked me over and said that he’d heard
about me on the radio last week. “Good luck to you,” he said.
I wonder how often that's going to happen. Rule #1: No hitchhiking. Until
that first encounter, I wasn’t sure I’d be able to resist
the temptation. Who knows, maybe I’ll cave later, but I figure that’s
less likely if I make an official rule against it. This is my game, after
all.
Lunch was a peanut butter and banana sandwich that I made from an abandoned
banana that I found in the dorm kitchen this morning. Dessert was a giant
slice of birthday sheet-cake with white icing and Keith’s name iced
in blue, “So you can take a little of me with you.”
It's twenty-six miles from Charlottesville to Waynesboro. My dorm mate
Christy Wood’s Aunt Vicky lives in Waynesboro. Since my route is
so far from major roads, the mass e-mail I sent asking for contacts yielded
only three places to stay all across the country. I may be pushing it
by doing so many miles this first day, but, well, I do everything the
hard way. If I wanted it easy, I’d be driving.
Only ten miles to go.
Later: Three months of planning and it never occurred to me to check out
a topography map. At least three of those twenty-six miles were up and
down a mountain.
Halfway up Mt. Afton, I stopped to chew on a sports bar and to contemplate
my lack of foresight. Last week, I completed my self-directed training
with a fifteen-mile hike up and back to one of my favorite professor's
houses. I should've done a lot more of those, but the stresses of my last
semester prevented it. I’d done three-hour practice hikes every
day for three months and counted myself set. Now I’m wondering if
it was enough. It will have to be.
When my friend Jacob showed up with a gallon jug of spring water and a
smile, I could've kissed him. His arrival wasn’t planned –
he just happened to be driving back to Charlottesville tonight –
but to me, he was a gift from the gods.
So I made it. I'm too tired to be exuberant, but I’m definitely
cheerful. Aunt Vicky fixed me up with a plate of fettuccini alfredo and
some steamed carrots. Uncle Tom brought me home a large Arby's roast beef
sandwich. I could have eaten twice the amount.
I took a hot shower that would’ve lasted all night if I'd been capable
of standing that long. I’m sleeping on a bunk bed in the basement.
I’m so exhausted, a bed of nails would be fine.
Have I mentioned that I’m tired? Good night.
May 19
The family cat woke me up at 4 AM by tapping its paw on my nose repeatedly.
Aunt Vicky, who thought I'd like to see myself on the morning news, woke
me again at 7 AM, but all I saw this morning was the foot-high stack of
pancakes and pile of bacon that Vicky’d made for breakfast.
I have a blister on the baby toe of my right foot that's half as big as
the toe itself. The bottom of my left big toe is one long blister. The
backs of my ankles are bloody. Otherwise, I feel pretty good. I wrapped
the worst parts in moleskin and carefully pulled on two layers of socks
before donning my boots. It’s not good to fear your boots the second
day out.
Aunt Vicky was eager for me to be on my way. Not because I'm a burden
or she's busy, but because she's convinced that I'll be successful and
wants to tell everyone that I stayed with the Carter family first.
On the way out of town, people driving to work honked and yelled that
they’d seen me on the news. A woman jogger stopped to say hello,
but not because of the broadcast. She asked me my trail name, thinking
that I was through-hiking the Appalachian Trail. When I told her my real
destination she shrugged and wished me luck. Hiking the Appalachian is
every bit the feat that I’m undertaking; worse maybe – I’m
pretty sure I’ll climb less mountains cross-country than a through-hiker
will. It’s a completely different experience.
Waynesboro was a very hiker-friendly town – one of the few I'll
pass through in which wearing a giant backpack didn’t get me odd
looks.
I walked to the edge of Staunton. At the Augusta County library, I checked
my e-mail for the first time and found a message from Kristin. My friend
through high school and college wrote that she wished she'd said more
in her goodbye and that she'll miss me.
The tone of finality in her note scared me a little. Everyone’s
got the post-graduation jitters. Some people will say that this trip is
an attempt to forestall the inevitable, but the way I see things, I'd
rather be doing this than job hunting any day.
I wrote: “I'm going across the country for six months, not away
forever.”
This first night on my own I stopped at the Welcome Center and ask for
free places to stay instead of staking out my tent for the first time.
They suggested the Valley Mission, a homeless shelter, so off I went.
The lady in charge of the Mission took a Polaroid and my fingerprints.
“All according to policy," she said, and handed me a bunch
of paperwork:
Question: What is your occupation?
Answer: Currently, walking.
Question: Where was your last place of residence?
I wrote in Aunt Vicky’s address. I like my vagabond status.
That done, I was given clean sheets, escorted to a shared room at the
end of the hall, and advised, "Dinner's at five, curfew's at nine."
I don't have any other shoes but my boots, so I walked around in sock
feet. At dinner, a woman who called herself "the loudmouth"
took me under her wing. She clued me in on the fact that the residents
get to eat before the people coming off the street and urged me to grab
the last piece of cake.
We had fish of undetermined origin, overcooked green beans, a roll with
butter, fruit cocktail, a cheddar-stuffed potato, and sheet cake for dinner.
We also each got a can of some generic soda the same color and taste as
cinnamon chewing gum. Everyone complained about the fish, but I was too
busy gobbling it all down to comment.
I thought about walking around town a bit, but my blisters convinced me
otherwise. Instead, I sat in the television/playroom and helped one of
the kids there put a puzzle together -- an endeavor complicated by her
baby sister. The mother of both girls was busy helping the oldest of three
with her homework.
Mom and Dad both called. They seemed cautiously assured by my progress.
Mom’s words of comfort: “You know, blisters can kill you if
they get infected.” Thanks Mom.
I hiked twelve miles today.
May 20
Breakfast – cold cereal with those little carton half-pints of whole
milk– was served promptly at 7:30. The lady in charge woke me up
at 6:00 so that I wouldn't miss it. I wondered why until the kitchen staff
presented me with a gallon-sized Ziploc baggie containing eight individually
foil-wrapped ham and cheese sandwiches and a foot-high stack of oatmeal
cream pies.
My roommate asked a favor of me as I was packing. She said that a relative
of hers, Ruby B. Sprouse, is buried at the cemetery in Craigsville. She
wants me to find the grave and say hello for her.
The blisters are worse today. I limped eight miles and stopped in at a
gas station called Pappy's Place in Buffalo Gap. I called Sara so that
she could find me for our lunch date. Then I pulled off my socks and shoes
to air my feet out during the wait.
A moment later, the station owner's daughter joined me on the curb. Beth
is in fifth grade, soon to graduate to middle school. When I asked why
she wasn’t in school today, she told me about how her mom and the
principal are fighting – Mom's upset that the money she and the
other parents raised in ice cream and picture sales only netted the computer
lab five computers.
Beth and I talked for about an hour before Dad ("He's 63, he mostly
sits around the house.") showed up to relieve Mom at the counter.
Beth loves to read as much as I do. We have much in common, except that
she has had way more boyfriends than I did at that age – seven.
Sara showed up about five minutes after Beth and her mom drove away. We
took the tortilla wraps and berry smoothies she brought from C’ville
into Pappy's Place.
"Don't you want to sit outside?" she asked.
“No thanks, I spend enough time outside as it is.”
Sara paused every so often in our casual lunch conversation to interject
a “You're insane.”
Pappy himself was eavesdropping at the counter a few feet away. When he
started asking questions, I asked if he would like one of the remaining
six and half sandwiches in my pack. He declined, but told me to take a
big bottle of water on the house. When I tugged my socks on to go, he
wished me luck. He looked worried, so I offered to send him a postcard
further down the road. Once he was sure that I wasn't kidding, he gave
me his address.
* * *
I didn't know what a project I'd started when I offered to send that first
postcard. I probably wouldn't have if I'd known that my holiday card list
that year was going to be in the hundreds. The impulse was in part a need
to prove that I wasn’t just another crazy passing through. Also,
I wanted to connect with each of these people that I met in more ways
than an hour or a day would allow. I wanted to repay the kindness. Also,
I wanted to assure the grandfathers and the mothers that I wasn't going
to end up "dead on the side of the road," as my own mother worried
aloud so often. I haven't stayed in contact with most of these people
since that last Christmas card, but I still remember them all.
* * *
The road I'm on, Route 42, is tree-lined and cool in the shade. It would
have been a lovely walk if my bum feet hadn't made every step painful.
About two hours after leaving the gas station, I began scanning the woods
for a place to spend my first night on the side of the road. Railroad
tracks run paralleled the road and there were streams every quarter mile
or so, but I didn't see anything promising. Then I saw a sign for the
North Mountain Wildlife Management Area – a free camping ground!
It wasn’t on my map. I'd have jumped for joy if I were physically
capable of it. To celebrate, I replaced my sunhat with a bright red bandanna.
My jubilance carried me three spirals up the mountain before I reexamined
my map and determined that I must be on Elliot Knob, elevation 4,400 feet.
It was 5:30. I had to find a place to camp before dark. This was not as
easy as it sounds.
The problem with camping on mountains is that the ideal place for a tent
is level ground and that’s not easily found on a mountainside. I
bumbled around in the woods for half an hour before I settled on a ridge
near the entrance. In doing so, I broke several camping rules: The site
I chose looks as if it might be part of a drainage channel, so I’m
praying that it doesn't rain. Also, I only walked about ten feet from
my campsite to pee instead of the recommended minimum twenty-five. Full
disclosure: I'm sure that if I'd felt the need, I would've done my business
there too without digging a cat hole – my attempt to dig one with
a stick failed miserably in the rocky soil.
My excuse for this misbehavior is biting flies -- hundreds of them! No
sooner had I slipped my pack off than an air raid of pain-inflicting specks
descended and began their bloody campaign. I've been taking garlic pills
faithfully for a month now because someone told me that they repel blood-sucking
bugs. Well, I must be the biggest fool on the planet because, to the flies,
that garlic is just a marinade. I am girl flesh con aglio.
I quickly decided that putting up my tent for the first time would be
adventure enough and I could save the first foray with the stove for another
day. Fortunately, setting up the tent was as easy as the directions claimed
it would be – snap the airplane-grade titanium poles together, slide
them through the loops on the outside of the tent, and you’re done.
I tossed my sleeping pad and bag into the tent, grabbed my water bottle,
bag o' GORP, the flashlight, and this journal, and dove into the tent
feet first.
I'm forgoing the usual night ritual of tooth brushing and changing. Instead,
I've stripped to my undies, which is a difficult task since this is a
bivy tent. Bivy is short for “bivouac,” meaning “tent,”
but it might just as well mean “coffin.” It’s barely
big enough for me to lie down with half a foot of space above and a few
inches on either side of me. The sun is setting; I hope to wake when it
rises feeling rested and with feet in better condition. Total miles today:
thirteen.
May 21
"Every day a new hardship, every day a new adventure." That's
my new motto.
I woke up twice last night. The first time, there were flashes of white
light all around and everything was quiet except for the crickets. I thought
the flashes were lightening bugs so I went back to sleep. I woke up again
when rain hit my face. Oh boy, time to find out if I'm in a drainage area.
I leapt out of the tent with my flashlight, yanked down the rain flaps,
and shoved my pack in the tent after a quick check for bugs. A cricket
and two daddy long-leg spiders got in. I'm ordinarily scream-and-cringe
afraid of spiders, but I just grabbed these guys by their namesakes and
tossed them into the drizzle.
It was 5:30. I wanted to go back to sleep, but couldn't, so I watched
the mist outside the tent wall brighten for an hour before I stirred.
Everything was damp; I shoved it in the pack anyway. I didn't bother with
the moleskin this morning, just headed down the mountain.
The morning air was warm but not yet humid. I stepped gingerly down the
mountain, anticipating blister pain, but there wasn't any. My feet felt
fine! After two days of torture I was finally able to walk without limping.
I felt so relieved that I hopped up and down. I hooted into the forest
and grinned 'til my face hurt.
Half a mile after where I'd turned off, I came to a clearing. On either
side of the road, dark green plants grew in waist-high rows that trailed
into the distance. A whitewashed farmhouse, tiny in the distance, sat
snug at the base of a mountain still veiled in mist. I stared and stared,
watching the sun burn away the mist and the green get greener still.
Just outside Craigsville, a maroon minivan pulled onto the shoulder ahead
of me. A woman jumped out and smiled.
“Okay,” she said. “You've peaked my curiosity. Where
are you walking to?”
Penny P. Plemmons is a reporter for the Augusta County paper. She also
owns the Cast-A-Line Trout Farm with her husband Bryan. She asked if she
could take me to her house for an interview and to rest my feet awhile.
It sounded like a more than fair trade to me, so we arranged for her to
pick me up in Craigsville.
Nicole and I had arranged to meet for lunch today, so I called her first
and gave her Penny's number. Nicole was bringing me my belated graduation
present. At first, she wanted to get me a radio headset, which seemed
like a good idea before I started walking. Then I walked a few days and
realized that I wouldn't be able to hear cars coming while wearing a headset.
That, and the weight of the batteries became a concern – even two
AAs are something to consider when you're carrying everything on your
back. After spending that day at the mission with no shoes but my boots,
I asked if she wouldn’t mind getting me some Teva sandals instead.
I needed camp shoes on my feet more than music in my air.
Back at Penny's, I rested. I'd been so busy taking things one painful
step at a time for so long that I'd forgotten what rest was – and
it's only my third day.
I would be a lucky girl if the country were full of Penny P. Plemmonses.
The first thing she did after giving me a quick tour of the farm was to
ask if I needed any laundry done. She lent me a soft robe to cover up
while she threw my dirty things in the washer, then she pointed me to
a giant claw-foot tub for a long, hot shower. Just when I thought that
I couldn’t take any more kindness, Penny sat me down at the kitchen
table with a big slab of still-warm coffee cake. My jaw dropped in amazement.
She dismissed my stunned appreciation by saying that she’d baked
the cake for her son's fifth-grade teacher who was coming for a home visit
today.
Yes, people like this really do exist in the world.
After our interview, Penny left me in her office to check my e-mail while
she took care of some trout-related business. I was proud to report myself
in such good hands to Mom and Dad.
When Nicole showed up, Penny did an encore of her tour and I got to tell
Nicole all the things I'd learned about trout farming. Trout beds are
large concrete troughs. The troughs are terraced so that the fresh water
that flows into the one at the top of the hill flows into the trough below
it and so on. That way, the water gets constantly aerated. The youngest
fish are in the highest trough, with the beautiful full-grown rainbow
trout in the lowest. The Plemmonses use burial vaults for their troughs
– so resourceful, these farmers.
Hanging above each trough is a feeder – a funnel filled with trout
food. A thin stick hangs down from the funnel into the center of the trout
tanks. To feed, the trout bump up against the stick to knock food loose
from above.
I didn't realize that fish were that smart, but Penny says that they soon
learn by trial and error that string equals food. Baby trout, called fingerlings,
must be fed every hour. It takes over a year for them to reach full size.
Penny and Ryan sell their trout live; someone else does the messy processing
work. Looking down into the casks was like finding a leprechaun's stash
of gold and rainbows.
When Nicole arrived, I had to say goodbye to Penny. We were on a mission
to find a gravestone. Across the street from the pay phone where I called
her was a graveyard several acres large. We hiked up the hill and ate
our bag lunches under a shade tree before beginning the search.
The graveyard was immense; we found some Sprouses, but no Ruby B. The
gardener watched us awhile and then asked for whom we were looking. He
said that we could find another cemetery across from the prison. We got
directions.
The Augusta Correctional Center is Virginia's state prison. It's a maximum-security
prison, and looks it. Steep rock cliffs flank either side of the road
for most of the way there. Aluminum hangars crowd the road even more before
you reach the large, glass-enclosed tower that overlooks the main facility.
We kept expecting someone to stop and question us, but no one approached.
In fact, we couldn't see anyone anywhere. The place was as quiet as a
cemetery, but we didn't see any cemeteries or guards anywhere, just solid
walls of gleaming razor wire surrounding a large brick building. We were
doing a fine job of scaring ourselves without company. One glance around,
and Nicole took the first U-turn opportunity and covered our retreating
tracks with a dust cloud.
Back at the pay phone, Nicole and I said our good-byes. She was the last
scheduled visitor from Charlottesville, and if it hadn’t been for
the late hour our farewells would’ve lasted another hour. It was
four o'clock. Goshen, the next town, was still seven miles away.
I walked into Goshen at sunset. When I discovered that there were no Welcome
Centers and only one church, which looked closed for good, I began to
worry. People sitting on their porches watched me pass by with some interest,
but I couldn't bring myself to ask any of them for a place to stay. One
woman collected her children and closed her door when she saw me coming,
then stood behind her lace curtains and watched me pass.
I halted at the edge of town by a slimmed-down version of a mini-mall
– a laundromat, bar, and convenience store. A man coming out of
the laundromat saw me and approached. He asked if I needed a ride somewhere.
I told him that I was looking for a church or some place to pitch my tent.
He looked me over in a way that made me shrink a little and said, "You
know, I've got an extra bed up at my place . . . How old are you?"
I quickly declined his offer and continued walking. He drove back up the
road to collect his laundry and then came back to ask again.
"I'll find a place," I said. "I always do."
“Always” -- I didn't tell him that I'd only been doing this
for three days. As the mountain road got steeper and the chances of finding
a flat spot declined, I got desperate.
The next road I came to had a chain across it with a "No Trespassing.
Violators Will be Shot" sign. I hopped the chain, skidded down the
gravel road, and pitched my tent behind some pine trees on the most stable
ground I could find. The earth here is boggy. Frogs are croaking nearby.
I can still see the car headlights passing by on the hill above, so I'm
shielding my flashlight as much as possible while I write this. Paranoia
strikes deep in the heart of this interloper, but I don't see as I have
any choice. Today's mileage: seventeen.
May 22
If you're bad-ass and you know it clap your hands (clap, clap)! I hiked
twenty-one miles and Warm Springs Mountain (2,950 feet) today. Why I chose
to make the two longest hikes the days I also climbed over mountains is
beyond me, but darn it, I did it. The view from the mountaintop was worth
it. I tried to take a picture, but how do you take a picture when the
view extends 360 degrees; and how do you capture that feeling? You don't.
Some things must be experienced first-hand.
I am now in Warm Springs at the Warm Springs Inn. A German couple own
the inn. They let me put my tent on the little strip of land parallel
to the inn. It's separated by a stream of fresh spring water, the source
of which is about fifteen feet from my tent door.
The lady owner asked, “Won't you be scared?”
I laughed and said, “Not a chance.”
I've even got company. A woman who lives across the road brought her greyhound
puppy Woody over and tied him to the picnic table nearby while she goes
to work. He's obviously used to a lot of attention, because he keeps nosing
my hand and whimpering. This makes it difficult to write, but I don't
mind. I’m overjoyed to have such a friendly companion for the evening.
One cool thing about walking: I get to read all those historical markers
along the road that people whip past in their cars. I've read about many
of the battles that happened on Virginia soil. The names and dates escape
me, but the significance of all that blood shed and honor defended does
not.
May 23
It was drizzling when I woke up at seven, so I lied in the tent and thought
about the two ladies I met the night before. They were running a race
to raise money for the Lung Cancer Association. They asked me what cause
I was walking to support.
I answered, “For myself.” Then I wondered again why I hadn't
hooked up with a charity to do this; it certainly would've made things
easier in some ways. I did look at a few charities at about the same time
I was looking for sponsors. Fortunately, there aren't any untreatable
diseases in my family or my circle of friends. It seemed unfair to randomly
choose a “good cause.” There are too many worthy causes in
the world for me to fight for all of them. Plus, the tone of my whole
adventure would change if its purpose were fundraising.
No, the only way for me to make this journey was for me. How many other
times in our lives do we get to be so selfish than during these transition
times? Presumably, after this walk I'll have to get a real job, settle
down, and do some good for the world (or for Capitalism if it’s
like most other “real jobs”). Honestly, I believe I am doing
good for the world right now. When I make it across (no ifs here), I’ll
be able to tell all those people who claimed that the world’s just
too dangerous to do what I did that – thank goodness – they’re
wrong. I have faith in the universe. Also, I can’t think of a better
way to become well-rounded than by traveling. Enough excuses ...
Nine AM and it's still drizzling. This time, I remembered to put the rain
flaps down so I can just enjoy the sound instead of having to leap out
of my warm sleeping bag and fix them.
The innkeeper came out to ask if I would like some breakfast.
“Just four dollars and twenty cents,” he said, but as soon
as I started to dig through my hip pack for the cash, he said, “Oh,
don't worry about it. Just come sit and I'll get you some breakfast.”
After German pancakes with thick maple syrup, toast with homemade jam,
coffee, and fresh-squeezed orange juice, I carried my dishes to the kitchen
and thanked the innkeeper profusely. He ushered me into the front hallway,
to a closet full of coats left by past customers, and started trying them
on me. A bright blue Cubs jacket pleased him best. He insisted that I
take it.
“You stay warm, now,” he said.
In no hurry to leave this oasis of hospitality, I walked across the street
to the Jefferson Pools and shelled out a well spent twelve dollars to
take a swim in the bubbly blue water. It was like swimming in warm Alka-Seltzer.
I could have floated there all day, especially since it had been drizzling
all morning.
But no, I put my boots back on and kept walking. Mom sent me a care package
by way of General Delivery, so I picked that up at the Warm Springs post
office. The package contained beef jerky, rice cakes, lots of vitamins,
and the beginning of an article she’s writing about me for the local
paper. Then I stopped by the library to check my e-mail. The librarian
and I talked a while and she gave me juice and crackers. Finally, I packed
up my stuff and headed west.
Later: “Service me!” I screamed – at my useless cell
phone. It was several hours later, dark was falling fast, and I was walking
down the west side of Back Creek Mountain (2,445 feet). The lady who offered
me a warm bed for the night was waiting for my call; I was nowhere near
a pay phone. The already familiar dread crept around in my brain. I did
not want to spend another night wondering if I'd wake up to the sound
of buckshot on my tent.
Fortunately, I found an alternative. At the bottom of the mountain I found
the Blowing Springs Recreation Area. It’s got a camping area where
you can pitch a tent or an RV for six dollars per lot and it’s only
half full tonight. Setting up camp took about five minutes; I put the
tent up and rummaged through my pack for cooking implements and utensils.
Then I made my first attempt at using a camp stove successfully and had
a joyous Ramen dinner. I hiked thirteen miles today. Tomorrow, I’ll
take my first steps in West Virginia.
|
Next >>
Next >> |