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Showing posts with label GoPro. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GoPro. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

T+135: Stalled in Central New York

Centennial, Wyoming:  My body is not liking being off the bike. The daily vigorous exercise suited me.  My digestion has slowed to crawl; my shoulders and neck ache. I am having trouble sleeping.  The daily walks are helpful, but obviously not sufficient.  Today, we got my beloved Kuwahara mountain bike running.  We took a small jaunt in the 40 mile an hour wind.  My coat blew up like a balloon.

My 1986  Kuwahara reminds me of previous trips we have taken.  I rode that little stump jumper from Jasper, Alberta to Yellowstone, from Montreal to Halifax and back to Quebec.  It’s been on the backroads of Yellowstone during the Great Fire of 1988.  It’s been to Boulder and back a few times, and all around Wyoming.  None of these rides asked as much, nor delivered as much, as the most recent journey. 

Earlier trips were vacations, escapes, a hoot.  The trek across the country was a quest… to see what was going on in our country , to be sure.  But it was also to find out who I was after years of submersion into grievous overwork.  I had trouble seeing my personhood separate from my work.  Even though it was killing me, I couldn’t find a way to reduce it or make it relent.  The only thing I knew to do was something completely different.
Now that we are back, we cannot perceive what our life will be like in 6 months.   We are still in the sacred space of the trip, telling its tales and trying to mine its teachings.  As we wound through central New York, we thought we were on the downward slope, and getting close to that victory dance.  Wrong, wrong, wrong.  There was still plenty to learn about persistence, commitment, and dumb luck.   The first teacher was the little town of Fulton.

Mile 3695, Fulton, NY
We ride into Fulton and the first thing we see is a pretty lake.  We go over to it.  The next thing we see is a huge warning sign, “NO SWIMMING, NO WADING, DO NOT EAT FISH FROM THIS LAKE. If you get lake water on yourself, rinse immediately.”  It doesn’t say what the toxin is or what caused it.  We wonder about the flocks of geese and ducks paddling about on the lake.  Are they being poisoned?
As we leave the lake, we look across the street and immediately see a big Wal-Mart.   As we ride into town, we start to see the tell-tale signs of economic distress: empty buildings, abandoned homes, beater cars, pay-day loans, houses that haven’t been painted, faded For Sale signs, rusty fences, hand-made business signs.  At one of these handmade business signs on a faded old house, we stop.  The sign says “No Biggee Coffee House” and something about its home-grown look is appealing to us.
As soon as we step in side, we are warmly greeted by the proprietor.  She is a European American woman, with faded blonde hair, strong arms, and snapping, bright blue eyes.  We look around for a place to sit.  In the former living room, there are a series of second hand lounge chairs and saggy couches nestled around a makeshift stage sporting handmade signs announcing Game Night and Open Poetry Night.  We find two chairs around a well-used wooden table in the former dining room. 
We go to the handmade wooden counter and ask about latte’s.  They don’t have that kind of a machine.  How about some regular coffee? Fine.  She pours us two big mugs of coffee from the domestic drip coffee maker.  “Those are 50 cents each…so $1 dollar, please.” We are surprised at the low price.   Well, we better get a pastry, too.  “They’re all home-made,” she offers.  Wes gets the coffee cake, and I get the cinnamon roll.  Mine is delicious, but Wes’s is very dry. “That’ll be $1 dollar each, and they come with coffee, so you owe me another dollar.”
We are seated next to a middle aged couple who look like they just came off a 1950’s farm.  She has dyed blonde hair in a soft bouffant and is wearing a cotton shirt with small flowers.  He could stand to lose a few pounds, but has a round, open face with his short hair carefully Bryl-creamed into place.  They smile at us and say “Hi.”  This group is joined by a young woman, perhaps 17 or 18, who might be the daughter? niece? guardian? of the proprietor.  She is all excited about a fund-raising effort she is doing for a school club that  will use the funds to visit colleges.  She is taking orders for pies.  She makes a sales pitch at the couple’s table and at ours.   We explain we are just passing through; the farmer’s wife says they are too expensive at $22 a pie.  The farmer says he doesn’t thinks schools should be promoting the eating of sugar.
About that time a rather round young man comes in.  He is a regular.  The proprietor asks if he wants his usual.  He does.  She fixes him some sort of big sugary drink, which excites a comment from the farmer sitting next to Wes.  “See... this is what’s wrong with the American diet…too much sugar…too much wheat.  It just stimulates the production of bacteria in the gut.”
The young man is blissfully sucking his drink through a straw, when a handsome, slender, dark-skinned African American man comes into the coffee house.  Everyone greets him.  “Hey, Lionel!”  He goes over and gives the proprietor a big hug, “Hey, baby.”  The farmer’s wife leans over to us and whispers confidentially.  “They’re newly-weds…aren’t they cute?”
The young man with the drink goes up to Lionel and stops him in his tracks by saying, “I sure was sorry to hear about your son.  It’s real bad when someone so young dies, isn’t it?”  There is silence in the room.  Lionel finally smiles at the young man who seems totally unaware of his blunder.  “Thanks for your condolence.”  The farmer whispers to us that the son had died of a heart attack, even though he was just a young teen.  He gestures to a sign announcing a chicken dinner benefit for the family to help pay for the costs.
Lionel extricates himself from the young man, and scoots behind the counter to grab the coffee pot and re-fill everyone’s mugs.  We offer to pay for the re-fill, but…  “Oh, no, refills are free.”
About that time, we are joined by another 30 something woman, who has bangs and long blonde hair curling around her stout shoulders and thick back.  The teenager immediately accosts her with the pie sales pitch.  Ms Bangs looks at the prices, blanches, then declares, “I make all pies myself…bread, too, pasta, even. All that store bought stuff is no good…too expensive and full of all kinds of junk.”   This statement is confirmed by the farmer. “See that’s just what I’m saying!”
The teenager is none too pleased by her sales failure and she wails, “How am I ever going to go to college if I don’t make my sales.”  Her mother/aunt/guardian offers, “I don’t know how you will afford to go college. Period.”  The teenager offers, “I could get a job.”  Lionel asks, “What kind of job can you get?”  Teenager, “I could get one like yours.”  Lionel, “You have to have a car.”  Teenager, “You have to have a car to work at Domino’s?”  Lionel, “How else are you going make the deliveries?”  Teenager: “They don’t give you one to use?”  The whole room laughs.  The Mom? asks, “How would you get a car?”  Teenager, “I don’t know.  Why is it all so hard!?”  Ms Bangs, “That’s just the way it is.  Nothing is as easy as you think.”  Whole room: “Boy, ain’t that the truth,  That’s right, mmm-hmm.”
At that point, Lionel announces he has to get to work.  He goes over to hug his wife.  She asks, “That’s all?”  He glances around, decides to take a chance, and gives his new wife a nice big kiss.  As he exits, he says, “I’ll be back after a while to help you clean up.”
Wes and I decide we best be moving on, too.  At that point, the farmer pulls out a folder, reaches in, and gives Wes a flyer telling about a website and some products he is promoting.  It is promoting a wheat and sugar free diet, and he is selling some amino acids to promote better digestion.  He says, “I lost 40 pounds since I started following this diet and using this stuff.  You go on the website and you can find out all about it.”  Wes takes the paper and prepares to leave.  The proprietor has stepped away, so he just leaves a $5 dollar bill on the counter, hoping they will take the hint about their prices. 
As we ride away, we can see that the town is hanging on by a thread.  The downtown businesses are mostly closed.  We decide to push onto the next village just six miles away, where there is supposed to be a small motel.   As we walk our bikes up the hill (my knee still complaining), we talk about whether No Biggee can make it.  We hear a lone saxophonist practicing jazz in a small house across the highway.  The player would play a bit, stop, then try again, this time a little better, a little stronger.  By the time we had cleared the hill, s/he was able to play the whole phrase.   That’s our wish for the folks at No Biggee—that they’ll find a way to keep doing just a little better until they can do all right.
We make our way to the hamlet of Volney, where we cannot find the motel.  I call the number a few times.  It rings and rings.  Finally, we go into the Ace Hardware and ask about the motel.  The young man working the counter has never seen or heard of this motel.  Just at that moment, a customer with a prominent bandage on his neck comes the counter.  The counterman asks the customer about the motel, who immediately asserts, “Naah, that’s been out of business for a long time.”  Are there any other motels about?  “There’s one Fulton.”  We just came from there, we’d prefer not to backtrack.  This causes a great deal of consternation and “Is there one in…? How about in….? There’s definitely one in Oswego.”  We’re not going that direction. After much back and forth, checking the computer, contemplating routes…nope, we have to go back to Fulton and stay at the Riverside Motel.  Sorry.  
On our way out, we ask the young man about Fulton.  It seemed very depressed.  He says, “You shoulda seen it before.  Man, it was something.  We had Nestle’s, Birds Eye, and Miller.  Everyone was working and the town was just humming.  Did you know that Nestle’s had its first factory in America here in Fulton?”  We ask if there are is any signs of rebirth.  He shakes his head, “There’s some talk of Birds Eye starting something here again, but I’ll believe it when I see it.”

We make our way back into town, past the abandoned Nestle factory to the Riverside Inn.  Once, it was a standard bearer.  Now it is showing its age with stained carpet, peeling wall paper, and a rutted parking lot.  We ask the young man serving as the desk clerk about the town.  He replies, “It sucks.  I can hardly wait to get out of here.”  Thinking of our encounter at No Biggee, we tell him we have met some nice people who trying to get things going.  He snorts, “Nice people! Not too many of those around here, if you ask me.”
The room is not at all expensive, but is full of all sorts of extraneous furniture like a couch in the entrance and a storage chest along the wall.  It is crowded and a bit dank.  The restaurant is closed, but they have some food in the bar.  It’s 10 wings and 2 beers for $10 night and there is a small crowd.   The waitress has her small son and infant in the bar and steals moments to attend to their needs.  The next morning, she is working the front desk and the tall man who was in the bar is serving as manager/maintenance/whatever. 
A full hot breakfast comes with the room.  There is one waitress, who is working hard, especially for a group of what appears to be construction workers, who have her coming and going, getting more food, more drinks, on and on.  When they leave, the table is a mess, there’s a lot of uneaten food, and they have left no tip.
She says to us, “Those guys do that every day. Never leave a tip.  Ask for everything.  I’m only getting $7 bucks an hour and working 14 hours a week.  I need the tips, but they don’t give a damn.”
We have decided to make the best of this rest day by doing laundry, correspondence, and dealing with Wes’ broken Go-Pro camera.  This gives us another view of this broken down town.  The laundromat is crowded.  We are greeted by a man who yells a story at us that makes no sense.  When he goes into the Laundromat, he is scrupulously avoided, even when he directly speaks to someone.  There is a large group of young Spanish speaking men, who point at our bikes, especially the bike trailers, but do not speak to us.  An older man with Downs, who may be at the Laundromat in some official capacity, goes from person to person, wishing each one well.  A tired looking woman with an adult son, cleans and sorts and stacks an enormous pile of laundry.  She apologizes to us, saying, “My washing machine broke down.  Don’t know when it’ll be fixed.”
Wes has spent hours on the phone with the Go-Pro camera people because this nearly new camera will not turn on and will not charge.  After a series of tests, which the camera fails, they tell us to send the camera back and they will issue a new one.  That’s great, but how can we get while we are on the road?  There are multiple confusing phone calls as Wes tries to work out the logistics.  Long story short, we have to send the camera back and they will send the camera on to one of our future destinations. 
There is no UPS or Fed-Ex store in town--closed.  There is a mailbox place that can send it.  Ok, back across town with all the information.  Wes asks the woman if she can print the mail label from the email Go Pro sent.  “Oh, no.  We don’t have any email access at this store.”  "Well, if I pull the email up on my computer, can we use the printer here?" I ask  “Oh, no.  That’s not allowed.  You have to go over to the library.”

Back across town again.  The library is next to the post office.  Wes will mail some letters, while I go start printing the labels.  Oops, bad plan.  I go the library and realize I have neither lock nor money.  I have to wait until Wes comes before I can start.  There is another young woman waiting just outside the library.  She is morbidly obese, and on oxygen.  She can only move a few feet at a time, before she has to sit down on her walker.  She calls for a taxi, then makes another phone call while she is waiting. The conversation grows more and more heated.  She is quite upset because a former roommate came into her apartment while she was gone and took something.  The person on the other end apparently didn’t think the offense was so bad.  The conversation becomes ever more heated until the young woman screams into the phone, saying, “I don’t know why you are trying to stress me out.  If you don’t watch out, I’ll have a heart attack and just die!”
I am relieved when Wes returns and we are able to print the labels.  There is one librarian in the large 1900's  edifice.  He is running around like mad, helping people with computers, answering reference questions, checking out books.  Back at the mailbox place, the clerk easily prepares the camera for shipping.  We ask her about the local economy.  She says it bad, really bad, but maybe the Bird’s Eye thing will help some.  I say I think it makes sense for Fulton to become a processor of the local apple harvest.  She says, “Oh, no, I don’t think there is enough apples to do anything with them.”  We say we just rode through miles of apples.  She insists there’s nothing to be done.
We stop at a shop on the way back and see that it has notices for 4 chicken dinner benefits for people experiencing some sort of crisis.  We have been up and down, back and forth in this town.  The signs of hope, local organizing, urban agriculture, or maker-space entrepreneurship, so common in Detroit, are nowhere to be seen in this little town.  We have seen a lot of despair, too much negativity, and a fervent belief in future negative outcomes.  It makes us sad and makes us want to leave.   Sore knee or no, we’re heading out tomorrow. 
 
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posted from Centennial, Wyoming

Sunday, June 30, 2013

T+6: And so it begins...we hope


PORTLAND, OR:  We arrived today to sunny, hot Portland.  We had a magnificent view of Mt. Hood as the plane circled.  It is a huge massif, completely snow enrobed.  Wes spent the entire flight from Denver peering out the window.  We played a guessing game:  “Is that the Red Desert?  Is that Bear Lake?  Is that Boise, ID?”  The skies were clear and the view was amazing.  We saw the volcanic cones of the Cascades from our window and were immediately humbled.  These mountains are obviously named Cascade because of the roaring way the water comes off the steep sides.   We will have our work cut out for us on the first part of this trip.
We have been a jumble of nerves and exhaustion that reached a boiling point last night.  Since we left Detroit on June 22, our life has not yet slowed down.   It is always a fairly rough passage to get to the cabin two days, but we have done it often and know all our favorite stops along the way.   It has become a matter of ritual for us to stop at the Pioneer Co-op in Iowa City.  Here we pick up our fill of good Midwestern produce, fresh hand-made bread, and rich organic coffees.  We know well that such delicacies will be rarities in the wilds of Wyoming.  We stop in a park for a picnic, but are chased away by the swarming mosquitoes breeding in the remainder of the flooded Iowa River.

I ask Wes, “what will we do if we when we are on the bike and the mosquitoes swarm.  There won’t be a car to hide in.”  We remind ourselves other mosquito swarms on other trips and recall our cries for mercy, and our setting up and hiding in the tent for a moment of respite.
Then it is a straight push to Des Moines, where we always stay at a Candlewood Suite and eat some of the food from Iowa City.  One of the delights of this lodging is their video lending library.  We checked out The Way, which was particularly appropriate for us to see at this time.  In the movie directed  by Emilio Estevez, featuring his father Martin Sheen, the meaning of journey is explored.  Each of the characters takes El Camino de Santiago (The Way of St. James) in Spain, saying they are looking for one thing---to quit smoking, to start writing, to lose weight---but find that the journey brings the knowledge they need, not the knowledge they sought.  Throughout the film, the constant refrain and greeting is “Buen Camino” ---roughly good path, good way.   We are thinking a lot about the bike trip, wondering what we will learn, wondering where our tempers will break, and who we will meet along the way.

The next morning, we take a tiny detour to see a working Danish windmill.  As we take a walkabout the minute Iowa town, we see men two staring pensively into the southwest.   The wind is blowing sharply, so I ask, “Does it look like tornado weather?”  “The tornado sirens are blowing in Walnut” is the reply, which is supposed to tell us something, but does not.  We continue our walkabout, when strangers stop us on the street to warn us of “big storm coming”.  We ask where we should go, we are not from here. The answer is go to the Danish Immigration Museum, where they have a good basement.  
We start to make our way there, a good six blocks away, when another Iowa woman, appears at the door of her house and announces to us, “It’s a complete lockdown.  You need to get to shelter right now.”  She considers offering her place to us, but is relieved when we ask, “Should we go back to the Windmill?”  She agrees, “Yes, go there.”  The sky is blackening, and the wind is rising hard, when Wes and I begin running to the mill.  Giant raindrops are pelting when we duck inside, just in time.  A few seconds later, the wind is pushing the rain sideways, the trees are whipping, and it is impossible to see across the street.  The radio is screaming warnings of 70-90 mile hour winds.   We are glad to be inside, in a room far from windows and blowing tree debris.
As quick as it came, the storm left.  When we drove back to the interstate, the road was scattered with all sorts of tree debris, including a few big limbs.  Again, we wonder, what would we do if we were on the bikes during such a violent storm.   Again, we remember hunkering down under an overhang and watching a storm lash our bikes, but not us.

By the time we get to Sidney, Nebraska, it is clear that we have entered the West.  The hotel is full of oil field workers and the prices reflect it.   We choose to eat breakfast at the hotel and regret it.   Like the room, it is flashy trash: bad, cheap ingredients gussied up to look fancy, but in reality, plastic and shoddy and fake.   We are glad to realize that it is only 180 miles to our cabin.

When we get there, it is refreshingly cool, not more than 55 degrees.  The cabin is like a long cool drink on a hot day.  It takes us a little while to open it up.  I can’t rest until the full load of furniture, dishes, and whatnot has made it to its new location.    We are super pleased with how all of it works.  We argue about whether Wyoming looks dry or wet. 
Wes goes out to get a piece of lumber to reinforce our kitchen shelves, now sagging under the heavy load of dishes, and terrifies a young male moose who was quietly, and apparently habitually, eating in our yard.  Wes tells him that he doesn’t have to leave, and to our astonishment, the moose stops, seems to consider the proposition, before deciding that this yard was not big enough for the both of them.   He is a beauty, at least 6 feet tall, 300 or more pounds of moose muscle, with his 2 inch antlers still in velvet.  This is by far the closest I have ever been to a moose, and I was thrilled.
The next day is consumed by errands.   We have to get Wes’ bike shipped to Portland, and we spend hours, truly hours, trying to figure out Wes’  GoPro video camera.  The camera is communicating with the camera is complicated.  I fuss at Wes because I told him months ago to get started figuring out these systems.  He keeps saying, “Who thought it would be so difficult?”  I remind him, over and over, I did. 
The next day is the belated filing of our federal taxes, which goes well until it is time to submit and we realize that we are out of ink and the closest store is more than 40 miles away.  We don’t have internet at the cabin at this point in time, so we go to the nearby hamlet of Centennial and try three different locations before we are able to submit our taxes online.   The technology is difficult and balky, and requires downloads, and re-booting, and failures, and retries.  We are exhausted, stressed, and cranky by the time we are done.
Then we have to go back to the cabin and begin closing it up so we can be on the road by 5 am the next morning.   We work at it, and are so exhausted, we go to bed by 9, but are so keyed up, we are awake by 2 am.  We close up the cabin, (a multi-part process that requires draining all the pipes, among many other things).   Our dear friend takes us the 130 miles to the Denver airport, where with the exception of a difficult security clearance for Wes, we are happy to get on the plane to Portland.  I sleep much of the way.

When we land, we call the bike shop to get instructions and find out about the bikes.  We find out, to our (especially my) great disgust, that our bikes have not arrived. Wes’s is not due to arrive until tomorrow, but my bike and the BOB trailers should have already been here.  A call to Detroit confirms that our shipment, despite having been dropped off more than a week ago, was not sent from Detroit until Wednesday---two days ago.  It is highly likely that it will not arrive until early next week.
Wes is philosophical about it.  Perhaps this is the way the gods are making sure we get a rest.  We have been on the dead run since the first part of May and are truly beat down.  So now we chill in hot and humid Portland (who’da thunk it) and watch the funky street life.    The truth is: the trip takes you, you don’t take the trip.  Apparently, this trip is not quite ready to start…or a maybe the trip is not in the biking….but in the being on the path. That we are, that we certainly are.