Friday, May 14, 2010

It Begins

Day 0


There’s something refreshing about setting off on an adventure with your foot pressing the gas pedal down to floor, only going 35mph, and not getting impatient. After a morning outside in the freezing cold rain with my dad and uncle, frantically - and semi-successfully - trying to connect the auxiliary battery in the back of my marginally more beautiful van (I cover the rust with primer....on one side), my uncle and I caravanned up 101. We occasionally passed semis going a tad slower than we were, but more often than not we were the two vehicles in the slow lane getting passed by grandmas and beat up jalopies. There was no hurry. Our VW machines wouldn’t have allowed us to be in a hurry even if we had wanted to. Through a maddening flurry of downpours and sunshine, we made it home. My first home. Arcata.


To be fair, my uncle lives in Bayside, which, I came to find out, technically isn’t Arcata. But still. In my mind they’re one in the same. Heck, they share a police force (another fact I didn’t already know). So there I was, starting my van trip where I started my life - amongst the lush redwood trees of Humboldt County. Of course, since no trip starts quite as planned, I didn’t end up sleeping in the van. Before you start clamoring for my head and calling me a fraud, bear in mind that this might not be the only time on my “van trip” that I don’t stay in my van. Plus, there were two perfectly legitimate reasons why I didn’t sleep in my van: 1) Because of the aforementioned auxiliary battery debacle, my entire van was turned inside out to run wires from the battery to the alternator, from the battery to the battery, from the battery to the fuse box, from the battery to the inverter, and so on. There was nowhere to sleep. 2) We were running a test to see if the refrigerator could be fooled into thinking that the inverter was actually AC instead of DC and to see how long it would run. The only problem (as this method is quite sound), is the damn sound. The inverter runs its fan the entire time, and the inverter is right under my head. Well, it would have been had I slept in the van. Which I did not because of numbers 1 and 2.


No harm in starting a trip both comfortable and well fed, right?


Day 1


My wonderful caretakers turned out to be cruel taskmasters. The first day of vacation from real life and I’m put to work! The nerve. Luckily, being incredibly rich, they put me to work using only the best of tools. Case in point: a riding mower. Unfortunately, I came to find out that the best of tools were old and somewhat decrepit. Case in point: the riding mower.


Here’s a quick breakdown of how a day intending to be productive and fruitful quickly became frustrating and unproductive:


- We show up, realizing that we only have a single pair of ear mufflers. So my uncle drives back into town while I start mowing.

- After mowing for roughly 15 minutes, the blade belt snapped. So I start to sweep the driveway.

- My uncle returns with the extra ear protection. I attempt to weed whack instead, but the whacker won’t start. It’s flooded. He then leaves to buy a new belt while I continue sweeping.

- After putting on the new belt I return to mowing. After roughly 3 minutes the mower won’t move. Not forward, not backward. We discover that a different belt (we’ll call this the driver belt (technical term)) has fallen off.

- We take apart the mower to put the belt back on.

- After roughly 7 or 8 minutes of mowing, the mower stops again.

- We again take apart the mower, and figure out that one of the round spinny thingies that belts go around is loose. We tighten it. I mow like a mad man.

- Close to finishing, the mower dies. Out of gas. We refill the gas. The mower won’t start. We try again. The battery is dead.


It’s as if the gods were angry that on my first day of vanventuring I was attempting to work. But what the gods don’t understand is that without my uncle’s help I’d never have been able to even begin the trip. I was simply trying to begin giving back. Stupid gods. On the bright side, I learned that riding a mower around and around in circles is incredibly fun and might be a decent career move. I mean, even with banks screwing up and housing markets tanking, grass continues to grow and continues to need mowing. It didn’t hurt that I was mowing the grass atop a beautiful sunny hill in Trinidad where I could look out onto the white caps of the ocean and listen to sea lions barking. Well, when I wasn’t busy focusing on cutting every blade of grass while listening to the incredibly noisy motor of the green riding mower. Glorious.


Day 2


Copy. Rinse. Repeat. Only with more success. I worked on the van; I sat on the sweet mower, riding giddily around in circles; I pulled some pesky blackberry bushes and pulled some surprisingly more pesky ferns. And then, in a weird twist my uncle gathered up some strange objects: a long wooden post with a pointy end (perfect for jousting), some rags, gasoline, and a maul. I thought my uncle and I were about to go all Braveheart over some unsuspecting neighbors. In my mind we would be hooking the joust to the side of his jagdwagen (look it up if you’ve never seen one), dousing the rags in gasoline, wrapping them around the lance and setting them on fire. He’d drive toward those crazy neighbors while I stood in the back wielding the maul. Unfortunately, we used the jagdtwagon’s winch to pull a tree upright, the rags to protect the tree from harm, and the maul to hammer the post to hold the tree in place. Then we lit it ablaze. Kidding. The gas? For another project. I guess it’s all for the best anyway. He only has one neighbor (an old man who likes mowing grass as much as I do), and he’s out of town, so there really weren’t any potential victims for our 13th century hijinks.


Dinner was a trip down memory lane at local Hippy-Mexican eatery HeyJuans. Huge burritos, $3.50 pints ($2.75 all day Saturday!), and 10% off everything because it was Wednesday. Seriously. After eating our filling (and spicy) burritos we stepped outside to see a sad crime of stupidity taking place as a couple of young college students went into Subway. What the hell is wrong with people?


Day 3


One step forward, two steps back. Why is it that whenever you manage to get the auxiliary battery working you invariably back the van into a stationary backhoe and shatter your rear window? I’m doing my best to stay positive because these minor setbacks would be huge catastrophes in any other part of the country. Luckily, my uncle is the mother f’ing VW man. I’d certainly be sunk without him.


We went to Bob today - a recommended locksmith - to see if he could fix a little lock problem that I have with the water tank. Here’s how Bob plays it: “Well, it’s not getting done today. I left two minutes ago. And it’s not getting done tomorrow either. Maybe Monday or Tuesday at the earliest. I’m going out of town.” So we ask him what he thinks of the job and an estimate. “Well. To rekey this is going to take a while. At least an hour. And I might not even be able to do it. It might not work. Something like this will be thirty, thirty five.” We tell him we’ll think about it and come back Monday morning when he opens. “You come in Monday morning, I might not get it done until later in the week. Monday’s filling up. Got stuff for Tuesday.” We say alright and start to leave. “Going to a funeral in Sacramento.” Sorry to hear that. So we head down to the south side of Eureka to another lock shop and ask them the same thing. Their answer: “Eight or ten bucks. Be done by tomorrow.” Have fun at the funeral Bob.

10 comments:

  1. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I'm excited to eat a spicy burrito and ride the mower. And meet Bob.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Hey guys.... This sad story could only be brought to you by the engineers of V.W. BUT HEY WHAT OTHER VEHICLE COULD YOU DO A WALLOPIN 35 MPH IN? One thing you can say about a Volkswagon is you can always expect the un expected. Have you named it yet ? Maybe you can commune with the ocean breezes over a pint of I.P.A. and think of one.Sometimes the Volkswagon gods require this in order to begin a journey. This could be the missing link you need for total v.w. cooperation. cheers C.U. SOON DAVIDAD

    ReplyDelete
  4. Wait, seriously? Busted back window? In need of a locksmith? You might have gotten some of my travel luck. (Don't worry, that means, aside from these setbacks...adventures are coming.) Look forward to reading more from my favorite, beardy van guy.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Love that last line. Sorry I didn't respond to your email from around 2 months ago -- I assumed that you had already left for this van trip back in March and used that as an excuse to be really lazy about emailing you back. Here's the short and sweet version: I was in Delaware doing "glorified yard-work" (as we liked to call it) working for a federal estuary; the project was a definite bust -- we didn't get much done, a lot of our work was unnecessary, and we spent eight weeks doing it. So most of my team was very unsatisfied with AmeriCorps NCCC. But that's all over with.

    I'm at McDonalds in Marrero, LA, which is across the Mississippi River from downtown New Orleans, using the free wi-fi. Two members from my team are on disaster assignment mucking out flooded houses in Tennessee (Nashville and Memphis), another teammate is down in Mississippi chainsawing flood damaged trees, and another is doing controlled burns in the great dismal swamps. The rest of us are living in a cottage outside an old Catholic church working for a Catholic charity called Operation Helping Hands (OHH). They help elderly and disabled people in New Orleans rebuild their homes, many of them were ripped off by shady contractors, etc.

    We haven't really had our first day of work yet. That's tomorrow. Spent this weekend roaming around the French Quarter and Bourbon Street. You've really got to make sure you hit N.O. during your travels. It's the most foreign city I've ever visited without leaving the U.S. By which I mean there's dilapidated houses, palm trees, scorching humidity, strange accents, immense poverty, a downtown that looks a lot like Paris, tourists everywhere -- I could be in San Jose, Costa Rica.

    Just to give you an idea, one of the houses OHH is working on is located in the lower 9th ward, an area which was almost entirely destroyed by Katrina. There are five houses on the block. 4 of them are abandoned and falling down. One of them is being rebuilt. And this pattern repeats all over the city, especially in the lower 9th...

    It's exciting and depressing and makes you simultaneously wonder why we're rebuilding at all but also how could anyone suggest otherwise?

    -Zack

    ReplyDelete
  6. More more!!!! Your public is awaiting the next installment

    ReplyDelete
  7. Micah - Bob is at a funeral. You won't meet him.

    David - It does need a name. Anyone have any ideas?

    Stacey - So far my travel luck has been no good. New problem? My refrigerator smells like it burning some noxious gases and leaking them into the cabin.

    Zack - Good to hear from you. Glad you're moving on to something more productive than weed pulling. Keep me posted on where you are in case I can visit you on my travels.

    Dan - Ask and you shall receive.

    ReplyDelete
  8. >David - It does need a name. Anyone have any >ideas?

    "Peaches"...It is from Georgia after all.

    "Tramp" From the Otis Redding/Carla Thompson classic..."You straight form the Georgia woods!"

    ReplyDelete
  9. my (at least) third and final try to post a comment! And here I thought some of my dear son's antics are retarded (only kidding, darling!). Your stories have cracked me up ... except for the rat and horrible inhabitants stories.
    I think Peach, Peaches, Peachie, Peach Pie are all good names. The connection to georgia, the love of delicious peaches, and the desire for everything to be peachy are good enough reasons. And now we'll see if this works ...

    ReplyDelete

Starman

Starman
able to turn left

Hank

Hank
tired of muffins

Clean up

Clean up
metal gone

Trinidad

Trinidad

A Jagdwagen!

A Jagdwagen!
Look closely