Subject:
[adventure!] Hitch-hiking
Date:
2/11/2004 9:19:23 AM
Two points of interest:
1) Thanks again to Scott, there are more pictures available:
<weblink information removed>
2) There may be an Environmental-ish Challenge starting up
soon that you
(yes YOU!) can take part in. Details to follow in future
emails, but the
first challenge involved exercises in conservation,
reuse-ation, and
poetr-ation.
***
So, I've been wanting to hitch-hike for years, ever since my
friend Fritz
hitched across the country (the big big one) to BC. When he
got back we
heard the stories of frustration, watching old folks in
ridiculously large
mobile homes whizz by, the joy of being picked up just when
you think you're
going to have to sleep in a ditch. It sounded ... well, i
think what I
probably said at the time was 'cool' but I was thinking
something more like
'huh'.
In the town near where I was staying in Southern Spain there
is a little
cafe that sells English books[1]. While I was there I read 3
books that I
found there: 'The Life of Pi' by Yann Martel[2]; 'Dirk
Gently's Holistic
Detective Agency' by Douglas Adams[3]; and 'Round Ireland
with a Fridge' by
Tony Hawks. In the opposite order.
Round Ireland with a Fridge is the true story of the
author's trip (based on
a drunken bet) around Ireland carrying a little bar fridge
on a cart. It's
a pretty good story. Hawks is a comedian in England whose
other claim to
fame is having written a song called 'The Stutter Rap'.
While I was reading
the book, I was thinking two things. First, that he seems to
really like to
use the word 'alarming' in the same way that Douglas Adams
liked to[4]. And
second, that he really makes a big deal about standing
around waiting for
cars, stories of frustration, watching old folks in
ridiculously large
mobile homes whizz by, the joy of being picked up just when
you think you're
going to have to sleep in a ditch.
After talking to some people around Spain, most of whom told
me very clearly
that Spain is second only to France in lousiness for
hitching, I decided
that I must hitch-hike through Spain and France. In
Barcelona I looked on
the internet for information about hitching to Paris. I
found a tip for
which street to stand beside. Fantastic! The next morning I
would set off
on my hitch-hiking adventure! Well, the next afternoon. I
took the metro
out to the recommended street, made myself a sign that said
Girona, and
stood on the side of the road. There was an emotional
roller-coaster as I
waited and waited on the side of the road.
Somewhere between the third and fourth minutes I took the
metro over to the
train station and jumped on the train to Girona. The next
morning my
hitch-hiking adventure would begin!
Now, Girona is a magical place. Walking around Girona in the
evening,
everything is lit in a certain way that you feel like you
are either
dreaming or you have somehow stumbled into some perfect
painting.
The day whizzed by like an old person in a Winnebago. I had
to stay another
night. Better rest up. In the morning my hitch-hiking
adventure would
begin!
When you stay in a youth hostel, sharing a room with 9 other
people, you're
not always guaranteed a good night's sleep. That evening
though, everyone
was in bed and sleeping quietly (not a snorer in the bunch).
Everyone
except one Scottish guy, who showed up pissed to the gills
at 2 am. Now,
it's also not uncommon in a youth hostel for your roommates
to come home
drunk. Travellers sometimes indulge. However, in this case
the level of
intoxication must have been enough for the management
downstairs to refuse
him entry. And he was mad.
There was a lot of screaming and yelling and pounding on
glass doors. At
one point he yelled something about how 'every *%&-ing
person in this
country has the right to freedom!'. It was almost
inspirational. Not quite
though. After a while the police showed up quietly and
somehow he left
quietly. At least two things were notable about this. First,
the police
showed up very quietly, without even turning on the blinky
lights on their
cars. Second, the drunk guy left quietly. I kept thinking
about how in
North America there would be 15 police cars, each with 100
seperate lights
flashing and spinning, and that the drunk guy would put on a
'COPS'-like
performance, kicking and screaming in toothless fury while
the police stood
on his back. I think either the lights of North American
police cars induce
fury, or the Spanish police carry some kind of happy pills.
Anyway, the next morning (read: 'afternoon') I decided to
start
hitch-hiking! I reached the bus station by 1 pm and was on
the bus to Besalu
(a little town about an hour North-West of Girona).
After looking at Besalu's wonderful old stone bridge I
walked to the edge of
town in the direction of Figueres (signs said it was 28 kms
away), and
looked at the side of the road. It wasn't the best place,
but everything I
could see for the next km or two was worse, so I stuck out
my thumb. About
50 cars and trucks drove by over the course of about 10
minutes. Everyone
in the cars stared at me with this look on their face that
said "what the
hell IS that?!" I started to wonder whether there was
an octopus on my head.
I checked. There wasn't.
What was more worrying was that all the truckers made hand
gestures at me,
pointing either up or down or making a circular motion.
Sadly, all the hand
gestures were in Spanish and not covered by my
Ingles-Espanol diccionario.
I was pretty sure they were either telling me this was a bad
spot to hitch,
or that there was a Spanish bear right behind me and I
should run. Either
way, things were looking bad.
After a quick survey of the bushes behind me (no bear), I
decided to walk to
Figueres. What the hell. I like walking, and although my
backpack was
still as heavy as a drugged midget wearing a 'nice-guy'
beige sweater[5], I
was thankful that he or she was at least remaining calm.
I walked about 10 metres and heard a car coming up behind me
so I turned
around and stuck out my thumb. Can't hurt. That's when I got
my very first
hitched ride! It was a local guy who was headed home and
couldn't take me
all the way to Figueres, but could drop me up the road at a
service station
where I might have an easier time. I waited there about 10
minutes,
spending a few minutes in the station, then a few minutes
before it, then
walking back to the station. I had no idea where to stand or
what I was
doing.
As soon as I gave up and started thinking about walking, I
saw this crazy
guy driving up the road in a little red car. He was all over
the road,
speeding and swerving. It reminded me of being in Morocco.
The drivers
there are nuts. The cab driver I had in Rabat (the capital
city of Morocco)
drove right in the middle of the lanes on the white line and
passed between
all the other cars who were (stupidly) driving *IN* their
lanes.
I sort of stuck my thumb out half way, not sure whether or
not I wanted to
get into this car, if he did stop. He slammed on the brakes
and came
literally skidding to a stop about 10 metres past me. I ran
to the car and
got in. The driver, who was from Rabat, took me all the way
to Figures at
top speed, swerving past every other car on the road. When I
jumped in, I
didn't have time to put my big pack in the back seat, so it
was jammed
betwen me and the dash. I also didn't have time to put on my
seatbelt. I
considered what I would like written in my obituary.
Something along the
lines of 'Passed away peacefully in Northern Spain when the
metal internal
frame of his beloved backpack made a quick pass through his
innards'.
Anyway, I made it to Figures, got another ride to La
Jonquera (the border
city) and (after a couple of hours waiting there) to
Perpignan, where I am
now. This morning I will definitely be hitching to
Montpellier. Aw shit,
it's already 3 pm here.
What was my point? Oh yes! I have just given you the details
of one day of
hitch-hiking. No doubt you are sitting at your desk at work
thinking
'cool', or maybe 'huh'. Unless you are Fritz, in which case
maybe you are
saying 'Aw yeah! Go Jay!'. Thanks for the encouragement.
Have fun!
jay
[1] Finding English books in countries where the people
speak wierd
'non-English' languages can be hard, unless you really have
a hankering for
romance novels.
[2] Find this book immediately!
[3] Find this book eventually!
[4] As in 'The old man approached at an alarmingly slow
pace'. I love it.
[5] I bought a 'nice-guy' beige sweater in Girona so that I
would look more
pick-up-able. As in 'Hey honey, let's stop and give that
nice guy a ride to
France'.