Hitch-hiking to the crags

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Todd Gordon

Trad climber
Joshua Tree, Cal
Topic Author's Original Post - Dec 5, 2007 - 01:19am PT
Anything unusual happen to you while hitching to the crags?

Todd Gordon

Trad climber
Joshua Tree, Cal
Topic Author's Reply - Dec 5, 2007 - 01:32am PT
Guess I'll go first. I used to hitch a bunch , so I got a few;......

While hitching in the Meadows;...I was in the back of a pick- up that hit a bear.....(He got tagged in the butt and survived...)

While hitching up to Idyllwild to climb at Tahquitz/Suicide.....I got a ride in a stolen car and we got pulled over.....the dude took off running, and the cop chased him down and eventually caught him.......

While driving back from climbing at J. Tree ( I was living in Nebraska at the time....), ...I picked up a girl hitching on the freeway in weather in the teens...snow and ice on the freeway...very cold......she asked me to follow a certain car;...when the car pulled over...the guy got out and had a huge butcher knife welded and was coming at me......


I hitched from SLO to the Valley in about 3 rides....no waiting....and all three drivers drove over 70 MPH most of the way......couldn't have made it faster if I had driven myself......

I used to hitch to J Tree from San Diego quite often;.....when I got home;...I had to soak my hand in warm water because it was so cold I couldn't sleep......

While hitching to Teluride to Ice climb.....I waited on the side of the road so long, that when I finally got a ride....the driver said he could barely see me for my pack and I had been covered up in snow.....

Got a ride once small sports car and the driver had a ferret loose in the car;...the ferret bit me on the foot......


Got a ride in the side car of a motorcycle.

Once hitching back to San Diego from Joshua Tree.....the driver seemed very nervous the whole way....finally he got up enough nerve to ask me a question....why my ankle was all bloody?....he thought I had be shot in a fight or a robbery......I just had a bad battle with a j. Tree Crack.......
Todd Gordon

Trad climber
Joshua Tree, Cal
Topic Author's Reply - Dec 5, 2007 - 01:51am PT
I saw Karl with a K hitching in Yucca Valley with a huge potter's wheel, a typewriter, skiis, a wheel barrel, a huge pack of clothes and climbing gear.....

James

climber
A tent in the redwoods
Dec 5, 2007 - 03:14am PT
I have to walk alot.
brat

climber
it changes frequently (Reno, for now)
Dec 6, 2007 - 03:08am PT
I haven't hitched much in the U.S. and when I do, I usually end up getting picked up by people I know. I hitched a bunch in New Zealand but it was generally uneventful.

But... once I picked up a hitchhiker on the Eastside, and she was pretty nice, and so I let her crash in my tent cabin with me for the evening and tried to help her find a ride to the Valley the next morning. I found a ride for her, but then I couldn't find her.

A few days later I got called by the Mariposa County sheriff. The girl had disappeared, never made it to the Valley to meet her friends, and I was the last person to be seen with her. I think I was a suspect in her disappearance! They called me several times a day for the next few days.

Anyways, she turned up a few days later. I guess she'd run into some people she knew, and gone backpacking with them, and not told anyone.

The whole thing kinda sucked. But at least she was alright.
happiegrrrl

Trad climber
New York, NY
Dec 6, 2007 - 01:41pm PT
Radical - How do you know the people who always gave you rides didn;t say the same thing!!!???


hahahah


just kidding

I have only hitch-hiked about 8-10 times, between New Paltz and the cliffs. Pretty uneventful, except usually later that day at the cliffs a person passing by says "hey, yeah...sorry I drove past; I was in a hurry."

What? 30 seconds out of your day, to pick up a person you KNOW is going exactly where you are, on a ride that is 15 minutes long, is a time suck?

Once a girl was afraid to let me ride in the back of her pickup truck because it didn't seem safe.

The worst was when I walked from the Trapps to the Mohonk Mountain House one day when I didn't have a partner. I figured I could get a ride at the parking ,lot, same as at the cliffs.

Ummmm....No.

SUV after SUV drove passed me with vacant gazes focused dead ahead. I certainly could understand if they had kids in the vehicle. But otherwise? Geez.

Finally a guy who worked there stopped and gave me a ride. Thank god, because it had started raining.

Blowboarder

Boulder climber
Back in the mix
Dec 6, 2007 - 03:57pm PT
Sean, Chris and I were sleeping off an all nighter in the red rocks overflow site out by the gypsum plant when this monstrous (6'4". 275 #) just released from prison aryan freak invaded our campground and told us a tale of woe and discontent.

Eager to be rid of him, we offer to take him to blue diamond and get him some gas for his car, which he has none of, so he can drive the f*#k out of our life. He's eyeballing us up one side and down the other, as men fresh from the joint tend to do, when he spies Sean's knife wedged under the drivers seat, pulls it out, eyeballs it appreciatively, and declares "this'd cut ya bloody" while stinkeyeing us all.

Little did he know that gripped tightly in my hand, in the arm he couldn't see from the front seat, was Sean's wall hammer. Everyone laughed it off as a joke and I didn't have to sink it into his head.

Haven't picked up a hitcher since. Sorry, highway travelers of goodwill co-dependance.
Abercrombie

Trad climber
Ca
Dec 7, 2007 - 04:00am PT
On a trip from Palm Desert to Big Sur we got stuck in all kinds of towns. It was fun watching cars go by with the bumper sticker saying "Practice Random Acts Of Kindness And Senseless Acts OF Beauty"
Todd Gordon

Trad climber
Joshua Tree, Cal
Topic Author's Reply - Dec 7, 2007 - 04:08am PT
Todd Gordon

Trad climber
Joshua Tree, Cal
Topic Author's Reply - Dec 7, 2007 - 04:11am PT
Todd Gordon

Trad climber
Joshua Tree, Cal
Topic Author's Reply - Dec 7, 2007 - 04:15am PT

Leroy

climber
Dec 7, 2007 - 05:13am PT
Sorry, If u want stories,buy my book "hitchiking to the crags".
Michael Hjorth

Trad climber
Copenhagen, Denmark
Dec 7, 2007 - 05:40am PT
It’s a dying art!

Had the same promise to myself always to pick up hitchhikers when I ”grew up”. But hardly see any these days.

I hitched though Germany quite a few times. The prime focus in Germay is SPEED!
Once I got a ride with two old ladies (65-75 yrs). There was a slight problem pulling out from the gaz station due to all the highspeed BMWs and Porches. So to start conversation somewhere I said (in hobbling german), that germans sure drive very fast.
”Jah-jah, viel zu snell!” the ladies said. And 1 minute later we were cruising at 110 mph!

There was allways a queue of hitchers outside all german gazstations, and rules dictated that you queued up behind! So I did. Huge pack, iceaxes, rope, helmet, all on the outside to get attention. And it worked. Several drives said that it was the first time they picked anyone up. But I looked interesting, travelling with a purpose.
These two guys pointed me out in the middle of the queue and said: ”Mitkomme!” So I did, squeezed my pack onto the tiny backseat and we took off. Not much traffic that day, and we could hold 145-155 mph for several periods of 10-15 minutes before some idiot in the horizon pulled out to overtake a truck without realizing that the small spot in the rearmirror would be on his tail in a few seconds!
North of Basel they had to turn left toward Stuttgart, but at the same time we overtook a minibus with some of their friends, and they gave me a ride to France. Showed up that they were the driver’s mechanics and that he was a professionel racer…!

Michael
Abercrombie

Trad climber
Ca
Dec 7, 2007 - 01:16pm PT
I posted this on another thread.

Back in 91 a work buddy and I had a four day weekend and decided to hitch from Palm Desert to Big Sur with $20 each. At one point in Santa Barbara a little sports car rolls up at the onramp and the 90210 25 year old driver asks if one of us would help him move some boxes into a moving van. At the time the cast on his arm and his clean cut nature gave his story some legitimacy so we thought easy money.


Not enough room for the both of us so I take one for the team and jump in with visions of a pack of cigs and a meal other than Oodles of Noodles for the night. As we were driving into his posh neiborhood out of his glovebox came that months issue of Playboy. He offers me to thumb through, and that is when the red flags started waving.


When we got to his nice apartment building he started his story about how sorry he was that his friend was not there yet with the van and that he would be there any moment, he even made a fake phonecall and I decided to go take a piss.I remember looking at myself in the mirror thinking now what mess have got yourself into? and decided to tell him its time to hit the rode.


Upon my return to the living room I glance at the TV and now we got some porn going. I look at him sitting in his chair and he puts all his cards on the table. "How about $200 bucks for me to watch you masturbate" he says.(cheap bastard I think) and out comes my mace that my Mom made me promise to bring. (fu**en A mommy knows best) And begin my reasoning that he either give me a ride back, or my buddy and I will be driving to Big Sur in a Miata.


Needless to say he drove me back handed me $20 and we had taylor made smokes and opted for beer instead of a good meal.

Not the only weirdo I have been picked up by but a standout for sure.Him and the guy wearing nothing but boxer shorts and a cowboy hat.

There some strange folks out there but for every weirdo there are plenty of damn good people out there.
happiegrrrl

Trad climber
New York, NY
Dec 7, 2007 - 01:39pm PT
...oh crap. I forgot what I was going to post.

Carry on.
Watusi

Social climber
Newport, OR
Dec 7, 2007 - 03:22pm PT
I used to hitch a lot! One time however when I was 16 I was hitching on the east side and had gotten dropped off in the middle of nowhere...I was there for what seemed like an eternity. Finally a decrepit old pick-up stopped, the driver was this humongous indian dude. While we were heading south this guy didn't say a word...I was getting a little nervous as he was cracking beers as we drove and I had eyed a rifle in his gun rack. He finally pulled off onto a dirt rode and said "You're gonna earn your ride boy" Sheez I was now sweating for sure, and he was hauling ass so I couldn't bail. We travelled for maybe 5 miles and stopped..."Get out," He told me and I was gripped! He then told me to follow him. After about 100 yards he stopped and looked down at something. It turned out to be an ancient indian Metate, (grinding stone.) He told me that it was way to heavy to lift into his truck by himself and he just never seemed to have anyone with him this far out to help him take it home. The thing was really heavy but we got it on board and then the guy finally offered me a beer for my trouble. We returned to the highway without further stops and he got me to a place where I could easily get another ride. The guy actually was pretty cool, but I definitely was scared for a bit there!
Domingo

Trad climber
Ann Arbor, MI
Dec 7, 2007 - 03:58pm PT
You see some weird stuff hitch-hiking through the U.P.
euro-brief-guy

climber
mountain view, ca
Dec 7, 2007 - 06:45pm PT
I heard a couple of hitchhiking stories involving Russ that had me in stitches. One involving a short bus, and the other involving a frightened salesman.

C'mon Russ, Post up.
happiegrrrl

Trad climber
New York, NY
Dec 7, 2007 - 06:59pm PT
Oh, the U.P.! I lived there for 4 months, back in 1990 or so. Was at my parents house in Marquette.

My younger brother had this friend who lived waaaaaay off some side road, miles off another side road, miles of of HWY 41.

I offered him a ride home form night school once and when we turned off the first side road he said I could let him off and he'd hitch. being the good girl, I offered to take him on further. When he finally got home, it was SO in the middle of the woods I couldn't imagine how on earth he could have suggested he'd get a ride. It was the middle of winter too.

weird....

DonC

climber
CA
Dec 7, 2007 - 07:38pm PT
On the way back from the eastside of the Sierra, south of Lone Pine in the middle of the desert, there was a guy hitching.

He was only wearing a loin cloth, had a crooked cane, and a white goat. Would have picked him up of I had room. Sure there was a great story there.
Bart Fay

Social climber
Redlands, CA
Dec 7, 2007 - 07:48pm PT
Coming home from Owens, just past that familiar turn off where the 395 curves east & I14 heads
on to L.A., Just past the old Gulf service station with the velvet elvis posters, there was
a barefoot, late 30s bar fly, in a short, black cotton dress looking like she'd just been
dumped out of a car.
Looked like trouible to us. Kept on crusing.
Mighty Hiker

Social climber
Vancouver, B.C.
Dec 7, 2007 - 08:16pm PT
I used to hitch-hike regularly from Vancouver to Squamish, before I was old enough to drive. Some interesting adventures, though in the 1970s, on that road, with a rope conspicuously displayed, it wasn't usually too bad.

Mt. Slesse is south of the Chilliwack River, on a ridge between two tributaries, Nesakwatch and Slesse Creeks. To do the northeast buttress, you hike 10+ km up Nesakwatch Creek, on old logging roads. (Sometimes they're driveable.) Then do the climb, and come down the other side. Then you hike out. Unless you have two cars, you get to the Chilliwack River road at a point about 10 km from where you left the car, possibly more. So you hitchhike back.

The catch is, there are several minimum security "facilities" in the valley, and the usual signs warning about hitchhikers. The time I did it, they were hunting for an escapee. But I got a ride anyway.
Ricardo Carlos

Trad climber
Off center, CO.
Dec 7, 2007 - 09:33pm PT
Leroy
Post up
First hand would be so much better than third hand around the campfire.
Second thought maybe not!
I do not think the husband – wife one was much different last time I heard it 20++ years after first hearing you tell it.
Almost as good as the Yosemite Basement one , but than was not hitch-hiking
Mark Rodell

Trad climber
Bangkok
Dec 7, 2007 - 09:45pm PT
Spring 71, first extended trip to the Valley, I'm sixteen. I'd gotten up some grade threes, a big deal, pushed into 5.9 too, wow, so stayed an extra day and my ride cut out without me, had to hitch to the Bay. Sunday afternoon, Camp 4 Chevron and after ten minutes hanging my thumb a red VW bus comes, sliding door slides. It's Royal and Liz. Modesto? Sure, anywhere west of here, sure.
He'd been up on El Cap solo, trying duct tape out for aid and other stuff. Kindly, they asked of my exploits and we gassed about the Pinns and eleswhere. Think they fed me. And in Modesto, as the bus pulled away, I knew to stop listening to others jawing about others, mean, things I'd heard about 'em, didn't jive with those hours. A darn good ride.
hossjulia

Trad climber
Eastside
Dec 7, 2007 - 10:46pm PT
Never hitched to go climbing, but I did post a notice in A16 once for a ride to JT for climbing. Ended up marrying the guy.

Living in Boulder in the mid 80's, I drove an old beater 67 Malibu. Picked up a scruffy looking dude one day with an English accent who stunk to high heaven. HE rolled down his window as soon as he got in. Turned out to be Derrick Hersey. He took me on a cruise of the Red Garden Wall. Fun day.
Melissa

Gym climber
berkeley, ca
Dec 7, 2007 - 10:50pm PT
I don't generally hitchhike unless some big snafu has made me need to.

Hitchhiking story # 1...lost keys somewhere at Trashcan Rock...presumably into a climb. See two 20-something chinese girls stop for a look at the pile before exiting the park and ask them for a ride out so I can send an SOS to the rental car company. The tell me where keys are hidded in the car, and I spend hours sitting on the wood pile in front of the Circle K waiting for the lone taxi in Yucca Valley for my return trip. Hitchhiking on the 29 Palms highways after midnight seemed like a bad idea.

Hitchhiking story #2...J was doing a semi-alpine start to climb El Cap. As I wasn't part of that adventure, I slept in the back of the truck as he tooled around doing various errands. He made a pit stop at the lodge and I jumped out to grab some coffees.

When I got back to the truck, it was gone.

Wearing pink jammies and carrying a hot cup of coffee in each hand, I jogged over to the road to try to hitch a ride. Luckily a woman up early to take pictures picked me up. She seemed unmoved by the weirdness of a hitchhiker in PJ's. She probably thought I was flagging her down rather than hitchhiking and then couldn't think of a good reason to say 'no' after I asked for the ride.
happiegrrrl

Trad climber
New York, NY
Dec 7, 2007 - 11:07pm PT
That's hilarious, Malissa(the pink pj's story).

I always wondered if rental cars had keys hidden somewhere. Guess that makes sense - but it surprises me more rentals don't get stolen then. Are the keys usually accessible from outside?
Mighty Hiker

Social climber
Vancouver, B.C.
Dec 8, 2007 - 01:00am PT
Mark R's story reminds me of another one. There's a seaside cliff in a Vancouver suburb, that's called Lighthouse Park. Lovely seaside toproping and bouldering. I was there once in the second or third year I was climbing (about 1973), with a friend. It was slow learning in those days, we didn't have a lot of gear, and I was 15 (?). Anyway, these two older guys show up and do some fast good climbing, give us some tips. They offer us a ride back into town in their VW bus.

It was Hugh Burton and Steve Sutton, in the middle of their amazing run of El Capitan and other climbs.
hobo_dan

Social climber
Minnesota
Dec 8, 2007 - 05:57pm PT
I used to hitch out to Yosemite from Minnesota in the early 80's.
Couple of times I caught Freight Trains west to Portland or Seattle

-Out of Alta Utah i get a good ride in a Semi-Trucker is a Viet Nam Vet and he needs to talk. So all night long he unwinds terrible stories of 18 year old killers dropping V.C. out of Helicopters, making them walk through mine fields. Heavy sh#t for a midwestern boy and heavier for him. When he dropped me off i said "Welcome Home"

From Reno to DesMoines all in the back of pick up truck- a long time to be bouncing

Out of the valley I get picked up by Tim Hebert? in a VW Bus

My wife and i finish backpacking the West Coast Trail Vanouver Island B.C. and we do this epic eight hour hitch from Bamfield to get back to Port Renfrew on logging roads no less- Canadians are the best- A really civilized country-if you have not done the West Coast trail you need to go do it now!

Coming south from Reno through L. Tahoe I get a ride from a high school kid- He drops me off near this housing development. I go into the woods to crash and about a half hour later he shows up with his pals to rip me off. But I'm in the woods and they were too lazy to get out of their car to come searching- I just stayed rabbit quiet and was gone early early the next morning

Going east through Tonopah I get dead headed BAD- 9 hours.Just watching the locals cruise Main on a Saturday night.
I crash in a vacant lot and the high school kids flash their brights on me and shout "goodnight"
No chance going east soi try to make it back to Lee Vining.Next morning an old groover gives me a ride about 40 miles out of town West-drops me at a crossroads Whorehouse. No traffic but one car every half hour. I can still hear the tire hiss as they burn by at 70. Mid afternoon the same guy comes cruising out to check up on me and ends up giving me a ride to Lee Vining- like about 180 miles out of his way. I have picked up a lot of people since then and if I can I give them some cash or food if they need it because I really appreciated that guy bailing my ass out that time.
Too bad our country is so uptight and we can't trust each other for rides. We've all got a story worth telling
murf
hobo_dan

Social climber
Minnesota
Dec 8, 2007 - 06:03pm PT
This is From Tom Waits: NightHawks at the diner

I just happened to be back on the east coast a few years back
I was trying to make me a buck like everybody else
I was glad if times didn't get hard, Christ I got down on my luck
And I got tired of just roamin' and bummin' around
So I started thumbing my way back to my old hometown
You know I made quite a few miles in the first couple of days
You know I figured I'd be home in a week if my luck held out this way
You know it was the third night I got stranded
It was out at a cold lonely crossroads as the rain came pouring down
Man I was a hungry, I was a hungry, tired,freezing, caught myself a chill
It was just about that time...
It was just about that time that the lights of an old semi topped the hill
you should of seen me smile when I heard them air brakes come on
yeah and I climbed up in that cab where I knew it'd be warm
At the wheel, well at the wheel sat a big man
I'd have to say he must of weighed 210
As he stuck out a big hand and he said with a grin
"Big Joe's the name and this here rig's called Phantom 309"
Well I asked him why he called his rig such a name
But he just turned to me and said
"Why son don't you know this here rig'll be puttin' 'em all to shame
Why there ain't a driver, no there ain't a diver on this
Or any other line for that matter that's seen nothing
But the taillights of Big Joe and Phantom 309"
So we rode and we talked the better part of the night
And I told my stories and Joe told his
And I smoked up all his Viceroys as we rolled along
Pushed her ahead with 10 forward gears
Man that dashboard was lit like the old Madam La Rue pinball
A serious semi truck
Until almost mysteriously
Well it was the lights of a truck stop that rolled into sight
Joe turned to me and said
"I'm sorry son but I'm afraid this is just as far as you go
You see, you see I kinda gotta be makin' a turn just up the road a piece"
But I'll be damned if he didn't throw me a dime as he threw her in low
And said "Go on in there son, and get yourself a hot cup of coffee on Big Joe"
I mean to tell you man, when Joe and his rig pulled off into the night
Man in nothing flat they was clean outa sight
So I walked into the stop and ordered me up a cup of mud saying
"Big Joe's settin' this dude up" but
It got so deathly quiet in that place
Yeah got so deathy quiet in that place you could of heard a pin drop
And as the waiter's face turned kinda pale
I said "What's the matter did I say somethin' wrong?"
I kinda said with a half way grin
He said "No son, you see It'll kinda happen every now and then
Cause every driver in here knows Big Joe son
But let me tell you what happened just ten years ago
Yeah it was ten years ago out there at that cold lonely crossroads
There was a whole bus load of kids and they were just comin' from school
And they were right in the middle when Joe topped the hill
And could have been slaughtered except Joe turned his wheels
And he jacknifed, yeah, he jacknifed and he went into a skid
You know folks around here, well say he gave his life to save that bunch of kids
And out there at that cold lonely crossroads
Well they say it was the end of the line for Big Joe and Phantom 309
But it's funny you know cause, cause every now and then
Yeah every now and then, when the moon's holdin' water
Well they say old Joe will stop and give you a ride
It seems just like you, some hitchhiker will be coming by"
"So here son," he said to me
"You get yourself another cup of coffee, it's on the house
I kinda want you to hang on to that dime
Yeah I kinda want you hang on to that dime as a kind of souvenir
I want you to keep that dime as a souvenir of Big Joe
Of Big Joe and Phantom, Big Joe and Phantom 309"
Leroy

climber
Dec 11, 2007 - 10:11am PT
Best line I heard hitching wasMy wife likes to F... other guys and I like to watch.Just ateaser.Buy my book.
Melissa

Gym climber
berkeley, ca
Dec 12, 2007 - 04:11pm PT
I'd buy your book, but I hope you've got an editor. ;-)
TwistedCrank

climber
Ideeho
Dec 12, 2007 - 04:18pm PT
In 1982 a funny thing happened to me hitch-hiking from Gunnison to the Valley. I got a ride.


Freaky, man.
brat

climber
The Portal
Dec 12, 2007 - 04:26pm PT
I picked up a book in a book exchange once, about an English guy hitching around Ireland with a refrigerator.

I believe the book was called "Round Ireland With a Fridge."

Mildly amusing...
Batrock

Trad climber
Burbank
Dec 12, 2007 - 04:49pm PT
Karl with a K is a classic. Used to see him buying loads of gear at the Sport Chalet in La Canada back in the 80's. Then saw him at a Starbucks in Malibu about 7 years ago.

I hitched from Coloma to the Valley a few times. Nothing too memorable except one dude who was high as a kite and was weaving all over the road. If you have ever seen the movie Fandango there is a scene where Judd Nelsons character goes skydiving. Judd Nelson is terrified to jump so the pilot says why "hey man, it's no big deal. You want me to jump first so you can see how easy it is?" Judd looks at him and says, "if you jump who's gonna land the plane?" That is kinda how I felt on that ride to the Valley.
Ricardo Cabeza

climber
Meyers,CA
Dec 12, 2007 - 06:12pm PT
My first hitching experience was when I was 19, leaving New Hampshire for Colorado to live somewhere new. On a whim, I sold the old Volvo 240 and bought a train ticket to Denver with maybe a grand in my pocket. Get to Denver and take the RTD to Boulder getting my pocket picked in the process, where I checked into the hostel. After about a day in Boulder, I got antsy to decide where I would move to, and a little paranoid, some good herbs to be found there. I walk out of town and stick out my thumb. No sooner had I done this than a pickup stops and picks me up. I’m thinking, ‘sweet my first hitch, this is gonna be easy.’ Wrong. The guy who picked me up, Peter Korba (somehow I still remember the name) tells me how dangerous hitching in the front range can be and offers me a job building on the spot. I declined but will never forget the kindness. From Nederland I headed to RMNP hoping to hitch through the park and then continue to Steamboat for the winter. Wrong, the pass had closed the week before for the season. Back to Boulder. Returning to Boulder I got picked up by a woman who had just returned from Nepal and was selling crystals out of her car. We ended up getting a little too stoney and visiting some sort of convent (I think, I was pretty irie at this point) to try and sell crystals. No crystals having been sold, we head to boulder and I return to the hostel. Next day, I heed Peters advice and go greyhound to Silverthorne and begin hitching again. Two uneventful rides despite near misses with deer get me to Steamboat at 2am.
Two months later, I decide to partake in some halucenogenic substances and hitch to Denver for a Phish show that I do not have tickets for. I get there pretty easily with some girls from Summit county who were going too and manage to find tickets(free no less) must’ve been the utterly confused look in my eyes. After the show I make a sign reading ‘Steamboat or Freeze’ since it was in the single digits. Well the 2 girls must have had a hell of a time convincing their boyfriends, but I got a ride in the back of a station wagon all the way home, being asked by the guy driving if I was hitting on his girlfriend and if I wanted my ass kicked. I wasn’t, and I didn’t.
Fast forward 3 years. I’m living in Tahoe City and decide with a weeks notice to go with a girl I had never met to Alaska for 2 and a half weeks. We weren’t old enough to rent a car, so we decide to hitch. Heading from Anchorage to Homer, we had some nice rides but the one that sticks out in my mind was Pyro Paul. Pyro Paul was a self styled nickname that later proved to be spot on. Paul picked us up with a beer in hand and a few empties on the floor and proceeded to tell us that he really shouldn’t be driving, as his license was revoked for taking a moose out of season, in the middle of town! Anyhow, personal indiscressions aside, Pyro turned out to be a great guy and a great tour guide. He insisted on taking a side trip to a town whose name I now forget, just because it was the westernmost road in Alaska. From there we went straight to the salty dog saloon in Homer, because we JUST HAD to experience it he said. Then it was on to the the brewery for growlers and finally on to the campground where he was staying and we JUST HAD to stay there. A week later, we peeled ourselves away from the wonderful raspberry farm/commune that had become our home and left for Talkeetna having made dozens of new friends.
Heading back up the Kenai, we got a lift from a girl who lived in, of all places, Talkeetna! However, she had to do some things in Anchorage for a couple of days, but we were welcome to stay with her at her friends house and then get a ride and stay with her in Talkeetna. How on earth could we say no? Two days of bar crawls later we left for Talkeetna. After a mid ride sushi stop we arrived at her house/1 room shack and found out that she worked at the west rib, and we could eat there for free if we wanted. Well, yeah. We ended up staying for the better part of a week, hiking, drinking beer, and partying all night on the river while the northern lights faintly danced above.
This isn’t saying that hitching is easy, or all the folks who pick you up are normal, far from it. I can remember swatting mosquitos for two, three hours at a time waiting for a ride and asking to be let off in the middle of nowhere because the driver was too drunk, sketchy.
Long winded I know, and I didn't climb much in AK, but there are some surreal experiences to be had on the road.
Ricardo Carlos

Trad climber
Off center, CO.
Dec 12, 2007 - 09:17pm PT
Todd
I am pretty sure that blond picked me up hitching in Tahoe 78.

Maine to San Diego, the most asked question was why don'tcha get a job so you can buy a car. Did my Datsun pickup and VW van count I would counter. I am doing this because I can!
john hansen

climber
Dec 12, 2007 - 09:42pm PT


I heard a story about a guy who hitchhiked from Lone Pine to Reno with one of those little tear drop camping trailers.
Ricardo Cabeza

climber
Meyers,CA
Dec 14, 2007 - 08:50pm PT
Just got two great rides today, first one was first car all the way to kirkwood, then going home third car all the way home. Gotta love tahoe folks! It really sucks having a broken truck. I'm thinking about getting a subie despite all the recent head gasket slander. My last one went for many miles with nary a problem. Preventative maintenance, people!
Wade Icey

Big Wall climber
Indian Caves, CA
Dec 14, 2007 - 09:49pm PT
Much easier (and safer) To get a ride if you're sporting one of these, babe.

http://www.alohashirtrescue.com/prod_oclurid.html
Todd Gordon

Trad climber
Joshua Tree, Cal
Topic Author's Reply - Dec 14, 2007 - 10:22pm PT
Ricardo Cabeza

climber
Meyers,CA
Dec 14, 2007 - 10:37pm PT
Almost made me blow water out of my nose! Too funny! Says something about those british hitchers, huh?
Mighty Hiker

Social climber
Vancouver, B.C.
Dec 15, 2007 - 12:57am PT
I went to an Access Fund conference in Estes Park, Colorado in 2001. There was a fellow there, in the 50 - 60 range, who'd hitchhiked there from somewhere back east. He just liked hitchhiking, and travelled that way a lot.
Jaybro

Social climber
The West
Dec 15, 2007 - 01:17am PT
Don't worry Melissa, Leroy has a ghost writer, unless the deal is off...
quietpartner

Trad climber
Moantannah
Dec 15, 2007 - 12:28pm PT
I used to hitch all over the western US, had some spooky trips, along with some amazing rides (left Oregon with 2cents and wound up in MT with 2 cents, well-experienced and well fed.

I'd like to try it again, only I'd do only one thing consistently. I'd pack everything in a bright red 5 gallon gas can with hinged lid, which stands out like a beacon at road's edge. Never had to wait more than ten minutes with a can.

They always laughed when I told 'em, "Nope, didn't run outta gas, but this sure makes it easy to get rides out here in the middle of nowhere."
Todd Gordon

Trad climber
Joshua Tree, Cal
Topic Author's Reply - Dec 15, 2007 - 01:10pm PT
nevenneve

Trad climber
St. Paul, MN
Dec 16, 2007 - 03:29am PT
I think it was around 82 and the family was heading back from RMNP taking the scenic route skirting Denver. My dad wakes me up and tells me to roll over as a blood covered Mexican crawls into the rear of the Suburban next to me. It's pitch dark since the dome interior lights don't work and I'm still sure that was blood running down the guys face but I'm too scared to risk looking. Dead quiet and dads been gone a good 15 minutes since this guy got in. A car goes by and I could swear the skin on the back of my moms neck is grey. I'm pretty sure the next time this guy puts his hand to his head I'm going over the seat and hoping he takes my still sleeping brother as bait. Out of the cold night a siren breaks the air and my dads back in by the time the clump of mud he winged at the license plate fall off onto the ground. Our illegal immigrant passenger is suddenly quite animated. Fifteen minutes of hastily interpreted directions gets me the best cold air I've breathed in my short life as the rear door swings open.

Apparently my mom spotted the flames from a few miles away and the broken arm on the guy standing in the middle of the road was short of surprising. He passes the 30 second physical and leaves his hashish in the bushes on his way to being packed onto the metal floor next to me. The multiple other passengers had took to the hills but my new friend had stayed considering his mother was pinned in the car with probable internal injuries. Dad decided to see to the small fire still burning on the ground and found having two arms was all that was needed to get the door unstuck from the bent frame. Seeing as nothing could be done but alert the police the nearing sirens spelled time to dissasociate from the scene. It kills me that I can't remember my moms first words after we pulled away from his house.

Sorry if this is OT but we had been climbing most of the day.
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