My Sweet Home Away From Home - On the Road # 32, Part 1

GiveYourselfSomethingtoWriteAbout-SweetHome.jpg

It is absolutely excruciating to read this particular letter of my DIY booktour/roadtrip in January 2006. I had just come to Santa Cruz due to Lili, the Rock Lady, who I had met on the ferry. I ended up staying in Santa Cruz for 6 months, and it was one helluva ride.

This is one instance where I let my romantic side interfere with my common sense and my intuition.

Before making a decision on where to live, I stayed a night in the main house where Janna and Fred lived. I woke up in the middle of the night with this oppressive feeling of some dark and heavy bearing down on me. I could hardly breathe and it scared the shit out of me.

That was all I needed to know. But I moved in anyway…

Big mistake. Huge. I did end up in a good place, but it was a crazy ride to get there.

Hey y'all,

I really meant to live in Santa Cruz, close to the beach. 

I’d seen a place with deer running through the yard and the roommates - Meg and Christopher - were about my age and in a similar phase in life. They were very cool. 

There was lots of light, and I liked the old farmhouse feel of the place - even if the landlord was an alcoholic, lived on the property, and sat in his oversize pick-up with his elbow jutting out aggressively, drinking cans of Bud and glowering at the house. 

To make matters worse, he had relatives wringing their hands in anticipation of his death so they could get their hands on his money.

“He (the landlord) has been mad at me ever since I turned down his marriage proposal,” said Meg, as she showed me around.  “Maybe he’ll fall in love with you, and I’ll be off the hook.”

Given that he was eighty-plus and had stalker tendencies, I sure hoped not. 

I really liked Christopher and Meg, and had pretty much decided I’d love to live with them.

But I went ahead and came to see this place that was fifteen miles into the Santa Cruz mountains because I had an appointment. 

And I keep my appointments.

“When you see James Dean on the left, take a right on Alameda…” said Janna over the phone. 

I hadn’t met her yet, so my first impression was from her voice. 

If caramel had a voice, it would be Janna's. 

Her accent, breathiness, and tone of voice pronunciation bring to mind a flow of smooth, thick liquid sugar. 

Oddly enough, her girl's girl voice is easy to listen to and she has many fascinating stories.  

In her late fifties with three grown sons out of the house, she is not in my phase in life. 

After driving through the Redwoods on Highway 9, I saw the mural of James Dean on the side of the Brookdale Lodge - which is supposed to be haunted - on the left and made an immediate right on Alameda…

I really meant to live where the action was, but I could not resist this place...

As I write this, I’m sitting here on a mini-stage built within a half-circle of redwoods. 

I smell smoke coming from the stove, burning wood from the main house. The house was built in 1907 from virgin redwood, crammed with antiques, photos, artwork, and knick knacks. 

Out back is a pool built during the 1920’s, I suspect. 

On the north/northwest side of the pool is the cabana with bathroom and laundry room. 

On the west side is the studio where Erin lives and behind that is the “secret garden.” 

On the south-central side is the main house, behind it the cathedral-stage of redwoods, and behind that…is my space. 

I live in a tiny house on the north/northeast side of the property, but I get the most sun.  (This was before tiny houses were a thing.)

It’s uphill from the creek, and groove on the constant trickle of water - it's like those meditation tapes that people play when they need to chill. 

On one side of my place is the chicken and rabbit coop. 

The rooster is lazy about cockling in the morning, and all the chickens are in cages except for Cadbury, the breeder mama bunny. 

She got out and still runs free, much to the chagrin of Erin Rose and Janna. 

There is a light breeze blowing, the wind chimes are gently tinkling a harmony. 

I also hear the chirps, peeps, and cackles of birds as beams of golden glow are streaking through the woods to light up this place nestled in the woods. 

“We took out all the Douglas firs when we first moved in,” said Janna.  “And the redwoods just shot up from there.”

“This place is very magical,” said Travis, Janna’s eldest son.

He wasn’t exaggerating; I feel like I’m living inside a fairy tale.

Welcome to my home away from home. 

I live in the “playhouse” of this property, but I call it the hobbit house. 

It’s the size of a shoebox, not even big enough for a double bed, but it gives me autonomy. 

There is a huge window Janna recycled from an old schoolhouse on the south side of the building and when I walk out the door, one of the first things I see is that cathedral of redwoods kitty corner from my slice of personal space. 

I have to go to the main house to go to the bathroom and use the kitchen, but I have the run of the property with my rent. 

“This place was like Sleeping Beauty’s castle,” Janna said. when she described the forgotten cabin that had been empty for years at the time she and Fred bought it. 

The people who live here could also be characters out of a novel.

“We’re an eccentric family,” Janna said.

First, allow me to introduce Erin Rose, the caretaker/adoptee who posted the ad. 

Photographer, recluse, keeper of Cooper, the ugly cat, and would-be catcher of Cadbury, the runaway rabbit, Erin Rose made his new home here a few years ago when Christian, Janna's second son, told him his mom could use some help. 

He has since become a part of the family and Janna’s best friend. 

Sometimes it's difficult to tell who takes care of who, or what.

“People actually got offended when I said Chief likes white animals a little too much…(Yum!) in the ad,” he said. 

He’d also described  chickens, roosters, numerous rabbits (including Cadbury, the breeder), along with Chief, a big white dog, and Cooper, his road-scrapping tomcat.

To be continued…Remember Cooper, the road-scrapping tomcat.

Peace,
Montgomery

 

The Fool's Journey, Part 2 - On the Road # 28

Image by Pexels from Pixabay 

Image by Pexels from Pixabay

Hey y’all,

Since Sun and I got a late start from Eugene, we didn’t get far.

Sun suggested we stay the night in Ashland because we’d have a place to crash there - a friend who she had met at EarthDance in September working in his kitchen 

She didn’t tell me her “friend” was the Knight of Cups. I also thought she had a girlfriend, but hey! Sexuality is fluid. 

Since Sun had made 0 book sales on my behalf, I was agreeable to a free place to stay. I also learned yet another lesson in getting what you pay for, but more on that later.

Again, I don’t regret giving Sun a ride because she had great stories, it was another chapter in this grand adventure, and awesome things would come of it. Just not in the way I thought they would.

Before we went to the Knight of Cups, she also turned me on the luscious Jackson Well Springs, a lovely place to soak and sauna naked at night. I wouldn’t have found this wonderful place without Sun.

She ran into another friend from her time in Taos, and ran off to have tea with him.

Finally we made it to our crashpad and the Knight of Cups.

His name was Matava. I’m pretty sure he named himself. He was originally from New York. But once he had awakened to a higher vibration, Matava donned loose, flowing garments to indicate his enlightenment, and made his living with exotic cuisine and Ayurvedic smart drinks.

I think he was a caterer with a New Age edge. 

I had to admit his tea was excellent. But I doubt it made me more intelligent. As far as his healthful cleanse cookies were concerned, they tasted funny - probably because they didn’t have any sugar 

Sun and Matava got reacquainted with a lively discussion over the wisdom of human design and Chinese astrology. Matava consistently referred to the Chinese and Western astrological significance of his absent housemate. I don’t remember her name, but she was at least 10 years older than he and owned the house.

“She’s a Fire Horse AND a Scorpio,” he said. “She’s very Scorpio.”

I suspected that meant he’s her lover who pays no rent, and the Fire Horse Scorpio gets pissed off with her errant Knight of Cups on the regular. 

And then Sun started disrobing.

Like a lot of Pacific Northwest hippies, Sun dressed in layers of heavy sweaters. As she and Matava animated over all things New Age, Sun took off one heavy sweater after another, along with her leggings and woolen socks until she was down to a t-shirt and loose, flowing skirt and bare feet. She also contorted her body in visually appealing stretches that thrust her ample breasts into the limelight.

When Matava slid down to the ground in a bent-knee crouch, Sun followed suit, with her long skirts making a pretense of modesty. Once they overlapped their big toes and gave each other that look, I knew exactly where this night was going.

But I was exhausted and it was time to crash at the crashpad.

Matava had made up a massage table in the living room for me to sleep on and I was out within minutes.

Unfortunately, exhaustion didn’t render me deaf. The High Priestess, Sun, elevated the Knight of Cups, Matava to the state of the Lovers, and woke up the Fool who had given her a free ride. I was tempted to make some noise to disrupt the high vibration of their coupling, but why? 

From what I heard, it sounded rather average.   

The next morning, Sun hinted that she'd forgotten how much she liked "Matava's company," with the implication that she could hang in Ashland even though a storm was coming that we would be wise to beat.  Then we hit Evo's Cafe.  The High Priestess went to the market to replenish the supply of ass-wipes for the Knight of Cups.  The Fool checked email and pulled out my tarot deck and started shuffling, wondering how I was going to gracefully extricate myself from this situation.

Upsidedown Temperance asked me for a reading, even though he had no money.  One of the eccentric, homeless youth that has found some sanctuary in the most tolerant coffee house in the affluent arty community of Ashland - home to the Shakespeare Festival every summer - took a seat and I gave him a reading, which he interpreted for himself.  Once Sebastian had satisfied his need to talk about his neglected talents while he had someone's attention, he left the table after a couple of hints.

A well-preserved, nicely groomed black man with a shaved head and pretty face at the table on my left who had observed the interaction of the reading, started up a conversation.  His speech was as refined as his looks, so I gave him a brief rundown of my story and explained that the cards were a gimmick I used to get people's attention to the book.  He then asked me what I thought it meant that the cards got people's attention.  What did I think people were seeking?  Of course, I didn't know. 

"They're looking for that third voice," he said. 

His name was Amien and he had moved to Ashland from Santa Rosa, California just six months before.  At fifty-two, Amien had had many lives, as a professional dancer and an artist, he had designed sets and done the lighting for many productions, and although settled was in chrysalis for his next life incarnation.  He encouraged me to do a storytelling, although he preferred philosophy and science fiction.  The noise of the cafe distracted him after a couple of minutes, so Amien suggested going by his cottage and doing the storytelling there. 

"It's very peaceful, I'll make some tea, and it'll be much better."

Never, never, never go off with strangers, always said my mother, the Empress.  You may come across the Devil, maybe even Death, and then what are you going to do?

But I am the Fool, and I am no longer a little girl.  Amien gave off a good vibe-ration, my instincts told me it was safe, so I went.  Besides, I thought he was gay. 

Besides, it is the Fool's nature to trust.  Will this step send me careening over the cliff or dancing over the rainbow?

If one doesn't trust, one doesn't get to meet the Magician...or the man who makes things happen.

Amien was a highly talented artist from what I saw of the pieces in the mother in law apartment.  After listening to "The Birth of Ella Bandita," he bought two books, offered me his spare bedroom - a good hidey-hole for the Hermit - and said he'd like to throw a party for me. 

"We'll make it very nice, very selective," Amien said.  "So you will meet the kind of people who can help you." 

The best part, it really was no strings.  Amien had his libido and his attention distracted by a sweet young thing, half his age, who led him around by the nose...or the head.  I provided good conversation, a sympathetic ear, and good counsel.    

"It'll be my first soiree," he said. 

Ain't it grand how artists support each other?

That night, he introduced me to the Hierophant, who had the mother-in-law apartment he lived in.  Melody was a teacher, whose daughter also was a self-published writer.  She was also throwing a dinner party that same night, so Amien suggested they coordinate their events and I be the guest storyteller for both parties. 

He helped with making up the flyer/invites, thinking up such refinements as "intimate setting," and "light refreshment provided" and a discreet "Books for sale." 

The party had a good turn-out, and The Fool got to take a turn as the Star, entertaining the Court with a tale.  Emperors, Scholarly Hermits, Lovers, and Empresses made up the audience.

It was grand, but alas not perfect.

As much as the Magician warned the Fool to be selective, I gave a flyer to a woman whose Tower had come crashing down.  He had met her and was surprised that I gave her an invite.

"She strikes me as somebody with a Ramona complex," Amien said.  "I suspect she's missing parts."

He shrugged and said it'll be what it'll be, but the Magician called it.  Just as the Star had told the climax to an audience of enthralled Courtiers, and was forty-five seconds away from the end, a Queen in the audience interrupted.

"There's somebody out in the cold."

Turning around there was the woman of the fallen Tower peeking in the windows, wanting to be let in.  The Fool did, and gathering my wits, finished the tale.  Honestly, it was more disruptive to the audience than it was to me.

An hour later, the Fool realized what a mistake inviting the fallen Tower to the party.

"That's why I consider myself legitimately schizophrenic," she hooted in laughter at her own joke. 

The Magician gave the Fool many a pointed look until there was an opportunity to generously volunteer a ride in the Chariot of my Brown Beast.   

It occurred to me that I shouldn't be compassionate at the expense of others.  After all, this sanctuary was home to the gracious Hierophant and Magician.   

They didn't ask for this. 

"I told you so," said Amien as soon as I came back from giving Julia a ride home. 

Other than that, The Fool took a step off the cliff and ended up with the World in his pocket. 

I love Ashland!!!!

Peace,

Montgomery

 

The Fool's Journey, Part 1 - On the Road # 27

Image by komahouse from Pixabay 

Image by komahouse from Pixabay 

Hey y'all,

I love being on the road.  

As exhausting as it is, I absolutely fucking love being on the road.  There's something about throwing oneself in the path of chance...

Not to mention that being on the road is sweet living at its most distilled. All the sour, bitter, and not so tasty parts are culled from the nectar every time I start up the Beast and ride into the sunset.

Even if there is no sunset, I always feel more and more amazing the further and further I get away from that place where not so wonderful things have happened.

Is it also immature?

Of course it is. 

But to throw oneself in the path of chance is to be the Eternal Fool at the start of one’s journey in the Tarot, leaving myself open to the domino effect of things as they happen.

After Thanksgiving, I left Eugene to go back to Seattle to the bazaar managed by an eighty year old clown at the former elementary school.  

This time it was a waste of time and money, not to mention that Marcia (pronounced Mar-See-Yaa) Moonstar just had to come by my booth to bitch and complain every chance she got. 

Even though she had the benefits of my boom box playing music in her booth because I didn't have batteries and that was the only outlet in the room, the energy vampire still had more juju to suck out of me. 

Mar-SEE-YA Moonstar was a wannabe High Priestess, while she was truly Upside Down Justice because she was also the one making money.

The unfairness of it all got to me. I had to get out of there. I got in the Chariot of my Beast by 2 in the PM, left the flea market early and drove to Portland. 

As soon as I left the city limits of Seattle, I felt lighter and breathed easier. It felt great to cut short the unnecessary suffering of a bad decision and just move on.

The flea market idea wasn't so great after all...

I'd been hearing about craigslist ever since I got down to the lower forty-eight, and I came up with a crazy idea in regards to rideshare. 

"Good at sales and need ride to Denver?" so began my ad.

In a nutshell, I made it clear that anybody who sold my books would get a free ride with no gas money.

I thought what the hell?  It's free to post an ad on this site, so what did I have to lose? I didn’t even expect anybody to answer since I put it up at the last minute.

What enterprising salesman-types would be looking for rides to anywhere?

Well, somebody did answer my post. I didn’t get an enterprising salesman type, but I did get Sun. Just imagine my surprise when my post was answered by another Fool on her own Journey.

"I'm in Eugene and am ready to leave right now."

Yet another stop in Eugene to meet my prospective saleswoman eager for a ride free of gas money.

Sun, nee Susan, was born and bred in the farming plains of Iowa. She was a robust blonde with slightly cocked blue eyes.

At twenty-four, Sun was as cosmic a hippie as one who had come of age in the late 60’s. She spent at least a year living naked and homeless in the island wilderness of Kauai. Somehow she ended up there after flunking out of college due to her activism in things that matter.

Sun recommended herself with the claim that in her gypsy travels of joblessness, she often went door to door canvassing for the Sierra Club for the going rate of 50 bucks a day whenever she was broke. So she would likely be comfortable approaching strangers to sell my collection of original fairy tales.

She'd been road-tripping around the West Coast for two months, but was really compelled to keep her promise to her folks in Iowa and return for visit by Christmas. I was heading to Denver, which was on the way more or less, and Sun had a cousin there she could stay with.

Knowing Sun made me fully understand why those who are just passing through are looked at sideways by those who have put down roots, paid their dues, and accepted the benefits of staying in one place. 

The nomadic don't invest in any one town, therefore how can they be trusted?    

Back in Homer at the beginning of this DIY book tour/road trip, Lia, the woman who let me sleep in the Beast on her property had a saying:

“We are all interconnected.”

How true. And there's nothing quite like giving a stranger a ride in good faith a road trip to prove it.

If nothing else, Sun had great stories and was fascinating to talk to.

Our first hours on the road, Sun showed me a picture of her girlfriend, her “baby” as she called her, and told me all about the paradise of living naked in Kauai.

She had been part of a gaggle of transients who moved their encampment from place to place around the wilderness of Kauai to avoid getting busted and kicked off.

She said it was glorious to l to eat mangoes from trees and not need any money until the day some guy showed up who took a dislike to her. He nudged and nudged until she was exiled from the village.

Even Paradise has a dark underbelly.

But as far as our original agreement was concerned, I often had to remind Sun to talk me up whenever we made a pit stop.

"Oh...yeah..." said Sun every time.

Unfortunately, my enterprising saleswoman had the attention span of a two year old.

She didn’t sell one book. But I don’t regret giving her a ride because the risk of giving cosmic hippie Sun a ride to Denver lead to other more wonderful things.

More to come on my Fool’s Journey in the next email.

Peace,

Mana

Yachatstasy

Image by Dimitris Vetsikas from Pixabay

I can feel the rhythm of the sea.

The current lulls while pulling back until the intrusion of crashing waves breaks the spell. Tis a strip tease the ocean does with the shore.

Mesmerizing and violent by turns, water flows soft before the burst of rage that frightens and excites.

There is grace in the erosion the sea wreaks upon the land.

I lie along the jagged edge and stare at the liquid jade beating against the rocks, the stone reshaped with the eternal rise and fall of the waves.

The water’s mark is left over time, its influence ever changing.

Sexuality is poetry when spoken with the cadence of the ocean. Orgasm now has the potential of infinity, expanding to allow ecstasy that is slow and enduring; its subtlety lingers long after the coupling is over.

In that moment of awakening, the sea turns mischievous with a sneaker wave that leaves me soaked. 

The ocean fascinates more the further the tide comes in.

The poetry of its language becomes a spoken word jam, a loud roar with staccato timing, merciless in its penetration, and the scenery only grows more devastating.

I want to get closer to the force.

Stepping tenderly along those jagged edges, I move to where two flows of the tide collide at the low point of the rocks.

Sometimes, the tide comes in nice and easy, and the embrace is chaste – a peck on the lips.

Then the momentum builds and builds until two currents shatter in an explosion of foam. The love gets deeper as the tide keeps coming, crashing droplets of salty froth that soar high above me. 

Crescendo.

It is a dance and a symphony, and the ferocity is too much.

I start to move, my rubber boots doing a near silent stomp as I wave my arms, circle my hands, and twirl my fingers.

The flamenco beats in time to rhythm of the ocean, the sound of waves booming against the rocks makes me giddy.

So this is how music and dance came to be.

I am certain of it.

Way back when we had the good sense to listen to the world around us, this is how it must have happened.

We called out in response. Clapping and stomping, so consumed were we with the motion and songs of the earth, we had no choice but to move our bodies in step.

How euphoric it must have been to play with the world around us, and how joyous when the world played back almost doesn’t bear thinking about.

Because if we did, we’d have to confess alienation was our own choice.

I resent my clothes.

I want to feel the wind and absorb the salt into my being. I compromise and take off my shirt.

Standing at the edge, I continue my dance with the sea as waves crash before and spits of water shoot like geysers through the blowholes behind me.

The ocean is relentless.

Her aggression becomes a little terrifying.

The waves climb higher…and higher…making a zenith of noise when they fall.

I back off and join my friend.

We stand inside the pelvis of the rock beds, a bowl formed in the stone, far enough from the edge where the rocks meet the sea.

Yet the tide still runs past us, around the stone on either side, and the waves continue to rise high above us before they crash.

But for now, we are safe inside that pelvis.    

"This is fiercely beautiful," says my friend.

And she’s right. It is.

Near us, a flock of pelicans coast just above the rising crests of watery emeralds until they peak, and evade the collapse of smashing foam.

Far away, the light changes as the sun drops behind rolling clouds, sending beams across the sky.

Yet the clouds hover above the horizon, leaving a path for us to see clearly the fall of the sun.

At the far reaches of the world, the sea is lavender slate; and there, I see waves rolling and crashing in the distance.

At last, the ball of fire descends and makes shadows of the birds flying across the horizon.

 Crescendo.

 We have stayed on the edge for over five hours, bearing witness to the spectacle of an incoming tide that happens every day.

But it is exquisite on this one.

Many people have come and gone in that time, but we remained. That piece of the coast belonged to us in those precious hours.

But now, it’s time to go.

The sun is gone and the sky is growing darker. The sea has become ominous and water climbs over the rock beds where we stood earlier.

It won’t be long before the bowl where we stand is flooded and the shoreline is fully possessed by the tide.

Making our way over the rocks, we are exhausted and exhilarated, and covered with salt.

I can taste the ocean on my fingers.

Photo by Terina Chapman

Photo by Terina Chapman


 

Tripping Through Wonderland and Hobo Punks - On the Road #21

GiveYourselfSomethingtoWriteAbout-Wonderland1.jpg

Hey y'all,

Every time I think my little road-tripping book tour has hit a lull, something happens.

Way back on my first stop in Homer, a free-spirit that found his way to my Arabian Nights booth-style set up, whose roommate had listened to a story and bought a book, mentioned that he was selling "the key to art."  

And pray tell, what is your key to art?

Oh, a concoction of chocolate and mushrooms.

It had been years since I jumped down the rabbit hole. 

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Since he supported my endeavors, I felt obliged (and happily so) to support his. And then I didn't use the key to art to open the door to new dimensions until last night. 

But that's okay...

My date from last week had never done mushrooms before. Since he expressed curiosity and willingness, I offered to share “the key to art” (and other dimensions) with him, excited to have somebody to share them with.

Anyway, he and I ate the magic chocolate, and walked to the park near the neighborhood of Turnagain, in Anchorage.

It wasn't long before we crossed paths with the professional, purposeful couple wearing matching jeans, matching down jackets, and matching boots purposefully striding their way back home, hunched over in joyless discomfort. 

They had had their healthful walk in the outdoors and were ready to return to where they could be at ease.

Indoors.

Then we came across the group that halloed into the dark and walked past us with their faces to the breeze and their shoulders back. It was clear that they were enjoying the cold and themselves in the cold.

After the woods, we wandered in the very pristine neighborhood of Turnagain with their artistic houses.

Thus our voyeuristic trip began as the mushrooms hit a peak.

Being from the South where most of the really nice neighborhoods were in areas that had been built a long time ago, it was something to see the expression of affluence in a city that is still growing into its personality. 

Many of the homes were showy and I couldn't get over all the huge picture windows, with tasteful lighting whether people were up and about, at home, or away.  

Looking into somebody else's world, we saw fine art displayed in tastefully decorated homes. It was as if their privileged way of life was on display to anybody who cared to look.

"Looky here! See my fabulous home! My beautiful art, luxurious furniture, and unique knick knacks. Wouldn't ya just love to live here? Aren't ya jealous?" 

It was Life as a Peepshow, now you see me, now you don't. 

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Occasionally, we'd see signs of human activity, a mother dancing the boogie woogie to show off her moves to her son, her head obscured by the glass, with a bird's eye view of her gyrating torso.

We also passed houses with normal windows, as well as bushes to hide from the stares of the nosy, mushroom-tripping voyeurs like me and my date. But for the most part the houses in the neighborhood screamed:

"Here I am! I have arrived!” 

There was a car that kept creeping past us. The neighborhood watch wondered what we were up to. 

We were clearly not one of the Joneses. So were we casing the neighborhood? Looking to defile one of the virginal showpieces with our criminal intent?

Then there was the house with the huge yard, and the only thing on display was the blue room in the basement.

I overstepped the boundaries, and entered the yard to get a better look. And that’s when we got caught. 

But the guy who did was even more of an oddball in that neighborhood as we were. But he was perfect for us in the state we were in.

His name was Bradley.

He was clad in tight faded black jeans, a black Carrhart jacket, a grubby black tee shirt, camouflaged by a red and black checked scarf, a gold chain with a medallion, shiny black cowboy boots, a faded American flag bandanna wrapped around his head, and metallic pink sunglasses (it was night) perched from his ears to his crown. 

He was very compact, no taller than five foot four and he had the scratchy vocals of a skid-row drunk. 

Bradley was the lost soul younger brother living in the basement of his brother's and his brother's girlfriend's house. He smelled like an Altoid factory.

He came out of the blue basement to find out who we were and what we were about. While he was there, he indulged in a forbidden cigarette and told us about himself and how he came to be there.

I couldn't stop staring at him as he talked incessantly of clearing out the yard we’d just invaded.

It had been crowded with the abandoned vans, trucks, and other vehicular junk the brother’s girlfriend's deceased father left behind. 

Apparently, the dead dad had been a hoarder when he was alive, and his daughter was having a hard time letting go of her daddy's excess baggage.

"She will not get rid of the abandoned airplane parts in the back yard. This was her father's house. She has four or five houses all over. She calls me brother-in-law, but I don't see my brother getting married. He says she's the one though."

The car that had been following us for our walk redoubled its vigilance after this interaction.

I figured the neighbors must have been grateful to have the yard cleared out of the junkyard effects, even if they gritted their teeth at the presence of Bradley. 

Whoever that woman was, his brother’s girlfriend must have been really in love. Chances were, Bradley was probably very helpful.

On a professional note, an unexpected thing has happened.

I may have an opportunity to freelance an article to the Anchorage Press, so I'm interviewing people who used to be the homeless teenagers in major cities with a liberal bent across the country - who have done their fair share of squatting, hitchhiking, and train hopping. 

I found out there is a large community of hobo punks from Anchorage on out because they've found a niche here. 

They have one hell of a story, kind of nice to focus on telling the tale that belongs to other people. 

It’s been a couple of years since I've been in reporting mode, but it's a good change. 

The Press has at least nibbled on the bait, keep your fingers crossed for me. Will they bite?

I'll be back in Juneau from October 25th to November 1st when I go to the lower forty-eight. Look forward to seeing everybody...

Peace,

Montgomery

PS If you’d like to read the blog post where I met my date that I later tripped on mushrooms with, click here.