A Limp in the Woods...or not (Day 122)

An Appalachian Trail Tale
Day 122: Wednesday, July 24th, 2013

Rutland, Vermont Zero Day #2 = 0 miles
Miles to date: 1,680


Asian Pears and Adam’s Apples

Preface: As it seems to go, my temerity had a way of embarrassing me yesterday. I lost every game of Scrabble I played, no matter the challenger. (Challenger implies they were challenged. They were not; not during the game, and not at any other time. We know who the challenged one is.)

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Today, at an unethical hour, I awoke--challenging though it was--and managed some more painting. (When I say “managed,” what I mean is I managed others while they painted.) I also tried to bounce back from all the Scrabble trounces. Dress the wounds. Nurse the ego. Start anew. Get out of this rut(land). Time for ol’ Funnybone to bone up on two-letter words. (Ugh is three letters.) Time to work on words longer than two letters. There’s a whole dictionary’s worth, I tell ya. And ya, ya is a word, that piquant pear.

After watching the paint dry, a cadre of us participated in a protracted sally to a not-so-local organic farm/commune. Basin Farm is run by the same folks who operate the Yellow Deli, a peaceful, spiritual people who are respectful enough not to shove their beliefs (or their food) down your throat. ‘Twas more work-for-stay stuff, though not much of it. More of a play-for-stay. Our attendance turned it into a funny farm.

We raked and hoed underfed fields before harvesting raspberries. When our supervisors weren’t looking, we’d each accidentally harvest berries into our yawning maws. “Oops,” we’d repeat, giggling like children. After reaching our fill, we sat down for a larger, more organized feast. Then more cultivating. The fields were dusty plots with rocks scattered about, so none of us knew what was being grown, or what had been grown. Bigger, riper rocks, perhaps. Someone joked, “they raise ‘em to set ‘em on the AT.”

I worked on a haiku and sang: “Raking rocks in the...hot sun…I fought the trail and the...trail won.”

The haiku: 

I can’t seem to think
Of a befitting haiku 
I would be proud of

Is that a haiku?

I hope to bring one of these things on a future hike
After the tilling and another scrumptious lunch, the farm’s foreman/factotum, a short handsome man whose name was something or other (I didn’t hear it because I wasn’t listening; in fact I hardly ever tune in to good-looking guys, unless I’m standing in front of the mirror) took us under his wings. He taught us the noble art of passing the time*. It is a lesson all thru-hikers could use. 

(*Hear today’s bonus track by clicking on the link!)

He had a hip, hippie name, now that I think about it. 

When done doing diddly, we disregarded the One-Hour rule and went for a flop in the adjacent river, just upstream from a wide but untraveled automobile bridge. Our hippie host demonstrated how to launch from a fifteen-foot perch into the river. Or how he’d launch.

Most of us chickened out, including Chickadee (proving that chickadees can metamorphose into chickens when undue anxiousness is incurred, and that neither bird can fly). But Tugboat, ever the daredevil, would impress just as he had atop the trampoline at Bill and Amy’s Fourth of July bash. Despite the staid, subdued exterior, the dude is full of surprises. He consistently illustrates that our first obligation is to live. To live!

The guy possesses all the curiosity and wonder of a child, even though he’s some years removed. Most of all, though, he’s ballsy. At least until he hit the frigid water. No man is ballsy after that. Once swollen and chafed, mine were now near my Adam’s Apple as I swam against the stream, trying not to get carried away. Malcolm Forbes once said, “People who never get carried away should be,” but I don’t think he meant by current.

If I had to orchestrate the ideal estrangement from the tilted, thin, muddy swathe, this was it. A difficult day of swimming and cloud watching. A day of undone deeds and not much more. A good, grand thing--for how we spend our days is how we spend our lives.

Trying to work this whole work thing out

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