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Hitchhiker's Requiem
My father taught me to never, ever hitchhike because I would die. He illustrated the point with dinner table horror stories starring chopped up teenage bodies strewn along the highway and acid-crazed madmen speeding across America at 120 mph: "Those are the kind of people who pick up hitchhikers."I followed his advice until I turned 18, which--in this country--is the legal age to stop following your parents' advice. I don't remember my first time, though. I was probably in Europe and it just happened--I stuck out my thumb and got a free ride. It was so easy and I was so hooked. Others chased drugs and girls but I chased cars. Free travel is addictive.
I devised a "hitch rate" for countries--the average number of cars that passed by before I got a lift. France has a better hitch rate than Spain, Spain better than Italy, Italian Switzerland worse than German Switzerland. Russians always pick up, as long as you have cash. Scandinavia is surprisingly good. The smaller the island, the better the hitching--unless it's a British colony. And then there's stuck-up bourgeois countries like Slovenia, where I waited 2 hours and walked over 10 miles before getting a lift from a bleach-blonde Austrian man who had crossed the border to buy a vacuum cleaner.
It wasn't always movie montage bliss. I've had my fair share of scares:
There was the Ukrainian sailor in Crimea who rode his little Lada like a speedboat, chain-smoking with all windows rolled up, chewing and puffing on his cigarettes and conversing wildly, dropping inches of grey ash each time he shifted gears. Also, maybe he was a little bit drunk.
And I won't edit out all the pervy creeps out there, like the beady-eyed, fifty-something French baker who wanted a male friend on this, his day off. Although, the one good thing about creeps is that most of them look like creeps. Hitching is all about judging a book by its cover and I've probably refused as many rides as I've accepted. I also accept that my own occasional creepiness has worked against me.
Like the time in Polynesia--sweat-soaked, red-faced and unshaven--when I stuck out a thumb and waited hours before getting a lift from a nice old lady in a flowery dress. I promptly fell asleep in her car (oh no, was I snoring?). Twenty minutes later she gently woke me at my destination. I thanked her and wiped the drool from my cheek, feeling like a numskull.
Hitching humbles you and makes you grateful for others. As I got older and wiser and less broke, I stopped taking so many lifts and started giving them.
In Costa Rica I picked up two Nicaraguans-a young mother and daughter who worked illegally in the banana plantations. In Zimbabwe--where a car with gas in the tank is viewed much like a free bus--I managed to fit 15 people in the back of an open truck. My passengers knocked on the window when they wanted to get off, then clapped their hands in thanks. In New Zealand, I picked up two Eurokids at the tail end of their gap year. They pretended everything was cool but displayed classic symptoms of backpacker poverty. They were out of cash and hungry with three more days before their return flight home. I drove them all the way to Christchurch and gave them dinner, then watched from the rearview mirror as they set up their sleeping bags under a bridge. Every true traveler needs to be broke on the road at least once. Everyone else is a poseur.
Like in Iceland when I picked up this soaking pair of entitled German campers with blonde dreadlocks and matching nose rings. They complained about the lack of space in my rental car, dripped their icky hippy wetness all over the backseat and demanded a monetary contribution for their organic, low-impact lifestyle. I offered them a fistful of blue pixie stix and dropped their ungrateful, low-impact asses off in a rainy parking lot. Kids these days; they got no respect.
There are no rules to hitchhiking but there are definite social graces--a delicate etiquette between giver and receiver. In America, that relationship of trust was broken long ago.
I don't need to spell out all the gruesome ways people have been killed hitchhiking or giving lifts--I have a word limit and besides, you can read it all on Wikipedia, right under "serial killer". Basically, a lot of people have died hitchhiking in America. It's just one out of many head-shaking United States' ironies--that in spite of our great freedom and multiple first amendment rights, imitating On the Road is against the law in most states because you might die. Meanwhile in "repressed" Europe, hitchhiking is legal, a rite of passage and the latest trend in charity fundraisers, kind of like our lamer walk-a-thons but way more fun.
Forget the economic woes, endless war and healthcare mess of the news: The real sign of America's troubles is that Rousseau's social contract has failed at this most basic level-between hitcher and driver, lift and lifted.
There's a hundred ways to philosophize this phenomenon: As a car culture, all respectable Americans own cars or have friends with cars--hitchhikers are Americans without cars and therefore undesirable vagrants of ill character. Or that Americans prize freedom of expression above quality of expression (see American Idol), which inevitably leads to victory of the lowest, loudest element. Whatever the reasoning, something bad happened in my country that turned hitchhiking into a vehicle for death.
I never hitchhike in America, nor do I give lifts to strangers. Maybe my dad's stories still haunt me, maybe I know better now, and maybe I have my own stories to tell: things that I've read in the paper, melodramatic TV newscasts, horrible stuff that's happened during my own lifetime.
As the English say, it's a pity really . . . how we've squandered this innocence, how we've closed the open road just a little bit, how our unfettered wanderlust is lost to precaution and cautionary tales. The American fairy tale of hitchhiking hovers on the verge of mythology--a belief rooted in history that might inspire young travelers, but nonetheless remains a kind of modern fiction.
It's a pity really because some of my happiest travel moments occurred while hitchhiking. Like getting a ride in Scotland on some long rocky isle in the Outer Hebrides. A farmer motioned me into the back of his pickup and I sprawled out across a pile of freshly chopped logs. Everything smelled like sea and pinewood; the ocean wind whipped my hair wildly. I watched the world pull away from me, backwards, the red-brown moorland swept up into high crags and then over the edge of broken sea cliffs. To this day, this is how I remember Scotland: from the back of a truck.
And that's still the way I like my travel: from the back of a truck.
Related:
* One man's search for the best pizza in Naples, Italy, the birthplace of the pizza.
* Another man's exploration into rediscovering a city he thought he knew completely.
Or watch the guys visit the "top of New York" and dive into the spiciest food the city that never sleeps offers. (Spoiler alert: Only one of them ends up sick, in the bathroom.)
Filed under: Stories, Africa, Europe, North America, Oceania, South America, Zimbabwe, Russian Federation, France, Iceland, Luxembourg, Slovenia, Switzerland, Ukraine, United Kingdom, United States, New Zealand













Reader Comments (Page 3 of 7)
Ali Mar 29th 2010 5:22PM
I came to the united states as a foriegn student in summer of 1978.
later that year i hitch hiked from malibu CA. to Vancouver B.C.and back.
Took me three days to get there.Realy enjoyed it.I still remember the rides and
conversations.Would i suggest it to my kids?NO WAY,Absolutly not.
The 70's are over.
Becky Payne Mar 29th 2010 5:20PM
WHAT AN AMAZING ARTICLE!
Deonna's a Dork Mar 29th 2010 5:21PM
Very cool Mr.Evans...its rare for me to read every word of a post and I enjoyed every one of yours..That being said, and yes America can be a scary place, we need to rationalize the statistics a bit though..you are comparing individual countries that have populations smaller then some of our states to our entire country...I bet if we were to do the numbers a bit closer to actual violent crimes towards hitchers per capital. we would see a different picture.Though I doubt I would hitch a ride in Memphis or Phoenix.....And stay far away from Juarez/El Paso ;-)
Sue Mar 29th 2010 5:32PM
Andrew, loved the description/memories of Scotland. How old are you? You write/sound like an old soul :)
JN Mar 29th 2010 5:27PM
Lived in Mass., stationed in Holloman Air Base, New Mexico. Out on the highway at 11PM thumbing a ride back from Alamogordo, NM. A guy picks me up to bring me back to base. The guy...my sister's, best friend's, husband, who just happened to be on a business trip from our hometown, MA. Small world.
Gigidh Mar 29th 2010 5:55PM
Ah it is sad! I am old enough to remember when America was as safe for hitch hiking as any place else in the world. My Mom pciked up hitchers in the 30s and 40s and my college roommate and I hitch hiked in the 40s ourselves. We were 2 young girls who had summer jobs as camp counsellors and on our day off we could only get to the town and to a movie by hitching. Mostly in those days we rode with truck drivers who because of their stellar characters were known as "knights of the road". When our oldest daughter did a year of college work in Europe she and her friends hitched all over Europe, but by then we would not allow her to do the same in our own country, When did we get so evil??
Roger Mar 29th 2010 6:05PM
Wow! What memories! I was forutnate enough to catch the last of the "good times" in US in the late 70's. I would have never done it myself, but my man Eric talked me into it. Off we went on a spring break from Indianapolis destined for "The Big Easy"! We had a great, great adventure that was an absolute blast and and an absolute terror at the same time. We were stuck in the middle of Mississippi for hours when we were picked up by a huge blue pickup, we threw our backpacks in the back of the truck and jumped in not even caring about who was picking us up. Several miles down the road, I looked out the back window and my backpack was on fire! It had leaned against stand up tailpipes our driver has mounted. Too Funny! WE made it to New Orleans, had a great time and head north to Arkansas to see our families. Great Memories!
Crusty Old Carpenter Mar 29th 2010 5:35PM
Hitch hiking was very common and accepted in the USA, during the Great Depression and thereafter. It reached its peek during WWII when many servicemen were on the roads, trying to get home on a weekend pass. I began thumbing rides to get to school in my early teens, the mid-50's. Even though there were a few "creeps" on the roads, I never felt threatened and always got out of the car OK. That adds up to about 1200 rides, back and forth, seldom with a familiar face. In my mid-twenties I hitched coast to coast one time. It was 1967 and hitch hiking was less acceptable by then. It took me a week to make the trip, thirty-three rides, Los Angeles to NYC in late November. I waited for many cold hours in some places, cars and trucks going by regularly. After that I never depended on my thumb again. When I lived in Mexico I learned that offering rides to people who are walking on back roads is customary, as is offering money to the driver when departing the vehicle. The money is always politely offered and politely refused, all a part of customary respectful attitudes between extended family members.
Jeanne Mar 29th 2010 5:37PM
Thanks for the wonderful article! It took me back to the 60's when I was a cash-strapped girl with a wanderlust so strong it forced me to take up hitchhiking. I met many, many kind, generous people on the road (and a few scary ones) who went out of their way to help me along. I have always been grateful to them, and have never forgotten them. It's truly a shame the young people now can't experience that without putting themselves in harm's way. Thanks again. Jeanne
marania Mar 29th 2010 5:38PM
I think this article is stupid. LOL It really was a waste of my time. I can`t believe this stupid idiot put his life at risk just for a free ride. What a dumbass. And then he complains and whines about how hitchiking in the U.S. is dangerous and continues on complaining about the fact that hitchiking is illegal here. What does he want to do? start a hitchiking movement? it is really not that serious. he`s getting all up-tight over the fact that he can`t hitchhike here. IT`S HITCHIKING LOL how much of a dumbass can you be? stop making it sound like its some movement or cause.
James Mar 29th 2010 5:43PM
I was aquitted once for killing a couple hitchhiking hippie teenagers that badmouthed President Bush and our veterans. I hope you burn in hell Billy and Steve (I got you). God Bless Double Jeopardy!!
Rod Mar 29th 2010 5:51PM
Ok. I guess you're going to post this until you get a reaction. Here you go:
HOLY SH*T!! IS THIS GUY CONFESSING TO MURDER?!?!?! WHOA MAN I CAN'T BELIEVE IT!!! SOMEONE CALL THE LAW!!!
There.
Are you happy?
By the way, I gotta call BULLSH*T!!!
Gordo Mar 29th 2010 5:41PM
The best story I have read in a while. Thanks. I never hitched much but still give
rides to people I feel are safe and in need.
Steven Sexton Mar 29th 2010 5:42PM
I met some very nice people on the road, and still see some of them 45 years later.Two from Germany visited here twice over the years.
My best friend was only 17 when I met him, he was put out by his folks so they could do drugs and not have there boys around to get in way. He came to live with me, his older brother went to Alaska and was killed there.
My friend met a local gril and had two fine boys with her. Oldest boy just turned 18 and well be spending the summer here on West coast with me. He now lives in Georga with his folks.
skeet Mar 29th 2010 10:19PM
i had fogot but a guy ask me if oregon was still the same in the 60s early 70s he hitched hiked from california about 14 miles inside oregon he was arrested spent 2 weeks in jail was realsed and went strait back to california it was ilegal to hitch hike oregon until 73-74
Jerry Mar 29th 2010 10:14PM
I have hitch Hiked all over America , no better way to travel
wrolf Mar 29th 2010 6:01PM
Hitch hiking IS a dying art, and that is sad. I am proud to say that I have MANY miles under my thumb.
Question folks: Do we REALLY have any MORE crazies or do we just hear about them sooner?
I had great rides, a few mediocre rides but I was never threatened or harmed. I had a BLAST hitching across these United States and Germany!
Elwn Mar 29th 2010 6:20PM
Ah, your article brought back such memories.. I'm a 50 something housewife now but in the early 70's I hitched from the East Coast to California and back a dozen times in little over a year. Never ran into trouble, met alot of unusual people, saw alot of this country and had quite a few adventures. Too bad kids can't do that today....
Tim C Mar 29th 2010 6:25PM
My buddy Brian and my brothers would hitch everywhere as kids in MA and NH in the early 1970's.
Brian was a freckle-faced blond with a "dutchboy" haircut who had an interesting way of hitching. He would stand on the side of the road giving the middle finger to cars as they went by. We would sit on the side of the road and watch. Inevitably, someone would stop and ask him if he wanted a punch in the face and he would reply..."No, we want a ride !" after the driver would stop laughing, we would all pile in.
Roger Mar 29th 2010 6:35PM
As a teen in the 70's, I hitchhiked in Europe - My best story is when I got picked up by a French farmer in Saarland carrying a truck load of sugar beets. He drove me almost all the way to Paris. I only speak a little French and he only a little English, yet we talked constantly about his wife and kids. When he let me off, he gave me about 5 pounds of sugar beets - for which I was grateful. A really nice guy!