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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 4 of 7)
Martin Boelter Mar 29th 2010 6:36PM
I hitchhiked for 7 - 8 years. From school, to school, from work, to parties, to friend's places and on and on. But that was Germany, in case you wondered. In rural areas, even in larger cities like Berlin, catching a ride with a stranger is a normal thing to do. Bus schedules don't always accomodate you, so hitchhiking is normally not done due to lack of funds, but lack of a proper bus schedule.
I never had problems, either to be picked up or when I was driving myself, picking somebody else up. I moved to the US two years ago, so all the way up to 2006 I was still catching a ride occasionally in the larger Frankfurt area.
I wouldn't do it here, though. My american wife and other people I met here told my enough horror stories about it. I don't claim to be a great researcher on the differences between these two countries as far as hitchhiking is concerned, but I will tell you my theory. First, no guns in Germany. So nobody is likely to shoot you. There are no 50 mile stretches of nothingness in all of Europe. Doesn't exist. So you won't be allone with somebody else for any extended period of time, and if you try to enter a deserted forrest road with a normal car, you probably wouldn't be able to drive far. The locals already spotted you and will come after you in fear you would start something in their beloved forrest. Then, not much gang stupidity going on, by which this country seemed to be plaqued. And lastly, not much drug abuse going on either, legal or illegal. Look at all the drug problems America has and the related violence. Then watch some commercials and take note of all the fantastic drugs they sell here for everybody. Got muscle pain in your big toe? Take blue crap. Having problems getting up in the morning? Take green crap. Look not virbrant enough? Yellow crap. I mean, with all that drug consumption, I just can't think where all these drugs take people, sorry. Might be nothing but to me it adds to the insanity we sometimes witness here.
kampeny Mar 29th 2010 6:38PM
Loved your story, unfortunately so true as far as the safety in the USA is concerned. European born, I had criss-crossed all of Europe hitchhiking in the sixties and seventies and then found out in the eighties in the USA that many seemed to consider hitchhiking as a public nuisance that should be treated as a crime (included being hassled by many small town police officers).
So sad it has become unsafe ... but can't we rejoice knowing the USA has the best imprisonment rate in the world (756 per 100 000 inhabitants in 2006 outperforming the next best: the Russian Federation with 611 and the next best, New Zealand with a pidly186)... would there be a relationship by any chance? ...the more humane our approach ... or is prevention a waste of money not generating anywhere close the economic activity generated by the prison system and therefore unworthy of consideration ... could it be that law and order, cherished by many, brings about the exact opposite? Could it be that leaving education to the television, the police and the courts rather than the families could contribute to bring about the fact that globally the USA has become one of the most dangerous countries in the world ... or maybe its due to the fact that not enough people carry arms around? Go figure.
mary lou Mar 29th 2010 6:48PM
u r so right. A lost innocence and a lost art. My story of a few:
Once in Europe I was alone in a small restraunt about to order when a lebenese man ask me persistantly to go with him to the port of marsallise in S. France to pick up a car. I left quickly of course thanking God I had some common sense. I never doubt to this day he was thinking sex slave for I was attractive and young.
I still hiked but like I said, I have common sense. I was amazed at the lack of common sense among many travelers, mostly young women. Scares me. Lord knows they need to get their damn noses out of nail polish bottles and learn about the realism of life. Oh sh%* I forgot,,,,, who would teach them????
Please pardon my spelling.
Spread common sense!!!!!!!!! But only if ya got it,,,lol.
Bob Mar 29th 2010 6:47PM
Great story, in 1972 at the age of 17 I hitchhiked from Duncan Ok to Long Beach CA and back, then to Jacksonville Florida and back to Duncan and finally to Akron Ohio and back to Duncan.....little money in my pocket, slept in trees, under bridges, and an occasional $4.00 a night hotel..you can imagine what that place was like. I ran into one creep which thought he had a date for the night until I jumped out of his car while he went in to buy beer for the evening adventures and hid in the trees till he left...I also had a California family pick me up, gave me breakfast and a ride almost across California, great people, a few rides where no one spoke English, one van that was so full of pot smokers that I had to sit by the road for an hour when I got out (didn't smoke it but couldn't help breathe it) before I felt normal enough to continue..., all in all great memories and in hindsight mighty lucky. BUT would I do it today, not in a million years, the world has changed and to take a chance like that today would be similiar walking down a dark alley in an abandoned city block. But loved reading the article...good stuff, could relate to the road experience.
Kaydee Mar 29th 2010 7:15PM
I hitched hiked as a teenager twice - first time with a gf and we got into a car accident. No one was badly hurt, but still....second time alone, and the guy passed my street and headed towards the river. I kept on begging him to turn around and take me home and he wouldn't. He was stupid enough (or SMART enough from my perspective) to slow down slightly at a stop sign where I was able to jump out of the car - it was still moving, and I fell to the ground, but I got out and RAN home! Needless to say, I never hitch hiked AGAIN! I'm counting my blessings and leaving it at that!
ml Mar 29th 2010 6:58PM
u sound like a 20 year old with a 6 year old mind. Like a lot of peoples in our world breeding stupid children. I got bad news for you. YOU CAN T FIX STUPID.
There was a time of innocense in this world, only a short while ago. That would be "in the past" if you could understand that. Oh and if you could broaden your mind to understand there is still much good in the world then you might have a chance to fix your stupididty. Really!
bo bo Mar 29th 2010 7:06PM
Theres so many beautiful creative AMAZING people hitchhiking across America right now..that are safe and need to be picked up...how do i know this? because im one of them and i have MANY friends that hitchhike all the time to get across country. that now thanks to you....wont get a ride now because you posted this . swaying everyones opinion.
America once home to the free......
Thomas Mar 29th 2010 7:13PM
When I was younger and stationed in Washington State I used to hitchhike all the time. It was great and I met a lot of interesting people.
chfrench Mar 29th 2010 7:53PM
In the mid '70's I graduated HS at end of 1st semester. Dad took me 9 miles to
I-70 gave me a quarter and told me not to say to much to cops if they stopped me.
I went from Frisco Co to Wheeling WVA in 4 days. It was '73, January and the 1st gas crunch. What a trip. Two years later I did Denver-Reading Ca. and back, some hopping freight trains through Nevada and Utah. It is sad that those days are past in the USA. We once respected hobos and travilers!
Dale Kendall Mar 29th 2010 7:53PM
I was flat broke one winter and wanted to see my oldest two daughters at Christmas. Hitched from Spokane WA to Grangville ID. One of the rides was from a Vietnam Vet who explained to me that he had killed many times and that it would be nothing to kick me out the door while flying down the highway. I kept my cool and kept listening to him and responded to his tails. As it turned out he drove me to my destination and I thanked him. He left before I headed to the apartment where My X and my daughters lived. Another time I was broke again and decided to hike to Billings MT from Spokane so that I could sign the Electricians out of work book. Most of my rides were cool but one ride was with 2 men. One quite young and one older. They spoke of the sagebrush rebelion. The Older man suggested they should take me out in the woods and hang me. I didn't show any feelings and they took me to the nearest town and dropped me off. I was glad to get out of the truck and grab my backpack. You meet all kinds on the road. I haven't had to hitch since. I used to pick up a hitch hiker from time to time but, stopped the practice while I was waiting for a job in Pittsburg CA since I picked up a hooker that was looking for tricks and a homosexual man that was looking for a good time. It's just not worth it from either side.
Clyde Mar 29th 2010 8:17PM
Good story Andrew, sort of reminded me of my own youth back in the 1940s. At the age of 13, I hitch-hiked (and rode freight trains) from California to Oklahoma, my native state. Got the hell scared out of me several times while both riding the rails and hitch-hiking, but it all worked out OK. After I reached my destination, I attempted to join the Marine Corps, but they would not believe me when I told them I was 18. I ended up being sent back to my parents by one of my uncles; on a Greyhound bus. Quite an experience, but this day and age there's no way I would ever do that again, even if I was still 13.
killer Mar 29th 2010 8:17PM
I`D REMEMBER WHEN I WAS A KID, KNEW THIS KID NEVER LISTEN WHEN NOT TO HITCHHIKE. WELL HE WAS MISSING AND LATER THE AUTHORITY FOUND HIM DEAD. @ THE MORGUE, THEY HAD TO ID HIS BODY, AN WHEN HE WAS ID, THE FORENSIC STATED THAT HE DIED WITH A SPEAR TIRE IN HIS AZZ. TRUE STORY. BELIEVE IT OR NOT.
Robert Mar 29th 2010 8:18PM
I hitch hiked a lot as a teen, once from LA to San Francisco and back at 16. I remember coming back to LA I got stuck at this freeway on ramp for what seemed an eternity, it was dark and I was cold tired and hungry...oh yah flat broke. So a bit later a car stops and rolls down the window, it's a priest, need a lift? You bet. All the way to LA, only about 2 miles from my home. That day I was watched over, and I'm far from religious. The writer is correct, I lived to write this but I wouldn't hitch hike now.
Youtube
Another Black Season
Katrin Mar 29th 2010 9:58PM
you are sooooooo right!
Katrin Mar 29th 2010 10:00PM
Oops, clicked at the wrong reply. Comment was ment for the one underneath you..........
Gerard Mar 29th 2010 8:21PM
America was the last to come and I'd bet it will be the first to go.. why? Because this country only looks good on the outside.. on the inside it's EVIL, HELL, racist, discriminating, classist, oppressive, status-oriented, narcississtic, hypocritic, money money money!! Do I need to go on? Oh yeah I know it's 'FREE'= and we're all Free to SUFFER here. Yah I know.. we all know!! Thanks elitist scum for reminding us every night on CNN and FOX News. Thanks for nothing!
Here in NY, you can't only hitchhike.. but you can't ever pick up a hitchhiker either because it's so fearful to do so.. in fact.. local authorities educate citizens on the dangers of picking up women or children if they are seen hitchhiking because they are usually a 'front' for robbers, rapers, criminals hiding nearby waiting for you to stop for the woman or child. A trap! Nothing is honest or innocent in America. Just offer me a space ship outta here and I'll board it tonight. right now!
Katrin Mar 29th 2010 10:03PM
Gerard. You are sooooooooooo right about the Americans (Die doofen Amis!).
rudd Mar 29th 2010 8:39PM
began h'hiking getting home from baseball practice in late 60's. Continued to use it as a regular way of gettin' here n' there. Mostly north-east & into ohio - once carried 5 h'hikers through Pa. Felt great. Made signs .. once had someone photograph my brother & I (been backpacking in NH .. "Keep America Beautiful .. Pick US up ..!) ) .. paid us for the photo-op - then proceeded to pass us by ..! Can't recall any serious situations, and do remember many good rides/people.
Muncherflesh Chalkwhite Mar 29th 2010 8:50PM
Poor old Mucherflesh Chalkwhite had no idea about the unsafe nature of riding in the back of a truck inside a cage with really big hungry pigs. At first the pigs only sniffed then sniff came to nudge and nudge lead to drooling mouths full of chomping tusks which lead to MC quickly emptying his backpack of anything remotely edible just to find out the pigs weren't hungry at all and surprisingly horny instead to the absolute delight of a hitchhiking MC that just so happened to be looking for that very type of fix himself - but NOT with a cage full of unwashed stinking fat pigs! After the pigs finished soaking poor old MC down with loads of hot out of the bowel pig squirt all MC could do was puke his guts out later found fast asleep by the farmer driving the truck who came to the conclusion the MC had been carrying with his pigs in unnatural ways that made the farmer very jealous. MC spent the rest of the trip driving the truck as the farmer spent the rest of the voyage satisfying the desires of his caged flock as the merry band of smiling faces drove off into the American sunset.
fred Mar 29th 2010 8:46PM
First time ever that I have enjoyed a post and comments as well as I have enjoyed reading these. I think I will sign off while I am in a good mood. Thanks everyone. Hope to see more of this sort of thing.