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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 6 of 7)
J.J. Mar 29th 2010 10:48PM
Pam,
Your experience sounds about par for the course. All these others are living on borrowed time. I've never hitchhiked in my life...never will.
Jblood Mar 29th 2010 10:32PM
What a great article. It's very well written and I immediately can relate to the author as a person who picked up a few hitchhikers on my many journeys from the lower 48 to Alaska during the '90s. One trip in particular was a lucky encounter for myself and two beautiful 20 something college girls who were travelling to yellowknife from calgary, I was also in my 20's. The engine in their bucket truck had thrown a rod while traveling in the mountains and they sold it for a few hundred dollars the day before. I stopped for the girls early one morning because they looked like two angels with a lot of luggage. I think they picked me too. I was traveling light, in a very nice car and had plenty of room, I stopped right next to them. They needed a lift to "as far as I could take them" which was to Whitehorse in the Yukon territory. I picked them up in Banff national park, at least 2 days drive away. One of the girls' father arranged with us to pick them up in Whitehorse in a cessna airplane. He offered to pay me for my time when we got to Whitehorse. I didn't want that trip to end! We had such a great time together, I occasionally wonder how they're doing and if they have families of their own now. I've also picked up hitchhikers in Alaska that could be considered vagrants. But it was like 30 below zero and I had passed an abandoned vehicle a mile or so back. In those temperatures, it's like law in alaska to stop for someone when it's really cold. They were very grateful to say the least. I do agree that the hitchhiker's appearance is critical to "if" I'll stop. Also time, circumstance, and geographic area is also a critical factor for me to stop and offer a nice ride to a stranger. I have never feared any hitchhiker due to my physical stature and it seemed whoever accepted the ride saw that I could potentially kick their ass. Travelling alone for very long distances can be boring even in a very nice car or truck. So offering a ride to a grateful stranger can make the trip certainly more fulfilling.
Montana James Mar 30th 2010 11:23PM
Hitchhiking! The memories.
In '59, when I was a college boy at the Univ of Montana, I hitchhiked from Missoula Montana to Seattle to visit an uncle and aunt, then on to Oakland CA for a college friend's wedding, then back to Missoula. Later, I traveled from Billings Montana to Philadelphia. I can remember every one of those rides! Interesting people give you rides, mostly traveling salesmen eager for the company.
My hitchhiking buddies and I had certain high standards:
(1) Never plan to travel at night. Stop and get accommodations (I stayed at an old hotel in Miles City Montana for $1.00 a night, and once in a Casper Wyoming YMCA for $2.00 (OK, I know costs have gone up since the '50s).
(2) Don't take a chance of being let off out in nowhere (particularly important if you are in a boondocks state like Mont, Wyo, ND). When your ride stops for you, ask him if he is driving to at least the next town. (Carry a map so you know where you are going.)
(3) Never use the thumb! How disgraceful and degrading! Take a small suitcase (only), and masking-tape a sign on it such as "Mont. U to N.Y." It gives the driver the idea you are a college boy (which I was) and that improves your chances.
(4) Always be clean-shaven and neatly dressed. No one wants to share a car with a bum -- or a man who looks like one.
Ah, the memories of the open road!!
Dave Mar 29th 2010 10:39PM
Showing my age here, I hitched throuout the USofA and Canada in the awesome years 1967-1968. What a time. No cash and very little clothing I made the best of it. Chicago to LA by way of Estes Park and Aspen. LA to San Fran and back and back and back and... Spent a night at Lime Kiln Creek before the trailers. Lived on PCH and stayed at Venice Beach. Hitched North to Oregon and through Yellowstone and on to the Expo '67 in Montreal Canada. Back through the Michigan woods and on to Chicago. Couldn't stay put for long, Took off for New Orleans and south Florida then back to NOLA and Albuquerque and LA again and a very different scene in San Francisco. Back to Chicago. There is a book of stories in there somewhere. I had had enough for a while, joined the Navy, and that is another tale.
Tony Mar 29th 2010 11:23PM
I've done a couple cross country hitches in the states, an experience I loved and suggest. Did that before I joined the Navy....either way though hitching isn't always legal, it really is pretty well considered legal in most places. As long as you don't walk on the interstate your fine in most all 50 states, and it's a really good time. Either way I dunno, try hitching and be kind and give rides.
Anne Mar 29th 2010 10:52PM
I've hitched and picked up hitchers, in the late 90s and early 2000s. Never had a bad experience, but it was always in state and in areas I know. I did get car jacked once, woman jumped in my passenger seat and told me to drive. Then lit a crack pipe. She wanted out just about six blocks later, outside a strip club.. most random experience ever!
Marci Mar 29th 2010 11:12PM
I was 16 in the mid 60's & hitched across England, Ireland & Scotland with a girlfriend. It was the best time of my life and we were fortunate to meet only pleasant and courteous people who would go out of their way for us or invite us home for a meal. Back then, there were few people who owned cars and they were tiny at best, but that too was part of the fun. Trying to cram everyone in.
Just great, great memories. Thanks for a well written article.
avlgal Mar 29th 2010 10:54PM
Great article! I used to hitch hike all around CA and across the USA in the late sixties and early 70's (almost always with another person). It was a lot of fun, met some wonderful people. Almost no creeps. I know I was lucky, but it was a different time, back then. Wouldn't trade those memories for the world!
Gary J. Hammond Mar 29th 2010 11:16PM
Gotta comment on this one!
Oh bringing back those memories.
In was the summer of 1971 and fresh out of high school. A buddy and I planned a trip across the USA from Pennsylvania. In classic blue jeans, blue jean jacket, neat 70's style boots, a back pack, sleeping bag and sponge bed roll that my dad made. We hit the road and traveled west young man. Sleeping outside most of the time, living off crackers and soda, and taking showers in a motel room once a week. The sites and sounds of going 80w will always be remembered. Yes there were some rides we turned down as to far out. But I would need pages to tell the stories. We worked for a carnavel in Ohio for two days, slept in the woods off the highway most of the time, rode up over those mountians in Idaho and made it to Settle. Thumbed it down the California coast and met lots of people along the way, espically that good looking girl who took me up on some mountain range to look down on L.A.( or was it Hollywood? like Bob Seagers song). Anyway as the weeks went on we thumb it back on 40E to 95N and back to home state.
We like doing this so much, we decided to do it again but head south to Key West, Floridia and over to the Mardi Graw and back up north to home state in early 72. Then enlisted in the Navy to travel half the world for a few years. Then there was the time of hitchhiking solo from Wyoming to Connecticut with my navy duffel bag to get back to base in 75.
Too many stories to tell and most of them good. However, those days are gone and there are more years behind me than in front of me on this earth but along the way I found the Lord or actually he found me and life is worth the living because I'm ready for the eternal future.
Regards
Rev. Gary
Brandi Mar 29th 2010 11:17PM
I picked up a hitchhiker once about 60 miles away from my parents house on the way home from college. Turned out he was going to the same town as I was and just one neighborhood over. It was the scariest thing I had ever done but he was a little old man and I could not turn him down. I never told my parents!
Jane Mar 29th 2010 11:34PM
Reading this really takes me back. I took off from a small town in Tennessee back in the early 80's, 4 months before my 15th birthday, and hitched all the way to Prince Rupert Canada heading for Alaska to find my awol mom.
I was fortunate to have been picked up by some of the finest people alive at that time, and I will never forget this one old guy who called himself 'Major Jacket'. We were between Vancouver and Hope when we saw this tired looking couple and he picked em up....the guy had a long braided ponytail down his back and a pregnant girlfriend who was hanging on for dear life to the leash of a scruffy old yellow lab in the pouring rain. They rode with us all the way to Prince Rupert. From there I hopped a ferry down to Juneau and didn't look back.
Funny thing about hitching up around those parts....to be such a vast and beautiful landscape, it really IS a small world in terms of people and crossing paths. I ended up working two summers later on a hand trawler, commercial fishing for salmon. While docked for repairs, I ran into that same young couple! They had bought a fishing boat of their own and were docked up at the same small villiage. The last time I had seen them her baby was not yet born....this time I was met by that same ol' yellow dog and a little toddling boy...and the reason they were docked was that she was in labor with their 2nd child- a daughter- right there on their boat- and I was amazed and honored to be a witness to this miracle!
It is sad but true that hitching in the US is ..or seems to be ...more dangerous than in other countries, but I have to say that I would not trade any but one (and it happened right in my own home town in TN) of my experiences of hitching for anything in the world! Unfortunately though, in this day and age I am afraid, just as the writer of the article said, that hitch hiking is going the way of modern fiction.
Bruce Mar 29th 2010 11:42PM
I hitched all over N. American when I was young, and started at 14 hitching from Studio City to Hollywood. Found out quick I'd rather kill than switch, but had relatively few problems and met lots of great girls in those days on the road, and lived with a few for months at a time. Hitched to Alaska in '74 and I'm still here! We still pick people up here too, and used to have a law if it was below zero you had to. Of course we still have the second amendment here and everybody packs a gun. It allows far more tolerance and diplomacy in some situations, believe me.
Too bad people have become so weird and sick in our culture that they've made hitching such a bummer although I haven't done it myself for decades, but I still pick people up. Okay...not all of them.
RaRae Mar 29th 2010 11:50PM
I pick up hikers when the weather starts to go bad and only when they look safe I've even brought one home for dinner with my family before my husband and I took him further down the road and checked him into a room for the night. He was nice and the stories were great.
Jimbo Mar 29th 2010 11:52PM
Why does aol only let us comment on unimportant issues like this any more.. Fukkin' communist AOL.. Did CNN buy them while we were sleeping? AOL.. GROW A PAIR AND STOP FILTERING YOUR MEMBERS ABILITY TO DISCUSS THE LAST DAYS OF OUR EXISTANCE... that is all...
bobd Mar 30th 2010 12:01AM
Back in 1975 during Rag Week at Hatfield Poly we had a fund raising hitch hike. Whoever could go furthest in 24hours. 2of of (me and Jane Billett) us made it from Hatfield (just outside London) to the Forth Road Bridge in Scotland- and back. I remember eating sandwiches with the toll takers at 2am or something. Great days and now lost.
tadpole Mar 30th 2010 12:37AM
i exist in a culture in the usa where alot of people hitch hike, and just about anybody will pick you up, if you really want the ride. i know people die hitch hiking. people die doing lots of things.more people die in a day driving their cars, rushing to get to that big meeting, that golf game, the big sale, than die hitchhiking in a year i bet. those statistics cant be too off. its a scare tactic to keep people from exhibiting freedom. why not travel for free?? sell your car, get rid of your possessions, and travel the world.. in the back of someone elses truck!! or better yet... catch a freight train on the fly and really live!! one love
T Mar 30th 2010 12:40AM
You are just serving to perpetuate the myth that hitchhiking is dangerous in the US with this post. WTF? You don't back it up with anything. In Russia and Latin America there are much worse things happening to innocent victims, and you know what? It's still not that bad.
I've hitched around the US several times out West, and have had nothing but amazing experiences. This myth that we are somehow worse off here in terms of safety for a random hitchhiker is pure farce.
I encourage everyone to hitch here, in the US, change people's minds. This article did nothing to help change anything.
T
bart Mar 30th 2010 1:35AM
i would never pick up a hitchhiker unless i had some friends in the car with me....being in a situation where you have to must feel awful. On the Road by Keroac is a great book, i would highly recommend it for anyone.
Nikie Mar 30th 2010 12:55AM
I've always wanted to hitchhike but I've feared what sort of horrors I'd experience for the fact that I'm of the female persuasion. Someday I'd like to think I can gather the bravery and physical strength and know-how to hitchhike without my gender making too easy a victim.
Dani:) Mar 30th 2010 2:18AM
i dint read all of this but i lyke how this guy writes.
is thizz a b00kk or has he written a bookk??