Saturday, November 7, 2015

Turn and face the strange, Changes





The underlying purpose of this trip through America was to decompress from Army life, do some soul searching and figure out who exactly I am, where I belong in this world, and where that will take me next. This has been the experience of a lifetime and I am very grateful for all the amazing people I have met as well as all the amazing places that I have seen along the way.

Hiking on the AT with Beebs
Sweepy BB
This past September while Dan and I were in Anchorage Alaska, we were Google searching for a climbing gym so we could try and get some climbing in while it was raining. Our options were slim but a curious result popped up on my phone screen: Mountain Training School. I clicked on their website (mountainguideschool.com) and before I knew it I had spent 2 hours reading through their guide on how to become a mountain guide. Multiple times throughout the trip Dan and I discussed how we could perpetually live on the road, make a living, and climb full time: winning the lottery and becoming a climbing guide are both pretty high on the list. I had no idea that there were actually schools out there that train, shape, and mold mountain and climbing guides so now my curiosity is overflowing and I decided to give them a call to see what this was all about. Turns out that Jaya, one of the school directors, had just flown in to Anchorage from Patagonia and was available to sit down for some coffee. We spoke for about an hour and after learning that the school is accepted by the Veterans Affairs and that my GI Bill benefit would foot the bill, the deal was basically sealed before we even said goodbye; it sounded too good to be true. I am the kind of guy that jumps into things head first and I had to exhibit some extreme self-control to not just jump right in then and there; the trip was only half over at that point and I had set out goals that I wanted to accomplish before committing to something new. Besides, what would happen to BB and Bertha? After talking it over with Dan I decided to give it some thought and would contact them down the road after I figured my life out.

Last morning with BB :(
Fast forward to February while I was in Arizona; I had been climbing solo for over 2 months and solo life on the road was really starting to wear on me. I had minimal direction and was just looking forward to winter being over and completing my road trip full circle. I decided I needed a new goal to set for myself and that I wanted my life to have slightly more focus but still be able to travel and climb. I decided it was time to contact Mountain Training School (MTS) again. This time I was ready to commit and pulled the trigger. It became official: I was the newest MTS student and would start my first class in Alaska in June.

Chillin' like a villain
April: My one year anniversary of separating from the Army was quickly approaching. Charlie and I decided it was time to start heading northeast; Charlie had to get back home to New York and I wanted to swing by New Jersey to see my family and sort out the next chapter of this journey. So we said goodbye to all our friends in Kentucky and began the haul to Harrisburg, PA to see my sister and her family. We spent a relaxing week in the rolling hills of PA and I said my goodbyes to Charlie as well as my sister and took off for New Jersey.

One year down: Celebrating with a new do
The biggest issues to figure out with starting school were to decide what to do with BB and Bertha. I threw around the idea of selling Bertha but with limited time and feeling that I would probably regret that decision, decided to stash it in my Mom’s backyard. I was worried that by the time I would return for her that she would be rusted to pieces but it was the only reasonable choice. What to do with BB was a much harder decision. Realistically I would be away at school for 3-5 years and I began to accept the fact that if I wanted to attend school, BB was going to need to find a new family. I struggled hard with this and wanted to find the best possible home for her. I tossed the idea out to Dan and Lexi but they were both too far away and could not accept BB as much as they wanted to. In the end I think I found the perfect family: my sister decided she would watch her while I am away. They already have one dog, Molly, who needed a buddy plus they live on a big farm so BB could run around free to her hearts content and lastly of course, I would get to see her every time I come home!

Transformation complete
BB's new best friend Molly
So, with all big issues sorted out, all that was left to do was kill time and wait for my flight to AK. What better way to kill time then to attend some amazing concerts? As it turns out, my deadheadness has started to wear on my best friend Alex and he jumped at the opportunity to go to the Dear Jerry show in Maryland with me. All of the remaining members of the Grateful Dead appeared as well as tons of very well-known artists in the Jam band world. Alex and I would attend two more shows together before I left: Death Cab For Cutie in Camden, NJ and best of all, Eric Clapton’s 70th birthday celebration at Madison Square Garden. This was both our first times seeing Clapton and he did not disappoint. He even brought out some superstar friends including John Mayer and Derek Trucks! Wow, what a night! The last hurrah before heading out would be Jam on the River in Philadelphia featuring Lotus AND Papadosio (yes that’s like 6 times in under 4 months but who’s counting?). We had some torrential downpours during JOTR but the bands waited it out and still put on amazing, albeit soaking wet, sets. 

Just slackin' off
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Thursday, October 29, 2015

Picking up where I left off...


Some of Charlie's Wizardry
How do I start this back up? I guess it’s best to just pick up where I left off and try not to summarize too much. I must start out by saying that most (more likely all) of the photos in this post were taken and belong to Charlie Becker. Charlie is a freelance photographer hailing out of the Finger Lakes and you can check him out here https://www.facebook.com/charliebeckerfotos and https://instagram.com/charlie_beckerrr/ here.

You ready for this?
Charlie and I started our friendship as BMX buddies in Colorado Springs way back around 2009. Ever since I left Colorado in 2010, we have remained in contact and we meet up anytime we are within driving distance of each other. This last time was a little different: I get a random call from Charlie one night while I am in the Keys and we are just b-s-ing and he says “man, what you are doing sounds awesome; I would love to do something like that” and I reply “yeah it’s great, why don’t you join along?” Before we knew it, we found a ridiculously cheap one way flight down to Ft. Lauderdale and I am picking him up from the airport. First we spend the morning in Miami Beach and then take some time to see a relative of his he hasn’t seen in some time. As luck would have it, within 24 hours of Charlie arriving, he ended up in the hospital. We are still unsure what happened (probably 24 hour stomach bug) but that first morning Charlie woke up running for a bathroom and  barely able to walk. I took him to the hospital to be safe and they shot him full of fluids and got him back to normal within 2 days and we were ready to resume our journey. We were off to a rough start but had big plans ahead.

Welcome to Miami
At this point I knew the Kentucky climbing season was still a couple weeks away so we really had no direction except chasing around bands in the southeast and Charlie was happy to tag along regardless of what we were doing. First up was a 3 night stand from Papadosio at the New Mountain AVL in Asheville. Didn’t I just see those guys less than a month ago in Tuscon? YES! But they are awesome so why not see them again and three nights in a row? This was Charlie’s first experience at a show like this and he instantly fell in love. I still picture Charlie’s goofie dance every time I play “Wax” by a similar band named Lotus. We hung out in NC for about a week at exactly the same time a chilly cold snap rolled through. We were sleeping in the van in temperatures down in the 20’s and it wasn’t the most pleasant way to introduce Charlie to van life. Finally it was time to head to warmer weather and to see a band called Cursive in Atlanta.

Pop a Dos i YO!


We made the drive over to Atlanta and were welcomed by slightly warmer temps. We attended the Cursive show and befriended a rando who came to see the show solo because his wife was about to have a baby. We ended up driving around aimlessly, late into the night to celebrate the end of this particular chapter in his life and ended up being welcomed back to the hotel he was staying at. This sounds weird but it wasn’t! Of course we were up to mischief and found our way onto the roof of the hotel and goofed around on the completely open top floor. As soon as we got into Georgia, we were already leaving as we had another show to catch in Nashville!

Tastes like...Stinky DAWGS!
This reminds me of a Michelangelo painting
Lets go back to your room ;)
Between two ferns..ERR..one fern and a caution sign...ZACK!
How often do you get on the roof of a skyscraper?
Before making our way up to Nashville we ended up taking some time to check out Chattanooga and the Smokey Mountains. Lots of driving led to lots of beautiful scenery and sunsets. One of the main reasons I had chosen to live in a van was so that I could remain mobile to chase warm weather and the sun and I was almost successful at avoiding winter for a whole year until on our way to Nashville we were hit by the last big winter storm of the season. Apparently Georgia has no idea how to drive in snow and driving up the highway was like a graveyard of wrecked vehicles on both sides of the road. We even saw an 18 wheeler sticking straight up in the air which was one of the wildest things I have seen on the side of the road. Regardless of the weather, we made it into Nashville on a frigid ice covered night just in time to see Warren Haynes front his band Gov’t Mule with special guest jazz guitarist John Scofield at the Ryman. The Ryman is dubbed the Mother Church of Country Music and has been the home of the Grand Ole Opry. The atmosphere of this venue always brings a special country flavor to the artists performing there. With the conclusion of this show, our music chasing endeavors were coming to a halt for a month or two and it was time to get back into the swing of climbing…at my favorite destination, The Red River Gorge!

HOLD ONNNN WE'RE ABOUT TO HIT 88 MPH

The weather still wasn’t quite right for climbing so we ended up bumming at my friend Mark’s house for about a week until we could finally make our way to the Red. I hadn’t seen Mark in almost a year and it felt very warming to be back in Kentucky with all my friends whom I just left less than a year ago. I was starting to get the feeling of completeness now that I had accomplished the goals I had set out to do and make the trip full circle, quite literally.

Always alert
Can you dread a beard?

We spent just under a month in the Red and it was just as much fun as any leg of the trip. I finally was getting back into the groove of climbing and pushing my limits. It was fun to see how my style of climbing has changed over the past year. The Red is known as being a place that isn’t very technically hard but demands a lot of physical endurance so when I left a year ago, some of my best climbing was being done on steep overhanging sport routes but now after a year, I lost a lot of that endurance and instead could put up more mentally and technically difficult traditionally protected climbs. One of the big highlights for me was helping Charlie to put up his first route ever! We both met through BMX and Charlie is still very much involved in the BMX world but I have since gotten away from the sport as I became more and more involved with climbing. I found that I was injuring myself too much on my bike and the older I got the longer and harder it was to get back on your bike after taking a fall. Insert climbing: the community surrounding climbing is very similar to BMX but instead a lot of your time is spent in the wilderness and when you fall, a rope catches you before you hit the ground, hopefully! Anyway, one of Charlie’s big goals on this trip was to climb and he made it happen. It felt awesome to be a part of that and see how much he enjoyed the atmosphere surrounding the Red and the climbing community.

No Hands!
Through the Rabbit Hole...
Charlie getting it done!
                                             

                             

During our stay, we made many new friends and even ran into some old ones. As it turned out, Melissa was in the area with her school for a spring break trip and I was lucky enough to swap some pitches with her and meet some of her friends from back her way. Another unforgettable friend was Gerard. Gerard is from Barcelona, Spain and this was his first trip to America. Gerard, Charlie, and I had an almost unhealthy amount of fun together full of dirty humor and inside jokes but one of the more memorable moments I recall was actually first meeting Gerard. It may be hard to see the humor in this story unless you can see the big picture: keep in mind that we are in the back woods of Kentucky surrounded by the local country-bumpkins and Gerard is from a big city in Spain very much culturally different. Anyway as the story goes, I was looking for a climbing partner one afternoon and was coming up S-O-L so desperately I started cruising the parking lot looking for anyone willing to hold my rope. Out of the corner of my eye I see Gerard sitting on the back bumper of his little tiny Toyota Prius staring down at the dirt looking fairly distraught. I decided he might be in the same predicament as I and that I should go invite him to climb. He instantly perked up as soon as I started talking to him and was extremely relieved to find a climbing partner. He thought he made the biggest mistake by coming to America. He put his job on hold and decided to take a yearlong climbing trip through America; his first stop being the Red because of its popularity of sport routes and it being a main hub of traveling climbers looking for partners. He just arrived to the Red earlier that morning from the airport and missed the daily gathering of partner-less climbers that gaggle together in the back of Miguel’s so he decided to go shopping for food. He ended up in the local town at a Family Dollar mortified at their choices of food and not sure what to think of the locals. On return to Miguel’s he couldn’t find anyone to climb with and thought that his trip was doomed from the start. That’s when I ran into him and we decided to climb. I informed Gerard that Family Dollar is not a grocery store and that the backwoods people of Kentucky are much different people than climbers and even the rest of America. Charlie and I then divulged all the American culture we could lay down on Gerard and we ended up having an incredible week and a half of climbing together.  

Three amigos

Just thinking 'bout stuff
More of Charlies Wizardry
Sick perspective
"The Classic RRG pic"
The world famous Miguel's
Ridiculously good climb and ridiculously good pic. Thanks Charlie!
I wish I could tell every story in here but most of the stories need to be told face to face heh. I’ll just say that it felt so good to be back in the Red and getting to climb with all my old friends, Angela, Mark, Dan, Mandy, Charles, Sarah, Benton, Blake, Andy….and anyone else I might have missed. Louisville is the closest thing I have had to a home in a long time and I really appreciate everyone opening their homes and hearts to me even after abandoning ship a year ago!

#Van Life

A "Where's Waldo" kind of picture
Hey Dan, remember this day?
 

And the journey continues...

Saturday, October 24, 2015

Please Stand By!

Captain of the ship!


Patagonian sunrises


I have decided it's time to start writing in here again. I have many stories to recall and lots of pictures to share so please hang on just a little bit so I can put it all together...I hope you will enjoy! It looks like I finally figured out how to do full res pics! This should be fun..

Sunday, February 22, 2015

5/6ths of a Circle

My goal was to spend a month in Tucson. I didn’t achieve my goal. Shortly after Gem and Jam I decided it was time to move on. I did however spend three fairly rad weeks in Arizona: two weeks in Tucson with a week at Cochise Stronghold squeezed in the middle. As luck would have it, Papadosio was headlining the Gem and Jam festival while I was in town which would be the culmination of my stay. After the show, I decided I was sick of sleeping in parking lots and left. Unfortunately, I am still sleeping mostly in parking lots.

The decision to leave early gives me an extra week to drive to Key West before making it to Asheville, North Carolina for three more nights of Papadosio. This plan change also gave me the opportunity to spend time with friends in Texas and see Lotus play in Austin. I happened to stumble into New Orleans for Mardis Gras and was probably the only sober person on Bourbon Street.
Every person you see is wasted
My journey has transitioned from a climbing adventure into a musical endeavor. I am currently logging LOTS of miles on the road chasing a few of my favorite musicians around the south. I will be in Asheville, NC at the end of the month and will be quickly moving through Atlanta, GA, and Nashville, TN on my way to Louisville which will complete my trip full circle from where it started just about 10 months ago.

The biggest thing I want to write about is something I am personally very proud of. Upon rolling into Key West, FL last night, I have hit 50,000 miles that I have driven since I converted Bertha to diesel. This equates to roughly 47,500 miles I have been living in Bertha. The 25th of this month will also be 10 months since I was discharged from the Army and started living on the road. In those 10 months and 50K miles, I have also managed to drive to every corner of the U.S.
Key West, Florida
It has been almost 4 months since Dan left to backpack Asia and I can say that life on the road solo is starting to wear on me. Having a full time climbing partner made the journey all fun and games where as riding solo has been more of a chore. I am starting to feel that my life needs slightly more focus and that I need to spend less time driving around. In the last 10 months, roughly 20% of my time has been spent driving. I am not saying that I want to travel less, just that I need to slow down and spend more time at the places I visit. I think when I hit one year on the road and make the trip full circle, I will feel that I have accomplished what I set out to do.


On Tuesday, my buddy Becker will be joining the adventure for an undetermined amount of time. Becker is one of my good friends from when I first joined the Army and was living in Colorado. Becker is an incredible photographer and his company will be very much welcomed. Expect the next post to have some epic photos and stories to make up for the lack of stories and photos in this one…

May 22nd, 2014: Cape Breton, Nova Scotia
September 9th, 2014: Seward, Alaska
November 25th, 2014: San Diego/Tijuana border, California
February 21st, 2015: Key West, Florida