Welcome!

Welcome!

The Beagle has landed!

It’s official.

After 43 years, numerous discussions, hundreds of photographs and thousands of pints of barista coffee we have begun our ‘Journey Through America’. We, being one Nicholas Charles Adler and Neville Peter Jacob, buddies, former kings of the road, lovers of travel and purveyors of a good yarn.

In his post, Nick explains how our friendship began, how it developed and what keeps us excited about the United States of America, the country, its history, its very diverse culture and above all the stories that describe the lives of its people.

In our youth, we travelled widely and gained a great deal from the experience but we always knew there was more to do. Having raised families of our own and aged gracefully we know that the travels and travails of our youth are not yet over. We have seen substantial parts of the United States but not the country as a whole, America is beckoning to us, the Statue of Liberty has lowered her arm, the flame tip on her torch points to the interior with its numerous freeways, interstate highways and country roads stretching out across the vast expanse of desert, hill and mountain and calling out to us, ‘this much!’

Like wild coyote on the loose we will answer the call.

Nick, Neville & our old friend Floyd

The purpose of the Beagle is to describe our journey and the people we meet as well as the preparations leading up to the journey itself. There will be insights and stories to share before then, as well as a look at some of the classic road travel literature of Steinbeck, Kerouac and their ilk. Nick and I hope that you too will be part of this process and share insights and stories of your own and ideas on how to cover as much of the US as possible within the limits of time and budget. This is not a travelogue, nor is it an account of a trip, we want characters and we want stories. We want to see, touch, taste and observe America as she is at what we might call an ordinary level. We are not interested in elite journeys, or respectful meetings with the high and mighty, we want to observe, recount and sing a song in the spirit of Woody Guthrie.

We will sing for whisky.

It is commonly understood that the United States is riven by deep political, sociological and even religious differences, and whilst we may touch on these things we believe there is a deeper spirit within America that can explain what it means to call yourself American at this moment in time.

My last trip to the States in 2022 found me taking coffee one day in the Mall off Val Vista, in Mesa, just outside Phoenix.  I was sitting at an outside table by myself and was thinking about reading a few more pages from my book. As I began to find my place, an old guy in a wheelchair made a beeline for my table. There was a moment of irritation on my part as I thought I was going to be tapped for a few dollars.

As he neared the table, the man shouted out, ‘Is that the year you went to college?’

I looked puzzled.

‘Your t-shirt. It says 1972.‘

‘Oh no,’ I said, ‘I just bought it in a store back in the UK’.

Without invitation, the man wheeled right up to the table and began to talk.

‘That was the year I went to college,’ he said, ’is 1972 at all significant to you?’

I could feel myself being drawn, against my will, into conversation.

‘My first job was on a ship bound for the Arctic where we took some measurements. Then I joined another ship and headed for Bermuda.’

There was then a leap from Bermuda to working in the Pentagon planning drills for the navy during the Cold War. Little by little, his story took hold of me, at the words Pentagon and then Cold War, I was slowly reeled in.

It transpired that the man, Randy, was a chemical engineer by trade and it was this that led him to work for NASA on developing the Challenger space shuttle programme in 1986. It was an ill-fated mission that resulted in the loss of everyone on board, apparently, the investigation into what went wrong became part of Randy’s brief. He explained that incorrect seaming at the top of the fuel tank led to water being forced into the tube, it then froze and expanded allowing fuel to escape and explode. When he explained it, it seemed obvious that a seam open to the elements might have been a problem allowing the ingress of water.

I should have been a NASA scientist.

In his way, Randy moved from being a potential public nuisance, to an interesting storyteller. He could have been a fantasist, but his story hung together and it was plausible. Perhaps he was entertaining me with a made up story, I couldn’t tell, but it was worth the listen and I regretted my initial reluctance to engage in conversation.

In this digital world where everything is uncertain despite all the surveillance and security checks, Nick and I still believe in good old analogue friendship, but to the digital we must return because we are looking for writers, thinkers, photographers and people with nothing more than a darned good idea to share, there is the comments section below and the possibility of writing a post of your own. If you have a good idea now is the time to start applying pixel to screen.

We have a few ideas, but we are hoping that you may be able to give us a nudge along the way, make suggestions, describe your own experiences or even get us to go somewhere just to see how we react to what we find. We’ll finesse some of the detail as we go along. Nothing is set in concrete at this point, we haven’t decided on an itinerary, nor people we should spend time with, or even how we are going to travel, we are opening these important matters up for discussion.

Many years ago, at a Children’s Summer Camp we used to sit round a campfire in the midst of a pine forest and sing these words written by Woody Guthrie. At first, I knew nothing of the vastness of the country I was in nor of the diversity of its people. What I did pick up from the song was a spirit of cheerful optimism and welcome, it is a song born out of struggle and suffering but it is also a song of belonging. These first few verses convey the message perfectly:

‘This land is your land, and this land is my land
From California to the New York island
From the Redwood Forest to the Gulf Stream waters
This land was made for you and me

As I went walking that ribbon of highway
I saw above me that endless skyway
I saw below me that golden valley
This land was made for you and me

I roamed and rambled, and I’ve followed my footsteps
To the sparkling sands of her diamond deserts
All around me, a voice was sounding
This land was made for you and me.

This Land is your Land – Woody Guthrie

I’m finishing there as the Beagle is telling me he wants to be let out, he’s scented a deer that has just passed by and slipped back into the nearby woods. The road is stretching out to the far horizon, it is empty but for the distant grassland and the wind passing across it, but the question is where to start?

8 responses to “Welcome!”

  1. The WayBack Machine – The American Beagle Avatar

    […] blogging buddy, Neville, threw down the gauntlet for our next adventure, proclaiming, “Nothing is set in concrete at this point, we haven’t decided on an itinerary, nor people we […]

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  2. Tim Shey Avatar

    I noticed your “Camelback Spartans” shirts. I used to live in Phoenix, Arizona from November 1978 through January 1979. I worked at O’Malley Building Materials at their Sunnyslope yard in north Phoenix for two months. I shared an apartment on Black Canyon Freeway somewhere around Dunlap and Northern Ave. I then worked at a warehouse at Guy Isley’s RV Center in Mesa; I shared an apartment in Tempe. I know that there is a Camelback High School in Phoenix.

    Later on in my life, I hitchhiked through Phoenix, Tucson, Flagstaff and other parts of Arizona. I hitchhiked across the Navajo Reservation several times. Flagstaff has a really good Christian mission on San Francisco Street; I stayed there a few times.

    _____

    Washing Dishes [2010]

    A year or two ago I was hitchhiking across the Navajo Indian Reservation in northeast Arizona and I got a couple of rides to Flagstaff. It was during the winter and it was going to get cold that night (maybe around 0 degrees F), so I stayed at a Christian mission in downtown Flagstaff.

    They have a well-run mission there. After 5 PM, one of the leaders would give a Gospel message and then we would have supper. After supper, we would shower and then go to bed. They have a dorm room upstairs; I believe they have beds for twenty men.

    So the next morning we were eating our breakfast and one of the leaders asked everybody, “So who wants to volunteer to wash dishes?”

    Immediately, I raised my right hand and said that I could wash the dishes. The leader smiled at me, walked over to me and patted me on the back.

    Then the leader asked, “Who wants to help Tim wash the dishes?”

    Nobody raised their hand.

    The leader looked at this guy and asked, “Hey, Hank, why don’t you help Tim wash the dishes.”

    Hank replied with a look of disgust, “Now that is not a Christ-like thing to say.” Which meant he didn’t want to wash the dishes.

    So the leader said, “Well, Hank, if you don’t want to wash the dishes then go back outside.” And Hank left the mission.

    I just about couldn’t believe what I had heard. Washing the dishes is a very simple, easy job. And your hands get cleaned in the process. Hank got a free meal and couldn’t wash the dishes. Ingratitude comes in different wrappers.

    I was very grateful that that Christian mission let me stay there out of the cold for one night. They preached a good message the evening before, I had a great supper, I was able to take a shower and sleep in a warm bed and then have an excellent breakfast the next morning. If someone wants me to wash the dishes, then I’ll wash dishes till the cows come home!

    Once I was hitchhiking through Pennsylvania and this guy picked me up. He had a used auto dealership and asked me if I wanted to help drive a car from one town to the next. I said, no problem. Then he said, let’s go to this mission and get some lunch. He usually recruited guys from that mission to drive cars for him.

    So we signed in at this mission–I believe it was in York, Pennsylvania. I was the last guy in line and the guy ahead of me was definitely a street person. He had a real bad attitude. He kept complaining about the food: “I don’t like this crap. Why do I have eat this junk? Don’t you guys know how to cook a meal?” And words to that effect.

    So I went through the line and thanked everyone for the great meal and smiled at everyone. Redemption sometimes happens in soup lines.

    That street person didn’t pay for his meal, didn’t prepare it, didn’t volunteer to help in anyway, but he sure complained to everyone there about the food. Then go outside and eat grass!

    Nobody there asked me to help wash the dishes, so I hung out with the used auto guy for a while and then moseyed out west on U.S 30.

    [Originally published by Digihitch.com]

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    1. Chuckster Avatar
      Chuckster

      I am not sure that I completely followed. Did the dishes ever get washed? That would be a deal breaker for me. I can’t abide eating from dirty dishes or utensils.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Tim Shey Avatar

        The dishes got washed. I just thought that the homeless guy got a free meal, but he didn’t want to wash the dishes.

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      2. Chuckster Avatar
        Chuckster

        That may well be so.

        Liked by 1 person

  3. Chuckster Avatar
    Chuckster

    Sometimes I feel uncomfortable in other people’s kitchens. Where is the soap, do you leave in the rack to dry, do you load the dish washer, do you save the leftovers. I never mind pitching in, but the particulars can be a challenge. I like to feel in control of my situation, whatever the circumstance. It would be helpful if there were a kitchen procedure manual laid out… which would be somewhat ridiculous…but oh so helpful.

    Liked by 1 person

  4. Sonoran Desert Allure – The American Beagle Avatar

    […] Neville’s blog has long celebrated the North American landscape. On his stage we sing the praises of majestic skylines, natural wonders, and iconic landmarks across the Continent. […]

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    1. Chuckster Avatar
      Chuckster

      🚜

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