

My desperation grew while you chatted against the clock: first 10 p.m. and then 11. And then midnight, one, two... your 500 watt Coleman illuminated for us the contents of my tent; so much so, in fact, that I fancied yo

And just as that sound cracked through the quiet — as if to further validate that infamous (and semi-hypocritical) hoeing of beans — you grew to symbolize the very reason I had gone to the woods in the first place.
But there was no escaping the uncivilized life now typical of modern society. For our final 10 hours at Rocky Mountain National Park, you were no Emersons. Rather, you were a mass of two men and three women huddled just 10 feet from our tent, sharing personal facts (and stripping articles of clothing) to the tune of "Truth or Dare" while children tried to sleep nearby.
Your lack of consideration infected us with a sort of desperation that was anything but quiet.
And though I have since returned to (un) civilized life, the lesson learned from my great experiment rings nevertheless true:
It is nearly impossible, these days, to simplify.
[Post backdated according to actual date of travel]
Head south! We've gone to a few places where I started to think we were the only people left on the planet.
ReplyDeleteMove further back into the woods, ff the beaten path. People like your neighbor(e)s don't like to work too hard. Of course carrying everything you need for a couple of days in the bush on your back is a lot of work, but it is worth it. Or so I have been told. :)
ReplyDelete~BPP
Winter: Somewhere in Appalachia is next our list, actually. Virginia most likely.
ReplyDeleteBPP: I told Washington that our next camping adventure would need to be either backcountry, or at a friend's family pond, where the only noises you hear are tractors in the distance.
ReplyDeleteI think this last experience has him thinking he should bring his backpacking gear out of retirement, regardless.