SNAFU
IN THE GLOBAL VILLAGE
(Part
11)
The
long train glides weightlessly through the heat. Wiz dabs his brow over the
glorified cell phone near occasional towns that collects the Internet. ‘I’m not
going to hide that I’m hot under the collar,’ he swears. ‘But the consolation is that we certainly are
the first hobos to use the railroad’s own website to consult a RR system map
while on the road. I’m checking the bigger towns ahead in hope that we can get
off this miserable ‘dog’ and onto a hotshot.’
In minutes he answers himself, ‘It’s dismal. There’s no big yard for 150
miles until
He
expounds further while typing little buttons as the freight trudges through the
Wasatch Range on the eastern hot lip of the
It’s
a powerful image, one most hobos wouldn’t care for, but thumbs up to Wiz Kid.
Years ago, he was the first ‘bo on the block to take
a scanner onto the freights. Then, in the nineties, he was among the vanguard
of ‘hi-tech hobos’ with state-of-art electronics who revolutionized freight
hopping. We now have aboard: Cell phone,
walkie-talkies, police scanner, infra-red goggles, global positioning system,
and satellite connection to the Internet.
We also carry Rand McNally’s Handy
Railroad Atlas and The Automated Timetables.
The
irony is that technology in agriculture knocked off the greatest waves of
freight riders in history. By the start of WWII, one after another innovation
each replaced a dozen straining backs in the fields across the nation. Mechanization all but killed the working
American hobo.
Now,
high-tech hobos, though not the rule on the rails, crop up often enough. They are usually boxcar tourists, like us,
rather than bona fide long-haul train tramps. Their instruments take a little
magic out of the freight riding experience, but they get us on more trains
easier, faster, and safer. Wiz concludes, ‘I wouldn’t leave home without at
minimum a cell phone and two-way radio.’
Wiz
irritably snatches the scanner after our freight stops a third time within one
track mile with nothing passing us by. ‘Let’s investigate this holdup,’ he
gripes. He selects the next yard’s frequency and we listen in to discover that
many trains are ‘staged’ or stacked in line because the entry rail to the yard
is blocked with a building freight. It’s going to be thirty minutes before the
track clears.
‘Let’s
go on a hobo Easter Egg hunt.’ I suggest from the platform. ‘Are you daft?’ Wiz
pleads, ‘It’s not Easter.’ Clown adds,
‘What’s up, Doc?’ I propose, having
noticed periodic dry, cracked ties in the roadbed that cue valuable hobo date
nails, that we walk the rail to search for them. Wiz opts to remain with the
gear, so she and I drop and amble toward the train rear while peering under
cars at older ties. We’re searching for
3” nails with thick, flat heads stamped with the year the tie was laid.
Theoretically, 20-30 years after a tie is laid- its lifespan- the date nail is
noticed by a worker and the tie is replaced.
Hobos collect loosened or pulled nails to trade or make lucky charms
(with the wearer’s birth date) by silver-plating the dated head. The hobo nails are often found in older
sidetracks out west in ‘veins’ of years, but today Clown and I discover a sole
’58 date nail that remains stuck tight in the long tie and between our
birthdays.
Further
back along the train, a red-faced tramp and his long-tongue dog stand on a
hopper platform and, at our approach, a gnarled hand reaches out with an
upside-down canteen. ‘Sorry, buddy,
we’re out too,’ Clown replies honestly. ‘Trains are stacked on the main,’ I
inform, ‘And they won’t release for thirty minutes.’ He rubs a scraggly chin,
looks up and fixates on an object across the way. ‘Ya
know, I figured as much.‘
I follow his gaze. ‘It’s a water spigot,’ he
finally says. ‘I’ve been staring at it on the outside of that white building
for ten minutes. That’s a bramble patch between the rail and house.’ I read his thoughts and roll my own dry tongue.
‘It’s five mnutes each way
through the thorns, a minute to fill your jug…You can be back in eleven
minutes, with luck and by leaving the dog.’
He, followed closely by the dog, bounds
down to the roadbed rising with heat waves. He is sinewy, tattooed and
dehydrated; the pet is a Heinz variety with a long pink tongue. ‘I’ll watch
him till you get back,’ I offer, but he gently declines, ‘Naw.
He knows his business.’ The mutt rests a
chin on the old army pack and the tramp nods quietly at us before turning to
face the patch. ‘Here goes nothin’’ he yells, and scampers down the bank.
The
water will taste better for the thorns,’ I call, and the dog’s concerned gaze
follows him.
We
watch until he wanes in the patch. ‘Love
it!’ I exclaim. The major types of riders
are boxcar vacationers like myself, the homeless or those too poor to afford
bus fare (though the freight is usually faster and more comfortable than
Greyhound), migrant workers, the unemployed looking for work, immigrants, loony
bin rejects, anti-socials and outcasts, men on the lam, marriage fall-outs,
runaway teens, veterans, the curious, and now executives and pet owners.
Clown
and I continue to walk the train identifying the different cars: gondolas,
tankers, other hoppers, flatcars and, at the very end, a solitary boxcar. The
dog grows smaller in the distance even as the tramp has disappeared in the
briars. ‘I can’t let go the feeling of
freedom of the man and dog,’ declares Clown.
‘Yes,’ I agree. ‘They are a living example of hobo life and of the
American pursuit of happiness. It’s what this one country on the big globe
stands for. The collective doesn’t decide the purpose of the individual. Every
person, hobo and dog has a right to try different paths, pick one, and live it
for himself.’
‘A
boy and his dog on the open road makes me want to click my heels,’ pulses
Clown. ‘Meanwhile,’ I remind her, ‘Free clicks demand vigil. This freight may
pull away any second.’ ‘Doc,’ she warms.
‘Give me the benefit of the doubt of knowing exactly where our next ride is if
this train pulls out.’ I clam up. We
round the last boxcar with FRED blinking red over and over, and beyond a
sweeping view of the empty back track for miles.
Hiss.
Click. Bang. The freight suddenly
hiccups forward.
‘For
Pete’s sake!” cries Clown, sprinting around FRED. ‘How do we know if the door on the other side
of this boxcar is open?’ ‘It’s high on
the springs- an empty,’ I spur.
(Railroads often leave one sidedoor open for
the next load that may be hobos.) “It’s
open!’ she soon verifies.
We
race to overtake the door, then slow to match pace at a walk. Now the hardest
part is getting up and on. The boxcar floor is five feet off the cinders- at
Clowns nose. The ballast is angled and slippery, plus the freight gains speed
each tick. ‘Follow my lead,’ I instruct,
and trot to the moving ledge, bend swiftly and slap my thigh. She steps on and vaults into the car. The
door passes but I regain it and belly flop in myself, scratching nails on the
hardwood to keep from sliding out. She yelps and grabs my shirt to tug me
through the opening. Safe and panting, we retire to opposite ends of the
boxcar.
Remembering
the tramp, I peek through a wall crack on the closed
side. ‘I guess the timing was off,’ I
report. ‘The dog is sitting with its back to the freight watching the master
with a jug of water stuck in the patch.’ She antes, ‘That’s the American way.’
The
world changes once you enter a boxcar door.
The outside and your past are left behind with the gentle shake and
roll. Though the ‘window’ (open door) provides light and a god-like
imperviousness it takes a good minute for your eyes to adjust to the dim. It’s a rare old boxcar with a wood floor that
cushions and muffles the rail travel to make conversation possible. Locked boxcars,
like some lives, are sealed shut until the right moment when a worker breaks
the seal to admit light and unload them into a yard. Empties, like this one, are seal-less with
one ‘window’ left open after the last cargo was off-loaded. That door becomes a
wide-screen TV featuring the local nature channel. It measures 15’ wide and 9’
tall and slides on a horizontal floor track that I ‘stake’ with an 8’’ railroad
spike to prevent it from vibrating shut on rough track. We sit in opposite ends of the ‘side-door
Clown stands, prances the shaky floor,
and sits close by me. The boxcar reaches
speed and the inside movement progresses from jiggle to sway to rock-and-roll all
the way. ‘I feel like a hoboette for the first time,’
she murmurs snuggling closer. ‘Are there many girl riders?’ I answer, ‘Hoboettes are the rarest, about 2%, and almost always with
a man in tow.’
‘My breast pocket jumps. ‘You’re
morons! If you hear me, I assume no
responsibility for you.’ I key my radio
and she answers in it, ‘Morons must be the last hobo type. Thanks for your
concern. We’re on the last boxcar: Doc,
me and FRED!’ He roars back, ‘Wave
through the door so I know you’re alive.’
She warily rises and reaches out the door. ‘Rock on Wilma
Flintstone!’ fires Wiz. ‘What’s your plan?’
That plan takes action in thirty
minutes as the train slows and parks on the mainline. We leap out the door and gallop the ˝-mile
toward Wiz waiving at us off the hopper.
‘The trick here,’ I puff behind the lady, ‘Is to look ahead for the next
possible ride while recalling the last nearest one in case the freight
starts.’ She tugs my hand hard as I
continue, ‘Give greater weight to the one behind because if the train starts
that car will catch us while the one ahead will…’ At this instant the freight lurches and we
are caught in a no-man’s land between no real cars to ride. She drops my hand, screams ‘Goddamn baggage!’
and sprints to the first oil tanker car ahead.
I dash and grab the same moving ladder in the nick of time.
An
oil car is black bottle with a two-foot thin grate at the end called a bumper
that rides over the wheels. They twirl faster and faster below our bird perch.
‘Where the Hades are you?’ sounds Wiz on the radios. ‘On an oil tanker,’ I shout with one hand on
the grate and the other the receiver.
‘What!’ he gasps. ‘I’ll phone the next yard and tell them to radio this
train to make an emergency stop.’
However, I urge patience that an emergency stop might throw us off.
‘Give me a minute to think,’ and he
signs off. Momentarily, the
walkie-talkie blurts, ‘The mileposts cross-reference the railroad map to show
the freight seventy miles outside
We
fasten like ivy to the mesh platform.
‘You stepped out of the Eris crowd, the only
person willing to ride a freight. Why?’ I ask close to her face. ‘It’s another lifestyle sampler to figure out
myself,’ she replies, and scoots closer on the bumper. ‘I’m hard to get to
know.’
I
coax her, ‘We’re sitting on a narrow mesh inches above racing wheels and can’t
get off. If the train emergency stops we
fall. If the local police see us, we’re nabbed. In an hour our fingers will
cramp like sticks. After sundown it gets nippy. Are you nervous, Clown? She retorts, ‘Not unless I should be.’
‘Why
are you on this trip?’ she counters. I am
instantly carried away from the tiny stage to the mightiest autobiography. ‘Did
you ever read John Griffin’s Black like
Me?’ I ask. She twinkles, ‘One of my favorites. What happens, it begins, if a white man
becomes a Negro in the deep South? What
adjustments must he make, what changes occur within him, and what are the
sensations of being different. How else
would he know except by becoming a Negro?’
‘Exactly,’ I echo, appending, ‘The story haunted me for years until I
became a hobo. Unlike Griffin’s transformation to a black using dyes, oral
chemicals and shoe polish, I only avoided shaving three days, donned old
clothes with empty pockets, and walked into a railroad yard.’
We
ramble at 40mph down the rail over bumpy crossings
and through little burgs where passersby wave incredulously, but we can’t let
go the bumper to wave back. I glance at
Clown, as a teacher to a student, proud that she doesn’t quiver or puke.
‘This,’ I tell her, ‘Is your moment in the sun. You are a hoboette!’ After twenty minutes ride on the dodgy
tanker, the freight pauses on the main, we jump down and race to our hopper
before it trundles.
Wiz
pulls his hair and stamps his feet on the steel porch. ‘Don’t do that again at
the risk of death!’ he screams. ‘You needn’t have worried,’ I console him, ‘We
had you watching over us.’
Wise
tramps slow down- slower than the train go their minds. In jail this is called
doing ‘easy time’, and doing train time is the same to make long hours pass
easier. Spread ideas out, taste one at a
time, and let conclusions arrive like maestro piano keys. I pull out and read ‘L’Amour upside-down to
decelerate after the tanker. ‘Doc Bo,’ quips Wiz. ‘You’re the Zen master of the
21st century, with an upside-down book in one hand and a thumb up your
ass with the other.’
Later,
a sky of lights ahead. The freight train, truly the greatest technological
wonder of time, pulls into the Mormon capitol after dark with three heathen
hobos.