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On The Balcony In The Big Easy

Submitted by Josh on July 22, 2005 - 3:14pm.

We made it to New Orleans. Wednesday night we camped at David Crockett State Park south of Nashville, a place with lots of fireflies and no one else bold (or dumb) enough trying to sleep without an air conditioner. The humidity was intense, but we made the most of it with a little fire and a few sips of Port Wine. We all went to bed early, but no one slept well.

Thursday it was on the road. We made it down to Bama, to the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute -- a must see -- and got some help getting around a traffic jam from a friendly local gentleman. After that we drove hard on the 59 west. This is our only scheduled backtrack and we didn't take the scenic route, blowing down through the earthy lush corridors of Mississippi and into French-friendly Louisianna at top speeds. Four states in one day; just find a trucker who's balling it and get behind the mule.

Aunty Sheena comes through on the phone (I'd just left her a message before) and we've got a place to stay, so we visit for a moment, shower and head out to the quarter. It's around midnight and I'm in a crappy mood because I was in the zone and did a lot of driving and didn't take a nap, but we make it there and a beer and a slice of pizza bring me back around.

Bourbon street is kind of slow. There's action in the clubs, but at midnight on a thursday, there's not a lot happening in the streets. Just drunken northerners wandering aimlessly around packs of 6'6" rail-thin black transvestites and a few gruff barkers trying to hustle pudgy jocks with mardi-gras beads and giant fruit drinks into the strip clubs. It feels like the mother of all tourist traps, though that may have also been the $4 slice of pizza.

But we walk it because we have to walk it, and we cruise around to Molly's on Decateur, which seems to have some real people, and where $4 will get you an awfully large glass of Turkey. We park it there for a little while, shoot the shit, move into the back bar, which is actually in a courtyard, so no AC but much better music.

The way home was confusing. I wandered off to get a hot dog and we got separated, and then when we got back together there was some altercation arising from my inability to tell when Mark is joking and when he isn't. C'est la vie. Luke and I stay up until dawn talking about trade policy and whether or not to abolish or reform the corporation as a legal form. Another prime night.

Tonight will be cuisine and music, out on the town with Sheena.

East Nashville Score!

Submitted by Josh on July 20, 2005 - 12:43pm.

East Nashville Shine
Mark fulfilles one of his great American ambitions. Moonshine.
We had a dream. The dream was to find moonshine, in America. And here it is.

At first we weren't sure what the score was with Nashville. On our way into the city center we saw approxomately one million police officers. Seems like a fightin' town. Downtown the music is always free though, and the BBQ is good, and the daughters of the south are present. And we met up with Travis and his friends Mark and Ben and Erica the half-sleeve tatted bartender on her way to North Carolina sent several rounds our way and the good times got to rolling.

I hung back with a couple glasses of water (because in spite of the website name one thing we don't do is drive drunk) and we made our way over the Cumberland river into East Nashville, which except for the 90% humidity feels a lot like Portland. Nashville Mark broke out this jar of rasberry shine, and in spite of the fact that it was his birthday he shared it with us.

Tulsa and Travis
When Tulsa wants a drink, Tulsa get's a drink. That's travis with his Carter Administration t-shirt.
They have a giant white German Shepard named Tulsa. Took the Toe a little getting used to, but Tulsa is the major buddy. He don' give a shit and loves everyone -- except people who come to the door in uniforms, of course. So we got all fired up, saw a little of the hood on foot, got giant glasses of whiskey and t-shirts from Niko, the major man at the Red Door East Saloon, came back, broke out the Texas Thunder Cannon, had a good ol' time.

Now we're feeling the second-day effects of the rasberry shine, copying music switching between great concert DVDs and the Supreme Court hullabaloo, waiting on a pizza.

Nashville -- The Now Trip

Submitted by Josh on July 19, 2005 - 5:20pm.

Here's a photo I call Rummy on the John:

Rummy on the John
Daddy Dean lives just outside Nashville. He has two sons in the Air Force. This is his toilet.
We stayed at Daddy Dean's last night. It was a dry out day; just hung out and ate chineese and watched The Magnificent Seven, which is about a much different idea of what Texas was. Luke is playing some guitar. Mark wrote some postcards. I wrote a couple good things (about racy racy stuff, I assure you) that will be posted soon.

Tonight we're out with Travis Collinsworth; brother to Kevin, who was one of the many fine people I met through MFA. Should be a good time.

Deep In The Heart Of Texas

Submitted by Josh on July 19, 2005 - 4:02pm.

Big Bend Basin Trio
Go to Big Bend. Camp in the Basin. It will be worth it.
Texas is where the West and the South meet. At this point, the Southwest (which is where you think this would happen) is it's own animal. The desert metros are booming, and the highway signs advertising real estate tell you on the way into Las Vegas, "Welcome to the New Southwest." But the spirits of the West and the South (and throw in Mexico if you want to keep it real) have deep roots in the Lone Star state. It's rugged individualism of the frontier coupled with the kind of cultural pride and rituals that spring from generations.

We came in on the national parks tip. Three words: Big Bend Basin. That's where you go, although the Guadeloupe Mountains were also quite picturesque and led to our first good run of audio. Luke posted some other stuff on this with more photos as well.

Our first stop in civilization was Austin, where I'd gotten us set to stay with my ETW alumni friend Julia Smith. Her and her roommates Zack and Andy were fantastically gracious. We arrived late, around midnight, but we hung out with Julia and Zack for a couple hours and I slept in absent Andy's bed.

BBQ at the Green Mesquite
On Zack's recommendation we hit the Green Mesquite in Austin with Julia. Best cue we've had yet.
Barton Spring Pool
Barton Spring is a natural spring that's been sort of turned into a pool by the city of Austin. The fresh spring water is cool even in the heat of the day.
The next day we hit up the Austin Museum of Art to see the Annie Libowitz exhibition, portraits of great American musicians. Then to the Green Mesquite for some delicious BBQ, and on for a swim at Barton Spring, a natural spring that's been turned into a pool by the city of Austin. It's cool all the time and doesn't need chlorine since the water springs pure from the earth and constantly washes on down.

Julia Smith
Julia's an old friend from ETW. She moved to Austin shortly after graduation and found it mightily to her liking.
Then it was back home to shower, get dressed and head out to see some live music. We'd picked The Weary Boys, always a hootin' hollerin' ho-down of a good time. It was a scant $5 and there was an amazingly graceful amazon cocktail waitress who'd parade the room dancing along and holding a tray of beverages above her head and the crowd. Future ex-wife #1 for the Kone Zone? Maybe, friend. May be.

In any event, I slapped my leg so many times I had a healthy bruise the next day, and we left happy and energized to meet Zack at another spot, then off to skinny dip at the elks lodge before finally returning home.

Big D
"Drink. Drive. Go To Jail? Another Government Lie," so sayeth the billboard with the power-suited woman lawyer outside Dallas. The highways are mad, huge soaring overpasses that must reach 75 or 100 feet into the air. The city center is all mirrors -- oil money booming the town out just as architects perfected that technique -- like a cluster of diamonds.

The wonderful Wunderlichs
The Wonderful Wunderlichs. Group photo in Paul and Jo's dining room with their daughter Nikki and Los vagabenderosos.
Paul and Jo's place is in a quiet exurb town called Farmer's Branch. The surrounding towns of Dallas are fully integrated into the larger metro area, but maintain their identity via huge water towers and individualized street signs. You know you've left Farmer's Branch and crossed into Addison when the signs go from red to blue and they get a different logo tacked on to the end.

When we got there the scene was set. Paul did us up right, with a bucket of Shiner Bock and Blonde on ice and three truly Texas-sized steaks ready to throw on the fire. By and by Scott and Nikki made it on over and we filled out the spread with some loaded baked potatoes, fresh-cut tomatoes, texas toast and a delicious (yet inexpensive) merlot. It was the finest meal we've had since hitting the road. That's one of the things that's so cool to stay with your friends parents.

Paul's Texas steaks after
Buen provecho!
Paul's Texas steaks before
You can't win a race on cheap gas!
"You can't win a race on cheap gas," he says, so we supped and heard stories from Paul's old days. He helps run the North Texas Food Bank, but as a kid he grew up overseas in Saudi Arabia and Jordan, which is where he met Jo. At that time it was a pretty small community of Americans in that part of the world, mostly the children of a few businessmen and diplomats. I suppose it's mostly the same today, although the populations of both have probably grown.

We also got to hear some dirt on ol' Tommy boy. He was Luke's long-time roommate and fast friend at Reed, but somehow we had to go all the way to Texas to hear about his trip to Mexico. Interesting. That's what happens when you let your friends have dinner with your parents and your sister and you're not around, my man. ;)

In summation, it was a great evening. Paul had to get back to work feeding the hungry in the morning, so we all headed out to that Duke's place, which I mentioned before. Outside their house is a sort of cul-de-sac/roundabout with some grass, a couple trees and a bench in the middle, so we hung out there for a while, having a little guy time, working on a bottle of Rye, enjoying the warm night air. In truth the main thing that got us back in to bed was the thought of Paul waking up for work and seeing us degenerates still awake outside his house.

Scott and Rodger Hose It Up!
Rodger holds the North Texas Potato Cannon while Scott loads the firing chamber with fresh hairspray.
So we slept it off for a while, did our laundry, cleaned out the truck then went out for some TexMex, which is sort of the opposite end of the food spectrum from the Steak extravaganza, but unique and delicious in its own right. And then it was over to Scott and Rodger's for all the hilarity you may have heard.

In the morning it was time to blow. We collected ourselves, got some coffee and Kolatchies and then on the road through Oklahoma to Little Rock. After nearly a week we said so long to the Republic of Texas. So long, but see you again.

Texas Thunder Audio

Submitted by Josh on July 16, 2005 - 1:55pm.

Rodger and the Texas potato cannon
Rodger and his creation, which we are now traveling with. Booyakashaa!
Thrill to the Texas potato cannon and some other good times. Contains damning evidence. Not suitable for all audiences.

Listen Now.

Here you'll hear Rodger, Scott, Brieann and us fellas. "Kick him. Tell him Texas is calling" is Rodger trying to wake up Tom back in Portland at 4am Central/2am Pacific (on a work night). The thunk is three eggs hurtling across Rodger and Scott's back yard. The rest is history.

Mesh Shirts In Big D

Submitted by Josh on July 14, 2005 - 3:15pm.

Quick update; we're in Dallas making the most of Paul Wunderlich's extrordinary graciousness. I'm struck again and again by how lucky we are to know so many wonderful people.

Team Mesh Shirt
That's what a hangover in Dallas will getch ya.

Last night we went out with Nichole, Scott and Rodger to a local upscale-downscale hotspot -- Dukes "Original Roadhouse" (which seemed a little new to be all that original, but whatever), populated by America's winners. It was actually a pretty good scene. There were a gang of consultants in training playing a cup-flipping battle-of-the-sexes drinking game. We got hit by two guerilla marketing teams; one a Marlboro man giving out free zippos in return for a scan of your ID, the other a few kids being paid to go out and talk up the Texas Rangers. The baseball team, not the elite law enforcement unit. The Shiner Bock flowed and everyone was young and affluent, beautiful and laughing. We're having grand fun in Texas.

Today we re-orged the truck and declared total war on the stankiness that has infested it over the past month. This struggle is far from over, but we've struck another blow for freedom and justice, though the whole operation may have lowered the neighbors property values a bit. C'est la vie.

We'll be here in Big D another night, and then it's off to Little Rock, Memphis, Nashville, and the Great Smokey Mountains. Always more to come.

Vagabender Audio - Episode 1

Submitted by Josh on July 13, 2005 - 11:37am.

We've been recording things. Stories, goofing off, music, etc. We're going to keep posting like this; it's like our own little internet radio show (or "podcast" for buzzword-compliance) and I think we like it.

This episode features our finest run-in with the law so far. All the way back in Eastern California we were running state roads through the Mojave desert. There were some pretty big brush fires and at one point we blew right by a ranger barricade. The rest is history.

Listen now.

Hello Austin, Are You Ready?

Submitted by Luke on July 12, 2005 - 8:15am.

Breakfast in Austin
Julia took us to get delicious breakfast Tacos.
It's been a few days of heavy travel since Tucson, but now we're resting comfortably in the home of Joshua's ETW friend Julia. Sixto is happily chewing on his rubber bone and all is well.

Max
Max will soon be a patent lawyer in DC. !$Ca'Ching$!
Tucson was fun, though unbearably hot. Mark and Josh beat the heat by holing up at Taelyn's and drinking. I on the other hand hung out with Rachel's lawyer friend Max.

Taelyn's Bambilicious Fourth of July Feast!
Venison, grilled onions and zuchinni. MMMMMMM.
For America's birthday, Taelyn cooked us a mean venison meal, and we partied with some Tucsonites until about midnight. Then we went to the bar. The aptly named Surley Wench is a
Boozin at The Surley Wench
pretty decent bar. Though they did try to kick us out when Taelyn tried to bring a bug
Beecho The Bug
Beecho was a cicada that Taelyn me at the Fourth of July party. You're dyin' Beecho!
he had befriended inside. The night became rapidly hazy, as we continued the regimin of Wild Turkey and beer backs.

Turkey!
Wild turkey and beer backs: the offical drink of Vagabender
Friday July 8th: We high tailed it out of Tucson. Got started a little late, but made
The White Sands Crotch Grab
When it's too dark to see much, you gotta spice up the pic a little.

White Sands by 9pm. Late dinner at Applebees made us feel like a part of local life on the outskirts of Alamogordo(which Mark says is Spanish for Fat Fort). We pirate camped between Cloudcroft and Mayhill, NM.

Texasproofing!
A flag sticker and a support our troops magnet should help ease vagabender's passage through Texas and rest of the South.
Saturday July 9th: After breakfast at the Cafe in Mayhill, we hit the road for America's most beloved Caverns, Carlsbad. On the way we stopped at a dollar store in anticipation of how we might be recieved in Tejas.

Cavernous and gaping, like the deficit and filled with blood sucking rodents, like the halls of Congress, Carlsbad Caverns just might be America's most beloved national park. The steady downhill grade of the descent into the caves revealed once again that fat Americans walk slow and fall down a lot.

Hello Texas!
Texans love to drive friendly (glug, glug). It's the Texan way! (glug, glug)
Driving South into the Guadalupe mountians, we caught our first Texas rainstorm. Big Thunder and Lightning abound in West Texas. We spent the
Guadalupe Mountains!
Sunny, and rainy with lightning and thunder
night playing guitar, making audio, and maintaining the fragile social bonds that keep the wheels of Vagabender spinning.

Sunday, July 10th: Hit the road driving South to Big Bend. We chased a huge thunderstorm the whole way. At Marfa, we decided to take the road less traveled and head for Texas farm road 170. This is the only place where you can actually

Big River!
Nice view of the Rio Grande from TFR 170.
drive alongside the Rio Grande for a significant streach.

We rolled into Presidio, Texas looking for gas and found a freaky scene out of a Zombie movie. None of the gas pumps worked. We tried to stop and get cash. At the drive through ATM a couple sat in their truck in front of the machine. When we pulled in behind them the woman got out and gesticulated wildly at us. Finally a kindly local told us that the electricity was out and in order to get gas we'd have to make it the 60 miles to Lajitas.

The road along the Rio was amazingly beautiful.

Da Mayor!
Drunk on Lone Star long necks, the mayor of Lajitas gives us the stink eye.
When we got to Lajitas, we found gas, and Clay Henry III. Clay is a beer drinking goat, and the Mayor of Lajitas. Texas is fucking weird.

When we finally got to Big Bend we camped in Big Basin, the most incredible campsite I've ever

Sunset in Big Bend
Just look at all that natural beauty
seen. Down in a hollow, surrounded by mountains, Big Basin is lush. We saw wild pigs. A lightning storm just over the ridge lit up the basin in flashes for hours.

Monday, July 11th: We packed the truck and hit the road for a long day of driving. We arrived in San Antonio at around ten and stopped of to

Remember the Alamo?
This corpulent officer is now all that defends the Alamo from shirtless West Coasters and their dogs.
see the pride of Texas, the Alamo. Honestly, I wasn't that impressed. Sorry Texas.

The 35 North from SA to Austin crawling with outlet malls. I thought all of central Texas smelled like shit until I realized I was smelling the inside of the Truck. Stinky.

Arrived in Austin to a welcome of beer drinking and sitting in the backyard with Julia and one of her roommates.

Tuesday, July 12th: AUSTIN! Eating breakfast tacos. MMMMM. We're planning on a crazy night in Austin and then on to Dallas.

Leaving Tucson

Submitted by Josh on July 8, 2005 - 12:42pm.

We're packing up to head out of Tucson, saying goodbye to the swamp-cooled box of heaven we knew as Taelyn and Rachel's house.

The regemin of sun-avoidance spurred Mark on creatively, but left me only a few pounds heavier and a couple brain-cells short. Last night we did get out into the outskirts of town to take in a great combination desert thunderstorm and sunset. That was a treat from the natural world.

We'll have more soon. Luke is going to take a turn on the wheels of steel and I'm going to get serious about producing some audio. Maybe we'll get out another mass email when we hit Texas.

Bienvenidos a nuestros queridos lectores hispanohablantes

Submitted by Mark on July 6, 2005 - 11:57am.

Bueno, compañeros quiero agradecerles por visitar nuestro sitio de web y invitarles a visitarlo en el futuro. Bienvenidos! Primero quiero mandar saludos y cariño a todos mis amigos hispanohablantes en todas partes del mundo especialmente a mis queridos chilenos. Les quiero muchísimo hueones. Ademas, voy a pedir perdón ahora por los numerosos errores del futuro con la escritura de un gringo flojo que casi no ha usado el espanol en mucho tiempo y nunca ha escrito por una pagina de web, po. Gracias por su paciencia. Si quieren llamar mi atención a algún error especialmente horroroso o solamente dejar un comentario o mandar cariño, por favor deja un mensaje en la sección de comentario (add a new comment.) Será excelente.

Bueno pues, ?Qué pasa conmigo? y ?Qué es Vagabender? Las ultimas noticias de mi vida son que me gradué con honores en una carrera de pedagogía en castellano en la Universidad estatal de Humboldt y con la abundancia de libertad que ahora tengo empecé con un viaje gigante por todas partes de los EEUU. En ingles es el famoso o sea infame tradición de "Roadtrip." Salimos juntos, yo y dos amigos muy buenos de secundaria, Josh y Luke, y un perro medio malcriado que nunca se calla que es el famoso y querido Sixto.

Sixto
sixto relajandose
Hicimos planes para ver lo máximo de la naturaleza increíble en mi país y entender como son los norteamericanos que han votado por Bush, el otro lado digamos. Es decir, ?Qué son los Estados Unidos ahora? ?De verdad son unidos? ?Como son la gente corriente? ?Quienes somos nosotros mismos? ?Donde están las cervezas mas frías y las chicas mas bonitas? Todas las respuestas de esas preguntas, compañeros, salimos a encontrar. Vagabender es una combinación /juego de palabras entre la palabra vagabundo y la palabra borrachera. Que puedo decir po, a mi me gusta una chelita bien helada. Entonces, nuestro roadtrip es una búsqueda por el corazón del pueblo estadounidense y un chance para tomar algunos refrescos por el camino. Es un viaje de descubrimiento, de lo que tenemos afuera y lo que tenemos adentro.

Aquí, pueden encontrar muchas fotos, noticias y comentarios en ingles (muy bueno para ejercer) y espanol de lo que hemos encontrado, a veces serio a veces chistoso. Espero que les gusten y disfruten!

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