
In case you missed it a blog based mini-series was started on the occasion of my last entry so if you want the full story, please start with my previous blog. If you don't want the full story then just jump right in. Either way, you have chosen the road less traveled.
Part II
ON MY COUCH
Well, this story will be finished in the comfort of my living room two days after it started. By a simple analysis, the effort was a failure. I, however, like the media covering the immoral acts of a lying Democrat President will put a positive spin on this disaster. After a quick look over my shoulder to make sure Bill O'Reilly isn't watching, I, now, continue.
A cold breakfast it was. Two pop tarts and that horrible shelf milk. It was quite cold and I broke out a handy dandy hand warmer. This was a case where my left hand knew precisely what my right hand was doing and was threatening violence if it didn't give up the hand warmer. Eventually, while refereeing the on-going tensions between my hands, I was able to break down camp and load the pack. Donning my heavy flannel shirt I headed out. Amazing, still, how quickly a cold morning is swallowed up in bright sunshine with just a hint of increased temperature. Leaving was actually a change in the change of my plans. With the free camping and the peacefulness of the area, I thought an extra day here was in order. However, my walk to the maintenance yard in search of matches yesterday resulted only in a brief appearance in a Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks pickup truck's rear-view mirror. How different things might have been if I had gotten some matches. Instead I began my matchless journey to Lake Toronto via the town of Toronto.
Note: At this point I will mention a “Lesson Learned”. Please note that lessons learned may be totally logical and obvious to even the most casual observer, but the key here is the depth of the learning. Not knowing exactly where you're going when you're in a car is nothing at all like not knowing exactly where you're going with a heavy pack and no car.
My printed-out Google maps, and even the maps in the brochures the lady gave me at Woodson County State Fishing Lake proved somewhat ambiguous. Seems they were compiled with the assumption people would be in cars. More on the map front later.
So I find my way to 50th road and head west. This will land me in Toronto which is at the north end of the lake. Already my plans have resulted in an increase in mileage because I originally planned to go south since my next destination was S.W. of Toronto Lake. The change was because I wasn't sure if I would find an open marina this time of year but figured Toronto was big enough to have a store. Along the gravel roads I was mostly alone. Only an occasional car or truck. There was a dead coyote along the shoulder of the road. I saw no evidence of trauma on his body so I figured a car got him and he died of internal injuries. He had a nice coat of fur and would have made a good stuffed coyote for a museum. In fact I approached him slowly wondering if he was still alive. I stopped every mile or so to take the weight of the pack off my shoulders and to eat a few peanuts or M&M's. Eventually, I came to highway 105. 50th , as it turns out, does not go all the way into Toronto. A closer look at my Google map confirmed this. A closer look at the brochure map revealed that the Google map was the way to go. So I headed up 105 which would also get me to town. The weight of the pack was taking its toll on my body. I was stopping more frequently to rest. I was not particularly cold except when I stopped, but the constant stiff wind was adding to my struggle. I was not walking into the wind but it was pushing my pack expanded profile around a bit. Just out of Toronto a nice older lady in an old beat-up truck stopped to offer me a ride. While I had turned down a couple of other offers, after telling me there was a store in Toronto, she said to throw my pack in the back and she would take me there. I know I mentioned my plans for camping at Toronto then going on to Fall River, but it seems my agenda was secondary. We drove right through the town of Toronto to a grocery store/bait shop/cafe/video rental place 2 miles north. She said it was a better store and I could get something to eat there. I fetched my pack from the back of the truck and headed into the store. I asked if she thought my pack would be safe in the air lock while we were inside. She began a short speech about how country folk ain't like them city folk and that my pack would be fine there. The effectiveness of the speech, however, was somewhat diminished by her request for me to lock the door as I was getting out of the truck. I, nevertheless, previously held, and still hold, the underlying premise of her speech to be true. As I entered the cafe area of the multi-functional business I noticed 4 men seated at one of the tables. I believe they were mildly amused by my presence and the speech which they couldn't help but overhear. The lady, (my ride), asked what I wanted to drink and after settling on a Welch's Strawberry soda I was beginning to wonder if she planned to buy my lunch. After receiving the soda I informed her I needed to get some money out of my pack. She didn't object. While I ate my biscuits and gravy, (man were they good), the lady retrieved some pictures from her truck. She and her husband, an over-the-road trucker, live 2 miles north on eleven acres. While she raises chickens and sells fresh eggs most of her animals seemed to have been “rescued”, if you will. A mostly Black Lab she had she specifically said was a rescue. The horse looked like one and the llama probably was too. She had a picture of their Great Pyrenees sitting in her lap. She obviously loved her animals. After mentioning the weather report, (cold and windy), she offered to let me stay in her barn. I don't know if I gave her a questioning look or what but the offer was followed by the statement that she was safe and I could trust her. She had the store owner verify her statement to which I responded that I did trust her. After another offer and an encouragement to check the weather and another statement with verification of her trustworthiness she left. Oh, and with instructions on how to get to her place if I changed my mind.
( don't miss the next installment or I'll, uh, er, well, anyway just don't miss it ok )