In my last column, I made a
statement about the intellectual work academics engage in during our summers
away from the classroom. But all work and no play make Jane a dull girl, so
I’ve been trying to have a little fun this summer.
I joined the Southwest Montana Arts
Council to help with their Lunch in the Park series.
I joined Donna’s Kicking Country
Cloggers, and, God willing, won’t embarrass anyone but myself with my novice
clogging abilities.
I joined the YMCA and am spinning
my way to buns of steel.
But really, I feel the best way to
get to know Montana is to get to
know the land on which I’m living, so I went camping.
Upon reading that last sentence,
people who know me just fell on the floor and are currently doubled-up with
side-splitting laughter.
A few years ago, I went for a hike
with my dad. I heard water running and asked if there were a stream or creek
nearby. He said, “No,” and I realized that the sound was coming from the water
sloshing around in my Aquafina bottle in my backpack.
Clearly, I am not what anyone would
mistake for an outdoor girl. I own far too many L’Oreal and Paul Mitchell
products to be anything but a city girl.
So when my friend came to town for
a visit and wanted to camp in and around Yellowstone, I
said, “Sure. Can I bring my hair dryer?”
After she stopped laughing at what
I considered to be a serious question, she asked, “Do you have a sleeping bag?”
“Yes,” I said, “And it’s good until thirty below zero, I think.” My friend, who
cut her wilderness teeth in Alaska,
gave me a sideways glance but said nothing.
We hit the road with her dog Odys and
headed south of Bozeman for Spire
Rock. We made camp next to a bubbling brook under a picturesque pine tree.
“Where’s the ladies’ room?” I
asked. She handed me a roll of toilet paper and pointed me toward an outhouse
with, what I have since learned, was a vaulted toilet (which I have also since
learned has absolutely nothing to do with pole vaulting, thankfully).
Now might be a good time to mention
that I have never enjoyed doing my business outdoors due to my fear of what my
friend Richard called the Appalachian Butt Snake. Yes, I know that the
likelihood of any animal being interested in that area of my anatomy is slim,
but women are a little more exposed in that area than men when it comes to
relieving themselves outdoors.
Needless to say, I was a little
apprehensive about the vaulted toilet especially when I realized that at night,
such a venture would include careful balance of a flashlight, so I limited my
water intake and kept my legs crossed.
The plan was for me to sleep in the
back of my friend’s station wagon while she slept in her one-person tent with
her dog. However, after only an hour of sleep, Odys came to join me in the car
as he was (A) too cold to sleep outside, (mad at his mom for disciplining
him after chewing up his new toy, and (C) aware that I am a big weenie who is
afraid to sleep by herself outside.
It was a bad night’s sleep. Odys,
all fifty pounds of him, kept my legs pinioned in a mummy-like position,
prohibiting any movement which I desperately needed because of my desire to get
away from his prodigious flatulence (I knew that cottage cheese in his food
dish was a mistake!)
The following nights, I slept in
the tent and Odys slept with his mom in the car. The tent was pretty neat with
all kinds of zippers and pockets, and my friend had an egg-crate topper, so I
wouldn’t have to sleep with a rock in my back, but I wasn’t prepared for the
cold.
It was then I remembered that it
wasn’t my sleeping bag that was good to thirty below zero. It was my car’s antifreeze.
Too bad I couldn’t crawl into my car’s engine. It would have been significantly
warmer.
Those nights in the tent I wore
long underwear, two pairs of socks, two hats (one fleece, one wool), and
mittens. I slept in mittens! I now have a newfound respect for Lewis and Clark.
How did they do it? How did they ever get a comfortable night’s sleep? How did
they avoid the neck cricks that can only be explained by sleeping in the shape
of a question mark in order to stay warm?
The answer to those questions is
fire. On our first night out, my friend asked, “How are you at making a fire?”
Sitting in my camp chair with a book on my lap I replied, “What about me
screams good-at-making-fires?”
But I am nothing if not adventurous,
so I tried to build a fire. I failed.
I tried to light my friend’s white
fuel stove. I lit the ground on fire.
I tried to build a fire on the
second night. The fire flamed mightily for about ten minutes and then lamentably
died.
By then, building a fire had become
my metaphorical white whale. Like Captain Ahab obsessively looking for Moby
Dick, I began to plot the ways in which I would successfully bring fire to our
campground.
Then, I remembered as a child balling
up newspaper for my dad while he piled wood into our fireplace, so I grabbed
every piece of paper in sight, my Newsweek, the Cheese-It box, the map
of Yellowstone, and went to work.
My fire pit was a thing of beauty.
Upright logs encircled my paper wads in a tight hug, and as I lit a match, I
was almost sorry to watch it all go up in flames. But flame up it did and this
time for more than two hours.
Finally, the white whale was mine,
and I knew my dad would be proud.
As I write this on Father’s Day,
I’d like to thank all the fathers out there who teach their daughters something
every day. Even when you’re not sure we’re listening, we are.