Sunday, August 22, 2010
Friday, August 20, 2010
Sunday, August 15, 2010
I have been accepted by my closest neighbor even though I live in a tent and she has a big, wide trailer with a deck, which she has privatized by lashing grass mats to the railing and secured it with a rope to keep the gate shut. The family's plastic lawn games and dirt bike are safe from thieves.
See… that’s what gets me about tent living in the Trailer Park--- she has a deck and I don’t.
She is a plump fiftyish Frenchwoman with short, home-colored gold hair, who sits on her deck in a pink and blue flowered housedress and flip-flops. I met her the first night when I was looking for the outlet for my electrical appliances ( my laptop and my Blackberry charger).
I approached her carefully, (trailer-park etiquette requires that you ignore strangers, even if they’re right in your face, until they speak politely to you). She hustled down off her deck and led me to the back of our common lot, showed me some cables entwined in the wire fence separating us from the trailers behind us. (Thankfully the naked man was not in his window). But there should be a box with outlets to plug in those cables ---where was it? She said she must ask her husband, and hurried back up to her deck. She didn’t go into the trailer---she positioned herself by the open window on the deck, and launched the question into the murky interior. A low growl answered back.
“My husband is taking a sieste", she said, a little apologetically. "He says the box is midway behind the trailer”. She led the way, both of us creeping sideways between the trailer’s side and the wire fence, until we got to a box on a post spewing cables in every direction. There was an outlet left for me, thank goodness. Too bad my ralonge didn't work.
The next morning as I made coffee, I nodded at her, sitting on the deck making complicated arrangements with someone on her mobile phone. She put the phone down from time to time and went over to speak through the open window, like at McDonald’s drive-up, and received a series of low growls. Did that guy ever get up? I pictured him in an undershirt, lying on his back, bald head toward the window, looking up at the tinny ceiling of the trailer.
Mid-morning, as I was washing my breakfast dishes at the spigot out front, a frantic bark sounded from inside her trailer. She got up, opened the door and brought out a scruffy little dog, who got a whiff of Beau and promptly went beserk. From the window, Low Growl ratcheted up to a volley of growls. Madame made apologies, attached a leash and dragged the dog down the road. When she came back, she put him inside and out came a husky man-kid. When he spoke to her I recognized another voice from the night before: that of an adolescent with Down’s Syndrome.
As the garçon and his Maman played paddleball in front, I found myself wishing Low Growl would get off his cot and take the boy fishing or something.
On the other side of my tent a Dutch family with a couple of teens spends all day and into the night laughing, eating and drinking and laughing some more. It’s infectious, and sometimes I have to smile and chuckle too, even though I don’t know what they’re saying. The mother came over and spoke to me in French (the Dutch know everyone else’s language). She said her daughter, an animal lover, was dying to take Beau for a walk. The daughter spoke English and approached Beau, who was very happy to leave the Trailer Park and sniff his way along the lane that winds through shady, tranquil Tent City. Tents in nature colors-- green and blue and khaki--sitting on the earth, tucked in between the trees. Ahhhhh. That’s where I belong!
My neighbors all got together for a party in the trailer across the street—30-somethings filled the deck and spilled out onto the front yard. My Dutch neighbors were there—everybody was there, apparently, except for Madame and Low Growl and the boy…and me. The beer and wine were flowing and the stories got more outrageous as the night wore on. There were thunderous booming guffaws from the males and hysterical shrieks from the females. Everyone was having such a rollicking good time that I couldn’t be annoyed. I was reading in my tent, but I had to giggle at some of the outbursts.
Much later, when the party broke up and I turned out the lantern, ready for sleep, I heard the voices of the Dutch family close by. They were back on their own deck, hooting and shrieking with laughter. They were speaking their own language now, but they’d brought home the French punch-lines I recognized from the party, reliving the hilarity and giving it their own special embellishments.
The next morning, I greeted Madame as she was putting up another lawn game to play with her boy. I told her I was leaving, and offered her my left-over groceries. She wished me a bonne continuation and gave me a wide smile. A strangely black smile.
She had no front teeth.
Time to hit the road.
Thursday, August 12, 2010
Camping Le Ventadour
Now as I zipped open the tent flap the first object that greeted me was a trailer hitch, jutting toward me. I remember that trailer hitch. It belongs to the trailer next to me. I pitched my tent facing it because the trailer on the other side has a window that would look right into my private space, and facing it toward the street would have exposed me to the row of trailers across from my site.
I let Beau out of the car, where he had chosen to sleep after freaking out when the walls of the tent fluttered in a sudden night breeze. He likes a more solid enclosure. Who knows what signals danger in the mind of a rescued greyhound. We walked through Camp Suburbia to the river, where I hoped to find the wild natural beauty that I’d paid for with MasterCard.
Here’s how it looks in the morning before the kids come with their floats and flippers. I sat on a smooth rock and watched Beau standing in the clear water in his hunting pose, intent on the tiny trout zipping around just under the surface. He quickly realized that it wasn’t like hunting rabbits. The first time he thrust his snout into the water he jerked up and blew out bubbles. But he kept at it. If I hadn’t led him back to the campsite he would have stood there calculating his chances for another hour.
Back in Camp Suburbia, I pulled up the tent and turned it to face the street so that if I got up in the night to go out and pee I wouldn’t be impaled on the trailer hitch, or caught in the light from the other trailer’s window, where mysterious voices and shadowy figures loomed. The only other option would have been to turn the tent toward the back, but the morning sun revealed that what looked like a vine-covered wall was really…yes…more trailers. In the closest window, a flabby, shirtless (and probably pantless) guy scratched vigorously under his arm as he reached up to a shelf and found the coffee to start his day.
I have to be honest with myself. I booked too far into the vacation season. I can imagine the conversation when they received my request for a site. “You know…there’s a little space down in the trailer section we could rent her.” “You’re right! And after all, it’s just one woman.”
So they'd put me in the trailer park.
Wednesday, August 11, 2010
First Night Camping Solo in the Ardeche
“Why would you want to go camping all by yourself?” asked the Dutch guy at the campground reception. His blonde wife looked up from the desk with a grimace. I’d just seen the campsite they offered me and I’d just been told there was no wi-fi connection, so I was kinda wondering the same thing. Why would I drive for three hours, accompanied only by a large greyhound, to sleep on the ground in a tent?
It’s a personal outward-bound kind of exercise for me—a hurdle I put up on my life path. Last time I did it I was 62. Now I’m 65 and the hurdle seems a little higher. (The French say ‘I have 65 years’. I like that better—as if age is to your credit.) But it is a good personal challenge, isn’t it? Just you and your mental and physical abilities out there, under a foreign sky, no room service. If you “live” for awhile like that, you can get a pretty good idea whether you still have the chops for adventure.
Speaking of chops, it was Sunday evening and there was no food in sight. Stores closed, restaurants…(what restaurants?)…camp store—Nope. Just a mini-freezer of ice cream bars and cones. And a cold case stocked with drinks---mostly beer. Oh yeah…they’re Dutch.
I remembered I brought Andrew’s fresh tomato sauce and some pasta, so I went back to my site to put up my tent. It’s a big pop-up job that claims to take only 2 seconds to set up and it’s true. But then you have to drag it around to make sure the ground’s level under you, and you have to find a rock to pound in the stakes because you didn’t bring a mallet. But first you have to drive a stake into the ground to hitch up the greyhound. Then you can bring out your butane camp-stove, and a lantern because now it’s dark and you’re tripping over the cords stretching from the top of the tent to the pegs in the ground. You use a foot pump to inflate the new double mattress—nice! You push and pull it into the tent like an ant with a slice of bread, and you dress it with covers and pillows. Comfy! The greyhound agrees. He slips in around me and elongates himself corner to corner, dissecting the bed into two small triangles holding no possibility of comfort for me. He sighs in satisfaction.
I get the ralonge out—it’s an extension device with multiple electric outlets which allows you to take current from an outlet anywhere in the neighborhood. But when I try to connect the electric cooler I realized it only works with the car’s cigarette lighter. I try to connect the next vital appliance, my laptop, I discover that the thick layer of spattered plaster from months of renovation chez nous has clogged all the connections.
Now I know there is no other way…I have to go back to Mr. Why-Would-You-Go- Solo and ask for his help. I hope his wife isn't at the desk. I hope he has a mallet. Maybe I'll get an ice cream bar too...
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