More Random Thoughts or Observations



Mountain Laurels, or rhododendrons, abound in the Pennsylvania mountains reminding me of home.

My whole experience from start to finish has been one of running a highway gauntlet. You only have to be left standing at the end to win.

There are too many idle Americans. We have a lot of potential and people need to have jobs.

An Ohio patrolman, thinking I agreed with him, said, “If people don’t like things in this country - there’s the door.”
I would say, “ If you don’t like things - what are you doing to try to change them?”

Wild turkeys now abound in great numbers.

I have found facing traffic more confrontational than moving in the same direction.

I’m not sure if I previously mentioned it, but I am now on my fourth pair of shoes.

Ohio doesn’t seem to have many tandem-trailer trucks. These are very common in the West and elsewhere.

Dead groundhogs are now showing up as roadkill.

Pennsylvania has a terrible litter problem. I rank it as worse than Idaho - the previous leader. The irony is that it has more “Do not litter” signs than any state through which I have passed.

Many of the people and establishments in this area seem to prefer being paid in cash and even have signs stating so.

It has been almost six months since I’ve driven a car.

Crossing the Alleghenies has been an up-and-down experience. Lay your fingers flat and imagine going over one and then the next and then the next and then the next and you’d have the idea.

I saw black squirrels in Western Ohio. I’d never seen these before or even heard of them.

My water consumption is way down. It just isn’t required in this cold weather.

Like everywhere, the large electricity producing windmills are now in Pennsylvania, too.

My old high school - the “Warriors” - has consolidated with another high school and together they are now called the “Redskins.” In Oregon this would be considered very politically incorrect and would never fly.

Roadkill is much more pleasant in cold weather than in the heat of summer. Nature now acts as a refrigerator much to my relief.

There seems to be many many more cigarette smokers here than in Oregon.

My donations from strangers is now closing in on $1000 without me asking for a penny.

To my surprise, the coyotes have moved as far east as Pennsylvania. Sitting with friends around an outside fire in Ohio I was shocked to hear them yapping. Originally they were west of the Mississippi but have been rapidly moving east.

I talked with a president of a small college who said that he’d like to walk across the country too.

Country People here still burn coal to heat their homes. It gives off a sulfuric acidity smoke that I hadn’t smelled since being a child.

The Upper Oho River Valley and the Pittsburgh area still has a very low Mexican-American population. This is quite different than the rest of the country.

I hadn’t thought of it at the time, but a couple of days ago I crossed the physical divide separating the east-west flow of water. Now all of the water flows into the Atlantic instead of to the Gulf of Mexico.

I have also crossed a social divide as the Pittsburgh area television stations have been left behind and they now originate in places such as York, Pennsylvania and Hagerstown, Maryland.

Prices always reflect what people will pay and are not the same everywhere. I just had two eggs, bacon, hash brown, a cup of milk, and coffee for $4.24.

So many of the houses here in Pennsylvania are made of stone and brick and seem much more solid than the houses in Oregon.

There’s something lonely about a cawing crow in the winter woods.

A Tough Day






Friday Evening, Dec. 3
My feet were freezing as I hurried down the steep mountain trying to get to Ft. Loudon, Pennsylvania before the darkness was complete. Though the distance from Breezewood to Ft. Loudon was only 25 miles - the winter weather, the shortened days, and the three mountains I had to cross - all made for a very long haul and a lot of physical effort. I probably should have stayed the night in McConnellsburg but that would have left the highest mountain for me in the morning and with the sky threatening snow - I decided to go for it and put it behind me.
I arrived in the dark and the cold and luckily found a room in the only place that accommodated overnight guests. I felt lucky that I did not have to camp on what has been the coldest night thus far.

Note: Earlier in the day I was nearly attacked by three German Shepherds. I had my mace/pepper spray out and was ready to spray away to save myself when the owner rushed out and called them off apologizing to me.

A Cold but Delightful Day








Thursday, December 2
It was a cold dark morning with temperatures in the 20's as I left Bedford at 6:30 A.M. For many miles the road was surprisingly level and after two days of waiting out the rain - it felt good to be moving again. The ease of pushing my cart counteracted any negative caused by the cold and I happily walked the 18 miles to Breezewood, Pennsylvania. Breezewood is located at the intersection of Interstate 70 and the Pennsylvania Turnpike and therefore motels are available. Hence I am here for the night and tomorrow I will be in McConnelsburg - only 17 mles away. With the weather as it is, I am trying to "motel hop" as much as possible and this now is influencing my daily distances.
Note: The mountain I was warned about never materialized and I thought perhaps it didn't exist. It does. It is waiting for me beginning at the eastern city limits.
This should help warm me up in the morning.

Our Constitution - Part II


The Articles of Confederation - our 1st Constitution 1777 -1789


Without going through the complete narrative leading to our present constitution and the Bill of Rights, let me highlight the basic issues involved.

- Our first Constitution, called the Articles of Confederation, was hurriedly written primarily by John Dickinson of Pennsylvania in the midst of our war for independence.
- The states did not want to be subordinate to a national government so the constitution intentionally created a weak federal government with most real power retained by the states.
- While fighting the war and facing a common enemy - the Articles of Confederation was sufficient to hold the states together but proved insufficient during the peace that followed and disharmony usually prevailed.
- Our national government - better called “a collection of states” - was much like a creature with 13 heads. Each state or faction of states wished to take the body (the national government) in a specific direction most often favoring their own specific interests.
-Before independence, a favored method of controlling the Colonial Governors had been by controlling the purse and withholding the necessary funds to do business. Now, using this same method of control under the Articles of Confederation - the states were able to hobble the new federal government reducing it's power.

Simply stated, the early years of our new United States government was an arm wrestling match between those Founders who favored state’s rights, state powers, and state interests verses those who felt that if the United States was ever to operate efficiently and become a power on the global stage - a stronger national govenment was needed.

Gone In The Morning

Wednesday, December 1
It is hard to believe it is now December. This means it has been 5 and 1/2 months since I first began my trip at the Pacific Coast in Oregon. I am now hoping I might finish before Christmas but have learned to "go with the flow" and accept what will be. I did not plan for these extra days in Bedford but I cannot control the weather. Hopefully I will have dry roads ahead as I cross the remaining Alleghenies. My guess is that it will be 4 days of walking to the eastern side of the mountains.
Tomorrow I hope to walk to Breezewood and according to the locals - I will have a steep mountain to ascend before I get there.
Power up.

Our Constitution Part I


If the reader will permit, I would like to diverge from my travels and share a bit about the Constitution and history of our United States. I realize that many eyes begin to glaze in Pavlovian response thinking back to a former high school civics or history class. If so, I say shame on your teacher. All across America students rate social studies as their least liked - most boring subject. As a teacher, and as a citizen, I find this appalling for I cannot think of a more important and exciting subject than the grand drama of human events which have brought us to where we are today. To be ignorant of our country’s history is to be ignorant of ourselves.
I always ask students to imagine being on a trip, alone to the world and happily humming along. While camping for the evening you slip on a rock hitting your head and now suffer amnesia. You do not know your name. You do not know your family. You do not know who you are or where you’ve been. If so - you certainly would have no idea of where you were going.
We, as citizens of a country, have a collective persona - an American persona. If we ourselves have no or little knowledge of our past - how can we responsibly direct our future? In my opinion, we, as a country, have hit our heads on rocks and suffer from collective amnesia. Knowing little about ourselves, we have let go of the wheel and allowed others to drive our car - perhaps leading us in a direction we do not wish to go.
Where is the conversation?
When dressed publicly as a Colonial American I become a natural target for those harboring grievances against the country for past or current mistakes. Many times I have been approached my someone stating something of the sort, “Your people held my people in slavery!”
I accept this and agree saying that slavery was indeed awful but the Taj Mahal was built with slave labor - yet no one would advocate tearing it down. Our government, founded on the highest hopes and most noble ideals and principles, has not, honestly, had its door of democracy open to all groups - but I certainly would never tear it down. Instead, we must work together and continue, as Americans, pushing wide democracy’s door for all Americans.
I do not romanticize the past and have expressed previously the need to examine our history squarely. This does not mean we need dwell on the negative, but simply to acknowledge it and accept it. For as Patrick Henry said, “For it is only in this way that we can arrive at truth and fulfill the great responsibility which we hold to God and our country.”
Think me naive but I wish to state that the United States, in spite of the hypocrisy - was founded on noble principles, noble ideals, by educated men with the noble goal of devising and creating what has been and continues to be a most noble experiment - our constitution. They created it and we today are its stewards. Shouldn’t we know something about it?

Did you know that our constitution is the oldest functioning constitution in the world?

Bedford, PA - Again



Tuesday, November 30
It was raining quite heavily when I awoke and has continued unabated all day. The weather report has issued a "flood watch" as more rain is expected throughout the night. The current forecast predicts an inch of snow as temperatures tomorrow drop to the low 20's with highs in the mid-30's. Yikes. This represents planning problems and with it - a bit of dismay. I am about four normal walking days from being east of the mountains and do not wish to become trapped. As previously said, I can handle the cold - but due to my cart - it is the rain and snow that thwart my travels.
On the positive - Bedford is a surprisingly tidy town with coffee shops and places to eat, I am staying in a comfortable room at a moderate price, and there is a laundromat and a grocery store down the street.
It is a nice location to wait out the weather.
Be like water - go with the flow.