Having been born in Chicago and raised in L.A., taking a short cut through an alley or across a vacant lot has always been my idea of hiking. And although I saw in “The Yearling” that even wise and noble Gregory Peck could find a good reason to shoot
a deer, “Bambi” convinced me that until one of those critters actually threatened to
destroy my family’s food supply, my policy would be to live and let live.
My attitude towards camping was equally level-headed. Just as I felt that any six
or eight-legged varmint that flew or crawled into our home was fair game, and was just
asking to be swatted or squashed, anybody who chose to venture into the wilderness had
no one but himself to blame if he got himself mauled or eaten. But you know how it is
with peer pressure when you’re fourteen and two of your friends, Steve and Barry, both
of whom had scouting experience, suggest venturing into the woods for a couple of
days of high adventure. Or, to be more exact, as it turned out, two days and two nights in
the bowels of hell.
Frankly, I don’t recall what I expected, but, for openers, I didn’t expect it to be as
sweltering as it was. Hot weather and no air-conditioning is not a good combination.
Air-conditioning, my favorite invention, by the way, is the one thing that truly separates
us from the lower forms of animal life, including the French.
One of the most vivid memories of that camping experience is that from the
moment that Steve’s mother dropped us off in the foothills all I wanted was a peach. I
had always liked peaches, but no more than apricots or plums. But over the next 48
hours, I craved a peach the way nobody before or since has craved anything. I remember
distinctly thinking I would gladly trade my entire baseball card collection for a single ripe
peach.
The only sustenance we had were packages of dehydrated food. I had never
before had experience with survivor fare. For those of you who have been spared, it is
powder to which you add water, thus turning it -- voila! -- into wet powder. The way you
distinguish one meal from another is quite simple: you read the label on the package.
The first night in the woods, I found to my surprise I was able to fall asleep quite
easily, even though I had never before slept in a sleeping bag or under the stars. At some
ungodly hour, I was rudely shaken awake by Steve, who announced in hushed tones that
we had to climb onto a large boulder, where, in the moonlight, I could see that Barry was
already perched. Annoyed at having my sleep interrupted, I wanted to know what the
problem was. “It’s a skunk,” Steve whispered, pointing at a harmless-looking animal
standing about a dozen feet away. I told Steve that it wasn’t bothering me, he was. I just
wanted to go back to sleep. But he and Barry were so darn insistent, they left me no
choice but to join them atop the big rock.
From that vantage point, we got to watch the skunk rooting around in the
cardboard box that contained the food packages. Not being able to read the labels, the
poor beast had no choice but to tear open half of them. After about ten frustrating
minutes, he discovered what I already knew -- namely, that there was nothing even
remotely resembling food to be found midst all that tasteless grub. Perhaps because it
was my first foray into Mother Nature’s realm, I found it somehow comforting to
discover that the skunk and I, coming from two such different worlds, were alike in
thinking that if it came down to having to dine on powder, perhaps survival wasn’t such a
big deal, after all.
After a while, totally discouraged, he wandered off, I suspect, in search of a
peach.
The next day, just when I’d assumed things couldn’t get much worse, as is so
often the case, things got much worse, indeed. By a majority vote, it was decided that I’d
be the one to go up the hill to the stream that fed the nearby pond to collect a pail of
water. So, like Jack without Jill, off I went. Collecting the water was no problem at all.
However, as I made my way down the rather steep and narrow path, I heard a sound that
stopped me in mid-step. Immediately, I knew it could only be one of two things. It was
either Carmen Miranda shaking her maracas or a rattlesnake. Being aware, as I was, that
Ms. Miranda never went anywhere without a fruit salad perched on her head,
accompanied by six guys strumming guitars, I worked it out by a process of elimination.
And elimination was what I figured I was facing.
At first, I was afraid even to call out, terrified that the snake might take offense at
a loud noise. Finally, I managed to holler down to my friends that a rattler in the
underbrush had me trapped. One of them, as I recall, yelled back what even at the time I
regarded as a piece of very sound advice: “Don’t do anything to annoy him.”
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