Archive for June, 2007

Pit Stop in Pukwana

Great PlainsWe were finally on our way to South Dakota and took shifts on the long ride. I fell asleep in the back bed and woke to some bumps in the road. Leaving the lakes and wide fields green with knee high corn of Minnesota, we crossed the Missouri River into South Dakota. The bridge over Missouri opened up like a gateway into South Dakota and the Great Plains. Hills of green and yellow grasses rolled and stretched out to eternity beneath an enormous silver sky, with only the silhouettes of ponies and a few trees on the horizon. It felt like flying—with the bus gears disengaged we coasted down hills in all that space, the wind whipping through open windows.

We made our way toward the Badlands and Pine Ridge Indian Reservation. Then, boom! Worried that we lost something I looked out the back hoping not to see a rolling metal barrel or anything careening down from the roof. Nothing. We pulled over to find we had blown another tire in the rear.

Farm roadsWe drove cautiously to the next truck stop, got directions to “Ron’s place”. Ron, we heard, had some schools buses and the rare sized tire we needed. We took the Pukwana exit and tried following Ron’s directions of a few lefts and rights with no street names. “Head east, then you’ll turn off north. Go north for 2.4 miles and turn south.” I overshot the 2.4 miles, assuming he would have mentioned if it was just a small dirt road cutting through farmland. I took the next left down a wider dirt road and found a farmer on his tractor who told us we went too far but we could drive down the tractor road to get to Ron’s.Tire Barn

Ron knows BusesAfter navigating between fields of wheat, we finally reached Ron’s and sifted through his forty or soused tires in his barn for a couple good ones. “Two of ‘em for $120.” Ron wanted to help with the headlights which had stopped working the night before. A slight man, wearing a racing cap with a ‘Budweiser’ logo on the side, Ron knew buses. He had a fleet of his own school buses parked in front of the garage.

While Ron switched the tires, Brian, Paasch and I took the bikes off the roof and headed down the road. We climbed some hay bails, scared some cows into a stampede while trying feed them grass, and failed to coax a bull to chase after us.

Ron had changed our tire, fixed our head lights and given us a spare for the roof. We cleaned up with the hose and chatted with a bit. Spare tires

“We race lawnmowers in Pukwana every other Saturday. It draws quite a crowd, more than the number of people that live in Pukwana,” he said laughing. “They get fifteen of those mowers on the dirt track going 45mph and that’s something to see. My brother races. This is one of his mowers, though it ain’t working right now.”

“How long has Pukwana been doing lawn mower races,” I asked.

“Only about three years, but it is getting really big.”

After filling our water vessels we said thanks and goodbye to Ron and his mother Cheryl, two delightful people that had made our day. They wished us good luck on our journey and we set off to reach the badlands by nightfall.


***Dispatch from Fairfield, Iowa***

I awoke to Alan and Cat searching Lonnie’s place.

“So if I a reach the gravel road I have gone too far,” Alan said with his cell phone to his ear, Lonnie on the other line. “Ok, so I’ll turn around and look for the wind turbines.”

Big Green SummerAfter chasing the wrong wind turbine, we eventually found Lonnie’s place, one of many houses in a small community that has been off the electricity grid for fifteen years. Small turbines whipped around like plane propellers. Solar arrays were spread across the landscape on tops of buildings and on the ground angled south. We greeted Lonnie and walked quickly around the grounds. Inside the barn, drums and various instruments laid out across the loft, a work bench with tools, spare solar panels, about a dozen golf cart interconnected batteries, a dining table in the center and a small classroom and chalkboard. We walked between paths of fruit trees and fennel plants while Lonnie pointed out the pond, Raise the Barnthe rain water showers, and cabins for the Big Green Summer (biggreensummer.com) program. He explained the various ways the community conserves electricity and utilizes the land. Lonnie finished the abbreviated tour and corralled us onto the bus. He had plans to show off the bus and our project around town.

Fairfield is not your typical Iowa town. Two thousand members of the community gather twice a day for transcendental meditation at the two large golden domes at Maharishi University. Founded and named after Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, the spiritual guru made famous by his relationship with the Beatles. The school was designed around principles of transcendental meditation, mindfulness, peace, and balance while still having traditional academic disciplines.

We parked outside the dining hall around lunchtime and were soon answering questions. Burkey and I followed Lonnie into the cafeteria for a buffet of vegetarian dishes while Alan, Cat and Paasch remained with the bus to demonstrate to passers by. Students and professors waited in line for organic vegetarian food, most of it grown on university land. Lonnie brought us around to promote the talk we were to give at his home that evening, introducing us to dozens of students, professors and others who were at the University to work or meditate. We finally got a chance to sit down and eat before we took our rounds with the bus so the rest of the crew could enjoy the delicious food.

Field to TableLonnie next took us to a K-12 school in an old brick building a few hundred of yards from the cafeteria. The school taught sustainability as part of the curriculum. The Field to Table program allowed children to grow and eat food form the school’s greenhouses. A little sign read—“Sweet Potatos, 7th grade boys”. We picked some luscious looking chard for dinner and hurried off to our next stop on our tour of Fairfield. We pulled into the parking lot of a local natural foods store, and immediately attracted a crowd of smiling interested people.

“You take donations, right?” Asked a woman wearing jean overalls. She handed us $15 and told us to wait while she went to the ATM for another more. A man named Kim, who meditates for 8 hours a day, offered to buy our food at the grocery store. We gracisouly accepted and grabbed a few snacks before sneaking away down the street for an interview at the local open source radio station.

After a lengthy in depth discussion with Lonnie on the community radio station, we drove next to the home of the local SVO mechanic, then out to a organic farm in the hills that produced the local goat cheese as well as fruits and vegetables from their large greenhouse. Goats and Organic Greenhousechickens ran through grass and Lonnie led us into the big green house with rows eggplants, cherry tomatoes and hallways of bitter melon vine. It felt invigorating to be surrounded by so much life.

“The showers are just as hot, the beers just as cold.”Our last stop before returning to Lonnie’s home for the evening was the Abundance Eco Village. Several homes that were completely energy independant using a combination of wind, photovoltaic, and solar thermal. The normal looking homes use one-tenth of the energy of an average home with a combination of insulation and energy efficient appliances, and rather than pumping valuable water to keep their lawns green, the homes are surrounded by edible plants.

“There’s no silver bullet for achieving sustainability, but what we have is silver buckshot,” said Lonnie.

He let us peak into one of the homes—the interior looked sleek and modern.

“These homes have washers and dryers some have plasma screen TVs. Aside from a little propane for cooking they’re completely energy independent. The showers are just as hot and the beer just as cold as any other home,” Lonnie said.

It was late afternoon when we got back to Lonnie’s. All of us still wide eyed from seeing the amazing possibilities and realities of sustainability. Lonnie went off to meditate leaving us to explore the grounds and join in communal dinner with the students in the Big Green Summer Program. We ate vegetables that some of the students had grown or picked themselves. Hart, one of the students interning at The Big Green Summer Program told us about the program:

“Lonnie started this program so that students could learn about sustainability by living as part of a sustainable community, rather than talking about sustainability while eating snacks from California. A lot of what we do is odd jobs, and learning the skills and doing the physical work it takes to actually do this along with all the classroom stuff.”

Demonstrating our new conversion system.After dinner we gave bus demos as people from the community arrived for our talk. We explained the system and answered questions as the crowd gathered around the bus. Someone asked us about our journey and Lonnie suggested that we move the talk over to a small wooden stage on the hillside in front of the pond with open fields in the background. People poured cups of hot tea, spread blankets, and sat on the grass while Alan and I told sat on the stage with the sun setting behind us. We didn’t have to preach about sustainability If only every venue could be so nice.to this community so we told the story of our journey, the things that we had discovered, the events and people that brought us here to this hillside in Southeastern Iowa. We answered questions and quietly discussed the outlook for sustainability across the country as the moon rose into the purple sky behind us.

Lily Pad FairiesAfterward, we took our big lillipads the little girls gave us to put on our heads and walked the barn to play some music. Lonnie and one student started jamming on bass and guitar. Soon, we were singing, playing drums and guitars.

I decided to sleep on the roof of the bus under the stars until dew soaked me and my blankets. Alan pitched a tent in the grass. Brian and Paasch must have made their way to the bus after more singing and Cat shortly after.

I woke the next morning walked down to the pond for a morning swim. I was soon joined by Alan and Chris, A dip in the morning.both plunging in past the lillipads and the mucky bottom along the shoreline into the deep center. We rinsed off in the outdoor shower and hopped on the bus to visit a budding urban permaculture garden before leaving town.

Urban Permaculture Garden“It’s a work in progress, but eventually it will be nearly self-sustaining. See the grape vines growing up the telephone pole on the sidewalk,” Chris pointed toward twisted vines with unripe grapes hanging. “Here the beans feed nitrogen to corn stalk and the squash grow in the shade below. All these are edible weeds, this one kinda tastes like spinach. It’s great in salads. The bamboo is beginning to grow over there just in behind where the pond will be. The water all comes from the roof, from the rainwater catchment over there,” he pointed to a large tub next to the house.

We marveled at all the plants—annuals and perennials growing together in the small yard.

“Yeah we’re not self sufficient or anything like that, but we produce a lot of fresh food here, nearly all year round. And one day we hope it will be almost running on its own and we can relax do some serious sitting on the stone patio surrounded by all this.”


The Nation’s Capitol

Just outside DC we passed the affluent Virginia suburbs of Mclean and Vienna, stuffed with upscale shopping facilities, fat houses and mega churches that look like concert venues. Many of the residents live off our tax dollars in some form, as congressmen, diplomats, and those employed by the “defense and intelligence” business and other highly subsidized private industries.

Stormin’ the CapitolAcross the Potomac River and into DC, I spotted the JFK library and the Thomas Jefferson Memorial; between rows shady trees and white pillared embassies, stood the dome of the capitol building (Atop the dome of the capitol building, at the highest point in Washington, DC, stands the “Statue of Freedom”. Designed by Thomas Crawford in Italy in 1854; the bronze stature was cast by slaves in the United States, and put into position in 1863).

The Washington Monument on our left loomed over a shantytown of tents and young activists that spread out across the lawn. The shantytown was part of an action called “Displace Me”, intended to encourage the government to support peace talks in Uganda where a civil war has displaced millions over the past decade.

(Meanwhile, the Uganda conflict action network reports, that “U.S. has dramatically increased its involvement and arm sales to the Horn of Africa and East Africa in the last three years“ and “direct US weapons sales increased from $39.2 million in 2005 to nearly $60 million in 2006”. I am glad to see creative democratic attempts to influence foreign policy, and I hope that the activists protest the actions of own government in both producing and selling arms to Africa, as well as the invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan with equal passion.

***

Ethan and I met Brandon on Semester at Sea in 2004. We hadn’t heard from him since the voyage, until he got in touch with us two months ago. Brandon works for the American Council on Renewable Energy, and he invited us to volunteer at a conference that aimed to connect the efforts of the varied elements of the renewable energy industry and politicians by bringing them together in one room.welcome aboard

We arrived at his apartment, showered, relaxed and traded tales of our paths and adventures since SAS. Traveling around the world expanded our opportunities and the possibilities of our lives. Brandon told us of his epiphany about the future of energy in our society—the realization that renewable energy requires a quarter century commitment to shift our ingrained infrastructure. And retold tales of his adventures to Northern India, to Mount Kilimanjaro and of one particularly close encounter with a silver back gorilla in Rwanda.

call me Ishmael“Okay so there’s me and my friend, two guides and four armed guards—so we don’t get kidnapped by raiders coming over the border from Congo. We hike for about six hours climbing up through thick, thick jungle and the only place that’s open enough to walk is where the gorillas have already stomped a trail. We get to this clearing and there’s a group of about 40 gorillas spread out, just lounging and munching on leaves. I’m walking around, just in awe, taking pictures. Then we hear this thumping sound coming down the hill toward us, and our guide turns and starts running and waving us along yelling ‘Let’s go! Let’s go!’. But I’ve got my back up against a steep berm, so there’s nowhere to go behind me. Then I hear the thumping coming closer, the leaves around me start shaking. And maybe 20 ft away this giant male silverback crashes through the bushes. And he’s huge. He’s about 600 pounds and six feet tall with his knees bent. He takes a few steps toward me and he’s staring me down. I know that you’re not supposed to look a gorilla in the eyes ‘cause they’ll take it as a challenge, but if I’m going down at the hands of a silverback gorilla I want to see it coming. He takes another hop toward me, about six feet away now. He’s just a monster, so powerful, his chest is probably four times wider than I am, and his arms are thicker than my torso and stretch out to about an eight-foot wingspan, so he could reach out and grab me by the neck if he wanted. I’m thinking, ‘alright this is it. This is going to be like a bad prison movie’. He looks over at the other gorillas then back at me. He lunges toward me, rips a tree out of the ground and Bam! smashes me in the face with it. He just grunts over me walks away. I’m on my back just stunned, but not too fucked up. But when he made the move toward me I held my camera to my chest and captured the whole sequence.”My hairless cousin thinks he’s so cool with all that ‘logic’? Smack!

Brandon showed us the photos of the gorilla, uncomfortably close, then moving closer and reaching for a tree, and in the next photo the gorilla is mid-swing with the tree headed for Brandon’s forehead.

***

That night we picked up a lively group of passengers in front of the Capitol for a fundraiser cruise. Friends and former co-workers, SAS alumni, and my brother, his fiancée Marcie, who were in town from California, and Marcie’s parent’s from Ohio all piled aboard. Bus partyI got behind the wheel and cruised the bus through Adams Morgan distric, our passengers hooting out the windows. The DC bar rabble, mostly recent college graduates who’ve migrated to DC, cheered and shouted back to us. I pulled the bus over letting the party spread out onto the street—spawning drum circles on the sidewalk, and a steady stream of people in and out of the bus. Eventually I herded everyone back on board andJamin in the street set off again, always with a couple of new passengers.

We passed through Georgetown. The flocks of matching striped shirts, the young professionals to-be, looked either dumbfounded or perturbed by the blue bus and our wild cargo. Our next stop was a pool hall in Arlington where we stayed until closing. Then, before dropping off our passengers, we visited the Marine Corp Memorial near Arlington National cemetery. It’s a cool spot, quiet at night—the giant statues of soldiers struggling to raise a flag pole at Iwo Jima. Around the memorial bronze plaques read: Tripoli, Cuba, Puerto Rico, Philippines, Mexico, Haiti, Nicaragua, and other places and dates Iwo Jima memorialwhere US Marines have died defending America by invading other countries.

Just before sunrise we dropped off the last of our passengers. Burkey joined our former SAS shipmates Ashley and Fernando at the ‘Displace Me’ shantytown. Exhausted, I drove past the Capitol Hill, and parked in a Boys and Girls Club parking lot.

***

After a few hours of sleep, the hot sun roused us out of bed. We fetched water and cooked breakfast outside the bus. That parking lot would be our home in DC, and it wasn’t long before kids in the neighborhoodwe got to know some of the kids in the area. A couple of boys helped Ethan and I wash dishes at a spigot behind an apartment building, intrigued by the novelty of washing dishes outside. By the afternoon kids crowed outside the bus, asking questions and pushing toward the door. We let the excited little people on board to jump on the bed and bang drums. One girl led the group chanting the chorusus of popular neighborship-hop songs, calling out the names of everyone around the circle for dance solos.

“Go AJ, Go AJ, Go AJ!”

“Go Tamika, Go Tamika, Go Tamika!”

Some of the kids were sweet and some rowdy, some shy, some boastful, but all bright eyed and full of life like children everywhere.

***

The neighborhoods in that area alternate sharply between apartments for young professionals and publicly assisted housing. As I walked from the bus to Brandon’s apartment I saw Burkey straddling his bike, talking to a group of six African American boys—barely teenagers—who stood on the sidewalk looking frustrated.

“Where you from?” One of the boys asked Burkey aggressively.

“ Boston,” Burkey replied coolly.

“Boston? That’s a racist city, there’s no black people in Boston.”

“Have you ever been to Boston?” asked Burkey.

“No…this is 14th and Clifton, people get shot,” the kid reached under his shirt…and pulled out nothing.

“Where’s the worst place you’ve ever been?” the kid questioned.

“Roxbury,” replied Berkey.

The kid paused…“Man, there ain’t no black people in Boston.”

Berkey said “peace” and rode off. When I passed by one of the kids was trying to cut down a small tree on the sidewalk with a rusty old hacksaw he had found. Another boy started jawing and yelling with someone else down the block, “Man let’s go beat his ass!” “Wait’ll ya’ll see his face when I pull this out,” said the boy, who had given up on cutting down the sapling and hid the hacksaw under his shirt.

That evening, as Ethan and I walked from our bus to Bus Boys and Poets café, we talked about the young teenagers we’d met, angry, frustrated, and fearful. As we spoke a woman stumbled across the intersection next to us, “That Motherfucker, motherfucker think he can do that shit ta me?!” she yelled into the night. On the next block a man staggered toward us from his perch outside a liquor store, begging for change. Before we reached the café, eight blocks away, we passed a half dozen more people—desperate and stupefied by drugs, alcohol, and poverty.

Too often I have noticed, as children begin to understand or are forced to deal with the circumstances of the world around them, cheerfulness and hope fade to despondence and anger. Those young teenage boys have probably watched older friends and sibling, who they admire and respect, get beaten down by a society that has left their community in a cycle of poverty, violence, drug abuse, incarceration, insufficient education and scarce opportunity.

According to the 2004 US census, 18.3% of people living in DC live below the poverty line. The DC Mayor’s office reports that “40 percent of the adults in our city read only at a third grade level.”

With all the white marble pillars of government buildings and the gleaming corporate towers it is easy to overlook the reality of life for many DC residents. But one need only walk a few blocks from those centers of power to be reminded that all that wealth creates, and is maintained by, poverty.

We met our friends Pam, Natasha, and BioTour crewmember-to-be Fernando, at Bus Boys and Poets Café. Nearby Howard University, Bus Boys and Poets attracts a diverse and socially conscious crowd. It has been a favorite spot for Ethan and I when we’re in DC. The five top selling books at the café bookstore are:

1. Stealing Democracy : The New Politics of Voter Suppression – Spencer Overton

2. Understanding the Palestinian-Israeli Conflict – Phyllis Bennis

3. Hearts of Darkness : How White Writers Created the Racist Image of Africa – Milton Allimadi

4. Articles of Impeachment Against George W. Bush – Center for Constitutional Rights

5. A People’s History Of The United States – Howard Zinn

The food is good and cheap, the walls display the works of local artists, along with and pictures of Ghandi, Martin Luther King, the Dali Lama and others. An excerpt from Langston Hughes’s poem “Let America be America Again”, streams across one wall:

I am the poor white, fooled and pushed apart,

I am the Negro bearing slavery’s scars.

I am the red man driven from the land,

I am the immigrant clutching the hope I seek–

And finding only the same old stupid plan

Of dog eat dog, of mighty crush the weak.

****

O, let America be America again–

The land that never has been yet–

And yet must be–the land where every man is free.

The land that’s mine–the poor man’s, Indian’s, Negro’s, ME–

Who made America,

Whose sweat and blood, whose faith and pain,

Whose hand at the foundry, whose plow in the rain,

Must bring back our mighty dream again.

***

The next afternoon Burkey and Cat checked out the Smithsonian museums, Ethan I planned to meet them with the bus on the National Mall. As Ethan navigated through DC traffic, I sat nearby banging a drum along with the Manu Chao songs blasting from the stereo. At a busy intersection right next to the Capitol two older ladies waved to us from the sidewalk,

“Beep the horn E!”

“What?” E yelled, not able to hear me over the music and drumming.

“Those people are waving on the sidewalk beep the…”

One of the lights turned green and E pulled foreword. He was halfway through the intersection before he realized that the green light was not for us, and our light was still red. We continued on toward the national mall expecting to get pulled over, as there were cops everywhere, but we saw nothing behind us. It wasn’t until we reached the Washington Monument several blocks away that we saw the cruiser behind us, lights blaring. E pulled over and shut off the engine. A moment later two officers were shouting at us through the door. One of them, a stocky young fellow skidded to a halt on his bicycle. Wearing a bike helmet and sunglasses and banging on the bus door he yelled,

“Get out of the bus, get out of the bus!”

Ethan opened the door and I got out placing half a cinder block behind the front tire.

“What is that!” shouted the guy in the helmet.

“It’s to chalk the tire,” I replied.

“What about the brake?” he asked loudly.

“It’s just a precautionary measure,” I said.

Then they turned on Ethan

“Take your hands out of your pockets! What did you run that red light!? Why didn’t you stop when you saw us behind you!?”

They had apparently been following directly behind us since the intersection, but so closely that we could not see them in our mirrors.

While the guy in the helmet went to talk on the radio, I struck a conversation with one of the other officers. They were secret service, one of a dozen or so law enforcement units operating in DC.

When the helmeted fellow stomped back toward us I explained to him what we were doing in DC, and that I was guilty of distracting the driver and apologized. He explained that they were on ‘high terror alert’ (which sounds like uncomfortable thing to be on) then asked me about the nun-chucks hanging in the window.

“Oh those, those are just plastic toys. See?,” I grabbed them down through the open window and handed him the plastic tubes covered in foam rubber padding that I’d won at a carnival. He inspected them, pulled off the rubber padding, and pointed to the end of the cylinder.

“You see how hard that is? This is considered a weapon in DC. You would not like it if I hit you in the head repeatedly with this.”

Well, that statement is true for most solid objects, but I held my tongue.

“Can we search the vehicle?” a woman officer asked sternly.

“Is there any reason to search the vehicle? We ran a red light,” Ethan said well aware of his fourth amendment right protecting us from unnecessary search and seizure.

“Well, it’s our home,” I said.

“Do you consent to a search of the vehicle?” she repeated.

“Well, no.” I said.

“They don’t consent,” she called through here radio attached to her shirt sleeve. We were a bit worried that they might resent our not consenting to a search and try and screw us with any violations they could. But, to our surprise, we drove away with only a $75 ticket and some sympathy for anyone who has to spend their day on “high terror alert”.

“Grab me a silly hat!”, Ethan shouted, exasperated and looking to cool his rarely unsettled nerves. I handed him a green combat cap. He pulled it over his crown and turned up the music.hanging out at the mall

Soon we were parked on the on the National Mall answering questions from curious passers-by and playing on the grass in the warm afternoon sun.

Under a grove of trees about a furlong away, four men with shields and swords circled one For Haliburton! For Exxon! Ho!another, poised for battle. Wasting no time Burkie and I ran toward them, beating our drums. Cat and Ethan followed. They were four Roman centurions, led by Dominus (or Sean) who told us about Dagorhir, the battle games with padded weapons. They fight using an honor system, if you get hit in a limb you can no longer use it, torso is a kill. Their band of centurions competes in weekend battles as well as huge mock wars several times a year. We borrowed broadswords, shields and daggers and fought each other and the four centurions to the death, again and again.

For the second time that day we had encountered people pretending to be roman legions protecting the empire, although the Secret Service guys didn’t quite have the same sense of humor about it.

On Tuesday morning Ethan, Brian and I showered, shaved, put on suits, and walked down to K street, disguised as people who don’t live on a bus. We arrived at the ACORE office to help them prepare for their “Joint Outlook Launch”—a conference encouraging unity between the renewable energy industries. We met the ACORE team—Brandon, Tom, Dawn, Jodi, Nicholas, Cheri, Mike—the president, Jim—communications director, and Bill—board member and chairman of the Biofuels Coordinating Council.

“So what are you guys doing?” Bill asked.

“We’re traveling the country on a school bus converted to run on waste vegetable oil.”

“Okay, great.”

“Yeah, the original diesel engine was—”

“Yeah, yeah, I know all that I’ve been doing this stuff for over thirty years. Let’s have breakfast tomorrow morning and we’ll see how we can help you.”

We undertook some of the necessary grunt work—putting stickers on hundreds of booklets, and Vagabonds in disguisecarrying boxes over to the Ronald Regan building where the event would be held. As the leaders of wind, solar, geothermal, hydro-power, and other industries, as well as congressman, organizers and group leaders took the podium speaking on the outlook for the renewable energy industry, I sat at the greeting table just down the stairs and handed out nametags.

When most everyone had arrived, I climbed the stairs in time to hear Mike’s closing remarks. It was clear to him that renewable energy would succeed or fail together, their destinies are linked, and once everyone realizes that, the whole group will be better off. After the speeches, Ethan and I walked around the room drinking free wine and beer, eating hors d’ouevres and handing out business cards.

“Oh, Department of Energy, cool. I live on a bus that runs on vegetable oil, here’s my card.”

The next morning we met environomental warrior, Bill Holmberg, at the Army Navy Club for breakfast. As we ate omelets and pancakes Bill asked us about our goals and our methods and told us a bit of his own history and work for sustainability. He was a marine in Vietnam, and helped to revive some of the villages with small agricultural and animal husbandry projects. Environmental Warrior

“Where we actually built successful villages, there was relative calm. But, the higher ups in the chain of command were more concerned with body counts, and search and destroy missions,” Bill said. Bill set up similar village security sustainability operations in Afghanistan and Iraq. He told us that aside from a few scattered projects, Iraq and Afghanistan are disasters. “War is an anachronism,” announced the old marine.

Over the past several decades Bill has pushed for biofuels in the United States, in addition to Hard at workforest regeneration and sustainability projects at home and abroad. Recognizing that we shared the same goals, we returned to Bill’s office at ACORE headquarters to set about making them happen. For the next several hours Bill called contacts throughout the country, introducing us and connecting us with allies working toward similar ends.

Several hours later we set up a farewell photo-op with the ACORE staff in front of the bus. Mike ACORE + BioTourlet Brandon off for the evening and we returned to his place to cook and relax and take a breath after a series of very busy days.

Early the next morning, we bid goodbye to the Boys and Girls Club parking lot that had been our home, and realized that our pile of bikes was missing from the roof. With sighs we accepted that they had been stolen, then drove out of DC past the Supreme Court—carved in pure white marble, the Library of Congress, the Capitol building, and other grand government structures, standing majestic, like ancient temples in the early morning light.


East Coast Highway

I woke up in a McDonald’s parking lot on the Jersey Turn Pike. We were bound for Washington, DC and stopped to rotate drivers after traveling south through the night. I rubbed my eyes and stretched in the sunny parking lot. Tourists from Georgia stared and snapped pictures as they filed into their coach bus.

The driver of the tour bus next to us, a Haitian man named Silver, questioned us enthusiastically about the potential to grow fuel on his home island. We talked about the Silverbenefits of energy independence and exchanged contact information. I’ve since learned of an organization called BODDI and their efforts to “develop Bio-sustainable communities in both the Dominican Republic and Haiti.” Using biofuels from sugar cane, jatropha and other plants, as well as solar, wind, geothermal, and other renewable energy resources, they aim to bring about a rebirth of the island by building a locally controlled industry, improving the general standard of living, and reducing dependence on foreign oil. That would be a good thing for Haiti, the first slave colony to gain independence, only to be continuously attacked and exploited for centuries since. Neocolonialism, economic imperialism, or whatever one calls it remains, and Haiti is still the poorest country in the hemisphere.

****

Halfway through Maryland we found a good batch of grease behind an almost barren mini-mall. A bearded old man in a jean jacket stumbled out of the door in the back of a dive bar into the asphalt lot. It was about 11 am.

One of the restaurateurs, Dave, pale and slight with combed brown hair and a moustache, told us about his aspirations to get out of the restaurant business, maybe start brewing his own biodiesel and get back into bounty hunting. Bounty hunting restauranteur

Dave told us a little about his history in law enforcement. “What’s the most interesting case you’ve worked on?” Ethan asked him. He related to us a story about the three bank-robbing thespians who dreamed of starting their own theatre company, and would not let lack of funding stop them. So they robbed their local bank, opened their theatre with the cash, and began producing shows. A year later, and broke again, they went back to their unwilling benefactors this time taking the vault and walking away with over $180,000. When they returned a third time the pirate thespians were caught off guard by a bank that had learned its lesson. The robbers shot and killed a guard to escape and they and their money were marked when an ink bomb detonated inside their currency. They washed the money with a large amount of solvent from a local beauty parlor. Demonstrating their passion for the stage, they spent the washed money locally and continued to produce shows. It wasn’t long before the FBI, with the help of Dave, and the beauty parlor tracked down the dynamic trio.

“You’re making me think that it’s not that hard to rob a bank and get away with it,” I said.

“It’s not,” Dave replied shrugging his shoulders.

“We are looking for funding” I mused. “What do you think E?”

“I don’t think that our blue school bus with the giant silver stripe and a top speed of 65mph is the right getaway vehicle,” E replied.

Dave hung around as we topped off the veg-tank and wrapped up our hoses. He offered us the bathroom of his bar for us to wash up.

“Yeah I disagree with our criminal justice system,” said Dave. Ethan, Burkie and I nodded in agreement thinking of the millions of people mired in the US Prison System.

“Yeah I think we should be able to shoot someone if they run,” Dave said.

We looked at one another incredulously then politely nodded our heads. Who wouldn’t run if someone like Dave was chasing you?

We finished cleaning up. Dave gave us a bag of bulkie rolls, cold cuts and sliced cheese, and we bid the bounty hunting restaurateur farewell.


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