Sunday, January 25, 2009

More Papers, More Books, and BOSS

It was hard getting work done during the holidays, but I have made a few advances nonetheless. As per the title, a few more papers have agreed to print my Texas Perimeter Hike column, I have read or started a few more books, and finally, I have submitted my name for an outdoor survival school scholarship.

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I am pleased to announce that my hometown newspaper the Corpus Christi Caller-Times has agreed to run my future column. In a bizarre twist, my contact person is Cynthia Wilson, formerly Cynthia Arbuckle, of W.B. Ray High School fame. She didn’t reveal her secret identity until the end of our first phone conversation, but I had suspected that it was her all along. In addition, I have garnered the support of the Clifton Record. To both of these papers, I thank you for your support and willingness to take a chance on me and this project.

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I have also been doing some reading, both historical and fictional, going back in time to get a feeling for what once was in the different regions of Texas. I recently finished The Captured by Scott Zesch which details the lives of abducted child settlers by Native Americans, mainly the Apache and Comanche peoples. The author’s distant uncle Adolph Korn, himself an abductee, inspired the research into what these captured children endured and the times in which they lived. Because of the perimeter hike, I became especially interested in the landscape of the Panhandle, a favorite meeting ground of the evasive warrior-nomads. The perimeter also passes within fifty miles of the farm of Dot and Banc Babb, two of the children featured in Zesch’s research. A fascinating and lively book, The Captured will have you longing for those fearsome times, which, truth be told, took place not so long ago.

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I have also started both Lonesome Dove by Larry McMurtry (why, oh why, have I waited so long?) and Lone Star Nation by H.W. Brands. I am only a few pages into Lonesome Dove, but it promises to be an epic journey after my own heart. With an eye on the perimeter, I hope to rediscover the cattle trail “used” by Augustus McCrae. Lone Star Nation on the other hand is addressing Texas history with a wonderfully entertaining style. Brands’s facts are every bit as engaging as McMurtry’s fiction, illuminating and spotlighting our Texas forebears and the clash of cultures that took place leading up to the forming of the republic and, ultimately, the state.

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Lastly, I have added a new element to an already heaping project. I have applied for the David Buschow Memorial Scholarship to attend a Boulder Outdoor Survival School Field Course. The BOSS staff trains participants to survive in the Utah desert. The course is intended to be rigorous, mentally as well as physically challenging. It lasts twenty-eight days, and by the end, participants are expected to have a fundamental grasp of how to survive in the middle of nowhere. Water location, campsite location, and fire making are part of it, but the tougher part, working through “the wall” of your fatigue, hiking fifteen to thirty miles with little food and water, and figuring out just how to make things work, either makes or breaks its participants.

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I’ll hear back from BOSS toward the end of February. In the meantime, I’ve trying to improve my physical health. One of the things BOSS grades you on before starting is the Cooper 1.5-Mile Running Test. After a few trials, I have fallen comfortably within the “Good” range for 30 to 39 year olds. (I can’t believe I’m in the 30 to 39 bracket!) I’m also doing push-ups, crunches, sit-ups, and stretching, as well as jumping rope and hiking. The exercise feels good.

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There is much that remains to be done, and I will continue to update periodically to let you know where I am. For the moment, that’s all from the preparatory side of the Texas Perimeter Hike.

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Until next time, travelers… stay tuned.

1 comment:

Unknown said...

Interesting. If you get to McMurtry's sequel "Comanche Moon",
you'll find plenty of references
to the Texas panhandle, and in particular, to Palo Duro Canyon --
west of Ft. Worth by a couple of hours, I believe. It was
one of the campgrounds of the
Comanche, I think. Another thought
is that you may actually want your
own teepee -- maybe these nomadic
peoples were onto something when
it comes to surviving in the arid
plains of north Texas. Charlie