Wednesday, May 12, 2010

avant la lettre – the U.S. chronicles ep.02

Welcome to the second chapter of this travel diary from the U.S. of A. (click here to check the first one). First observation: the delay to write and post is already getting huge! Quite. It looks like finding a quiet, pleasant and cozy little hollow of the world with computers and an internet access - plus, say, a fan - is way more difficult in this western developed and modern country than in Laos or India.

thrift shops: the best kept secret of the U.S. sub-culture?
Yeah, I know, it makes sense: backpackers traveling through India or Laos with nothing but sweat, motorcycle burns, imported beer hangover and mosquito bites need those internet cafés much more than any of the average local North-American citizen on a daily shuttle between work, shopping mall and home. And each and every single store, museum, park, pharmacy or gas station offers free wifi to the customers. What I don't have, however - and it's my fault, I reckon - is the neat, smooth, brand-new and trendy, aluminium alloy Macbook air with long-lasting ion-battery, simply to keep in touch with the world... If there's a crisis in this country (and almost everything around indicates there has been one not so long ago and the next one is already on its way), then Apple (after deducing all the money Bill Gates didn't waste in expensive malaria-vaccine programs) is probably of the very wealthiest among the big companies' family. Had never seen so many Apple devices in my whole life! Looks like every single individual owns at least a couple of them. Impressive…

We got to New Orleans 3 days ago and I’ve been looking for this moment since last Sunday. I'm running sooo ridiculously late. If I belonged to the half-full-bottle-seeing kind of people, I would say I'm still on time for the third week report. I also realized I gave no title to the first episode (something like "New York, New York", although easy, would definitely work). The second's will be An Appalachian paradox. Any suggestion for future titles is welcome, even though I won't pay for it. Let me take you back to a couple of weeks ago:

We left Brooklyn on a sunny sunday morning. The trunk was filled with stuff, so was the gas tank. Only in this case, the stuff was - obviously - gas. Soon enough, our stomachs got filled too as we bought these delicious chocolate and pumpkin, bran and mango, squash and blueberry muffins. They took us (or maybe the car did, I couldn't say) through a good series of highways, bridges and junctions, all being Memorial of something or somebody, all the way across New Jersey, then Delaware, then Maryland, to Washington DC: a nice and easy cruise. There, Laura was supposed to meet some friends and family, so I took the car on my own (woooooh!) and wandered around Columbia and the northern suburbs of DC, cruise-control on, speed regulator at 25mph, automatic gearbox on D4, coffee with milk in its recycled plastic mug ("CAUTION, LIQUID INSIDE MAY BE HOT") just by the side of the hand brake. and Mr. Dylan on the stereo, of course. Sweet. No use of your feet, no need of your hands: driving becomes an experience of total irresponsibility and peaceful passivity.
DC-tecture: the best kept secret of the U.S. Government's creative abilities?
Later in the evening, went downtown to meet my friend Zia. She was one of my very first CS guests from Toulouse, about 5 years ago now. She settled in DC years ago, coming from the Phillipines  after almost 2 years travelling and couchsurfing around Europe, then through Turkey and the Middle-East to Pakistan. On her own. And back to South-East Asia. She’s now studying and working there (in DC). And enjoying, as strange at it may seem, this bizarre heterogeneous and unnatural, rather bizarre city. To me, DC looked like a huge residential area built around a fake, artificial core of pretentious administrative palaces. They all look like those birthday cakes we drew as kids, massive pre-colombian pyramids of cream and fruits and candles, with columns and ancient-greek-latino-colonial-empire-rococo stuff. Everything is set up with gardens and fountains and memorials and large avenues whose pattern you can easily imagine to be, when observed from the sky, that of a proud fishing eagle, a gigantic dollar symbol or something like that... DC probably gives that sensation because this is exactly what it is, though. While walking around looking for Zia and not understanding exactly where she was supposed to be waiting for me, "with white trousers and a big brown hat", I remembered with a tender smile the megalomaniac cities I used to built on Caesar III or Ages of empire years from now. With all their impressive big temples and universities and hospitals and oracles and coliseums in the middle, with a star-shaped main square, then geometric, rigid, square streets with monotonous, homogeneous housing lots...

contre-jour, obelisc and a dream of peace on earth...
Well, I guess either they programmed those video games after DC's architectonic concepts, or they've been playing Caesar III for years until it eventually influenced the way they then drew their cities' maps! With Zia (she indeed whore white trousers and a large brown hat, in such a unique fashion I immediately understood why she considered this information would be of any help trying to find her among the crowd!), we wandered around the Capitole, Obelisc, Ministeries and Memorials. Saw this awkward Monument to the Wars, whose stone rhetoric and golden lettering seem to glorify the US' wars, deaths, conflicts all around the world, with special emphasis on US' Victories. When it maybe should, instead, quietly and humbly call for silence, memory and future peace. Especially, this thing about victory confused me a little bit: I thought that in the end, nobody was ever victorious in a war. And if we talk about Korea, Vietnam and WWII, I'm not sure victory means a lot. I remembered them some of the very intense feelings and emotions that struck me in Hiroshima's Peace Park and Paris Mémorial de la Déportation, then haunted me for months. The sensations emerging from this Monument to the wars is quite distinct, actually: nowhere else did I ever witnessed a glorification of war and victory over the enemy. I thought in the end, we could only be sorry for saying yes to the universal un-solution... Imagine the gravity point of the core of the very center of Washington DC. Try to see it from the sky and see how it's the heart of the administrative and political machine of this country which pretends to be ruling the world. And see how this very center of everything is a memorial glorifying horror, glorifying hundreds of thousands, millions of death, as the price for victory, democracy and freedom... Scary shit, isn't it?
imagine all the people, living life in peace.. you may say I'm a dreamer (...)

Okay. Enough about that. The Potomac river and all the heavy official stuff were really nice in the evening light and I recognized in just a second this big statue of whose-President-is-it? Lisa Simpson visits and shares her existential doubts with... Is it Jefferson? Many calls here, at the centralita, to say "it's Lincoln, you ignorant!" Who said TV sitcoms couldn't teach you anything about Culture? I took some (hopefully) nice pictures and experienced a subway problem with improbable delays. Talking about the subway, I loved the James Bond stylish design, like a 50's secret cave labyrinth of deep, dark, impressive concrete corridors and tunnels. We then spent the night at one of Laura's friend and the next morning, we'd had enough of DC. Back to the present: it is a Monday morning, we take the car again and leave: sunny day, light traffic, a fresh breeze. After a dozen of housing blocks with neat lawn and trees, I'm suddenly driving this average automatic gearbox big car on the mythical Road 66, surrounded by huge long trucks, heading South-West to Front Royal and the Shenandoah National Park, just on the northern part of the Appalachians. A few days before, checking a route on Google maps, we discovered the Blue Ridge Parkway, going all the way down from Shenandoah to the Great Smokey Mountains and decided we might want to drive it instead of any highway.


Road 66: a myth threaded with orange plastic cones...
Shenandoah is a beautiful mountain park where we camped for the first night after a couple of hours hiking under a bright green canopy full with mosquitoes, mosquitoes and mosquitoes. A bunch of lovely adorable park rangers in their early forties, a bit fat in their tight sexy brown uniforms, proudly wearing beards and hats as if they were to be shot for a Village People video clip, introduced us to the rules of the park and made sure we had enough specific knowledge and strong ropes to hang the food and toothpaste properly... because of the inquisitive clumsy dreadful friendly-but-dangerous black bears that would sure enough come visit our camp during the night. Oh my god, the bears, the beaaaars! We actually met no bear at all. Not even one. Not even from far away. And on the whole, let me think… we met nobody at all. Hey, wait! Not true. There was this young stupid tender and maybe motherless deer which pretended to have dinner with us and share my air mattress. No way. "Get out of the tent, you half-civilized piece of wildlife! Buzz off! If you ever happened to have a conscience, you'd be ashamed of your lack of self-esteem and consideration for your wild animal condition!" Hem, always trying to give lessons… We named it Jean-Claude (because its sweet eyes and cute look reminded those of a famous kung-fu master from Belgium), thought about slaughtering it in order to smoke one of its skinny gigots into a piece of coppa and finally had to throw stones at it until it gave up following us. Believe me or not, wildlife is not what it used to be. Next day, we had a 7 hour long hike along and around the mythical AT (the Appalachian Trail). For those who ignore about hiking, who don’t shiver and sigh at the sound of the letters HRP or think GR10 is a post-translational variant of an obscure Glycosaminoside Receptor, the AT is a hiking trail that goes 2.000 miles along the Appalachian range from North Carolina to Maine. It is hiked by old hippies and bums with white beards and dogs, young hipp-ish freshly graduated students, middle-aged hippies on their way to somewhere else and many other kinds of walking hippies. Quite in the spirit of Kerouac's dharma bums. Nice. Indeed. Saw some waterfalls and some disgusting reddish pale legged worms and glittering insects, entomologist and photographer friend Dr. Olivier Esnault would have been glad to meet. Took the car and drove down the Blue Ridge Parkway again. So beautiful. Oh my god, oh my god, oh my god! These views and landscape and the Harley Davidson low riders we kept crossing! "Oh, the places you’ll go", once said the other.

under the Shenando-shade ; creek waterfall picmic and bath ; looking straight into the worm eye.
Stopped by a lovely lake (Sherando lake, if I remember it well) to swim a little bit (Yucks! Oh, the disgusting soft material lake bottoms are made of and one has to step on, or in, before actually swimming) all the way to the small desert island in the middle. Surprisingly, we got attacked by ticks there. What the hell do they do on a desert island where there are no animals at all on a regular basis? Is this why they yawned and screamed and jumped on me the second I stepped on the shore? Were they zombie mutant ticks waiting for a prey to haunt, on this cursed island? Or were we to blame for interrupting their quiet hypobiosis? All I know is I now have to check myself up for some erythema migrans and other Lyme's disease symptoms. Played Go on the bank of the lake’s small creek until the park rangers abandoned the place, then crawled into the campsite restrooms to meticulously shower and check for extra ticks, do the washing-up and fill our water bottles. Then took the car to Jefferson National Forest where we set the camp in a bizarre creepy round clear in the middle of high dark pines (or maybe spruces). I spent the night awake listening to strange forest sounds, fearing a nightmare mutant zombie psycho-killer would come and murder us in quite a Twin Peaks atmosphere. Or even worse: take my soul and eat it with garlic and chives until the end of eternity...

Mountain Top Removal right by Mr. Gibson's place in West Virginia.
The next morning, we left Virginia for West Virginia: to Beckley then Rock Creek, kind of an end-of-the-world remote area where cell phone service doesn't even exist. There, we wanted to meet - and spend some time with - a bunch of eco-activists living on a squatting-in-the-woods community called Climate Ground Zero. Check for them on the net! These guys have been fighting and volunteering and non-violently acting against Mountain Top Removal (MTR, check for this too) for years, now. MTR is a really cheap technique to extract coal: you basically burst mountains off with tons of dynamite, from the top, then shake the hundreds of tons of rocks you get to separate the coal. Once it's done, you fuck up hundreds of thousands of gallons of pure river water to rinse the coal and throw all the stones and trees and natural garbage you produced down in the valleys, burying square miles of villages, fields, forests, streams and such. As you can imagine, the whole process needs huge amounts of heavy metals, chemicals and such, so as to purify and prepare the coal. And the incidence of cancers, selenium poisoning, asthma and other allergies in this area is of the very highest in the country. This part of West Virginia, "coal country", is poor, very poor and just so so poor. Among the poorest in the U.S. Coal extraction brings jobs and wages, of course, but basically brings money to the few big oil companies which bought those mountains for nothing 50 years ago (quite often, for just a box of cheap booze – the price for a good hangover and a signature). Now, they are simply turning this lovely region into a dirty, flat, sterile, poisoned ground.

the copperhead baby I almost stepped onto: true guardian of these mountains?
We met the community and spent 24 hours with them. Visited Larry Gibson (check for him), the lill' ol' man who spent his whole life fighting MTR to save the small piece of mountain he calls his home. Very impacting, charismatic, old guy. We followed one of his young activist followers (following a follower, ain't that something Jacques Brel talked about in one of his songs, uh?) to the edge of an active MTR site, about 200 yards behind his solar-powered eco-friendly non-Ikea home-made little cabin. I took some pictures and could try to talk about it but it's hard to do. And to imagine. Or make you imagine it. "It's difficult to see what is not here", says Larry. And after a while he adds, sadly "people here don't do anything. They just don't realize MTR is killing us". He walks a bit more. I almost step on a big copper head viper taking a nap on a warm stone in the shade under a tree, and don't realize until they tell me to just move on the right, fast... He he he. I now got a lovely picture of it. Beautiful animal. Yyyyyks. He also says (Larry, not the viper) something like "When you breathe it, when you eat it, when you live it everyday of your life, you just cannot see it. Go and tell people". That’s what I'm doing right now, I guess. Well, I’m trying, at least.


the outdoor kitchen @ Climate Ground Zero, right by the pétanque ground...
We then had a beautiful dinner back at the community, played this game of throwing horseshoes to touch a stick, like our pétanque, talked with this bunch of eco-hippies, all coming from different parts of the country and from different walks of life, to just volunteer for the project. Only a minority of them is from West Virginia. But some are. One of the youngest, not even twenty, was born in Rock Creek. As soon as 16, he began working as a nightguard for B & M, on an MTR site, and about 2 years after, decided to quit and join the community… he explains to me, half proud, half cynical, that he went to THE elementary school. And survived it, he adds. I’ve heard about THE elementary school earlier in the day: there’s only one elementary school in the whole area, and it’s about 600 yards under the gigantic pond where the coal is soaked and rinsed. The shadow of the coal silos run through the school’s playground everyday, more or less by the hour the kids are out playing. Neither the county, nor the state, nor the federal government, nor the oil companies did anything to move the school. And one of the community's biggest victories, after more than ten years, is the volunteers raised the money and got the ground to build a new elem school far away from the pond. Not a big deal, but something. Somewhere in one of the dirty houses and tents, between cooking dinner, doing the dishes and playing music by the fire, I read or heard this phrase from Gandhi I liked : "if you believe one single being cannot make a difference, then you've never been in bed with a mosquito"... This was my good night-sentence to chew, here at Climate Ground Zero...


the perfect guitar, outfit and background for Stevie Ray's Life by the drop.
The next morning, we had breakfast and talked with them all, gardening a little bit, or better said strumming an old cheap guitar while they were gardening, watching at my coffee with milk getting cold on the wooden porch of a house on its way to fall apart. White and grey waters tanks, solar panels, compost, green restrooms, home made greenhouse with tomatoes, avocados, radishes and strawberries. Nothing is thrown away, everything eventually serves and lives a second (third, fourth) life. Military camp equipment, old wooden boards, rusty nails and all you can imagine is abandoned around in a fancy romantic bohemian mess. Ah, and there's no shower. NO SHOWER !!! Fuck. Why do you have to be dirty and sweaty and eventually have scabies (don't laugh, they had scabies at the camp a few months earlier) to be a good eco-activist volunteer? You cannot be half the way to something else, do you? Is this right? Or maybe? Or at least clean a little bit? Just a little bit? No way? Sweep the kitchen floor once a... month? Nope? Okay... I couldn't stay much longer I'm afraid. Noon: the car is packed. We leave after sharing hugs and hand shakes (scabies... uuuuugh!) and emails. Those people are nice and their work really inspiring. Amazing, actually. If you manage to forget about scabies and this young ascarides-stuffed puppy sleeping on the kitchen table, eating in the plates to be washed and licking everybody's mouth after licking its ass. Sigh! Veterinary studies don't make it easy to live with hippies ;) Even though they may eventually change the world…


Mountain Top Removal illustrated: there was a hill with trees, there's now a flat piece of Mars instead...
We headed back to Virginia and drove all day to the South, to finally enter North Carolina as the suns went down: the skies were so beautiful, from pink to orange to gold ans ash... On a desert road on the way to Asheville, we stopped for dinner at an odd desert restaurant. A tired middle-aged blonde waitress, sweet and smiling, served us decent truckers’ food. A phone call to Monica, our Couchsurfer host for the night, to let her know we wouldn't make it tonight because we were still too far away. Just a bit later, we were driving in circles in a residential suburb of Black Mountain, desperately trying to find a place to set the tent. Hem, not that easy. On the next morning, we reached Asheville, a lovely arty, hippy-chic, little town. Monica said there were basically two streets: the trendy one with expensive art galleries and the bohême one with vegan fair-trade shops and cafés. That proved not to be exactly true: there was also a huge Greenlife organic store where we filled the backpacks with grains, fruit and cheese before going hiking in the Great Smokey Moutains.
desert road from Vegas to nowhere, someplace better than where you've been...

On the car park, just in front of the store’s entrance was a street musician playing an old electric bass. Tall, black, in his late fifties and with a mustache, he was the local version of both the Glover: Danny, for the look and Roger, for the bass. And he sure knew what to do with a bass. Somewhere between Marcus Miller and Mr. Wooten, he stood there smiling, slapping his incredibly phat grooves with a steady thumb and a tambourine under his right foot. Not even sweating. I had my watery fair trade organic french-brew Nicaragua coffee with milk while listening to him and had a look around before going back to the car. Even the old mamas with their groceries trolley seemed to be shaking their booties off the walkways to his grooves. Won’t you take me to… funky town? A long hour later, we entered Cherokee, gate of the Great Smokeys. I won't be long about Cherokee and the Indian reservation: Imagine a zoo where the sick, sad, depressed, fat animals would be human beings in ridiculous costumes and paintings. With little road signs showing them RAIN DANCING and mimicking THE WAR TRAIL or such. Well, if you can imagine that, plus the cheap booze and the dozens of Indian gifts, Indian crafts and Indian souvenir stores, together with the poor old men covered in feathers and make-up, forcing their toothless smiles for one dollar, you'll get a pretty accurate idea of what Cherokee and the Indian reservation look like. Ah, almost forgot. It's also full of all the black bears souvenirs, posters, magnets, tee-shirts, liquors, skin or furry hats, jewelry made out of bears teeth and such you can possibly think of. Ah, almost forgot. All the above, plus all the restaurants having mountain river trout on their menu. I was astonished and sad to find myself in Montmartre, on Las Ramblas, in Lourdes and Sigean at the same time. If it wasn't so sad, it would be revolting, I guess... We drove on.


a Great Smokey Morning.
Another while driving along a silvery stream and we entered the Natural Park. We left the car where our 3 day hike was supposed to take us, and quickly got a lift from une gentille française living in Atlanta, to get where our 3 day hike was supposed to start from. After twenty minutes of silent walking along the trail, civilization was way behind us. Fresh crystal waters on small singing creeks, big trees, butterflies and flowers and bushes and scents and stones and fuck, nature in the Appalaches is so amazingly beautiful! We lasted four hours to reach Mount Leconte, the second summit of the range, and there set the camp by a mountain shelter. Anti-bear equipments to hang the backpacks, anti-bear recommendations, anti-bear ladders to the shelter, anti-bear prohibition to cook in and around the shelter... Looked like we were in a remake of Romero's Dawn of the Bears. Ah ah ah. Actually, I wouldn't see no bears during the next 3 days, although their presence was almost touchable. On the trees and the trails, at least. Eight hours of hiking the next day, a good positive and negative elevation and my 18 kg backpack reminded me I'm not so young anymore. We crossed and followed the AT again, met some old hippies with long white beards but no dogs because due to the bears, this one happened to be the only section of the AT they couldn't hike with their dogs... Met two nice guys working for Alsthom in Knoxville and a nice couple from Birmingham at the second shelter. Made a bonfire and chatted with them for a while. I looked for any possible occasion to fill my camping shower bag with water, let it in the sun for a couple of hours and then hang it to a branch to enjoy a delicious warm shower in the woods. Rhaaaaa! I know it for sure now: home is not a place, it's a state of mind. And a foldable camping shower makes it easier to feel at home! On the morning of the third day, we finished the hike with a long steep three hour trail from the bottom of the valley up to the ridge, where the car was waiting for us. Feeling dirty and sweaty but the weather was perfect and the breeze was fresh at about 5.000 feet. Packed everything again in the car, had a short rest in the sun, then left. We drove the Cherolahah Skyway, another secondary little road following the Appalachian range, then entered Tennessee and headed south to Chattanooga where CS Andy was waiting for us.
the beautiful, unreal, Great Smokey Mountains, floating in the clouds like Miyazaki's Castle in the sky.
We easily found him at a bar, silently talking to his pint of amber ale, then followed his rusty Westfalia VW van to his place. He was a thirty something tall blond hippy with dreadlocks, working three nights a week at a bar downtown and lived in a small wooden house with two friends, surrounded by trees, bicycle parts and pictures from his travels. A genuine sports freak: Andy climbs, rides, hikes, paraglides and rafts. Plus, at that time, he was saving money to make it to Toronto by bike the next summer: more than 2.000 miles riding (is it what he said? isn't it too much?). Pas mal, eh? Like most CSers, Andy was a charming guy, had a nice conversation and a delicious sense of home-made, DIY design. Made us feel comfortable and at home in about two minutes. Very CS, you know, like so very easy-going and so totally friendly. Seriously, now: why does CS seem to gather the nicest people on earth? Or, better said: how come most of the nicest people on earth decided to gather on CS? Spent the evening together at his place: we cooked some vegetarian lasagna, Colombian salad with fresh cilantro and a delicious guacamole he prepared adding sprouted lentils and soy beans to the genuine recipe : excellent! I also tried some arepas with a non-conventional corn-flour. They were a complete disaster although we survived eating them... Hem... We then spent a while talking around local beers before showering and falling dead in bed.
along the crisis highway (1): Birmingham, Tuscaloosa, Rock City...

Next morning, supposed to go rock climbing, the rain started falling right after breakfast so we spent the morning crashing on the couches in the living room, watching the rain on the bright green of the garden, talking about life and everything and nothing in particular and finishing the lasagna and the beers while doing some laundry. Then we said goodbye and he went to work and we drove south through Tennessee, on our way to Alabama. We crossed Birmingham: an abandoned, desert, ghost, depressing as much as depressed zombie town and found no place to have dinner on a cold grey monday evening. We made it to Tuscaloosa and had the best hamburgers one could possibly dream of. Huge. Heavy. Fat. Juicy. Tasty. Way too big. So totally unhealthy it was a pleasure to just imagine the triglycerides filling one's arteries. Plus, the french fries were battered in beer before being soaked in the boiling oil. Jesus! That was so f---ing good it had to be a sin! After spending two hours looking for a national forest or anything suitable to camp around Tuscaloosa, we finally hid both the car and the tent behind some trees and bushes, hoping nobody would come by. Quiet night, holy night. The next morning, as usually in these circumstances, it was quite a funny experience to discover in the bright daylight the place we had chosen the night before while it was dark: the main highway was way closer than it seemed and all the trucks could probably see the tent, had the  drivers looked at the road while driving. We were lucky enough they all watched TV and read the newspapers while cruising on automatic...

along the crisis highway (2): entering Greensboro.
We crossed Greensboro, a small town severely hit by the crisis, and entered a pie café called PieLab. Check for them, they're worth all your consideration. In the middle of the deepest crisis, a bunch of cook and graphic designers built this unique cozy space to both cook and sell pies and create sustainable design, ads and stuff. Nice people, creative and positive, who created jobs, life and activity, as well as different kind of workshops for children and adults, in a neighborhood deeply affected by the crisis. No need to say the pies were fantabulous and the coffee, organic, fair trade and, well… watery. ;) The rest of the day was not especially exciting, driving south through Alabama. We listened to Janis Joplin, Taj Mahal and a bluegrass band whose name I couldn't remember. They were really good and their tunes took us and kept us awake until we entered and while we went all the way through Mississippi down to Louisiana. At the Alabama Welcoming Center, we met the scariest hostess  ever, who "kindly" (understand: County Sheriff style) asked for our passport numbers, phone numbers, address, blood type and about how long and where we planned to stay in Alabama, just "so as to help us have the best possible stay there" (seriously? that's all you've come up with?).
Greensboro, catfish capital of Alabama: its welcoming shops (lol) and the PieLab, home of the most amazing lemon pie ever!
Later on, we stopped at a lovely Trucks' kitchen on the highway. Fuck, this creepy old fat women looking exactly like the one in Stephen King's Misery. And the trucks' kitchen was exactly like in my dreams (from the american road movies of my childhood): sitting at the bar, eating eggs and sausage and grits with Fox News. And this middle-aged fat woman, named Shirley, with a white and red shirt and curly hair, refilling for free your mug of watery cafe and calling you Babe. Well, she was a Tracy, but everything else was pretty similar to the cliché of the Shirley waitress. I then spent several hours sighing, nose against the window, as miles went by, counting the road kills along highway 59. Interestingly enough, the raccoon disappeared progressively, as an increasing amount of armadillos began to make their way to the top of the charts. Maybe twenty to thirty dead armadillos just on the right side of 59 South. They look so cute! I wanted to stop and take one and stuff it. And shivered each time I imagined them alive...


last miles of the road to NoLa: perfect timing and the sunset on Lake Ponchartrain
We reached Louisiana in the evening, crossed the Lake Ponchartrain on an amazing, seemingly endless bridge and entered New Orleans with the sunset. We drove along the tramway to a lovely neighborhood to meet Rachel, our CS host for this first night. But that's another story...

 - Got an extra minute for some conclusion?

 - Okay, but try and make it quick, please: we're off schedule already...

 - Great, thanks! Well, it was an amazing week, full of beautiful people, places and moments. A very impacting, very inspiring week. Dense and full of great ideas, causes and fights. And an interesting contrast, all along this 1.000 mile long mountainous range. A contrast between the most preserved and protected natural spaces and the most devastated ones ; between acute environmental awareness and aberrant industrial, urban and suburban development ; between sustainable alternative consciousness and crazy blind straight-in-the-wall capitalist consuming behavior ; between creative, positive solutions and huge, global issues ; between Indians in cages and hippies at war ; between coal and trees ; between shopping malls with KFCs and the most virgin nature ; between chronic crisis and indecent wealth ; between yesterday's mistakes, today's consequences and... tomorrow's solutions? Hopefully.

That's all folks, see y'all next week! Love to all. Remember to take care of whom and what is important in your lives!
happiness is the way: take the right turn and head off the beaten track...

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