Tuesday, August 3

With a small harem surrounding me, I drove off the Alaska Marine Highway at
10:00 AM. Although Alison, Elke, and Jo-Anne each managed to make do with one
backpack, the minivan was now stacked to the gills and riding so low that we
couldn't drive over a crush-proof cigarette pack without a sickening dragging
sound. As we headed up the Interstate toward the Canadian border, I noticed how
much easier it was to travel with three companions rather than one. I didn't have
to make conversation, just drive and listen.

"The girl with the German passport will have to have it stamped at
Immigration," said the smiling fellow in the little booth. In fact, we all had to
show various IDs to an unfriendly woman. Although we weren't detained for more
than a few minutes, we felt unwelcome.
Our first taste of British Columbia was uninspiring. We drove through the flat
fields of the Fraser Valley and then built-up areas until the highway simply
ended in a residential neighborhood. Elke was determined to pay no more than $6
Cdn. per night for a bed so she and Alison asked to be dropped at a backpacker's
hostel near the railroad station, which turned out to be Vancouver's highest
crime neighborhood.
I dropped Jo-Anne at her friend's house in the chic Kitsilano district and
proceeded to my friend Jim's office at the University of British Columbia. Jim
and I took in the university's Museum of Anthropology, the pinnacle of
high-culture tourism in Vancouver and notable for its collection of totem poles.
I was stunned by the quality of the work, especially by the warlike Haida
Indians. The Canadian government never managed to sign a treaty with the Haida,
who are therefore suing to reclaim all of British Columbia's coast and fishing
rights. I thought I was tired of totem poles, but Jim was able to bring most of
the figures to life for me.
East Ocean Hong Kong Restaurant lies outside Chinatown, like all of the really
good Chinese restaurants here. Lest your surroundings in a modern office building
cause you to suspect the restaurant's authenticity, East Ocean brings your dinner
to the table flopping around in plastic buckets. Jim and I regretted that we
lacked the Hong Kong matron's ability to inspect the gills and eyes of the rock
cod, and we simply asked our waiter to "please kill these animals, cook them, and
bring them back." Jim says that it is the influx of Hong Kong Chinese that is
responsible for this presentation; 10 years ago, everything brought to your table
was well-killed.
Jo-Anne had promised to meet us later in the evening, but when I phoned her
friend's house, I was told that "she met some friends and went away with them for
a week-long bike trip." When I returned to the table, Jim said I looked
stunned.
"I was just rejected, but it was by a woman I only met yesterday. This is much
better than being rejected by women in Boston. In Jo-Anne's case, I can say to
myself, `She wouldn't have rejected me if she knew me better.' What I hate is
when women who know me perfectly well reject me."
Not one to let humiliation spoil an evening, I let Jim take me
toward the beautiful sunset by Stanley Park. The First Law of Photography is that
whenever you see something really beautiful, you won't have your camera. My seven
cameras were in my van; I was in Jim's car. I helplessly watched the sunset drip
liquid gradations of red behind the mountains around the city.
Jim treated me to gelato in a chic West End cafe, right next to a high-rise
apartment block known as "K-Y Towers" (this is the area of town popular with
homosexuals). As we walked back to the car along the dark seawall path, it was
nice to see how many young women were still out. This isn't Central Park in terms
of either crime or fear of crime. Drug dealers and gangs kill each other, mostly
with knives, but the average Vancouverite is able to enjoy the city at all hours
and in almost all neighborhoods.
"Strip joints in Boston
are really grimy, and you feel sleazy going into one. You have to see how
different they are here," Jim pointed out. I had no experience for comparison,
but I was surprised to see how clean, well-lit, and sober "The Cecil" was.
Customers were neatly dressed and hardly anyone smoked. There were only a handful
of women customers, all sitting at tables with counterculturish men.
Entertainment at The Cecil consists of multiple TVs showing sports and a big
stage in the center. The stage is equipped with a hot tub and a small fountain.
Men who really want to get involved with the show sit "lip-side" on the edge of
the stage, while friends who want to converse sit at tables farther back.
Jim and I walked in during the middle of the Amateur Night stripping contest.
We saw four women, one of whom looked no more than 15, display themselves for
five minutes each while prancing around the stage to pop music. The music was
played at a moderate enough volume that we diehard nerds were able to carry on a
mathematics and computer science discussion. The girl who looked 15 won the
contest. After the contest was over, we watched two professional strippers. Jim
revealed for me the mysterious formalized structure of the strip. During the
first song, the woman dances around the stage fully clothed. The second song
leaves her topless and the third bottomless. She spends her fourth song writhing
on the floor, disporting in the fountain, or lolling about in the hot tub.
Patrons left to themselves will simply sip their drinks and watch quietly. An
announcer periodically reminds the audience to "show her how much you appreciate
her," at which point a desultory howling rises up only to die a few seconds
later. Strippers appear to enjoy their work and are treated with some deference,
as are the cocktail waitresses, who are conservatively clad. Jim used to have a
tenant who called herself an "entertainer." In fact, she stripped for a living,
and Jim learned something about their culture: "Don't touch any of them; they all
have boyfriends who are bikers."
Considering it was my first time, I think I acquitted myself well. We spent
about 20 minutes sipping our drinks and then left at 11:30. Jim told me I'd done
much better than his last out-of-town guest, an MIT faculty member friend of
ours.
"He got so excited that he spilled a glass of beer all over me."
Jim's neighborhood is full of friendly young families. Everyone
has young children, and six women were due in one month recently.
"This is British Columbia. Once any animal gets here, it thinks it is time to
spawn," Jim noted.
I was overjoyed to find messages on the answering machine from both Elke and
Jo-Anne. Jo-Anne hadn't left town, and they both wanted to go to Vancouver Island
with me.
Vancouver Photo Album
From the top of the tourist tower...
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My visit to the Jewish Nose Research Center.
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Gastown...
By the water...
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Wednesday, August 4
A week cruising down the Nile River builds strong friendships. I hadn't seen
Michael for 18 months, I didn't call him until noon on my last day in Vancouver,
and he'd just spent 12 hours driving back from the dragon boat races in Calgary.
Yet he treated me like royalty. Michael rolled up to Jim's house in his new Mazda
and introduced me to his parents. His mother was born in South Africa and his
father in Hong Kong, but the family has become thoroughly Canadian. Michael
speaks pretty good Cantonese, but he wouldn't be too happy to live in Hong Kong,
which he has visited several times.
"It is the only city I know where if the walk sign comes on and you don't move
off the curb immediately, someone will push you off."
We drove to a medium-size Chinese restaurant nearby that was packed with big
round tables. A party of two would feel out of place here amidst the enormous
(all Chinese) families chowing down. It was a bit hard to talk over the din, but
we managed to catch up on old times.
Michael took a six-month leave of absence from his engineering job here and
worked as a wildlife photographer in Africa. I met him towards the end of that
assignment, which he looks back upon wistfully. He'd like to escape the routine
again, but his boss cringes at the thought of losing him.
Michael is in his mid-30s and still living at home. I asked his mother why she
hadn't introduced him to any nice Chinese girls.
"That's his department," she said abruptly.
"When I'm traveling, it is no problem to meet women. But here at home, they
get irritated when I talk to them," Michael mourned.
After dinner, Michael showed 400 slides from his six months in Africa (less
than 2% of the 600 rolls he exposed). Just one photo of mating cranes would have
been worth the entire trip.
"All of these animals will be gone in a decade or two. These countries are
facing choices about whether to feed animals or people; they are going to choose
people," Michael noted.
His observations about animal behavior betrayed substantial learning, but also
his western nose. He introduced quite a few animals with "these smell really
bad."
Thursday, August 5

I'd pictured Vancouver Island as a rugged parkland with occasional small towns
inhabited by sea kayakers. Traversing the east coast via a heavily used divided
four-lane highway reveals an island that is heavily populated, packed with fast
food chains, and quite industrial. Elke, Jo-Anne, and I took a 90-minute ferry
ride to Nanaimo and then started the 60-mile drive toward Victoria.

Jo-Anne illustrates what a wonderful person can be produced when Australian
openness and directness is mixed with education, intelligence, and a certain
amount of ambition. She moved to Toronto six years ago with her Australian
husband and has been working as an actuary. Just recently, Jo-Anne shed her
husband and the grueling Toronto pace in favor of the outdoorsy life centered
around Vancouver.
Elke came to Michigan as a Fulbright Scholar a year ago. She calls herself
"East German," in direct defiance of the politically correct lingo over there.
Elke has the kind of passionate response to literature, art, and life that so
many people have lost. She can appreciate a Shakespeare play, a beautiful city,
or a photograph with the wide-eyed wonder of a child mixed with the
sophistication of a well-educated 25-year-old.
I had been a little apprehensive about traveling with two people who'd only
met three days before, but Elke and Jo-Anne sorted themselves out into
complementary roles. Jo-Anne sat in the front seat and expertly navigated; Elke
lounged across the back seat and supplied us with country-western tapes from her
collection.

We spent the afternoon among an eye-popping explosion of artistically placed
flowers in Butchart Gardens, Vancouver Island's #1 tourist attraction, then drove
to McDonald Park, the closest provincial campground to the metropolis of
Victoria. All 30 campsites were taken, but three happy-go-lucky Dead Heads from
Ontario agreed immediately to let us share their site.
Paul was raised in England but lived in
Canada a bit as well. His seven years of following the Dead on tour was recently
cut short by some vaguely described brushes with the law in California.
"Did they dump you at the border?" I asked.
"No, I just ran."
I noted that most of my friends who toured with the Dead gave up after a few
months because they couldn't shake their middle-class values.
"I'm trying to get mine back," Paul responded.

Friday, August 6
Nobody can organize like a German girl. I'd been meaning to clean out the
disgusting cooler for over a month; Elke hadn't been in the car 24 hours before
the cooler and all the Tupperware containers were washed. After washing the
cooler and showering, we drove to downtown Victoria under gorgeous blue skies. I
immediately got on my bike to tour the city alone. I hadn't gone more than two
miles before I ran into Alison. She insisted that I come with her to Castle
Craigdarroch, built on the top of the hill by John Dunsmuir. Dunsmuir was a
Scottish coal miner who came here in the 1850s and became western Canada's
richest man. He built a stone castle and fitted it with wood carvings and stained
glass just in time to die.
After the castle tour, every aspect of which delighted Alison, we drove to
Chinatown for dim sum, which Alison had never had. Despite her sober lobbying job
in Washington, D.C., Alison told me how irresponsible she feels at age 31. She
skips and jumps along the street and dates a 22-year-old bike messenger.
"Can you believe it? I've never dated a man who wore a suit to work."
Alison hadn't fallen in love with Alaska.
"A place needs history to be interesting. Europeans destroyed the native
cultures in Alaska, but haven't been there long enough to build interesting
cities of their own."
After I dropped Alison at the fast ferry to Seattle, I got back on the bike to
tour scrubbed-up beflowered Victoria some more. Like all capitals, this city
prospers on the "tax the many to enrich the few" principle, and public places are
extraordinarily nice for a town with a small population (250,000 including an
endless suburban sprawl). Most of the downtown shops cater to tourists, however,
and it is difficult to get a sense of the real city life, especially on a fine
summer's day.
Elke's sensitive nose sniffed out the finest "clash of cultures" photograph in
the city: teepees and a totem pole on the front lawn of the enormous stone
parliament building. Measured by weight at least, European culture seems to have
triumphed by a factor of a million to one.
We drove down the west coast of Vancouver Island to Sooke and camped in the
city campground, right next to the Sooke River. I tossed the car keys to Jo-Anne
and Elke and biked down the 50 km Galloping Goose Trail, a former railroad. Hard
work was rewarded with good views over the Sooke Inlet, a lagoon, and a large
freshwater lake. I rode back on little country lanes past peaceful sheep farms,
little marinas, and lots of forest. It changed my opinion about Vancouver
Island.
Saturday, August 7

Elke and I bid farewell to passportless Jo-Anne at the ferry terminal and
hopped a ferry across the narrow channel to
Port
Angeles, Washington. As the ship rolled in a slight swell, I fixed my eyes on
the horizon and recalled Jackie Mason's "there's nothing sadder than a Jew with a
boat" routine. Port Angeles was ugly and slightly shrouded in clouds; I felt
strangely little joy at entering the U.S. for the final time this trip.
After a swim in the local 25-yard pool, where Elke revealed why East Germany
used to win all those Olympic medals, we considered how best to enjoy Olympic
National Park.
The main portion of the park is a 40-mile square surrounding the Olympic
Mountains, a ring of 6000+' peaks including 8000' Mt. Olympus. These mountains
were cut off from the rest of the continent by glaciers until about 12,000 years
ago. A unique ecosystem evolved here, and many species of plants and animals
common in the nearby Cascades are missing from the Olympics, grizzly bears for
example. After hanging out with Jo-Anne and Elke, I developed a particular
fondness for the Olympic marmot; he lives in a colony with two adult females and
their children.
Twelve feet of rain falls each year on the ocean side of the mountains,
creating rain forests and glaciers. The continental side is drier but still
plagued by weather that can only be called miserable. As an afterthought in 1953,
a big section of coastline was tossed into the park. It looks a lot like the
Oregon coast. Lush cliffs meet violent sea.
Sunday, August
8
Elke and I started our tour in the Hoh Rain Forest, named for the Hoh Indians
who inhabit this area. We slowly hiked around the eerie Hall of the Mosses trail.
Huge trees hung down their twisted moss-covered branches. I forgot to bring my
20mm lens and mosquito repellent; stupid, stupid, stupid. We were beset by
mosquitoes just enough to leave Elke's beautiful face a mess but not quite enough
to justify a run back to the car. I gave Elke a two-hour photography
lesson.

"What separates snapshot from art is a tripod and Fuji Velvia film," I noted.
"You have to learn how to use manual exposure on your Nikon and remember that the
camera assumes a world that is 18% gray. If you point it at something white, it
thinks the world has suddenly gotten brighter; if you point it at something
black, it thinks the light has dimmed."
"I always wanted to meet a man who could teach me about photography and
computers."
With fantastic manual dexterity and inherent style, Elke prepared
a scrumptious lunch. I'd been eating in restaurants and going hungry or snacking
when far from civilization. Elke wanted to live out of the cooler. Rather than
get on a soapbox and preach about how much more noble it would be to live her
way, she simply shopped, organized, and cooked.
After a shower at the Rain Forest Hostel, we drove down Highway 101 to Ruby
Beach, part of the coastline portion of Olympic National Park. Enormous piles of
driftwood littered the bottom of the cliffs. A blanket of clouds covered the land
and the first few miles of sea. The sun eventually sank low enough to illuminate
the undersides of the clouds, the cliffs, and the enormous rock formations in the
surf. It was pure sorcery but didn't last.
After dark, we camped at South Beach. Elke was desperate for some couscous and
soup so I promised to boil up water with my brand-new stove and pot. Problem 1:
fill stove with fuel. Solution: find motor home and beg. A retiree lent me his
genuine Coleman funnel and fuel filter. Then he got some pliers so we could open
the fiendishly child-proof fuel can. Problem 2: find recently purchased pot.
Solution: tear apart car in the dark for 30 minutes; find motor home and beg.
Problem 3: pressurize stove with pump for the first time in the dark without
reading all the instructions. Solution: spend 30 minutes fruitlessly pumping
without realizing that one is supposed to hold one's thumb over a little air
hole; cry like a child.
Elke made sandwiches. I felt like a total failure as a man, but Elke never
criticized or betrayed the slightest trace of contempt or disappointment.
Joel's girlfriend Denise (Chapter XIV) demonstrated a
contrasting female attitude in a subsequent phone call. Without even knowing
about the contretemps with the stove, she called me a wuss for eating in
restaurants rather than cooking for myself.
Monday, August 9
We stayed in the tent until quite late listening to the rain fall on the fly
and soak through sleeping bags and various other interior items. Anxious for a
tourist attraction, we followed signs to the Hoh Tribal Center. As the state
highway entered the Indian reservation, we could feel the federal dollars
stroking the car's undercarriage. The road took on a creamy smoothness that was
nothing short of delicious. The 200 Indians on this reservation live in rather
attractive houses whose yards are festooned with satellite dishes.
The Tribal Center turned out to be a dumping ground for Indian schoolkids with
nothing to do on their summer vacation. Elke called Mauricio, a Colombian she'd
met in Juneau.
"He's going to fly to San Francisco to meet me, rent a car, and then drive me
down the coast to Los Angeles. He doesn't have any hopes of getting involved;
he's just trying to be nice to me for showing him around Juneau. Colombians are
Catholic; they're very conservative about such things."
Right.
We spent the rest
of the day eating, driving through one downpour after another, and eating some
more. Elke shattered some of my misconceptions about East Germany. I'd
thought of Communist East Germany as a drab, gray, joyless place full of people
dying to get out and move to the West. Elke had been perfectly happy growing up
under the old regime and isn't particularly fond of the new system.
"One thing I have trouble adjusting to is the concept of property. We didn't
go walking through people's front yards, but everything else in East Germany was
public. You never had to worry about whether you were trespassing because
everything belonged to you in some sense."
Clothing at least wasn't gray. Elke's high-fashion wardrobe predated
Unification. If she and her friends couldn't afford something, they sewed it
themselves. Sometimes less is more anyway.
"I hardly owned a bathing suit until I came here; I can't believe how prudish
Americans are."
I reminded her that we couldn't all be young, 5' 6" and 120 lb.
Politics has never been Elke's main interest, but she told me about East
Germany's five political parties, including the dominant socialist unity party
(SED). Elke only voted once, but she was satisfied enough with the system to vote
voluntarily for SED.
"East Germany was very safe, very community-oriented, there was good day care
for kids and a lot of good opportunity for women to work. I am very sorry when I
see how materialistic many of my old friends are becoming. I really don't like
the values of West/Unified Germany. Even things that are supposed to be better
are in fact worse. Bureaucracy, for example, is much worse in Unified
Germany."
Elke is so well-educated and speaks such good English that her deficits jarred
me. She'd never heard of Jack Nicholson, Cary Grant, Stanley Kubrick, or any
other Hollywood icons. "I've only had three years of American movies, you have to
remember." She'd never heard of Gummi bears, staples of West German childhood. A
lot of attitudes that I'd thought of as German aren't very prevalent among East
Germans according to Elke.
"In my experience the difference between East and West Germany is greater than
the difference between West Germany and the U.S."
Speaking of the U.S., how had she found it?
"I really enjoyed my first six months here, but then began to see people as
living on islands separated by phone answering machines, connected only by wires
to the outer world. There was too much space. I tried to immerse myself in
American culture, but then stepped back. I began to reject American things, to
try to hold onto my German culture. I was so happy whenever I heard someone
speaking German. Now I think I am better at appreciating both cultures."
A couple overheard part of this conversation in a restaurant, and the wife
came up to our table. She peppered me with questions: Where did you go to
college? Where are you from? What are you doing now?
Elke smiled and said, "That's what I love about America; that would never
happen in Germany."
Tuesday, August 10

Hurricane Ridge is supposed to afford views to Victoria in one direction and
Mt. Olympus in the other. Elke and I hiked for two hours but never saw much more
than a few hillsides in front of solid white cloud. We drove back down to Port
Angeles to find sunshine and a nice ride through the Olympic Peninsula toward
Seattle.
A golden sunset kissed the treetops as we rolled onto the Bainbridge Island ferry
and drew across the waters of Puget Sound toward the tall buildings of
downtown.
The trip had been going far too well. Hospitable people everywhere, sunny
weather in Alaska, the lingering spell of Katmai, relatively crash-free driving.
What I really needed was the pain of staying under the same roof as my beloved
ex-girlfriend Rebecca and her new boyfriend Dave. I dropped Elke at a friend's
and arrived at Rebecca and Dave's house at 10:30 PM to find them together in the
kitchen. Rebecca had dyed her hair red and was wearing knee-length jeans and a
punk top; she looked more like a rock groupie than a physics Ph.D. Dave, a
soft-spoken guy of medium height, looked more like his social work day job than
his drumming night job. He was a good listener and rather reflective.
Rebecca tried to start about five arguments that we should have had five years
before, but Dave and I got along surprisingly well. Rebecca had told him I was a
"nerd," and he was pleasantly surprised to find my belt free of calculators or
other paraphernalia.
I had a joyous reunion with my letters and stayed up until 2 reading them and
writing replies. Although I'd not felt lonely for some weeks, I was suffused with
warmth every time I opened a friend's missive.
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