Greetings!
I've had many adventures since I left Austin, so many that it feels I've been gone for weeks. The train ride was
awesome; I made a couple of buddies along the way that were handy in
keeping things interesting, especially as cabin fever set in. The ride
itself was much faster & more comfortable than I anticipated. I
was accidentally directed to a lower cabin car which has wider seats,
more leg room, & only 12 seats. This cabin had 5 riders besides
myself so I had two fat seats, with more leg room than I have legs, all
to myself, making a generally pleasant ride with the exception of "The
Queen of The Train": a woman in her 50s who rides the rails often and
ruled our car with her giant vocal chords which were active most of the
time and usually had nothing interesting to broadcast.
We arrived in Los Angeles at about 7am on Friday, June 6th.
Considering I hadn't had coffee yet and no food since the night before,
it seemed like an eternity for me to get my bike out of train storage.
The brand new box I put my bike in in Austin was beat to shit and
burried under 30 giant boxes belonging to a family of 5 that were
moving to California from the East Coast. I twitched in anticipation of
getting my sweetheart out from under that heap. Finally, after a
gazillion years, I ripped through the little pieces of cardboard that
barely remained on my bike and swiftly straightened my handlebars and
put my pedals back on. Passengers aren't usually allowed in the
receiving area but that didn't stop me from test riding my bike in
giant figure eights in the belly of L.A.'s Amtrak station. Now that my
bike was working I was ready to go get lost, which I did swiftly!
I wanted to ride my bike the 13 miles to the hotel in Westwood but
now it was 8:30am and I still hadn't had coffee and, upon lifting my
bags, realized that somehow they were heavier than I planned
for them to be. Some gremlin must've stuffed some extra tools in there
while I wasn't looking. So I asked around about a bus only to learn
that the folks in LA are either confused or confusing when it comes to
describing their bus system. After 3 failed attempts at understanding
the bus in my caffeine free state, I tied my luggage onto my bike rack
with bungee cords, did some strange maneuvering of my limbs, and
managed to get on my bike. I then used nothing but will power to make
it go, without falling over, through downtown traffic, during rush
hour, all the while kicking myself that I didn't shell out the dough
for some paniers to balance my heavy load. My GPS picked this moment to
go apeshit and kept telling me I was in the middle of a dirt field in
Indiana and other blatent lies. Again I had to rely on the vague
descriptions of the people of Los Angeles. OK Go straight. Turn left on
7th street. Got it.
After 9 wavy uphill miles of 7th street where I crossed 3 freeways
and hit a dead end before finding the street I was supposed to turn on
from there, I had to practice my broken portunol (a rare mix of
portuguese and spanish) with an old Mexican man walking his
granddaughter to school. He told me I was ass backwards. I turned
around and went a few blocks while questioning my language skills. A
lady was watering her roses and spoke some English. She told me I was
ass backwards too and gave me a bottle of water for my crazy/stupid
bike ride. She didn't exactly say that, but her face said it. Somehow
the 9 mile return was also a steep uphill. I mean STEEP - like really
really hard without a load & impossible with 60 pounds on your
back. It was too early for this, I didn't have enough water, and my
bags weren't packed right so any further description of this segment
would just result in a lot of cursing.
I finally found myself downtown again and GPS was toying with me as
to which bus to take. I was a couple of blocks from where my droid was
telling me to go and standing directly beneath a bus sign that said
Westwood. I decided to listen to the sign. The fascinating adventure of
bussing in LA shortly ensued. Lifting my monstrously heavy bike with
the bulk of my belongings strapped onto it onto a bus where the driver
is too pissed off at her lot in life to lower the bus was only the
beginning. Yay, more pre-coffee oddly shaped exercise for me. Huff. I
get on. She immediately starts yelling at me that I put my bike on
wrong and it's going to fall off. So I stand there, helplessly watching
it wobble and waiver while waiting for her to stop driving like a
maniac so I can go fix it before the bus rolls over it. "Get behind the
yellow line!!", she screams as she continues to torture me for three
jerky, stop & go, city blocks before stopping to watch me lift,
twist, & lift my heavy life properly onto the bike rack. I finally
get to squeeze me & my other bag through the sardine can to ensure
my place among many indescribable smells & sounds. I try not to
look completely overwhelmed but my eyes are bulging and I spastically
keep leaning forward to see the names of the upcoming streets, hoping
& promising to turn my back on atheism if my stop comes soon. I
think I picked the busiest bus with the longest route in LA, and for
all the whining I've done about how Austin lacks diversity, let me just
say, I found it all on that bus. That delectable intimacy lasted about
45 minutes.
I get off the bus and it wasn't soon enough so I continue to turn
my back on god. The hotel is a mere block and a half away and I begin
to feel relief but it is snatched out of my heart when the grumpy old
imbecile behind the counter tells me my room isn't ready and he doesn't
know when it will be as he practices facial twitches which indicate
that I am the bain of his existence. He was almost as much of a brat as
the bus driver but I have yet to get coffee and all those smells on the
bus have made me testy and impatient. I proceed to put him in his
place. He backs down and helps me put my belongings into a storage
closet. Me & my empty bike go out for coffee. Finally.
After two hours of ambling through the UCLA area my room is ready.
I unload, catch up on some breathing, and soon I'm driving with my long
lost cousin and her precious offspring. I spend the next two days
getting to know my young, thrice removed cousins and biking the area.
My favorite ride was to Santa Monica Pier and all along the beach down
to Venice. The bike path is just the right distance from the actual
scene that you're close enough to laugh at it without actually having
to touch it. On the way back to the hotel I stopped for Persian Ice
Cream which is potentially the most divine flavor I've ever tasted.
Then, ZAP!, I'm off to the jobby job in Thousand Oaks. I'll have to
tell you about that later though because I have to go calculate some
loads now. I miss you all a ton!
SWAK!
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