My last two courses went
smoothly – no evacuations, no emergencies. The bus carrying us back
from whitewater rafting did catch fire, and on a separate
occasion, so did I, but there was no lasting damage to anybody
involved. I was more concerned by two fast-approaching deadlines:
August 24th, the last day I would have a job, and August
25th, the last day I would have a house.
On
the 21st
of
August, the other team came back from the field and the six of us
were reunited for the first time since training. It was great to see
them, but with still no word on the employment/home front I was
beginning to feel mildly concerned.
On
the 22nd
of
August, I was lying in the park listening to Trampled by Turtles and
doing paperwork for EPI when my phone rang, a Wyoming number.
“Hello,
Lily? My name is Mike Hobbs, I'm calling from Colter Bay Marina...”
Without warning, I found
myself interviewing for a fall job operating tour boats in the
Tetons. Using the 'Help Wanted Now' section of coolworks.com, I had
sent in a resume a week or so ago, without expecting anything much to
come of it.
The man on the other end was
friendly and keen. I played up my past experiences in Glacier, the
tours, the boats, the bears, etc.
After a brief conversation,
Hobbs informed me that they would be forwarding a background check
and checking my references. And then he hung up, and I was left lying
in the grass, bemused. Move to the Tetons? Maybe this weekend? Why
the hell not?
I made a mental note to go
look up where Colter Bay even was.
The rest of the week was
busy with EPI: inventory, gear cleaning, exit interviews. In between
work I wandered around town with my friends, enjoying the few days
remaining before we went our separate ways.
From top left: Josh
K., Andy V., Hannah S. Lily V, Erin C, Nicole H; bottom, Megan M,
Joshua T.
|
On Friday when I showed up
for work, my boss was on the phone with the Grand Teton Lodge
Company, giving me a reference. It must have been good; they called
back half an hour later offering me the job. I could start as soon as
I liked, perhaps Monday or Tuesday.
I am the hole in the river |
That was a good day. The
cool was in the air and the breeze sang September. In the afternoon,
to celebrate the end of the EPI season, we took a road trip to the
Lee Metcalf National Wildlife Refuge and wandered for a while through
the cottonwood wetlands and the Ponderosa pines.
With
Joshua and Nicole, I jumped into the Bitterroot River fully dressed;
the water was not too cold, the current surprisingly swift, and it
felt fantastic. Later, drying off as we hiked back to the car, the three of us lagged behind to look at birds and flowers, and it was
like an encapsulation of the best parts of summer, walking with my
friends beside the pines, under the blue sky by the river.
|
|
All too soon, the parting
came, and we dispersed to the winds, with only Andy and Hannah
remaining in Missoula. I drove away from the house on Harrison St
headed for Jackson, WY. Mapquest suggested a dismal route through
Idaho, but I opted on a whim to drive south through Yellowstone
instead.
It felt strange to retrace
alone the route that I had taken so many times in the green Suburban
with a backseat full of kids. There was a fire burning in the park
between Norris and Canyon. All the side roads were closed and plumes
of smoke piled up into the atmosphere. Cars were beginning to jam
where a huge bull bison lay in the grass near the Canyon service
station. Typical Yellowstone.
the biggest damn binos in the world |
In the evening I came to
Fishing Bridge on the shores of the lake, and there I opted to stay.
Fishing Bridge was interesting because it felt like an entirely
different place from where we had taken the kids. The lake was sandy,
blue and enormous. You could not see the far shores for the wildfire
haze. After cooking dinner on my little stove I wandered down to
investigate the eponymous bridge. The waters of the Yellowstone ran
rippling down to the lake, flocks of Barrow's Goldeneye drifted on
the water, and somewhere over the hills I could hear the low rumbling
moan of bison. I looked and listened in vain for great gray owls,
reputed to haunt the area. If I slept in my car in the parking lot of
the visitor's center, perhaps I would hear them later. I had a
mattress set up in the car and I was looking forward to curling up
back there. My favorite metal tent.
After a ranger-led
amphitheater program on bear management, none of which was news to me
sadly, I went to sleep hoping to be awakened by owls.
At 1:30 AM I was indeed
awakened – by flashing red lights and a ranger rapping on my
window.
“Ma'am?
Ma'am, wake up. You can't sleep here.”
I sat up and cracked the
window. He was a young ranger with a round smooth face. His Smokey
Bear-style hat looked so crisp and new, it probably hadn't even been
rained on since he left the law enforcement academy.
“You
can't stay at pulloffs in your car,” he said. “It's not fair to
the people who pay to stay in campsites.”
I was also not wanting any
of the amenities of developed campsites, and therefore did not see
why exactly I should pay for them, but it's hard to argue with a man
who's flashing police lights in your face at 1:30 in the morning.
He requested my driver's
license and I fumbled through the infinite heaps of my belongings
before finding it and handing it over. He took it away to his
ranger-mobile and I put on a sweater. It was a struggle to come back
to full awakeness, like rising slowly from a deep-sea dive.
The ranger came back. “OK,
this is what you need to do. There's a campground about 4 miles from
here. Drive there and find a space and you can register in the
morning.”
He pulled out and drove
slowly ahead of me until he was satisfied that I was going to adhere
to the straight and narrow, and then sheered off into the night.
All in all, the whole
incident seemed like something that Arlo Guthrie would get up in arms
about, and as I drove, I kept myself awake by imaging a young (and
not unattractive) Arlo giving me a ride in his VW van, perhaps
composing a comically indignant song as we rolled along.
At the campground I pulled
into the closest site and crawled back into my sleeping bag. It was
as cozy as ever but for some reason sleep was much longer in
coming...
In the morning I paid $23.13
for the privilege of a half night's parking next to the toilet, and
went on my way. In spite of the night's events, and the bad coffee
from the campground general store, I couldn't be too upset. It was a
clear and sparkling morning, and the Tetons were waiting.