it’s raining and cold and
i’m content to not be 
occupying anything other
than my own mind
which is likely less
organized than a city 
park with tents and 
drum circles and ipads
 
i have an 800 credit rating
and school loans greater
than fifty K and a house
valued a smidgen or two
greater than said loans by
the tax collectors, and i can
go ride a bike after driving
some hours to the trail head
 
the rain falls in a mist, the
skies are somber grey with
no light of white-ness, just
the drab distorted kind that
filters through seemingly
miles of thick clouds that
hang in every direction, 
yes, north south east west
 

Lafayette, Indiana is not an  mtb destination by any stretch of the imagination, even if your imagination is Gumby-esque.  If you have a Pokey imagination, you might be able to get there, Pokey being Pokey. Though, still, it is doubtful.

I stepped out of the car at the Amphitheater and looked up to visually pinpoint what my ears had already distinguished:  a V of Canada geese flying west.  My beater bike was racked on top of the car, looking a little weary for a late winter afternoon romp through a patch of woods.  (It has been with me for more than a decade now, taking beatings year in and year out.)  I was half-dressed in cold weather riding gear.  I soon took the bike off the rack and was pulling gloves over my hands.

Lucky for me, the trailhead had no evidence of previous riders.  It had been a while since I first cut a path through snow with bike tires.  Warming up on the initial stretch before the turn overlooking the Wabash River, I figured the last time I had such a privilege was somewhere around 1996 when I rode around Gettysburg’s park roads, fields and woods in a moderate snowfall with four inches already on the ground. 

I came to the turn overlooking the river and looked out, and an inner smile warmed me from head to toe.  When I woke in the morning, the air temperature was minus one degrees F.  I had decided when driving to work that it was a day to celebrate winter:

Beater Bike Tasting Virgin Snow

An owl flew in front of me through the barren tree limbs.  I heard not a sound of his or her wings as s/he glided, flapped and glided again.  Watching him/her pass before me and then glancing down at the trail, I lost his/her way when I looked back up again.  It didn’t matter.  I pedaled on.

Four great blue herons rose from the icy banks and flew in several directions up along the Wabash and across to the other shore, up and over the wooded buffer zone.  Twenty minutes into my ride, I was already soulified. 

At the turn-around point, flavors of very ripe Caribe coast bananas and brown sugar passed over my palate:

Joy in a Bottle

The river ran icy.  I stood and listened.  Solitude, water turning to ice and flowing towards the Mississippi Caribe , and extra bananas thrown into a banana bread recipe with hops that was somehow bottled, had me thinking, ”Lafayette, IN should be thankful it’s not an mtb destination.”

Already Treaded

I headed back towards the trailhead.  It seemed that dusk was setting in earlier than I had anticipated.  Picking up the pace, and occasionally looking down to be sure the hopped-up banana bread didn’t lose its cap and spill out, I burned some calories so that I could get a second turn in before darkness was upon me.

Singletrack for Other Life Forms (feeder stream to Burnett's Creek, which flows into the Wabash)

I finished off the Blithering Idiot at the second go-round of the turn-around point.  The toes on my right foot were quite cold, likely caused by a thicker sock and being stuffed too tight into the shoe.  I pushed the empty beer bottle back into the coozy that was lodged into the water bottle cage.  I clipped in, and was on my way.

Burnett's Creek

My ride ended knowing that the forecast was calling for a fresh two inches or more of snow overnight.  The temps should remain sub-freezing cold through the weekend, the forecasters said.  I got back into my car and hoped they were right in their prognostications.

copy-of-asstd-pictures-009.jpg 
The autumnal equinox visits us yet again this week, bringing in the season of less light in the evenings and crisp, chilly mornings.  It is also a time to compile a stack of books to pass the hours of darkness away as winter approaches.  And it is also the time of year when we move away from drinking those light summer ales and ease our palates into the girth of stouts, porters and barleywines.  Books and beer go together like a hay wagon ride and a full moon sky.   Here’s a list of books with accompanying beers for your reading, err, drinking pleasure: 
Book:  Dharma Bums, Jack Kerouac.  
Beer:  Weyerbacher Heresy Stout 
The whisky barrel-aged, black thickness will warm you as much as pages and pages of talk about mountain trails, Boddhisattvas seeking the Buddha,  poetry, adventure in the high Sierras…Japhy and Ray will have you feeling light again.  Or is that the Heresy?
Book:  The Gift, Hafiz.
Beer:  Troeg’s Mad Elf 
Get lost in the poems of the great Sufi master while sipping on this fine holiday ale of high alcohol content.  Drinks like a barleywine, and feels like one too.  Is that the Elf spinning your head around, or is it the words of Hafiz?  Or is Hafiz the Mad Elf?  
Book:  anything by Wendell Berry
Beer:  Weyerbacher Imperial Pumpkin Ale 
Whether it’s Berry’s poems, novels, essays, or treatises on agrarianism, you cannot go wrong pairing him up with a spiced ale that goes down like a slice of pumpkin pie at a harvest jamboree. Take Berry and the ale in modest amounts; they are both able to sneak up on you and hit you on the side of the head—one the way good beer can, and the other way truth can. 
Book:  Coal Miner’s Daughter, Loretta Lynn
Beer:  Yuengling Porter Not the lager, but the porter.  
America’s oldest brewery and the story of one of America’s truest voices are perfect for an autumn evening get-together.  Maybe even put some of her music in the stereo for the occasion. 
Book:  The God of Small Things, Arundhati Roy
Beer:  Victory HopDevil IPA 
IPA means India Pale Ale, and basically means lots of hops.  Why India?  The Brits threw extra hops in the ale for the voyage to their colony.  The hops were added so the beer would taste halfway good to the colonists when it arrived in India.  Today, American craft brewers are all about big hoppy beers.  And one of the best is HopDevil.  Oh yeah, the book.  Roy exhibits her mastery of the written word set in her native India that will elude to the Devils of colonization and imperialism as told through this tragic yet beautiful story about love. 
Five beers.  Five books.  Five more days until the first day of fall.   Enjoy the beers.  Enjoy the books.  This fall, take a hike with Japhy and Ray on a mountain trail to find your Dharma Bum and see if you don’t run into your cousin Hafiz out there too.  Or go for a walk on a country road with Berry, and be sure to wave hello to the Coal Miner’s Daughter when she passes by.  Rest assured that if you do either of these, you will certainly find The God of Small Things.   
(written Fall 2006)      
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