Thursday, May 7, 2009

So Far, So Dumb (Cigar Smoke 5-7-09)

First of all, before I try to be semi-funny, I want to thank all of you who sent me emails and cards about my having to put down my Airedale, Hadley. They meant a lot to me. Thank you very, very much.

Well, to kind of get my head out of what had been going on here, I decided to take another trip up to my new hovel in Oregon. I’m in the process of trying to make the place livable and I needed to take some special bunk beds up there.

So, after reading all the bed ads on craigslist for two weeks, I bought this kind of funky regular double bed with a twin bed on top. I got it at Couch Potatoes. I was going to haul it up to Oregon in my big old Dodge Durango. Finally, that polluting, gas-guzzling sumbitch was going to pay off.

The only little problem arose the day after I bought the beds. I sold the Durango. Pretty good planning, huh? (The White House has called me to help them screen their cabinet nominees. I kid Obama.) Just so you don’t think I’m completely nutso, I only sold the Durango because it wouldn’t start. I got stranded four times. It wouldn’t even start after I cursed at it and kicked it silly.

I got a neat used car that I really like, except it is not made to haul funky large bunk beds. It did, however, have a roof rack, and that’s where I made a really bad decision.

I was able to stuff all the wooden bed parts in the car. Yes, it was not completely safe. I had planks and springs and boxes going from the folded-down back-seat area up to the passenger side in the front. Just jammed in there. I could barely get in the driver’s seat, but I could see the right side rearview mirror, so I thought it would be relatively safe. My son, Casey, helped me get everything in there, but he made me sign a release form so he could show people at the funeral.

So far, so dumb. Then I decided to put the double-bed mattress on the roof and drive 830 miles. So far, so dumber. Being a conservative type, I wrapped the mattress in a special plastic tarp cover, and then I tied it down to the roof. And I knew the wind would be brutal, so I got six tie-down straps and cinched those suckers down tight. And I bought a bunch of bungee cords. And — I hate to say it — it looked pretty damn secure.

So I kissed Marge goodbye, and she said those 10 special words that I love, “Honey, you got the life insurance premiums paid, haven’t you?”

So off I went. I’m tooling along the 210 Freeway, everything is smoother than Nicole Kidman’s butt, and I merge onto Interstate 5, heading for hovelville. I am smoking a stogie I bought on the Internet so I didn’t have to pay California taxes; I am listening to Waylon say he is “too dumb for New York City and too ugly for L.A.,” and then I look out my left-hand window (the only window I can see out of) and I see a shadow. And the shadow is flapping around. Flapping shadows are not good. Then I hear the flapping shadow. Audible flapping shadows are even worse.

I pull off the freeway at Gorman. I stop at a gas station and I get out and look at the roof. It was like looking at Rosie O’Donell — it wasn’t pretty. The plastic was all ripped up; the straps were loose; the bungee cords were laughing.

So I go into this hokey AM-PM store and I look around for roof rack help and end up with some electrical tape, some duct tape and two coils of cheap rope. I spend 45 minutes in 60-mile an hour winds tying up that mattress, and I use up all the rope and the tape and the sanity I have left.

I go on down the road. It’s my life. I do not get far. I just make it over the Grapevine and the flapping is now so loud it’s making Big Bird horny. I get out and look up and I shudder. There is a loose, flapping, bleeding mattress, with ripped strands of tape and frayed rope everywhere.

Luckily, I have stopped at a Mobil station that has some pretty heavyweight tie-down materials. I buy four more cinch straps, wider ones. I get some better rope that doesn’t come apart as soon as you pay for it. And I get industrial-strength tape with fiberglass threads embedded in it. I spend another hour tying down that mess.

I head up the road again. I’m not having quite as much fun as earlier. I had to tell Waylon to put a lid on it. (You’re too ugly for Nashville!) Somehow I made it another couple hundred miles to a rest stop south of Stockton. I get out to go to the bathroom. Even bad roof-rack movers have to pee, dammit.

And, as I’m walking to the restroom, this guy next to me looks at the roof of my car, looks back at me, and then says, “Hey Tom, I loved you in ‘The Grapes of Wrath.”

I’m not going to tell you if I made it up to Oregon or not. However, if you’re driving northbound on Interstate 5 between Stockton and Sacramento, you might dial it down a few notches.