Part
5: Can You Bear It?
Handsome Lake
campsite
Saturday, Sept. 23
0600 (local)
The sun has
yet to break the horizon, but what Homer (no, not Simpson)
immortalized as ‘rosy fingered dawn’ is caressing the sky
with the palest of pinks. My handsome is still asleep in our tent,
but it sure is handsome out here anyway.
On my way back from
‘visiting the woods’ I gather more firewood. After
clearing out the fire ring from last night’s fire, I busy
myself building a classic log house fire structure.
I always
know where he is. He’s right behind me.
“Gee,
Mac. I didn’t know you’d been a Girl Scout.”
“Maybe
‘cause I never was. The group I ran with at that age was more
like Girls Scouting for Trouble.”
I watch him mull that
over and decide not to pursue it. “But that’s a classic
Girl Scout fire structure.”
“Yeah, well, the
Marines must have borrowed it from them.”
We both
chuckle at the thought of Marines admitting they got anything from
the Girl Scouts. Nevertheless, with one match it’s nicely
lit.
Together we lower the food locker and start coffee.
He
sits on a log and I sit on the ground in front of him. He straddles
me with his legs, his thighs becoming the most perfect armrests ever
invented, his chest the most comfortable backrest on the planet.
Damn, if for no other reason, I’d love him for being the best
recliner I’ve ever had the pleasure to sit in.
“I
missed making love to you last night, and this morning,” I
whisper. “I know why we didn’t, but that doesn’t
mean I have to like it.”
He rubs my arms. “Me too,
Mac, but unfortunately bears like the way we smell when we make love
just as much as we do.”
We quietly watch the dawn raise
its light, bringing along with it the sound of birds greeting the
day. God this is good. I must remember to thank Keeter for this.
Speaking of whom, here he comes.
“Leave it to the
Marines to hit the beach first,” he says appreciatively.
“You
squids always do,” is my natural reply.
“OK, now
that we have the standard service rivalry taken care of for the day,
is the coffee ready?” Ya just gotta love a guy like
Keeter.
Harm pours us each a mug. “Heather still
asleep?” he asks.
“Naa. She’s fussing with
her hair, trying to figure out how to deal with it without using any
spray, mousse, gel, foam, whatever else.”
“Maybe I
should go lend a hand,” I offer.
“It’s up to
you, but I gotta warn you, she’s kinda peeved about this whole
‘no lotions or potions’ thing.”
Yeah, but
struggling with a bad hair day is a tad better than getting mauled by
a bear, isn’t it? Surely she agrees with that. But then again,
she is from New York City.
I gird myself and call out to her
from the tent entrance.
“Heather, it’s Mac, can I
come in?”
“Sure.”
I crawl in and sure
enough, she’s got a mirror set up and is surrounded by pins,
bands, bows and some things I can’t identify.
“Jack
said you’re having trouble with your hair.” God, that
sounds so lame. Trouble in the Mideast, trouble with the deficit,
trouble with meeting enlistment quotas all sound like trouble.
‘Trouble with your hair’ sounds, well, shallow.
“I
can’t do anything with it without my products. Jack knows that,
too. Do you know he actually searched my gear and confiscated my
deodorant, perfume, hairspray, mousse, even my body lotion!”
Thank
you, Keeter. I’ll sleep more soundly tonight knowing that you
made sure your wife didn’t bring any bear-magnets with
her.
“Well Heather, this area has a lot of black bears,
and all those things, anything with a scent, attracts them. That’s
why we were careful to cook downwind of our tents and hung the food
in a tree. A less-than-perfect hair day is a small price to pay to
avoid a close encounter with a bear.” Tell me she’s not
this much of a twit; I was starting to like her.
She sighs
deeply. “Of course. But what am I gonna do with this?”
She gestures to her head. “I look like Medusa!”
OK,
she just regained some of my respect. Joking about bad hair by
referring to a Greek myth scores significant points.
“Let
me help. Marine women have to always have their hair above their
collar while in uniform, so I know a few tricks.” In a couple
minutes her hair is tamed, she’s happy and we’re drinking
coffee with the guys.
Jack leans over to me and says “thanks”
in a heartfelt tone that seems way too serious for the situation, but
what do I know.
Harm’s got eggs scrambling, Heather’s
got sausage frying and I’ve got a stomach ready for
both.
After we clean up our breakfast stuff and rehang the
food locker, Keeter suggests a morning hike.
“We can
pick up a spur of the Tracy Ridge hiking trail called Johnnycake Run
not far from here and hike to the top of the rise over there,”
he indicates a well-forested ridge above the lake. “Up and
back’s about four and half miles altogether, according to the
map,” which he hands to Harm and me.
We look at each
other. He really did plan this all out, didn’t he? Man, he must
*really* feel guilty about Bitsey.
“Sounds great!”
we chorus.
Loading up with water bottles and some trail mix,
we set off for a morning adventure.
A half-hour into our hike
I’m more impressed than ever with Keeter’s vacation
planning skills.
“How’d you come to pick this
Forest, this campsite, this trail?” I ask.
“Mac,
it’s amazing what you can find out in a few hours on the
Internet. This forest is the largest National Forest in comfortable
flying time from DC for our plane heading north-west, which is where
the best colors were predicted for this weekend. Plus it’s
situated so we could route over a string of State Forests, not to
mention Harm’s Gran’s farm. The campsite is one of the
few primitive ones that are on the water and have potable water
available. This trail, which conveniently links up to the campsite,
is part of the trail system that’s in the Allegheny National
Recreation Area, one of the few roadless areas in the Forest. It’s
heavily treed in second growth timber; mostly oak but with beech,
black cherry, hickory even some hemlock and really old white pines.
It’s considered one of the best, but less used parts of the
trail system ‘cause it’s a little steep. I figured it’d
be perfect. And, if it got too tough, we could always turn back.”
He
grins.
“You got all that on the Internet?” Harm
asks.
“Yeah, man, it’s good for more than just
e-mailing ya know.”
The trail is well marked, the views
astounding, the climb just challenging enough to make it interesting.
At the top we rest, drink deeply from our water bottles, munch on
some trail mix and gawk at the vista.
“Wow.” I
think all four of us said that at once.
Harm claps Keeter on
the back. “Man, you did good, real good. Thanks so much for
this. You and Heather had a brilliant idea and your execution has
been flawless.” He jumps up, grabs me with him and spins me
around, laughing with the full blown mirth I have never heard from
him outside of ‘Sarah’.
I shriek a bit, giggle a
little and wiggle a lot against him.
He puts me down and we
touch foreheads together in a moment of thanks for the wonder of this
day, this weekend, this ‘us’.
As we begin to head
back down the trail Heather grabs me. “Mac, if you two don’t
figure out how to get rid of the ‘complications’, you
need to have your heads examined.”
Approaching
Handsome Lake campsite
1100 (local)
We’re coming
in downwind of our campsite. Eeouw, what is that smell?
Harm
raises his hand in the traditional military ‘halt’ sign.
We all stop, looking at each other. He motions us closer together,
while keeping us facing outward. The hair on the back of my arms and
neck is at full attention.
“Keeter?” he
asks.
“’Fraid so,” Jack answers.
“Mac,
stay here with Heather. Keeter and I are going to check out our
campsite.” He knows I want to protest, he also knows I know I
need to protect Heather.
“OK, be careful.”
Harm
and Keeter get about 10 yards away from us and start clapping their
hands, shouting loudly, letting off ear-shattering whistles and
generally making as much noise as possible.
They round the
bend to our campsite and I brace myself. After another thirty seconds
their noise stops and I hear Harm shout, “all clear, come on
in.”
Heather and I walk into a smelly and trashed
campsite. The food locker’s been pulled down and somehow burst
open (probably as a result of falling 10 feet from its tree top
perch). Food is strewn all over. Our tents are ripped, the rest of
our gear doing a great imitation of an outdoor rummage sale.
You
don’t need to be Ranger Rick to figure this one out: bear.
I
don’t get it. We policed our food, the locker was secured, what
attracted the bear?
I watch Harm and Keeter eye each other.
“Is Mac?”
“No. Is Heather?”
“No.
Did you two?”
“No. Did you guys?”
“No.
You know me better than that, Harm.”
“Yeah, but
you’re newlyweds.”
“Yeah, and I’d like
to live to my first anniversary.”
“Is it possible
she wasn’t yesterday, and is now?”
“Maybe,
how ‘bout Mac?”
“Don’t think so, but
maybe.”
OK, I’ve had all I can take of the cryptic
twins. “What the hell are you two talking about? And how could
Heather or I have anything to do with this? I know for a fact Jack
confiscated all of Heather’s lotions and potions. You know I
would never bring any.”
Harm and Keeter shuffle a
little, glance at each other, clearly trying to decide who’s
gonna speak next. Harm takes the bait.
“It’s just
that sometimes women attract bears just by being women.”
“So
just ‘cause we are women it’s our fault that bears
came into our camp and trashed our food?”
“Well,
yeah. Oh, NO! Ah, shit.” My god, they say it in unison. Same
words, same pauses, same chagrined look.
Just like riding a
bike, I see Harm and Keeter haven’t lost their skills at
defending their own idiocy. Bet they perfected this performance at
the Academy.
I turn to Heather. “Are you on your
period?”
She blinks, swallows and then manages to squeak
“no.”
“Me neither. OK hotshots, any other
ideas? Like maybe your combined testosterone level sent some message
on the wind to Yogi and BooBoo.”
“More like a
local trouble maker who’s gotten way too good at getting food
lockers down,” comes a new voice into the mix. We turn to the
green-clad Park Ranger striding into view.
“Boy, he
really got you,” he notes as he surveys the chaos that was our
campsite.
“The good news is that we shot him about an
hour ago.”
“You shot him?” Heather’s
clearly distressed.
“Tranquilizer dart, ma’am.
We’ll transport him deep into the area of the Forest people
don’t go in. But he’s been tagged twice. He does this
again and it’s bye bye BooBoo. Unfortunate, but we can’t
have him doing this kind of stuff.” He shakes his head.
Harm’s
inspecting the food locker tie down (or is it a tie up?). “It
looks like he gnawed through the rope, bringing the locker crashing
down, which broke it open. That’s pretty sophisticated thinking
for a bear, are you sure he doesn’t have an accomplice?”
I
can’t stifle the laughter and neither can the Ranger.
“Who
or what did you have in mind?” he asks. “Smokey’s
on our side and Yogi went to animation heaven quite a few years
ago.”
I can see my ace JAG investigator isn’t
happy that he can’t solve the crime, but sometimes we all have
to live with a little disappointment.
The Ranger consults a
notebook he’s pulled from his chest pocket. “It says here
you’re scheduled to stay tonight and leave tomorrow. What do
you folks wanna do? Stay or go? I can tell you that the weather
forecast is clear, with an expected overnight low of 45, so if your
sleeping bags are intact you shouldn’t have a problem even
though your tents are ripped.”
He walks around the food
strewn site. “Of course all the open food needs to be properly
disposed of. I see you have a few canned things and they'll be fine,
just wash the outside of the can carefully before you open it.
Fishing's good this weekend if you have equipment, and if you have
any survival training, there’s plenty of things to forage in
the forest.”
Survival training? I jump right in. “Sir,
I’m a Lt. Colonel in the Marines, these two are Naval aviators
(kinda glossing over the fact Jack resigned his commission six years
ago), among us we have more than adequate survival skills.”
He
looks at us with new respect. “I’d say so. OK then, shall
I assume you’re staying?”
We all exchange glances
and nods. “Yes,” one word, four voices.
He reaches
into the backpack he has slung over his shoulder and tosses two
packets to Harm and two to Keeter. “Have a good lunch, courtesy
the Forest Service. Enjoy the rest of your weekend.” He touches
the brim of his hat, turns and strides back down the trail.
“Damn,”
I hear Keeter swear. “I thought I was done with
MREs.”
Handsome Lake campsite
1230
(local)
We’ve cleaned up the campsite, taken all
appropriate precautions with spoiled food disposal and we’re
ready for the next part of our day, which has been bear-determined
for us. I don’t know what Keeter had originally planned, but
gathering food has become the priority for the afternoon.
“Hey,
guys, this isn’t so bad. I was gonna suggest we go fishing this
afternoon anyway. The North Branch of the Sugar Run is only a couple
miles down the road from here and it’s got trout. Brown,
spotted and rainbow trout.” Keeter’s rubbing his hands
together and wiggling his eyebrows.
I see Harm’s on
board with that idea.
“Heather, do you want to go
fishing?” I ask her.
She wrinkles her nose. “I
love to eat them, but I’d just as soon skip the process of
bait, catch and gut.”
“OK guys, here’s the
challenge,” I see the startled looks on their faces. “Heather
and me against you two. We’ll forage in the forest for edibles,
you fish for them. Whoever gets the most, or the best, by popular
acclaim, wins.”
“Oh yeah, Mac, and what’s
the prize?” Harm throws back at me.
“Well, if we win,
we get you two. If you win, you get us. Seeing how it’s our
dinner, those good enough stakes for you?
It’s a
four-way eyebrow wiggling contest as we leer at our respective
partners.
“You’re the only steak I’ll ever
want to eat, Mac.”