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296 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 3958
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Title: HPR3958: Bikepacking in 1993 without technology
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3958/hpr3958.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 17:58:59
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3958 for Wednesday the 4th of October 2023.
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Today's show is entitled, by packing in 1993, without technology.
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It is hosted by nightwise, and is about 19 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, nightwise looks back at his very first bike packing adventure and its absence of technology.
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On the edge of real and cyber space, there's one place you can go and you've found it.
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Welcome to the nightwise.com podcast.
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And I got to say, after quite a few years of doing this, this might just be a premiere
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where you're not in the car or on a walk, but actually on the bike with me.
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The wine you hear is the sound of my electrical powered hybrid bike that allows me to fly around the country
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while I'm enjoying the scenery, getting some good air and for the first time recording a podcast.
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So it's a mini episode and today I don't want to talk about technology, but the absence of it.
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And to do that, I need to take you back.
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And I need to take you back in time 30 years, which for some of you might be more than your lifetime.
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But I want to take you back to a very, very young nightwise, that before nightwise was even nightwise,
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because that didn't happen until 95.
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I went on my first adventure.
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It was, let me guess, 1993.
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And my girlfriend at the time had to do a book report for school.
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She didn't like the read I did.
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So she gave me a book that she had to read called Summer 17.
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And it's about a boy who has a difficult home situation and decides to buy a race bike, pack his tent,
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and drive to Santiago de Compostela from Belgium all the way to the south.
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The book is a youth book, not a children's book, but young adult book.
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And it talks about the adventures that he has.
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And I read it, and I immediately fell in love with it.
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I finished it, I read up a book report, and I told my parents that for my holiday, I was going to go on an adventure.
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So I did.
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I got a mountain bike from my brother, who just purchased one.
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I got some cycling bags, some saddle bags from my girlfriend's brother, and I got a map.
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Where was I going to go?
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I had no idea.
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I didn't know if I could bike that well.
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I didn't know how far I could bike.
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I didn't know what to bring.
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I didn't know anything.
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And these were the days without the internet, where you could not research stuff.
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The book, you needed a map, and you needed a library.
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But what I did figure out is that it was not about the destination.
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It was all about the journey.
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I wanted to travel.
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I wanted to experience what it would be like to go on a bike ride, on an adventure, on my own.
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So I calculated that I needed about 80 kilometers a day, and started looking at the map.
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And pretty soon, I got interested by the coastline.
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The Belgian coastline is about 60 kilometers long.
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It's tiny, tiny, up against the North Sea.
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And when you follow it down, you come into the North of France.
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Dunkirk, Calais, La Havre, and all the way down to the Omaha and the famous D-Day beaches.
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It was perhaps a little bit out of my action range, but I thought,
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you know what, if I can do about 100 K a day and I got about a week,
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I might be able to pedal up all the way from Ostend to La Havre.
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And that's what I did.
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The only thing I had was a map, and I went over to the local youth hostel to get a membership card.
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I got a list with all the different youth hostels that were out there.
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I circled them on my map, and using a crude, just a ruler as kind of a crude action radius finder,
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I plotted a map from youth hostel to youth hostel.
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And it was adventurous to start that journey.
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The preparation was all the fun.
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I started going for bike rides every single night to work on my condition.
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And pretty soon I would do 40K an evening without breaking a sweat.
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Then I started thinking about packing.
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What did I need to take?
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Camera, a walkman, clothes, what kind of clothes did I need?
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I didn't know that I needed a good rain jacket, a good rain pants,
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and overshoes for my shoes when it would be raining.
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Because when you're out on your bike trekking and it starts to rain,
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well it starts to rain and you got to go, you got to go on.
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So the day of the big adventure came.
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Everything had been packed and repacked and repacked and repacked and repacked for about a thousand times.
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And this little 5,000 Belgian Frank, which is dirt cheap, mountain bike with these hand-me-down saddlebags was packed with my clothes,
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my gear, and even a tent.
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Because I was afraid that, oh my god, should I strand somewhere, I needed a tent.
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Am I sleeping back?
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And I set off on my big adventure.
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I rode to the train station and took the train towards a stand.
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And even that first day was fantastic.
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Because you got to think about how adventurous it is to go out and cycle on your own,
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with only a map, because I didn't have a cell phone.
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There was no wireless internet, so I was really on my own.
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Every day, before every evening, I had to call ahead to the next youth hostel to book a bed,
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and I had to call home to tell them where I was and where I was going.
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My uncle, bless him, had a copy of my route, and he knew every day where he was, where I was.
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He was basically a geography nut, and he knew which roads I was going to take.
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So if I didn't check in, they would know where to find the body.
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They were very worried I'd never done that before, and I was oblivious to whatever was going to happen to me.
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So I set off that first day leaving in Ostend, cycling along the Belgian coastline.
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The sea on my right, the cars and the trams, and the people on my left.
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First I rode the causeway, the boardwalk.
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And then pretty soon, if I could, I even hit the beach,
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plowing my little bike at an insane speed, about 30kph,
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because once you get that bike rolling, it really rolls.
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Along the surf.
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It was hard to get back to the road, because I had to plow through the beach,
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but those few kilometers on the surf with my tires through the water,
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the sea literally lapping at my feet, it felt fantastic.
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One of the reasons it felt so great was because I had prepared.
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I wanted to make sure that I would have the best time of my life,
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so I prepared some mixtapes for myself.
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Some of them were with orchestral music, you know, movie soundtracks to really give it an atmosphere.
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Some of the pop songs, some were like stuffed with vingelis and onion,
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god knows what, different moods, different mixtapes.
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And I would prepare them weeks out of head.
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Mixed them down, make them ready, and I had six or seven tapes with me and my little walkman.
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And I set off.
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The first youth hostel, I wasn't very lucky.
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The first ride was only 40 kilometers from Ostend to think it's Maria Kevke.
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But once I got there, it was full.
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I had apparently very enthusiastically walked around the back to ask if there was room,
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and the owner didn't really like that.
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I was supposed to ring the front door, which he didn't answer,
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because he was in the shower.
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I walked around the back.
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And the lady thought I was going to stalk her.
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It turned into a row. She got mad.
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I didn't know what to do.
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And she said, I don't have any room, go away.
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So the only youth hostel that I could go to,
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that about, I think it was seven pm,
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was the one in Ostend, 40 kilometers, back again.
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First night sleeping in Ostend.
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The adventure had begun with already one major incident.
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But I managed to pedal on, and it was a great adventure.
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And I think that, as I'm cycling right now with this hyper-modern bike,
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my smartphone, with a GPS, and God knows what,
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literally sitting on my steering column,
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I do start to think if the adventure,
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today, doing the same thing today,
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would be just as adventurous that it used to be.
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Because there are many stories I can tell.
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I can tell you about the first stay in Kelly.
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Because these are stories that I can only tell you.
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I have a couple of pictures snapped with my Kodak camera.
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But I don't have any selfies.
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I don't have any record of the events.
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Only the book that I wrote, the diary that I wrote,
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which is still somewhere.
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And that's it.
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Every moment counted, because, you know,
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it was the only way to perceive reality,
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not through your cell phone, not through your camera,
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but just being there.
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I can tell you a thousand stories about,
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I don't know, the first people I met in the youth hostel in Kelly,
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dining with an international group of strangers
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who only met each other for one night,
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because everybody was off to the next destination the next day.
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So those few moments we had were really,
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they were real, they were, they counted.
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So I can tell you about the first climb that I did
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in the pouring mist and rain up the Kaplani behind Kelly.
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The suicidal dive down into the village of Escal,
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which I only learned years later was an incredibly steep descent
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that I did with an overloaded and poor brake centered bike.
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I can tell you about the time that I looked for something
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to eat in Boulogne,
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and I came across this Vietnamese restaurant that looked
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a little bit round down.
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I sat down and I ordered something,
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and the owner looked at me and the place was deserted,
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and he asked me, who said this?
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I said, yes.
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And he became ecstatic because his father was saved
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by a Belgian medic while he was a prisoner of war.
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So out comes the dad and the entire family
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because they had Belgian guests.
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I dined nearly for free amidst a family of strangers
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who took me in as their own.
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I could tell you about the time that I got my first flat.
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I was on my way from Boulogne to Le Tripor
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when my rear tire gave out.
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I was excited because I had a wrench with me,
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and I was able to fix this.
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Only to find that the wrench that I needed to disconnect my tire
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was not amongst the gear that I brought with me.
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So 10 kilometers of pushing my bike towards the nearest town
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only to find the bike shop closed.
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I insisted,
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permanently, please, fix my bike,
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I need to get to Boulogne before the evening.
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I need to get to Le Tripor before the evening's over.
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So I had dinner at a local small restaurant,
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got talking with the owner and the patrons that were there
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because it was half restaurant, half bar.
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And Madame France, as she was called,
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served me royally.
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I wasn't allowed to pay for my drinks
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because I was on an adventure, she said,
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if I could only send her a card once I got to my destination.
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I promised to do so,
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and did when I got to La Javra.
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I can talk to you about meeting Vicki.
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Vicki was a Canadian girl, 21 years old,
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who was doing that bike through Europe thing on her own
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for a year.
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She was packed like a professional and taught me a lot
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about the maps that I needed to use
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and what I needed to bring with me.
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Suffice to say, I was packed like a tourist
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which for a trekking traveler is a grave insult.
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I had too much gear and my bike was a disaster waiting to happen.
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We, I followed her to Eiffto to a youth hostel
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where I was not allowed to sleep inside
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because there were three girls already sleeping inside.
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Two girls from Yugoslavia had booked a bed
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in the communal sleeping hall.
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The Canadian girl had booked a bed
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and I had arrived unannounced.
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So I was more than welcome to pitch my tent
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in front of the youth hostel
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while the old proprietor explicitly told me,
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he did not want me intermixing with the girls during the night.
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As the evening fell and everything got quiet,
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I heard a soft tap on my tent.
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One of the Yugoslavia girls told me to get inside,
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take a bunk and we all slept together until the morning,
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each in their separate bunks
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because you know, I was an innocent guy.
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There are so many stories I can tell you about that first adventure
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but it was one because I was so disconnected.
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I was disconnected from home
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and I had no way to call or alert somebody when something was wrong,
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which was exciting,
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but which was also extremely liberating
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because the only people you could talk to were the people
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that were really, really around you.
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And that made for beautiful, warm and honest conversations.
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I would love, I had a little flask with water of course
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and you'd go through quite a bit of water
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if you're cycling 15 or 30 pounds of luggage on your bike in the sun.
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And whenever I would run out,
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I would just stop at the side of the road and knock on the door
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and ask if I could refill my water bottle.
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I always, you struck up a conversation with people
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and I've met many, many interesting people
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who had each stories to tell.
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And those were the memories that I needed
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to store, which brings me to my second thing that I mentioned earlier.
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I needed to pay attention.
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There was no looking on my smart phone.
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No, no, no, the world was there.
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I had to seize it and if I wanted to really experience something
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I had to pay attention.
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Paying attention to the landscape, to the road, to the traffic
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but also to the people that I met.
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I really enjoyed that.
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And of course, there was the music.
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A fair selection of six, nineteen minutes tapes
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that accompanied me through my voyages.
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Each playing over and over on my headphones
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as batteries slowly ran out.
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And each, because I heard them in so many places,
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giving a soundtrack to some beautiful memories.
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I cannot hear Curier by Mr. Mr.
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or forever young by Alphaville
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without thinking of a thousand beautiful views,
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hundreds of places that I passed.
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People that I saw, Visage's scenery memories
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that had been accustomed, that had been tied to those,
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I don't know, 150 songs that I had with me.
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Maybe nostalgia makes us look more favorably upon the past
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and it might be the coming of age.
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But on the other hand, there is something to be said
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about disconnecting and reconnecting with reality.
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And maybe as I get older, I start to notice that more and more
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than in order to really connect with people,
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we need to disconnect from the digital world around us.
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To, I don't know, maybe experience reality more,
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make memories last in our heads, not on our camera roll,
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to really taste reality.
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And use cyberspace as a way to enhance it but not replace it.
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Maybe it's just a one-drinks-of-an-old guy
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thinking back on his glory days when he was innocent and young
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and maybe extremely, yeah, probably extremely foolish.
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But the absence of technology doesn't mean that there is an absence of experience,
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that there is an absence of the things that you can remember
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or see or hear or talk or connect or whatever.
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One helps the other but doesn't need to replace it.
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So, let that technology work for you instead the other way around.
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Bye.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio
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and Hacker Public Radio does work.
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Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast,
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then click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is.
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Hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by
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an honesthost.com, the internet archive and our sings.net.
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On the Sadois status, today's show is released
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under Creative Commons, Attribution 4.0 International License.
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