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Adventure Travel
by Doug Sassaman
So you've always wanted to bungie jump off the Kawarau suspension bridge in New
Zealand, kayak down the Royal Gorge in Colorado, or bike nude across the USA.
Well what if I told you there is a way to capture those same adrenaline thumping
sensations without actually having to go through the expense of traveling to New
Zealand, or the agony of applying a salve to the blisters on your plush bottom?
Prepare to stand in awe my friends, because I have found a way to enjoy the
essence of adventure travel within only a two-hour drive of your own home.
Whether you live in Pitipski, Iowa or El Nappo, Mexico, adventure travel lurks.
Unfortunately, like most great deals, there is a small snag in the nylon...you
must have kid(s), the more in number and younger in age, the more adventurous
your travel. Here's the secret I unlocked. Throw the kids in the car, drive to
your local slagheap, and enjoy. En route you'll experience the thrill of
plunging fifty meters, the icy splash of class V rapids, and the pain of
torturous third degree burns on your bits and pieces.
On the way to Tauranga Bay, New Zealand (a five hour drive from our home in
Auckland) for a sea kayaking adventure my daughter Emma opened my eyes. There is
a definite cycle a nine-month-old baby goes through in a long car trip. The
first thirty minutes are characterized by joyful play, then a slug of milk, and
if you timed your departure right, a blissful two-hour nap. A wakeful period
follows, where she stares out the window and wonders where in the hell we're
taking her. Her musings are interrupted by a pang a hunger. A squawk, a bottle,
and for the moment, all is well again. It's when the bottle thuds to the floor
that my adrenaline gland stirs. A small whimper is uttered and a toy is flopped
onto her lap. She regards it for a count of five and unceremoniously bats it to
the floor. A fuss, another toy, and in seconds it joins its brethren under the
drivers seat, perhaps never to be seen again.
In a chance discovery one day long ago, I found that non-toys held a child
captive for much longer than bright yellow giraffes or fuzzy colorful balls. An
empty beer bottle becomes the eighth wonder. I also uncovered an unsettling
parallel, the more dangerous an item, the longer the interest in it. If I could
trust her with a bag of glass or a bottle of boric acid, I've no doubt her
fascination would be boundless.
As I drive, my wife Denise attends to the baby. She's run though all her toys,
so an empty plastic Coke bottle is next. Emma snatches it and begins the
interrogation process where she examines and orally samples it from every angle
as if it were an alien communicator made of a lollipop material.
Fifteen minutes later, she's either figured out everything she needs to know
about the communicator, or realized it's just a stupid Coke bottle, in either
case, it ends up on the floor. A plastic grocery bag is next at bat, a watchful
eye to make sure she doesn't fit it over her head. That holds her for ten, and
then we start rummaging around the floor at our feet for the next enticing bit
of garbage-cum-toy. A road map must resemble a T-bone to her, because she
greedily stuffs it into her mouth, my wife quickly retrieves it and now a
dribbly tooth mark is our destination. Cup holders, floor mats, eyeglass cases,
wallets, "Hey that's mine!" banana peels, and books each go back in
succession and are increasingly cast aside with more vehemence. Until finally
the front of the car is cleaner then it's ever been and the back seat looks like
hurricane Emma spared no mercy. Denise finds a clump of lint and hair and
considers throwing it back into the maelstrom, but we know the end is close. No
more widgets, snidgets, or gidgets. Oh, what I would give for an ice scraper,
comb, or waterproof road atlas, name your price. Slowly, like a small nuclear
leak run amok, meltdown occurs.
You can't stop the wind or turn off the sun, nor can you stop a bored
nine-month-old baby, strapped in the back seat like Hannibal Lector, from
crying. Back when I was a kid, my brothers and I were free to roam and leap from
seat to seat like a bunch of chimpanzees, but today's world takes no chances. We
never entertain for a second the idea of taking her out and holding her. I'd
crash into a phone pole straight away, and if we survived, Emma would be
scuttled off to a foster home.
There are two ways to deal with a meltdown of this proportion. The first is to
drive like the Devil himself. Don't stop for lights, ignore signage, and assume
any flashing red lights behind you are Demon Dogs on the chase. It ends the
torture faster, but legal fees and representation can be expensive. The other
option is to jam on the brakes, preferably in front of a Dairy Queen. Air the
kid out, and let her burn some fuel by romping around on the pristine floors of
the DQ while you stuff your gob with a Peanut Buster Parfait. No guarantees on
containment, reactor leakage may continue when you put the plutonium back in the
isolation chamber.
I chose to gun it. We were close. I forgot where we were going, why we were
going, and what prompted us to leave the safety of our house. I slipped into a
coma with my hands clutching the steering wheel and a brick on the gas pedal,
Denise tried to read the same page of her book for thirty minutes, and Emma
screamed from the Bay of Islands to Tauranga Bay. Her banshee keen rouses
cemeteries we pass. We arrive and you've never seen a child taken out of a car
seat faster. When I pull her out the scream stops in mid-screech, she looks
around calmly, and if she could talk I swear she would have said, ?Oh, are we
here?'
The next day we ditched Emma and went sea kayaking. We fended off sharks with
our paddles, lost a few people in the treacherous sea caves, one guy next to me
was stung by a box jellyfish and paralyzed, blah, blah, blah?all I could think
about the whole time was what Emma had in store for us on the drive home.
About the Author:
Doug Sassaman is a freelance writer. He writes a bi-weekly humor column, 'Life
In The Cosmic-Burp,' dedicated to exploring the world of the obscure and
mundane.
Doug and his family currently reside in the Southern hemisphere in New Zealand
to see how the other half.
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