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Posts Tagged ‘Max Wareham’
July 20th, 2009
by Ned
After a couple of days spent in a state park outside of Austin, it was time to get Max to the airport. He had to get from El Paso back for Connecticut in three days, and we still had 600 miles of ground to cover for that to happen–plus, we were low on fuel.
The result was slow going at first. We were just entering west Texas. We found plenty of grill and barbecues spots, but waste vegetable oil was scarce. It took us a whole day of only marginally fruitful searching for fuel to get us to San Antonio for the night. 100 miles down, 500 to go.
Now we were in west Texas, the hardcore Texas of legend that made our ridiculous secession fib seem semi-plausible.
In the San Antonio Wal-Mart parking lot, we ended up parked next to Richard, a guy living out of his car in the same parking lot who spent three hours or so hovering around the bus, telling us about the ministry he used to be a member of. The conversation frequently turned to the Bible and bits and pieces of Biblical trivia when he was around — for example, Richard’s assertion that the pyramids at Egypt couldn’t possibly be as old as “science” told us, since the earth is only 6,000 years old.
The temptation to argue any one of these points was strong, but I resisted. Richard was obviously pretty lonely, as anyone occupying a Wal-Mart parking lot alone on a nightly basis would be. I didn’t want to tarnish what was probably one of his few recent lengthy conversations with other, attentive human beings. So, in a minor lapse in my adherence to the blogger code, I managed to keep my mouth shut.
We get an early start the next morning. We had little fuel, and two days to travel 500 miles. It was going to be one of the more frantic sprints of the entire trip.
Tags: Max Wareham, Texas
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May 19th, 2009
by Ned
[Editor's note: This is the third part of a serialized story about the journey from Connecticut to Minnesota to get the bus for the Juan Way tour. Read parts one and two.]
They hit their first major roadblock when their bus pulled into Pittsburgh around 9:30 a.m. on March 7. The Pittsburgh Intermodal Station had temporarily closed, so the Greyhound bus instead stopped at a claustrophobic little building on the outskirts of town. Bus stations are rarely comfortable places, but this place was worst than most. It was directly under the highway, pressed up against a large brick wall on one side. On the other side, across the black Ohio River, they could see the silhouettes of abandoned factories, shadows of faded industry. As if to make their surroundings even more depressing, the makeshift station was right near a prison.
John, Ali, Max, and Jae were all eager to get out of Pittsburgh as soon as possible. But no sooner had they stepped into the station the local television station warned of a massive snowstorm that had blanketed the Midwest. Greyhound employees told the assembled passengers in the station that there would be no buses headed west for three to four days. They were stranded Pittsburgh.
As the night wore on, the station became even more crowded as more people came off buses from the east and found themselves at a dead end. Max, realizing that there was virtually no chance of him getting to Minnesota and back before midterm exams, reluctantly took the next bus headed back toward New York. Ali, John, and Jae, meanwhile, hunkered down for a very long stay.
Ali was particularly mortified by what he saw during his stay in Pittsburgh. Most of the people stranded in that station were extremely poor and couldn’t afford hotel rooms. Bus station employees provided cots, but they didn’t have enough for everyone. Eventually, they provided free cups of water as well, but no food. Ali, John, and Jae helped set up the cots, but practically everyone in the station came to the unanimous conclusion that women and children should have access to the cots first, and the adult men could sleep on the floor if none were left over.
For two nights, Ali, John, and Jae slept on the floor of the station. To pass the time, Ali began writing stream-of-consciousness observations in the Moleskine notebook he had brought with him. At one point, he wrote:
lonesome faces. you can tell they too have the pittsburgh
city blues. lou’s not here to sing us no tunes
but then again, pigs feet are very hard to come by round
these parts. us vegetarians don’t have a chance
It was his first experiment with poetry. When he later returned to UCONN, he changed his major from political science to English so he could study poetry.
On the third day, March 9, the three ragged travelers wandered Pittsburgh in search of something, anything, to pass the time. Jae and Ali bought some Captain Morgan, poured it into a half-empty bottle of Arizona iced tea, and took surreptitious swigs of it in a local diner. John, never much of a drinker, came along but declined a drink.
They didn’t go back to the temporary Greyhound station that night. Ali and Jae, sick of sleeping on cold tile, convinced John that they should split the cost of a room at the Holiday Inn Express. For the first, and only, time on that trip, John and Ali spent the night in a place with beds and showers.
Continue reading the story here.
Tags: Ali Telmesani, Buying the Bus, Jae, John Paganetti, Max Wareham, Pittsburgh
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May 19th, 2009
by Ned
[Editor's note: This is the second part in a serialized story about they journey from Connecticut to Minnesota to pick up the bus for the Juan Way tour. Read the first part here.]
On March 6, about a month after John had purchased the bus on eBay, the trio began their journey to Minnesota. Ali and John took a late-night Greyhound from Hartford to New York City, where Max met them at the station. So far, they were making good time; it seemed like they would be able to get to Minnesota and back in under a week, before spring break ended. They boarded a bus to Pittsburgh, feeling good about their efficiency.
On the way to Pittsburgh, Ali noticed that the stranger he sat next to was writing with intense focus into a notebook. Ali discovered that the man, Jae, was writing lyrics. He was a rapper, tall, handsome, and fashionably dressed; he stuck out among the mostly impoverished and disheveled bus passengers. He said he was originally from Nigeria, and spoke English with a thick accent. Jae was studying at Boston University and was on his way to Minneapolis to visit his girlfriend. Ali, a guitar player and singer that wrote folk songs in his spare time at UCONN, was eager to spitball with a fellow musician. Ali rapped some of his own lyrics for Jae. Impressed, Jae agreed to travel with the three friends as far as Chicago.
Continue reading the story here.
Tags: Ali Telmesani, Buying the Bus, Jae, John Paganetti, Max Wareham
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May 19th, 2009
by Ned
[Editor's note: The following is a the beginning of a serialized story about traveling from Connecticut to Minnesota to pick up the bus for the Juan Way tour.]
 Flickr user somjuan
In January 2008, John Paganetti, a Zen-like senior at the University of Connecticut and a friend of mine from high school, started trolling eBay for decommissioned school buses. His plan, hatched partially out of boredom, was to buy an old school bus, convert it to a more affordable biodiesel engine, and grab some buddies for a summer road trip. The market for old school buses, it turned out, was surprisingly competitive. John was outbid for weeks. Finally on Feb. 4 he entered the winning bid of about $2,000 for a 1989 Blue Bird Conventional with an International chassis resting in a lot up in Dexter, Minnesota.
A couple days after John placed his winning bid, he talked on the phone the seller, a mechanic named Kim Wilson. Kim owned a massive used vehicle lot. He and his small staff would work on the cars that came in, negotiate the sales, and relax in the hot tub he had installed in his office at the end of the day.
Winning the online auction had been the easy part: Now John had to go halfway across the country and actually pick up the bus. But he had midterms looming and wasn’t sure that he would have the time to make the journey 1,400 miles west and back until spring break, in mid-March. Kim said it wasn’t a problem and promised he would hold onto the bus for as long as John needed.
Ali Telmesani and Max Wareham agreed to make the trip with him. The three of us had attended Middletown High School in Connecticut with John. Ali, a year younger than John, had followed him to UCONN. Max and I had both ended up in New York City; I study philosophy at New York University, and Max studies jazz guitar at the New School. I found out that they were going to be accompanying John to Minnesota when Ali was visiting Max and me in early February. I desperately wanted to go with them. The trip had always seemed like a distant pipe dream to me, but John’s purchase of the bus suddenly presented a road trip across America as a reality.
I am, first and foremost, a writer, and this seemed like the opportunity to tell the story of a lifetime. It was an adventure, perhaps the most ambitious one I would ever have an opportunity to participate in. Not only that, but it would give me an opportunity to travel more and see more of the United States in a few months than most people will ever have the opportunity to see. So when John asked, I told him without reservation that he could sign me up for the entire road trip.
But as much as I wanted to be part of the first leg of the journey to get the bus, my spring break didn’t line up with UCONN’s, and I had midterms to contend with. So John, Ali and Max would have to make the journey on their own, and I extracted a promise from them to tell me every last detail of the journey. That is what you are about to read about.
Continue reading the story here.
Tags: Ali Telmesani, Buying the Bus, John Paganetti, Kim Wilson, Max Wareham, Ned Resnikoff
4 Comments »
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