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Home Sweet Home! Trip complete: 1,350 miles traveled
Garry and the Girls
Ahhhhh! The comfort of real pillows and my
real bed! Yes, I have finally completed my dream adventure, riding 1350 miles, the length of
California. Along the way and since returning home, I have been asked hundreds of questions
such as, "What was it like? What did you learn? Was it harder than you thought it
would be? What's next?" And the most common question, "Does your butt hurt?"
"The girls" (Guenevere and Ginger) and I have experienced many towns and lots of
wonderful people and incredible views of California. After a week-long camping trip, most of
us have lots of stories to tell. But after 100 days of riding and camping, my stories take
longer than most people have time to listen. Some lessons I learned are hard to explain, and
I struggle to not play them down or over-dramatize the hardships.
My trip was more than I expected in every way. The adventure could not be explained in a few
words or paragraphs. It was as much an emotional journey as a physical one. Away from the
daily distractions of modern living at the pace of Silicon Valley, California, is beautiful
and full of wonderful people and wildlife. My focus was not on malls, freeways, stock markets,
and local business news, but, more on the beauty of life around me. Of course, I was closer to
those instinctual survival skills since the basics are what I dealt with daily. "Where
will I sleep and what will I eat?" was the mission statement of each day.
The education I received could never be learned in an arena or on a week-end camping trip.
The lessons I learned were important because there was a test every day and mistakes could
be more costly so far from home.
The bonding formed with the girls (my horses) is greater than I ever expected. People
commented daily on how my horses and I had a language of our own and how dependent we seemed
on each other. Being together day and night for 100 days, each day bringing new obstacles
and challenges, made us all sensitive to each others' behaviors.
My horses were challenged daily and they passed every test they faced. They were asked to
ride hard and face "sensitivity tests" each and every day. Bridges of all shapes
(some with only grates for floors); other animals they had never seen before; strange shapes
and colors everywhere; and large tons of steel making huge amounts of noise as they came
towards them at incredible speeds (the notorious horse-eating semi-trucks). Trails were
often narrow or filled with snow, and water was not always there when thirst arose. There
were never any barn-sour attitudes as we just kept venturing farther from home. My horses
are the true heroes of the trip.
In Be Tough or Be Gone (1984) Tom Davis wrote, "When you travel by pack train
you get a whole new perception of the goodness of people." (Tom is a cowboy who in
1976 rode his horse and led a pack train 4,500 miles from El Paso, Texas, to Fairbanks,
Alaska.)
I depended on this goodness of people for living quarters almost daily and they always
came through. Many others came along and gave me help, in many forms. Sometimes they gave
water, directions, food, or words of encouragement. Those who just gave me a chance to talk
to another human being helped more than anyone but I knew. I depended on my support team to
bring the correct supplies at the correct time and place. I depended on friends and family
back home to care for my animals and possessions I had left behind. And I depended on my
horses of course. It was not a trip I could have done alone and done the so-called "survive
off the land" thing that is often spoken of. The fact is, I had a dream adventure
I will never forget and I will always be in debt to those who helped to make it happen.
Garry Stauber
Long Rider
I enjoy hearing from people about their own adventures or how my journey has
influenced or moved you. Please write me personally at
garry@dream-adventures.com.
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