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Chinook
by George Hosier - February 21
Hooding
The winter Olympics are commandeering a lot of news time lately.
It’s a great thing, competition and all. Training hard, facing
formidable odds, bringing home the gold for your country, abusing
steroids—these are epic deeds and certainly newsworthy. I don’t
begrudge those spandex-wearing, ridiculously beautiful people
their well-earned publicity. I just feel a slight twinge of
jealousy that the Moose Hole Olympics never got equal recognition
back when I was a kid.
In retrospect, I suppose we wouldn’t have liked it if we had
gotten it. We wanted to maintain a low profile, we were simply
innovating ways to entertain ourselves on those long winters in
bush Alaska. We may not have had teams of crack international
reporters, poking several million dollars worth of electronic
equipment in our faces at every move, but that didn’t stop us from
pouring our very souls into astounding demonstrations of athletic
prowess.
Just about anyone can strap a pair of glorified Popsicle sticks on
his feet and jump off a mountain. As long as a slippery inclined
surface, gravity, and a human being converge at the same point in
the space-time continuum, the person is going to wind up at the
bottom of the slippery inclined surface. It’s a law of nature.
However if you rename it “skiing” and invite other Popsicle stick
owners from around the world to fall down a mountain with you,
suddenly we find footage of the event being beamed around the
world on prime-time television. The participant who happens to
arrive at the bottom soonest and with the most panache, gets a big
gold nickel on a strap and never has to work again. It’s a
complete racket!
A much more challenging winter downhill sport is “hooding”. If
sports reporters were actually interested in recording a contest
that showcases the heart-pounding adrenaline rush of fierce
competition, they would have been all over Ptarmigan Knob when I
was a kid. There they would have seen it all—the indomitablility
of the human spirit, dreams and aspirations transformed into
triumph or tragedy by a few moments of ruthless fate and
breathless skill.
Yet, in spite of those glorious exploits on Ptarmigan Knob, the
term “hooding” is a micro colloquialism limited to but a handful
of living humans. Specifically, it is reserved to the vocabularies
of the following: Me; my brother, Justin; Larry Fred; the twins,
Jack and Jill Smorkstini; Donna Sam; Anika Van der Veen; and
“Walrus” Fahnestock.
Only we eight who smirked at death on Ptarmigan Knob 25 years ago
can understand the camaraderie forged there. For the rest of you,
a little background would be helpful. Ptarmigan Knob was the name
of the tailbone of a granite spine that snaked for 15 miles from
Moose Hole to the caribou birthing fields atop the windswept
tundra of McCollum Plateau. Alascom had built a microwave tower
atop Ptarmigan Knob, affording Moose Holians the immense
recreational advantage of an access road.
The road turned off of the highway on the floor of the Tanana
River Valley at Moose Hole Lake. From there it snaked its way
through alder thickets, black spruce stands and poplar groves
until it had gained a thousand feet of elevation in three miles of
hairpin switchbacks. There at the summit the road ended at a chain
link fence that enclosed “The Tower”.
You weren’t supposed to go inside the fence and mess around with
The Tower. There were imposing looking signs to that effect--at
least they had been imposing prior to a decade of target practice.
Besides, The Tower was taller than it looked. About half way up,
you’d get a sudden rush of vertigo when you looked down, that
nearly washed you off of the narrow steel ladder. It was a really
weird feeling...er...so I’ve been told. But the access road
provided plenty of leisure activity on its own. ATVing, snow
machining, hunting, sledding—there were lots of things to do on
the Ptarmigan Knob tower access road.
However, the most memorable times of my brash youth involved
activities that could only be reached by little-known trails
branching off of the access road. For instance, if you parked at
The Tower fence and skirted it to the right, you would drop down
off of the gravel pad into a nice little birch wood. There was
barely a trail there, but if you knew where you were going, you
could walk southwest for about five minutes to a place where the
trees suddenly stopped growing.
A few feet from the tree line, a massive fist of gnarled rock
marked the border between a wooded ridge and the end of the Earth.
It wasn’t the end of the Earth actually, just the Southeast Face
of Ptarmigan Knob. Although it wasn’t technically a vertical drop,
for the first hundred yards it might as well have been.
We called that first hundred yards “The Bare Spot”. Nothing grew
on it except a couple of scraggly willows. Snow didn’t even
accumulate there. It either slid to the bottom or blew away, but
enough snow and ice would remain to disguise the razor-sharp warts
of rock that punctuated The Bare Spot, like magnets on a wall of
frozen grease.
At the bottom of The Bare Spot, where the slope abruptly flattened
out to a more respectable angle, a dense wall of trees sprang up.
They were big trees, stout and unyielding, with their feet planted
solidly in a tangled concertina of alder and rose bushes. It was
here that the sport of hooding was practiced.
Donna Sam would be the one to give the annual signal that it was
time for the opening of the Moose Hole Winter Hooding Olympics.
She lived in a cabin at the base of Ptarmigan Knob, so she was
able to monitor the condition of the slope. As soon as enough of a
glaze had developed on The Bare Spot she passed the word.
We didn’t waste much time on opening ceremonies, but it was
traditional to light a bonfire on top of the gnarled rock fist
before we got started. When there was enough light to see between
the bonfire and the blurred grey glow that serves as an Alaskan
winter morning daybreak, the Smorkstini twins and Walrus would
fade back into the brush to retrieve the hoods from where they
were stashed under a pile of spruce boughs.
There were two hoods. One came off of a ‘53 Chevy, while the
genealogy of the other one was less certain. Any logos, emblems or
distinctive contours had long ago been bounced, scraped or dented
away, so that it was impossible to make a positive identification.
Justin and Larry almost came to blows once arguing about it. My
brother swore that the second hood was from a ’62 Ford stepside
pickup, while Larry claimed he knew the exact ’57 Cadillac Coup de
Ville that it used to belong to.
Just as Justin was about to bash Larry in the head with a burning
spruce stick from the bonfire, Anika stepped between them and
suggested that if they were real hooders, they would settle this
the honorable way. With a malevolent grunt, Larry grabbed the hood
in question and drug it to the nearest knuckle of the rock fist,
while Justin poised himself on another with the Chevy hood. They
teetered there for a moment, hoods held back by Jack and Walrus
while Jill counted down.
Upon Jill shout of “go”, Jack and Walrus released their grip. The
competitors leaned forward and shot out of sight. The rest of us
rushed to the edge and peered over to witness the results. Larry
was still airborne, his scream of terrified delight drifting back
to us on the crisp breeze. Justin, however had caught one of the
hidden rock warts with the edge of his hood, and was now spinning
madly down the slope like a drunken top.
It turned out to be a draw, because although Larry reached at the
bottom first, the hood arrived on top of him rather than the other
way around. Justin was only a split second behind, his Chevy hood
impacting a granddaddy cottonwood tree with a “clang” that pitched
him face first into an enormous thicket of rose bushes. He was so
dizzy from spinning that he wallowed around in them for several
minutes before his equilibrium returned sufficiently for him to
extricate himself.
That was one of the more unremarkable one-on-one hood races.
Sometimes kids got hurt. Not all hooding events pitted single
riders against each other, however. More frequently, hooding
challenges pitted team against team. I wasn’t terribly fond of the
team races because I inevitably got paired up with Walrus
Fahnestock. It would be me and Walrus on one hood, and everybody
else on the other one.
You see, when Walrus was on a hood, there was only room for one
other person, and the girls and I were the only ones small enough
to qualify. The girls absolutely refused to ride with him because
he didn’t have running water at his house, and by the smell of
things, no soap either. After I got used to his smell, I found out
that teaming up with him was a really good experience half of the
time, and a really bad experience the other half. It all depended
on whether I landed on him, or he landed on me at the termination
of our descent.
We never did tell our parents about our hooding forays. We sort of
had an instinctive premonition that they wouldn’t understand. Even
when one of us got hurt, we never divulged the actual cause of our
injuries. The time Donna broke her leg hooding, we all said that
Larry had run over her with a snow machine. When Jack and Jill
both fractured their skulls in a collision with a rock, we claimed
that they had been helping Walrus haul water up a hill, and that
Jack fell down and broke his crown, and Jill came tumbling after.
I don’t think I’d have the nerve to go hooding again at my age,
but last summer I hiked to The Bald Spot just for old time’s sake.
The Chevy hood is still there, rusted and battered, and home to a
family of weasels. I stood on the fist and gazed downward. A lot
of brush has grown up to shrink The Bald Spot, but not much else
has changed in 25 years. I can still see the rock where Anika lost
her finger, and the big scar is still visible on the bark of the
tree where “The Great Pileup” occurred that destroyed the
controversial hood and the bridge of Larry’s nose.
Yep, for all the glamour and glitter, I haven’t seen anything at
the Winter Olympics that can come close to the adventure and
competition that the Magnificent Eight experienced on Ptarmigan
Knob. I’ve thought about suggesting that they add hooding to the
roster of events at the official games, but I don’t think it would
be the same. By the time they got finished establishing safety
protocols for the sport, there would be helmets and seat belts and
spandex leotards. I don’t even want to think about seeing Walrus
in spandex leotards. |
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