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Project Hitchhiker is the online creative outlet of Mike H.

Mike’s adventures have taken him across 3 continents, including driving a motorcycle for 6 months across Southeast Asia, hitchhiking across Canada and Japan, and walking 1000 miles along the coastline of Nova Scotia. Mike’s passions are music, travel and motorcycles (in that order). Mike’s dislikes include writing about himself in the third person. This site is a collection of his travels, stories and adventures in lifestyle design.

Disunee Rando and the Gaijin Zoo

Filed Under (Hitchhiking, Japan, Stories) by projecthitchhiker on 10-10-2007

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Harajuku

Since I’m moving to Japan in precisely two weeks, I thought it would be appropriate to look at what I wrote about the wonderful and mysterious land of the rising prices, on my first trip way back in 2002 (reading my old writing, I get annoyed with my too-liberal use of brackets… aw crap.)


 

-To Japan-

Early morning on April 25th I drove to the airport with my Mom, Dad, and friend Skye, a student from China (originally on exchange to St. Mary’s) who would be participating in the same exchange program as me. After a bad taste of 80`s rock, typical of an unnamed Halifax radio station, the news came on: seems that scientists have discovered evidence to back up the phenomenon of “Spring Fever” — the theory that says males are more aggressive in pursuing females in the Spring season — typically thought of as an old wives tale. They said something to the effect that male hormones actually increase involuntarily in the spring season. “Good,” I thought to myself, as we pulled into the airport parking lot, “not even on the plane yet, and already I’ve got an excuse ready.”


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Hitchhiking Canada, Age 20. Part 2: The $50 Bowjob Question

Filed Under (Hitchhiking, Stories) by projecthitchhiker on 28-09-2007

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No Hitchhiking

Last we left him, our hero had accepted a ride in northern New Brunswick, with a 50-something truck driver named Ed , on his way north of Toronto.


Ed looked like your typical older truck driver. Three days worth of stubble, 50 pounds overweight, and a plaid shirt and trucker hat. Ed and I talked about all the usual topics for a few hours, and exchanged travel stories. I find that people usually like to reminisce about the old days when they used to hitchhike themselves. Ed told me about his first hitchhiking trip when he was seventeen in Newfoundland:


“My mom sent me down to the store to get some smokes, eh. An my buddy jus’ so happen to be standing ‘ere in front of the store with a big ol’ bottle o’ screech. An’ so we get to drinkin’ an’ — it seems like a good idea at the time, yaknow — and we decide to go for a hitchhikin’.”


“Well, I guess we got a little too into the booze, ’cause I can’t remember actually leavin’ the island, or even the people that woulda picked up a couple o’ drunk kids like us, but when I woke up… When I woke up it was a week and a half later and I was in Edmonton. I guess we had quite the bender! And the hotel room was all smashed up, and a girl was passed out on the floor with my buddy… And I tried, really tried to remember what had happened and how we had got to Edmonton, but I could only get bits and pieces, eh.”


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Childhood Memories: Hampy the Hampster

Filed Under (Stories) by projecthitchhiker on 28-09-2007

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Hampster Ball

I remember being about eight or nine years old and there was a family party at our house. All the adults were upstairs in the kitchen and the living room, drinking, while the under 16`s were in the basement playroom. Hampy, my little sister’s pet hampster, was in one of those little clear plastic balls that let them roam around without worrying they’ll go too far.


Us kids were watching a movie when my dad’s uncle Rodney (the kids called him ‘uncle Rod’) came in. He was about 70 and more than a little senile. He looked at the little brown opaque plastic ball rolling towards him. He said “you kids and your soccer…” and kicked little Hampy’s ball clear across the room. There was a loud crack of plastic and gyprock as it hit the wall. “You kids stay out of trouble, now….” uncle Rod said as he left the room. All the kids were speechless. The ball was still except for a little rocking motion and Hampy layed motionless for a few seconds. Then he got up, looking dazed, and wobbled a couple of inches forward. My sister picked up the ball and took him out. “He’s okay!” She yelled, with a big smile on her face. Hampy, nervous, but looking in fine health, looked up at us while his body shook a little bit like he was cold.


One week later, Hampy mysteriously died. Now I’m no hampster doctor, but I have my suspicions the two incidents may have been related.


And that’s why I don’t play soccer anymore.

That time I almost died: “Stand By Me”

Filed Under (Stories) by projecthitchhiker on 25-09-2007

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Stand By Me

I remember being nervous walking past the high school principal on the way in to see our school hockey team play. I had replaced most of the Coke in my pop bottle with rum, and I had taken a few big swigs with some friends before coming in. I was 16 and it was my first time sneaking alcohol into a school event. I was something of a late bloomer. After the game, it was a small town tradition for everyone to go to the MacDonald’s on the other side of Beford for a bite. And because our team had won the game, there was an excitement in the air – anything could happen.


My friend Matt, being a natural small risk-taker, told me he was going to walk the shortcut down the train tracks which ran right behind MacDonald’s. “C’mon man. You’ve never taken the tracks? We’ll get there way before anyone else.”


We walked past the streetlights to were it was dark — to the tracks. I found it difficult to walk on the railway ties and talk at the same time because I was a bit tipsy. Every few steps I would loose rhythm and my foot would slide between the ties and trip me up.

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Jack Kerouac Syndrome

Filed Under (Stories) by projecthitchhiker on 25-09-2007

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Jack Kerouac

My friend Charles and I have Jack Kerouac Syndrome. JKS.


It’s okay, it’s rarely fatal. We can live like normal people for the most part.


Did you ever notice that in Kerouac’s novels, he’ll talk about a girl that he meets at a cafe or a party, and he’ll go on about how beautiful she is, how her personality is electric, and she brings him to life again? And then five pages later, the venue changes, he meets a different girl and falls for her all over again. Rinse and repeat every couple of pages. The poor girls.


This is Jack Kerouac Syndrome. The state of falling nearly in love with every beautiful, charismatic girl one meets, believing them to be your life force, your raison d’etre, and then forgetting about them the second the next beautiful flower comes along.


Yes, it makes relationships difficult. But in fact, Charles has had the courage to face the disease head-on and actually take steps to have a long-term girlfriend. We all wish the best for Charles, and hope that he can somehow overcome this sometimes debilitating illness.

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