A
couple of days ago Chris and I
were at an inside fairground
arena watching a barrel racing
competition. Ya know, with
horses? We were both depressed
because we'd come to Moab to
ride motorcycles, but the
weather didn't cooperate. We
stayed depressed until we heard
the following announcement come
over the PA system in a slow,
relaxed drawl: "For the owner
of a white Ford F-150 with an
ACME Construction logo on it's
side - Your horse is kicking in
your door." We'd have
laughed out loud if there hadn't been so damn many tough
looking, spur-wearin' cowgirls
swaggering around. But
. . . if you're gonna tie your
high strung barrel horse within
10 feet of your nice work truck
-- you'll get what you
deserve.  1973 Honda CB175,
complete with luggage
rack |
And
if you're gonna take your
vintage street bike ... oops, I
mean your 'dirt bike with
knobby tires' onto a desert
trail ? apparently you'll
get a helicopter bill, and an
article, and a plaque
commemorating your faux pas. When
last we left our hero, he had
alienated the entire county, run
up a tab at *Joe's Tavern*(1),
and hopefully bought new
underwear. (If you're
confused, you will find that
reading last month's 'Part
One' might be beneficial.)
Big Al had been unable to
guarantee *Mork* a rescue crew 'immediately' and *Mork* had
decided to arrange your average
everyday helicopter airlift.
In
a subsequent phone conversation
before the scheduled lift, *Mork*
told Big Al he had hired a
helicopter 'out of New Mexico.' Big Al was completely
appalled. Now, you remember that
in previous articles over the
years I have accused Big Al of
carrying dental floss in his
fanny pack. Lest you think I am
kidding, consider the following
conversation between Big Al and
*Mork*. I'd love to take
credit for this, but I can't.
This is 100% Memorex real. Big
Al: "Mork, don't hire a
helicopter - it's too
expensive. I can ride your bike
out." Mork:
"No you can't. I pulled
a muscle in my leg, I left it
lying on it's side, I'm sure
all the gas has run out on the
ground." Big
Al: "That's not a
problem, I carry extra gas." Mork:
"My bike only runs on
aviation fuel." Big
Al: "Not a problem, I
happen to have aviation fuel." (It
is this author's opinion that
Big Al has, in his possession,
any part required to fix any
bike for any make, model or
year, as well as spare parts for
the space shuttle.) Mork: "I'm sure all the oil has
leaked out." Big
Al: "I carry oil." Mork: "I'll bet the battery's dead." Big
Al (Big sigh): "Does the
kickstarter work?" Mork: "Yes." Big
Al: "I can start it with
the kickstarter and ride it out." Mork: "I bent the shift lever." Big
Al grinding his teeth: "Well, does first gear and the
clutch work?" Mork: "Yes." Big
Al: "Then that's all I
need. As long as the clutch and
transmission work, I don't
need a shift lever." Mork: "No. This is a SAFETY ISSUE." (Authors
Note: There are absolutely no
words at my disposal to
adequately describe the irony of
that statement from a man who
went into the desert alone with
ONE pint of water.) Apparently
Mork felt that since HE got
injured, he didn't want anyone
else to get injured getting his
bike out. This sentiment would
be admirable, if I didn't
think there was an ego
underneath it all, i.e. if Mork
couldn't do it without getting
hurt ... then it was obviously a
situation fraught with great and
terrible peril. The
conversation continued. Mork: "It's too difficult, that
trail is too dangerous." (Author's
Note: Mork unwittingly crossed a
line here and questioned Big Al's ability. Big Al could
ride a tricycle out of the
desert doing wheelies. Plus, Big
Al is intimately familiar with
the area and that trail. Big Al
delivered this next line to help
Mork understand how to walk
under a door with high heel
shoes on.) Big
Al: "Uhm, we ride that
trail all the time with women
and children." (Author's
Note: Touche') Mork
however, was unshakeable in his
ego and his decision and the
date was set for the airlift.
Mork asked Big Al for one favor.
Could he help him hook the bike
to the helicopter at the airlift
site? And could Big Al GET the
bike to the airlift site. Big Al
was all over it. But
Big Al needed help. Well, that's not really true. He
didn't need help, he
just wanted to be generous and
let a few others have ring side
seats at the show. I received a
call from Big Al offering me one
of those seats, but couldn't
get a flight to *Iceland* in
time. (You remember this all
happened in Iceland, right?) Big
Al arranged the following Big 4 'rescue' crew: Kari (a
woman), Dick Brass (71 years
old, creator of this particular
trail, and of the infamous 'Dick Brass Trail
System' in
the San Rafael Swell, including
the legendary 5MOH), and last
but not least; 'Wheels' -
the creator of the map for the
trail in question and a
part-time conspiracy theorist. The
following day, Big Al and the
rescue crew met Mork. Much to
Big Al's surprise, while Mork
had been playing the 'age'
card, Mork appeared to be very
physically fit, and a prime
candidate for Blackwell's
Worst Dressed List. Big Al
suspects to this day that Mork
is ex-military. (Which would
explain Mork's propensity to
give lots of orders and expect
to be obeyed, as well as his
inability to coordinate civilian
clothes.) When introduced to the
rescue crew Mork's comment was "Well, this is rather
humbling." It should have
been. One women, one old guy,
one little skinny guy and Big
Al. The
Big 4 set off to find the bike
on the trail while Mork stayed
back and waited for the
helicopter to pick him up. There
is a DVD of the Big 4's
adventure to get the bike to the
helicopter rendezvous. It should
be submitted at the Sundance
Film Festival. When the Big 4
arrived at the abandoned bike,
they found the bike exactly as
Mork had left it, and as he had
described it. What he hadn't
described was WHERE Mork had
abandoned ship. Dumped on it's
side and in the middle of one of
the gnarliest sections of the
trail, Big Al was amazed. How
Mork had even made it that far
was a question Big Al posed to
Mork later. Big
Al: "Why ... why ... WHY
did you keep going when you
realized the trail was getting
so rough?" Mork:
"The rocks were calling to
me. They spoke to me and said "C'mon ... you can do it!
C'mon, keep coming, keep
coming!!" (I
have a theory on this based in
large part on the DSM IV.)
During
the course of the rescue,
conspiracy theorist "Wheels'
took center stage. You need a
little background on Wheels to
appreciate what happened during
the rescue. Wheels
at one time was convinced that
Kari (who works for the National
Forest Service and is a member
of the *Fighting Banana Slugs*
and an avid desert racer) was a 'plant' by an extreme
environmentalist group. He had
also suspected that Dick Brass,
who at one time worked in the
NASA space program ...was a
Russian spy. As far as Wheels
was concerned, this whole
helicopter lift smacked of a
sinister plot. He just couldn't figure out how it fit
together. He had put his own
life in jeopardy by coming on
this adventure, he knew that
much. Wheels: "There is NO WAY a helicopter
is gonna come pick this up.
Something else is going on." While
Kari, Big Al and Dick were as
happy as pigs in slop, playing
with the horn on the CB, and
checking out the extent of the
mechanical damage, Wheels was
rooting through the luggage case
looking for bombs and drugs.  Kari
looks on as 'Wheel'
checks for bombs |  Dick
considers whether to put
the CB 175 out of
everyones misery |
 Not
what you expect to find
in the middle of the
desert |  Kari,
Big Al, and Dick |
 Dick
and Kari posing |  Wheels:
"It's safe... I
think" |
When
a thorough search and diagnostic
evaluation yielded nothing more
than exactly what Mork
had described, Wheels found
that, in and of itself, highly
disturbing. Wheels:
"There's something this guy's not telling us." The
other three managed to get the
bike running (Big Al having
brought along the oil, aviation
fuel, a catered lunch and a
computer and microfiche for the
CB175), while Wheels continued
to ponder the mystery. It
didn't help when they managed
to get the bike to the lift site
and discovered a 'cache'
underneath a nearby juniper tree
of : Three pairs of white
underwear, three pairs of black
socks ... and three .22 shell
casings.  The
"evidence" -
underwear and socks |
NOW
Wheels knew what had
happened. Wheels:
"Oh my gosh. He murdered his
wife! He brought her out here
and murdered her!" Of
course, Kari, Big Al and Dick
had better things to do, like
ignore Wheels and play some more
with the horn. While Wheels
worried, the other three played. And
then ... in the distance ...the
sound of chopper blades could be
heard over the tooting of the CB's horn. Wheels
had obviously seen Capricorn One
and taken it deep into his
heart. On the DVD you can hear
him say "They're gonna kill
us! They're gonna take us out
with machine guns!" Kari,
Big Al and Dick just stared in
awe as the helicopter approached
and landed ? while Wheels
peeked from behind the bushes. In
short order the bike was hooked
up and lifted out of the desert.
As the Big 4 watched the
helicopter lift off and soar
away, the CB dangling beneath,
Big Al turned to his companions
and said "Did we really just
see that?" Indeed
they had.  'Wheels',
the 'Dirtbike', and 'Mork' |  Houston,
We are go for liftoff |
 The
tow truck... |  Liftoff |
 One
small step ... |  ...
for a helicopter ... |
 ...
one giant leap for a CB
175 |  Mork |
But
what really happened to Mork out
there? Fortunately for the Big
4, neither drugs, bombs nor
murder had anything to do with
it. Mork's
story was simple. He was either
arrogant, ignorant, nutty or a
bit of all three. The talking
rocks did their job. They lured
Mork farther and farther into
one of the worst sections on the
trail. The evil rocks, having
done their insidious work began
the process of tearing him and
his bike apart. Mork tore his
hamstring and bent the shift
lever. The combination of the
two left Mork unable to ride the
bike either back out the way he'd come, or to the end of
the trail the other direction.
He decided to leave the bike and
hike out. Since
by trade he is a photographer,
he had packed his very expensive
camera in the luggage
compartment and wrapped it in
the only thing he could find
that morning in his camp trailer
– dirty underwear and socks --
to protect it. As he abandoned
his bike he grabbed the camera,
underwear and gun and . . . no
water. He didn't have any, he
already used up the meager one
pint of water he'd left camp
with that morning. Unable
to walk very well, and out of
water, he'd laid down under
the juniper tree on top of the
underwear and socks to rest. And
the first inkling of the
predicament he had gotten
himself into hit him. The
*Fighting Banana Slugs* had
lured him in. No one knew where
he was. He was injured, he had
no water and was miles from
civilization. He fired off an
SOS with his .22. No matter who
you are, no matter how tough you
are, when you lay down in the
dirt and fire off an SOS, you're scared. Whether through
arrogance or stupidity, death is
a pretty stiff fine for such a
mistake. I
think though that Mork's
pretty stubborn, and obviously
does not give up easily. He
continued on his hike. Every
time he took a step, he felt
like a knife was twisting in his
hamstring. (Big Al saw his leg
and Mork was black and blue from
his ankle to his butt.) It took
Mork between five and six hours
to hike out. He
finally came to a road that
would take him to camp and
followed it down (or up,
whatever). As he was limping up
or down the road (depending on
how you hold your map in my
opinion), exhausted, hurt and
thirsty, a truck came down the
road and he flagged it down. The
dark tinted window on the driver's side came down
half-way and the driver looked
at him curiously. Mork told him
he was out of water ... could he
have some water? The driver
perused him from top to bottom
and said wryly "Water's
pretty scarce out here in the
desert ya know." In
Mork's condition (and I have
to believe it was not too stable
at that point), he became
furious and yelled "Keep your
water, I wouldn't take it
anyway!" And then he stalked
off! Initially
Mork wanted to blame everyone
but himself. This is why I'm
convinced there was ego
involved. But truly there was no
one to blame no matter how you
want to look at it. If
you come to desert country, you
must understand that Mother
Nature does not even recognize
you except as an expendable
resource, let alone respect you,
but you must respect her.
There are a few points anyone
who ventures out in the desert
should know ... or they don't
belong there. - Know
where you are going. If you
take an unfamiliar trail,
expect anything.
- Don't
go alone. If you DO go
alone, tell someone where
you are so they can find
your bones if you don't
come home in a reasonable
time.
- Understand
that there is NO WATER in
the desert. You better take
plenty. Conservative
estimates are one gallon per
person per day.
- Never
'assume' anything. Even
experienced locals can get
lost or in difficult
situations very quickly.
- Take
Big Al with you.
In
the end Mork was extremely
grateful for the help he
received. At dinner that night
at *Fred's Tavern* the lies of
the day were swapped, while
Wheels watched Mork suspiciously
out of the corner of his eye the
entire time. I believe Wheels
asked him numerous times how his
wife was doing. And
Mork pressed $400 into the hands
of one of the Big 4 for their
time and effort and refused to
take it back. I believe he's
back East now, pondering his
next adventure. We can only hope
it's at the North Pole and he
takes along mukluks. End
result? - Parts
for CB175 damaged in desert:
Under
$200
- Cost
for rescue:
$400
to the Big 4
- Helicopter
lift est..
ahelluvalot
- Undetermined
Tab at *Ethel 's Tavern* ???
- Look
on Wheels face as the
helicopter approached:
Priceless.
Kim
Orndorff There
is a plaque in the desert
commemorating this historic
event. Next time you take a trip
to *Antarctica* , check it out.
(1.) Names of people and locations
have been significantly changed
and all will be asterisked,
mostly... |