AOP at Noon
This is the first installment of my
attempt to capture our walk to Fenway Park.
A little
background with what this (and future) posts are all about.
Without
getting too deep into the weeds, in 1973 four fathers from South Portland
Maine, decide to walk from said town to Fenway Park in Boston MA to raise money
for the Jimmy Fund. The Jimmy Fund
started in 1948 when the Variety Children's Charity of New England and the
Boston Braves baseball team joined forces to help a 12-year-old cancer patient
dubbed "Jimmy."
Here’s the original Jimmy – and a picture of our dads before
their walk.
Those
handsome devils – from left to right – are Norm Payette, Wilbur Wildes, Ge
Erskine, and Dave McHugh. Those are our dads.
Fast forward
to 2019 – 46 years after the infamous walk to Fenway – four of the original
walker’s kids decide they want to replicate the walk that their fathers did all
those years before.
I could
get into the details of how we made this happen, but I think you all will
appreciate me not sharing those details with you once you suffer through all
the minutiae I’m going to put you through as you read through our story.
Cutting to the chase, I’ll just say after hundreds of hours of planning, their
kids were ready to replicate the original walk. In addition to honoring our fathers,
we also were doing this to raise, what we hoped would be, substantial money for
this great organization. More on that later as well.
Time to
introduce the main characters in this story. Let’s start with the walkers:
Link Denise Pete Bob Tom
·
Link
Erskine – Ge’s son. Link was one of the fastest kids in the state of Maine in
high school. Link stated early on that he wasn’t sure he could make it all the
way due to some recent surgeries and other ailments directly related to being able
to successfully walk around the block, never mind all the way to Boston. As you
will see, he came through as a champ. I might refer to Link (his adult
nickname) as Linky (his childhood nickname).
·
Denise
Payette – Norm’s daughter. The smart money pre-walk was on Denise being the
pacesetter. Denise wore weights around her ankles for the year before the walk,
“to get ready”. I’ll probably refer to Denise as “Denise” throughout this
story.
·
Peter
Wildes – Wilbur’s son. This is me. I prepared by walking for a year leading up
to our event. Averaged 40 miles a week early on, then kicked it up to 60 per
week for the last month and a half. Still wasn’t sure if I was ready. I’ll
refer to myself as me, I, or even the third person, Pete, in this.
·
Joe
McHugh – Dave’s son. Joe also did a lot of pre-walk prep. His approach was a
bit different than the others. Joe would bite off a solid 20-mile day during
the week, which is approximately what we envisioned walking each day on our trek.
Not a bad strategy. I’ll refer to Joe by name, or Handsome Joe, and maybe
occasionally as Bob (more on that later) throughout.
We also had
an additional walker:
·
Tom
Hill – Tom is Joe’s brother in-law and Dave’s son in-law. Tom started out a
year prior by volunteering to being our scout, but over time he became a key
fund-raiser for us and ultimately, the fifth Beatle. Tom ended up walking every
mile with us. I’ll be calling Tom, Tom in this story
One
additional key player:
John
Cushing – John has been friends with the kids of the original four for over 44
years. Early on offered up (or was cajoled into) being our support driver. That
role turned into being a combination Sherpa, pace car, Sacagawea, and main support
structure for our walk. Basically, he was our savior, as you will be reading.
Conveniently I will be referring to John as John.
Now that
you’ve got the background and the key players, let’s dive in.
Tuesday
July 6th – First day of the walk.
Text from
Pete at 4:01 AM
o
Anyone
else can’t sleep?
o
Joe
– 4:01 AM: This guy
o
Denise
– 4:02 AM: This girl
o
Link
– 4:03 AM: Up all night
That’s no
way to be prepared for a 110-mile walk. What could you expect after 18 months
of planning and 48 years of history hanging over our heads? This was the
equivalent of trying to sleep the night before Christmas when you were ten
years old…and the night before your wedding day….and the night before a cross
country or an overseas trip that you had been planning for years... all rolled
into one.
We had planned for AOP (ass on pavement – a phrase we used throughout the walk) for a noon start. If we all fell back asleep then we could have got nearly a full night’s sleep in. That, unfortunately, did not happen.
Instead, things like showering, packing, worrying if you were forgetting something, wondering what we were thinking to begin with to try and pull off this crazy scheme, and the reality of what we had been planning for over 18 months (not for the last time on this day) and owning up to a debt we all felt we had to repay after 48 years was finally upon us, and starting to sink in.
Side bar –
one thing Pete had to do the first morning was his daily interview with a local
radio station - WBLM. Link was doing the same with another local radio station - WPOR.
WBLM is Rock, WPOR is Country – so we felt we had our bases covered.
Some time before, this station , WBLM, was kind enough to put me on for a
few minutes to talk about our walk. This was all part of my imagined grand scheme
to saturate TV, radio, newspapers, and the internet with our story. I’ll be
damned if near the end of this thing, we almost did that.
The week prior to our walk the morning show host Herb (Captain) Ivy,
reached out to me again and asked if I’d like to call each each morning of our
walk to give a live update. Me, instantly reverting to my teenage dream of
actually being a radio dj, of course said yes. So, in my first interview, between
counting how many pairs of underwear I needed to pack and figuring the proper
ratio of jeans vs. shorts, I once again did my best Les Nessman impersonation to
spread the word. Oh, and as would become my schtick for the week, I requested a
song for the walkers. First request for day one – Truckin’ – The Grateful Dead.
By now it
was time to roll. Plan was to meet a Link’s house before we all went deep into
Sunset Park to begin our walk at the same location our dads did in 1973 – the Little League field at Wilkinson Park.
So, with
backpacks, luggage, sleeping bags, and our families in tow we met at Link’s at
11:00 AM. We had a tight schedule and felt by adding in the hour buffer before we
had to beat feet might be wise.
Upon arrival
at Link’s, Joe let each new arrival know that the walkers were in the process of being
interviewed by someone at the Boston Herald. This was great, one of the biggest
papers in the city of our destination wanted to interview us. Like I mentioned,
total media saturation. They already interviewed Link, Joe was in process when
I got there, so only Denise and I left to do. We had an hour, no problem,
right?
Wrong.
Little did
we know (until it was our turn to be interviewed) that out interviewer, Marie Szaniszlo
– a wonderful woman- could quite possibly be the slowest interviewer in the
history of interviewers. Let’s just say, if she interviewed each of us any
slower, we’d be interviewing her….and writing the sorry in long hand….and in
cursive…and then mailing it via the postal service to the newsroom…and forgetting
to put a stamp on the mail so it would come back to us…except we would have
forgotten to put a return address on the envelope so it would be lost in the
mail, until somehow, miraculously we would have somehow come across it, then
do the whole thing again, only this time remembering to put a stamp on the envelope.
That kind of slow.
I just
googled Marie, and this is her intro on LinkedIn….
Experienced, versatile media
professional who's skilled in researching, interviewing, writing, and editing;
who has a sixth sense for what makes a good story and how to tell it; and whose
managers deploy her for the most challenging stories when they need a
"hail Marie pass."
God love Marie.
It was now about 12:15, but we figured there might be a dozen
people at the park waiting for us, so no big deal, right?
Again, wrong.
As we drove down to the end of the street to get to our starting point, what to our wondering eyes did appear? A crowd of easily a hundred friends, family, and probably just neighbors that wanted to see what all the fuss was about.
A bit overwhelming. Gratifying at the same time. All these people had taken time out of their busy days to come support us.
Surreal,
might be the better adjective. Was that Dave McHugh, the last of the original walkers
giving an interview to not one, but two television stations?
Why, yes
indeed, it was!
Then Link…and
Joe…and Denise…and Pete. The AOP at noon was now starting to get away from us.
After many interviews…. many more photos with family and friends…and after all the excuses to delay the start of this thing were exhausted, it was time to get started.
Ever heard the expression herding cats? That was how the start of or walk began.
That, my friends are the events leading up to the start of our once in a lifetime walk to Fenway.
Next up:
The Eastern
Trail Giveth and the Eastern Trail Taketh Away.