Showing posts with label coloma. Show all posts
Showing posts with label coloma. Show all posts

Thursday, September 22, 2011

COLOMA X

A funny thing happened in Coloma, population 485, elevation 750, this year, our tenth trip to the land of milk and honey and gold: We learned the locals genuinely like our obnoxious and childish antics. And they each had their own -- often provocative and very adult -- way of showing it.

But before we get to the story of how two locals ended up dead in a ditch (not true, though Jamie did pass out before dinner), let’s start from the beginning.


Day 1 - Sunday

D.O. and Adam took exit 137 toward N. Shingles Springs Rd. (thanks you racist, redneck hicks. You’re real time savers) early Sunday morning and were on the American with a cooler full of cold ones by one. After stealing firewood from fellow campers like the little criminals we are, we built a raging inferno so we could, for the first time ever on this trip, cook dinner. The sausages and black beans were delectable.

Afterwards, we headed to Gringo’s for a pitcher, though our real mission was to build on the success of our trip earlier this summer when we befriended Kimber and Greg, once thought to be our arch enemies (we assumed they found us rude and annoying). To our dismay, Greg was working but Kimber wouldn’t be on shift until the following night – a key finding that would pay dividends in 24 hours.

Back at campsite N, we rekindled the fire (no matches!) and were enthusiastic when the rest of the crew arrived in time for a drink or five before calling it a night. Cheers to Eric and Stephanie.

Day 2 – Monday


With the goal of hitting the river by noon or one, we rose early and got a jump on the day, getting in the car on the way to Old Hangtown before 10. We visited our not-so-favorite hate-mongering store, took A Walk Down Memory Lane (we tried to, anyway. RIP, old friend), the hardware store, and had our traditional lunch at the Buttercup Pantry. Jamie (avocado melt), Sam (club sandwich) and D.O. (huevos rancheros) did, anyway. Zach and Adam? Well, they stuck to the tradition of getting the biggest disaster of a meal listed on the menu… Introducing the Pharmburger (bacon cheeseburger/chicken sandwich all in one) and the Texarkana Hamdog, a clusterfuck of fat, sodium and cholesterol on a plate. The components: hot dog bun open-faced filled with a bacon-wrapped hotdog then deep fried, covered with a cheeseburger and smothered in chili. The cherry on top? A fried egg. The Buttercup doesn’t keep a doctor on staff, but they probably should. Amanda’s a goddamn sweetheart though. Total catch.

The clerk at 49er Liquors isn’t nearly as friendly and still prohibits “browsing” since this is “not a library,” but we did anyway and still bought 40s. We headed back to the river for a full day of brass monkeys and black 8-balls, both of which are getting harder to drink the older we get. We enjoyed the sun, the booze (sort of) and held our annual event before happy hour with a one-dollar poker tournament that crowned Adam champion of Campsite N, Coloma, population 485, elevation 750, California, and the whole fucking world, for that matter. We showered up prison style (Sam “dropped the soap”) and were off to Gringo’s for an eventful evening.

We arrived at Gringo’s with gusto. We asked for burritos made with the delicate touch of an angel (we wanted the cheese melted first) and ate and drank our way through the evening waiting for our shot to talk to Kimber. In the meantime, we had the staff dial up Greg who informed us the night earlier that he was just a phone call away from a party. While Kimber closed up, Greg hooked up the pitcher. Kimber, true to her word from our warm-up trip earlier in the summer, gave us a ride back to the campsite where the drinks kept coming, an apple bong was erected and the free styling flowed just as you’d expect from a few drunken white guys. Greg called it a night – another party awaited (there’s always another party with Greg) – while Kimber hung out a little longer, so long, in fact, that she’ll never look at her Dodge minivan quite the same again. (Boooom!)

Day 3 - Tuesday


Another first for Coloma X: A trip to nearby Georgetown, a quaint mining town twice ravaged by fire ,where the streets are so wide parking spots line the middle of the road. We saw the hotels and bars (brothels, surely, though no dames were to be found) and took in the town’s history. Parra’s was our dining establishment of choice, home to the world famous wet burrito. Not sure what makes it world famous; it took us 10 years to find the town harboring it. We also grabbed some sandwiches from the general store and were soon back on the river – albeit a new, more rugged beach due to the heightened water level -- for another day of sun and fun.

Another happy hour and shower followed. After striking out at Marco’s for pizza, Sam and Jamie went to town at Coloma Club and then it was off to Gringo’s for Taco Tuesday.

“The last time/that I saw you/you were crying”

Words from Coloma’s Simple Creation, words to live by. Fearful this is the state we’d find Kimber in, we tentatively entered, knowing Cameron, her younger brother in age, older in appearance, was on shift as well. Within minutes, we realized we must’ve received a rave review. Cameron was awesome! He showed us how to electrocute ourselves on a glowing Buddha and later whipped out his secret stash of pico de gallo, which, in retrospect, probably contained slow-acting poison. Regardless, it was da bomb.

Wanting to have guys’ night, we said our goodbyes to Cameron and Kimber. Kimber seemed bummed, but Muscles McGee, who had dropped by the night before to game on her, was back to keep her company and help her forget about us until this time next year.

Our final night of Coloma X was spent with whiskey, a fire and Zach’s flows. A post-CKT career awaits.

The last time/that I saw you…

Yours in savagery,

Adam, Jamie, David, Sam, Zach

For all the pictures, go here. Last year's post. Last year's pictures.

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Coloma 2010

North Shingle Springs Road is a seven-mile stretch of highway that carves through the backcountry of El Dorado County, where little more than rundown farms, one-room schoolhouses and rolling hills exist. It’s non-descript, quiet and lightly trafficked, seldom used by anyone other than the residents living on its path.

It’s also the most direct way in and out of Coloma, Pop. 485, a fact unbeknownst to us until two right-wing, neo-Nazi racists showed us the way some nine years after we first set foot in this old gold-mining town.

To reach the end of this three-day adventure we must first discuss the beginning.

Davis


On Wednesday night, Zach, Adam and Jamie headed to Davis to stay the night with D.O. Not wanting to arrive empty-handed, the trio stopped off at the neighborhood KFC for a long-awaited and heavily hyped Double-Down. Turns out advertising’s a fickle bitch. The sandwich was an expensive, bun-less mess of sodium and saturated fat, void of the traditional KFC flavor that has endeared us to the brand for years. It’s also not made from real chicken, but the mutant drumsticks taste way better.

After civilized conversation with Ellen (thanks for the hospitality) and Emily (wonderful seeing you) that included Jamie getting baked out of his mind (he took a small hit), we hitched a ride to Aggie Liquors for a little somethin’-somethin’ before frequenting a local watering hole (Froggy’s. Where else?). We settled for vodka sodas (which we only sorta discreetly drank on the Davis streets), but the “Gorilla” shots the store’s proprietor pressured us to try were tempting. Ultimately, we decided that 151 and Wild Turkey would be a drink saved for another day.

Coloma Day 1


On our way out of Davis we stopped at Safeway to get “supplies” – 42 beers, six sandwiches, one bag of ice, one pack of ping-pong balls and a free watermelon – for the day.

An hour later, and after an uninspired game of “What’s in that Truck?” (Best response: “3rd and 9 from the 27”), we reached Camp Lotus (via Placerville and Highway 49, mind you, not N. Shingle Springs Rd.).

The woman manning the check-in booth at Lotus is a raging whore who can sink to the bottom of the American River, for all we care.

Our “welcome” to Camp Lotus consisted of wrongly placing us at Campsite 5 (campsite 5!?!) only to give us flack when we asked to change to traditional Campsite N (she begrudgingly complied). We were also charged a day-use fee for arriving a little more than an hour ahead of check-in time. Campsite N was unoccupied when we arrived, but no matter.

Once settled, we headed to the river with beer, chairs, music and slightly calmed nerves for a day on the American. Our usually private beach was infested with fisherman and kids, but we found an even more secluded spot just a little further down the way.

Beers were consumed, Van Morrison was played too often and we were later greeted by Sam Marthinsen, who had to come late due to a work conflict (he was “chauffeuring” little kids), who invigorated the rest of us. More beers were consumed, showers were taken and we then “made it” to New Yosum’s (Starvin’ Dog Pizza) for some take-out.

The woman at the order window of Starvin’ Dog Pizza is a raging whore who can sink to the bottom of the American River, for all we care.

After pizza and some ill-advised one-dollar poker tournaments, Jamie and Sam challenged a group of Hmong to games of beer pong while the remaining three built a raging inferno and sang campfire songs until the last flame flickered out (we might have passed out).

Coloma Day 2


Friday morning announced its arrival with the sound of a crying baby.

The crying baby is a raging whore who can sink to the bottom of the American River, for all we care.

We got a jump on the day and headed into Placerville for a stroll through Old Hangtown that consisted of an annual photo, a stop in a darlin’ candy store and one in a terrifying store of anti-Semites that Jamie claims are “really nice guys”. Fuckin’ Goy.

For the first time possibly ever, we had a meal at the Buttercup Pantry where no one puked or did something ridiculously embarrassing. It was sorta boring, actually. And D.O. didn’t even get the Huevos Rancheros or Zach the Monte Christo. Traitors.

After brunch we browsed the “library” at 49'er Liquors and purchased gold in 40oz. increments. The gold was actually just shitty malt liquor that we still continue to drink on this trip despite no longer being 17 or liking malt liquor.

But tradition is tradition, so we took our 40s, chairs and music back out to the river for another day on the American that also included our annual draft. The only casualty of the day was Zach’s sunglasses (and Jamie), but he’s a fool for swimming a raging river with sunglasses on top of his head. Besides, it was more of a sacrifice than a casualty, anyway.



After a shower and cocktail hour, we headed into town for some shitty Mexican food at appropriately named Gringos. The place was a buzzin’, but that didn’t stop acting-manager Kimber from remembering us the moment we walked in. She was just as uptight (but soooo closet freak!) as we remembered, but New Keith 1 (Steve? Chris?) and New Keith 2 (Greg) were bitchin’ dudes who hooked up the burritos to our liking. Original Keith was apparently on a roadtrip with his new lady friend, getting high at every stop along the way.

Sam and D.O. engaged Heidi in a friendly game of quarters and talked-up some locals, but Kimber was tight-fisted and wouldn’t give us any free beer or food.

Kimber is a raging whore who can sink to the bottom of the American River, for all we care. (That’s not true. We like Kimber. We do. She just needs to let down her hair once in a while, figuratively and literally.)

After we outwore our welcome (not really, but sorta), we headed back for campfire. No more than 15 minutes later, two guys showed up at our campsite (now Campsite Q after Sam sweet-talked a different guy in the check-in booth who is not a raging whore who can sink to the bottom of the American River.). They were the two Coloma locals Sam befriended at Gringos. Nice fellas, they were. Then this happened:

Us: So where do you guys party around here.

Them: Folsom

Us: Oh. Not Sac.? How come?

Them: That’s where the Blacks and the Asians go.

The Blacks?!? The Asians?!? And that was the end of the fun. We also then noticed a few of us had on Kee Tov gear with the Jewish star, but luckily that went unnoticed.

Before things went south with Racist 1 and Racist 2, they told us how Highway 49 was a roundabout way to enter Coloma.

The next morning we got up and left. We didn’t drive back on Highway 49 through Placerville.

We took N. Shingle Springs Rd.

Yours in savagery,

Adam, Zach, Jamie, D.O., Sam