Clint
said this would happen on the boatride back from Åland. I was espousing how
much I was looking forward to being back home in Dunderbo for several weeks.
Making fires and drinking coffee and not living out of a suitcase or having to
move anywhere. He said it. “Mate, in two weeks you’ll be itching to go
somewhere new.”
He
was right. Something in my nature does not like sitting still for very long. I
cannot explain the joy I get from coming back from a trip, eating proper food
that I can cook myself in a real kitchen, sleeping in a real bed and waking up
to my own environment. But it definitely does not last. Probably because I have
been stuck in the pattern of coming and going now for most of the last five
years, since I first met Mia (and Clint, for that matter), down in New Zealand.
After
New Year’s, Clint was off to Copenhagen to visit a friend for a while, before
going back to England for another (maybe) MMA fight. After training for six weeks
he was going to go back to Norway, where he has a small apartment and a job as
a tree surgeon. I suppose he did not do the fight – I got a message from him
yesterday saying he was off to Turkey, and then headed back to Oslo. Don’t know
what for, and apparently he was traveling alone. He might have the itch worse
than I do.
So
it is then that I’m sitting in the train station in Enköping, waiting to ride
to Stockholm, where my journey will begin in earnest. I only bought tickets
last night around 8:30pm, at the last minute, and only decided for certain that
I was going about an hour beforehand. Earlier that afternoon I had been
distracted by taking the dogs out sledding again (six of them this time, which
is considerably faster than four).
I do
have an actual reason for the trip – I’m off to the south of Sweden to buy a
camera. A used Nikon F3, originally released in 1983, and fully manual. That’s
right. I found it on Blocket.se, a sort of Swedish Craigslist, and negotiated
with a very friendly man named Torbjörn to meet me at the train station this
afternoon. More on why I did this in
a while. It is loosely related to celestial navigation.
I
sit and wait in Enköping. My train should arrive in 14 minutes. What follows
will be an account of my journey, as it is happening, a running diary of sorts
and one of my favorite ways of recording events.
1010: På snabbt tåg. Till Mälmo och
Köpenhamn.
On
the fast train. To Malmo and Copenhagen (though I will change at Hässleholm, for
the last hour of my ride to Sölvesborg). The beginning of this narrative is
going to be regularly interrupted, as I have some real work to do on the train
today, a major reason I decided to spend over $100 to come on this trip rather
than have the camera mailed to me. I work better on the move, without
distraction. I’m in my seat now (which is comfortable and spacious. Like and
airplane seat, not quite in first class, but definitely better than economy
extra. The armrest dividing my seat from the one next to me is wide enough for
two elbows).
I
have two articles to write today from scratch – one that will go under my dad’s
byline, for the new magazine: another for Spinsheet,
again about Matt Rutherford now that he’s round Cape Horn and well on his way
back north to civilization. I also must finish editing my first editorial for
the new magazine, which has been a work in progress. It’s only 600-some words,
but it feels important. I’ve been changing it constantly.
We
started moving. I’m going backwards in my seat. This train is so smooth I didn’t
even notice the motion, and would have thought we were still in the station if
not for the city outside going by the window. Interesting how we say that
sometimes – “the city going by the window.” The city isn’t going anywhere.
Outside my window it is.
I’m
off to the café car shortly to start work in earnest. I’ll wait first for the
conductor to come by and collect my ticket. I already got shooed out of the
café car once – they’re not open yet. I plan to spend the day in there.
1023: The Bistro
I would
pay extra for a plane ticket if they had a bistro. I would.
This
one is small. They serve mostly cold fare, plus coffee (of course). I got a
citrus Ramlösa and a kaffe, mostly so
they let me sit here. Strangely, there are no tables, but little stand-like
devices around which I suppose one is supposed to sit with friends, with room
enough for coffee and beverages on the stand. The stand is in the middle of a
squared-off u-shaped dinette, with fake red leather seat covering and a too-low
backrest. I’m facing the bistro bartender, who maintains a small laptop at the
end of the long counter where food and drinks are served. I can see the world
going by outside the window just behind him. There are seven others in the
bistro car with me. One is most certainly an immigrant – a dark woman in a white
burka who does not speak Swedish. One is likely an immigrant, and looks vaguely
Italian. I, of course, am an immigrant as well. People outside of Sweden think
I look Swedish. People inside of Sweden mark me as an American from a mile
away. I stick out like a sore thumb. The rest appear Swedish. But what do I
know.
1211: Back in a seat, not the one I was
assigned.
The
train is not full today. Not yet. We have stopped several times along the way,
never for more than sixty seconds. You’d better be ready to get off when you’re
time comes.
Ironically,
I ate my lunch in the cabin, and not the bistro. I do believe they frown upon
bringing your own food into the cafe car. I drank my coffee and my bubbly
water, wrote the article based on my dad’s story (I recorded our Skype
conversation last night and transcribed a lot of it for the story today), and
came back again for lunch so as not to be rude.
I
took a seat opposite my own. It faces forward and is adjacent to a window, so I
can watch the scenery go by.
It’s
a black and white day outside, the sky blanketed by a low, thick layer of
clouds, the sun never high enough to provide any light. The ground is covered
in snow, and the trees in the forest have no leaves. The only color comes from
the odd countryside house, always painted bright yellow or red (and now I
understand why), with a bit of green mixed in from the pine trees, though a
faintly duller green to me thanks to my deficiency. It’s slight less black and
white here, a bit further south, with a bit less snow on the ground than back
in Dunderbo.
The
train leans into the turns, like a speedboat. Or a bicycle.
1219: Film photography. -or- Why I took this
trip in the first place.
I am
a cocked spring, freaking loaded with creative energy.
For
the past three days I have been absolutely obsessing over a camera, and not
entirely for the wrong reasons. I bought one, an old Nikon F3, on eBay, with a
50mm f/1.4 prime lens – that was Saturday night, and still I wasn’t satisfied.
I needed it now. So I spent most of
Sunday morning and Sunday evening back online looking at Rollei 35s, Minolta Hi
Matics and older Nikkormats, trying to find one within a day’s train ride so I
could make a small adventure of it. Last night was my first reasonable night’s
sleep in several days.
My
editorial for the first issue of All at
Sea SOUTHEAST (the new magazine for which I am acting as editor) touches on
the intangibility of modern technology – ”writing digital words and getting
paid digital dollars, neither or which actually exist.” Something along those lines.
Back
in Lunenburg last summer Mia and I were gung-ho about buying an iPad, so we
could use the insanely cheap chart software in lieu of purchasing a new $20
paper chart for each new place we sailed to. The software, which includes
digital reproductions of the actual paper charts, and with the same detail,
cost about $40 for the entire collection of Canadian Hydrographic Office
charts, from the Arctic Ocean south, to all points west and east. Essentially
free when you consider the sheer number of charts, from zoomed out small-scale
charts to zoomed in harbor charts, some covering only a few hundred square
yards.
The
owner of the North Sails loft shared them with me on his own iPad when I went
in to buy some spare hanks and some nylon webbing that Mia could make sail ties
out of. The program begins by showing all of Canada, with a myriad of red squares
that outline the various charts held within. Simply zoom in the clever way
Apple does it on their mobile devices, running your fingers over the
touch-screen, and each chart automatically appears, resolving right down to the
creek level with as much detail as the paper versions.
But
they are not paper. In the end, the iPad costs $500.00, about twenty-five
charts. To me, the value of that paper, which is real, far exceeds the ones and zeros embedded within that iPad that
merely represent the paper they’re based on. I’m very excited that we never
bought it.
Similarly,
I’m back to writing in pencil, and in fact, this very story began as pencil on
plain white computer paper.
Hence
the 35mm film camera. It’s real. Light enters the camera and leaves it’s
imprint, physically, onto the film.
The resulting image is real. It’s not
zeros and ones, not tiny square pixels, but a real, tangible image, one that
can be real and tangibly archived and resurrected any time in the future. I dig
that.
The
physical capturing of those images. After agonizing over this camera – having
already decided I was getting a 35mm, just needed to choose one – I chose the
F3 because it’s fully manual and mostly mechanical. The mechanisms that create
the images all operate from the power of one small watch battery. There is no
LCD screen, not even the small one most SLR’s have on the top, showing basic
shooting information – all the data is in the viewfinder, where it belongs, and
settings are changed with tangible, mechanical switches and knobs. The
resulting image, once the shutter is pressed, will be a surprise days or weeks
later when it returns from the photo lab.
The
F3 was the premier professional SLR in the 1980s when it came out, and remained
in production through 2000. Ironically, it was the first in the pro ’F’ line to
use any electronics at all; people genuinely feared this at the time, and the
camera was equipped with a backup mechanical shutter that would still fire at
1/60 with no batteries. I bought it precisely because of its simplicity, even
if it was considered ’advanced’ in 1983. Two watch batteries that last over a
year, and some film – that’s all you need to carry to get the most of it. No
cords, no computers, no plugs, just the basic gear. The body is weather sealed
and all-metal, and the lens I bought is fixed – no zoom. The camera will take
photos in the freezing cold and in the damp and I will not have to worry too
much about it.
I’m
taking a fork in the road. Hopping off the fence.
I
said it was like celestial, and it is. Technology is concerned mostly with the
end, not the means. GPS? Tells you where you are, and you don’t have to know
how it works for it to do so. It just does. Digital photography? Makes pictures
fast and easy. On automatic settings, the camera just works. It thinks for you.
Poeple
say that celestial navigation is a good backup in case your GPS fails. This is
not true. This is not why it’s worth knowing. Celestial navigation is not about
knowing where you are on a chart, it’s about knowing where you are in the
universe, physically and philosophically. It’s about practicing art, for the
sake of it. It’s about learning history, learning something for the knowledge because knowledge is
enlightening. It’s about using tangible references in a tangible world, about
being conscious. Not everything has
to be about practicality.
Likewise
with film photography. I want to pursue it precisely because it is more
difficult, more time consuming. It’s real.
I keep saying that, I keep thinking that, and I’m finally doing that which I
say I believe in. It’s about going out and looking for interesting images to
record, and the learning the process
by which they are recorded, not simply switching on to automatic and having a
go.
There
is no logical reason behind learning celestial or how to shoot a manually
operated film camera. The logic doesn’t matter. I cannot reasonably defend
either pursuit.
I
have never made the argument that celestial makes a good backup to GPS. A
second GPS makes a good backup to GPS.
1255: Leaving Nässjö station.
Almost
2400 words. Long Friday Column this is going to make. I give myself shoulder
problems in my right arm from using the trackpad on my laptop. My whole right
side is affected by it, from a crick in the base of my neck, down through a
tender spot between my spine and shoulder blade, into a feeling that my right
hip is out of its socket and ultimately to a sensation in my foot that I have a
stress fracture. It hurts when I twist it a certain way or sleep on my stomach.
The
conductor came by just now looking for new travelers. I’ve been aboard now for
nearly three hours.
1307: It’s military time in Europe.
The
sun just came out, and it’s no longer a black and white day outside. It’s
impossible to describe the winter light at 60º north, particularly when there
is snow on the ground. The sun never climbs more than it’s circumference above
the tree-line, and the shadows are always stretched long. The days are
perpetual sunrise/sunset, and it is difficult often to tell the difference.
Further south and closer to the equator the sun rises and sets in a near
vertical line, the difference in time between sunglasses and a flashlight only
minutes.
The
air must be cleaner here, or thinner when it’s cold (though that doesn’t make
any scientific sense), but something about it makes the daytime light glow.
When the sun’s out, one really
understands why the houses are colorful, for in the winter on a background of
glittering snow, they look like fairytales. The pine-tree green colors lights
up in the sunlight as if lit from within, and the moss on the forest floor, the
bits that shows through the snow, is nuclear. The browns of bare tree trunks
take on a detail impossible to render in broad daylight, visible only in the
distorted shadows of sideways sunlight.
It
is not often that one gets to enjoy the privilege of a bluebird day in winter –
when it happens, it’s always the coldest day of the week, as the clarity brings
with it frigid temperatures. But when it arrives, it is foolish to spend the
day indoors.
1324: Heartless Bastards, ‘Out at Sea’ is
stuck in my head.
1329: Heartless Bastards, ‘Out at Sea’ is
now playing on my computer.
…and I am drownin’ in, I’m drowin’ in
frustratiiiiiooon
OOOOOOOOOOOOHHHHHHHH
I’m out at sea and a cannot stop the tide
I’m out in the water I cannot stop the tide
I’m out at sea and I’m floatin’ away
I’m out at sea and I’m floatin’ away
I’m
back in my real seat now, about to start going backwards when we leave the
station we just stopped at. It is zero degrees Celsius, says the ticker.
1414: På tåget mot Kristianstad
On
the train now headed towards Kristianstad, my last switch before arriving in Sölvesborg,
which should be in about an hour. The sun has fully emerged now and the clouds
have cleared to reveal a deep blue sky, the landscape glowing just like I
described it above, and yet still more brilliantly. Note the time – I have been
on the move now for five hours since boarding the first train in Enköping. I
have six hours more on the journey home tonight.
This
train feels more like a commuter train and less like a long-distance train. There
is no bistro, and the cars are deserted. I can see the conductor through the
glass doors separating the cars, about to come by and check my ticket. I am a
new passenger on this train.
1423: At the back of the train.
The
conductor checked my ticket. He also informed me that I’d have to move to the
back of the train – the front bit wouldn’t be going beyond Kristianstad, and Sölvesborg
is beyond Kristianstad. Thank you sir.
1441: Backwards
The
back half of the train is now the front half of the train. I’m sat just next to
the door that leads to the driver’s seat, and watched as a train employee who
looked strangely like Seth Green, opened it with a special key and took his
place at the helm. Several minutes elapsed sitting in Kristianstad Centrum, and
then we were off again, in the direction from which we’d come, going backwards
and towards Sölvesborg.
1713: Tillbacka till Dunderbo
Back
on the train! And it hardly felt like I ever got off.
I
met Torbjörn (Tobi), about quarter after four, outside the train station (Sölvesborg,
by the way, is a very neat little seaside town. It’s on the way for us next
summer when we bring the boat up to Stockholm, so I told Tobi to hang on to my
phone number. After a short stroll around the square, I had a coffee at the
aptly named Coffeehouse, and wrote next month’s Spinsheet article about Matt Rutherford. Started it anyway – it’s
about ¾ of the way there. The latte was finally hot enough). Tobi came into the
small station with me and we took a spot on the bench next to a picture window
overlooking the town.
Tobi
could not have been much nicer, and matched my brain’s description of him after
first hearing his voice on the phone (which rarely happens – have you ever
listened to a radio announcer for a long time without ever seeing them?
Inevitably you’re disappointed if you ever actually do, because during that
time your brain creates an image of that person based on their voice. Just like
reading a book and then seeing the movie – imagination is far better than the
real thing). He brought the F3, as promised, but also had along a dozen or so
rolls of film, and two lenses. I really only wanted one of them, but he gave me
a good deal. In the midst of our meeting, he rushed home to retrieve some extra
batteries (the little bitty watch batteries, part of the reason I wanted this
camera), and brought back with him two photography books, extra lens caps and
even more film. So, done and done. Now I have six more hours on the train to
learn how to use the thing.
It’s
fully dark outside now. We’re back at Kristianstad Centrum.
1833: Losing motivation.
On
the train to Stockholm now, having switched at Hässleholm. I had to run up and
over the bridge to track #4, wasn’t quite sure where I was going and thought
for a few moments that I’d miss the connection, as I had only a couple of
minutes to spare. This was compounded initially because I was not quite sure
which side of the train to get off. Usually there is no choice. Now there was.
I hopped off one side, remained indecisive, climbed through to the other side,
and again decided that was wrong, and raced back across to the side I had
originally gotten off of before the doors closed. I made it.
1952: Bistro
Back
in the bistro car. A group of twenty-somethings occupy the same
fake-red-leather seats to my right, really designed for three, but four are
sitting there. Drinking drinks and talking Svenska. Two more sit to my left, a
couple – they are sitting closer than friends would. I bought a bottle of water
and an apple.
About
ten minutes ago I realized I have an hour stopover I Stockholm on the way home
– my train arrives at ten pm, and doesn’t depart again until after eleven. Not
ideal.
2305: Tåget mot Västerås
But
I am not traveling there. I’ll get off one stop sooner, in Enkoping, a full
sixteen and a half hours – if we’re on time – after after I got on earlier this
morning, at the same station. It will almost be the next day.
I
didn’t realize it until looking at my ticket earlier that I had an hour
stopover at Stockholm Central. That was a bit of a bummer. I spent the time
looking at photography magazines in Pressbyrån.