The Pros And Cons Of Hitchhiking
The pros and cons of hitchhiking? Pro: cheap. Con: dangerous.
It's convenient, but unpredictable. No car repair hassles, but
the hassle of standing in the rain, waiting hours for a ride. I
hitchiked 20,000 miles when I was young, sleeping under bridges
from Canada to Mexico. I loved it, but I wouldn't consider
hitchhiking as a primary mode of travel ever again.
There are still times when I put out my thumb. The most recent
was in the mountains of Ecuador. My wife and I were visiting Las
Cajas National Park, hiking along ancient Incan rock walls. We
missed the bus back to Cuenca. There may have been another one
coming, but we didn't want to wait until dark to find out. Out
went the thumb.
To hitchhike is "Ir a dedo" in Ecuador; to "go by finger." The
third vehicle to pass, stopped for us. It was a meat delivery
truck, and we were in Cuenca in an hour. When the driver refused
to take any money, we left him with a large avacado.
If you ever consider hitchhiking in other countries, ask the
locals about it. In Ecuador, for example, I've been told you
can't get a ride in the southern part of the country. Also, in
some areas it's customary to at least offer something for the
ride.
Hitchiking In The United States
The pros and cons of hitchhiking are obvious, and the balance is
on the side of the "cons." It's difficult to get a ride now.
However, it's still legal in most places in the U.S., except on
freeways. The point on the entrance ramp where you cross the
legal line is decided by the police officer that tickets you.
At sixteen, I was stuck for hours on a Montana highway. A nice
old lady picked me up and explained why I couldn't get a ride.
On that same stretch of highway, a few years before, the police
found a hitchhiker cooking a driver's heart over a campfire.
Ten years later I caught an item on the news: They were
releasing the canibal hitchhiker, now that he was sane. You can
see why drivers may be hesitant to pick up hitchhikers. The
lesson? Try not to look like a Psycho killer when you hitchhike.
One circumstance it may be useful to hitchhike, even if you
never have, is when you need to return to your car after
backpacking. Trails often come out of the wilderness in a
different location than where they start. Since there probably
won't be taxis there, hitchhiking could be your only way back to
your car.
This is relatively safe and easy, in these circumstances.
National Parks like Yellowstone are almost the only places we've
even seen hitchhikers lately, and drivers are comfortable
picking up people that are obviously backpackers.
Hitchhiking Safely
Follow some basic safety guidelines. Be prepared for many
possible circumstances. Have rainwear, in case you can't get out
of the rain. Have food and water, since you never know how long
you'll wait for a ride. Bring warm clothing if cold weather is
possible. Also, always have a highway map with you.
Use intuition and common sense when hitchhiking, and don't be
afraid to say no to a ride. Maybe I shouldn't have taken a ride
with that cocaine-snorting guy in Idaho when I was sixteen. Then
again, maybe my intuition wasn't so bad. He turned out to be a
decent guy, and brought me hundreds of miles closer to home.