A work by Howell Parry in 3 parts, 45 printed pages and 36,000 words.
What a wonderful event! It turns out that some other universities in Britain are doing the same.
Howell participated three years running, meandering almost aimlesslesy about northern Europe (England, Germany, France and the Benelux countries) with one or two partners. Each time it seems Howell was the (self-?)elected log-keeper, and he kept a very detailed log of events, taking notes it seems every ten minutes or so.
Those three logs are on the web for our enjoyment. They are rather lengthy, and detailed journals, peppered with occasional photos. The text is not especially well formatted or proof-read, all the same, an excellent read, painting a wonderful picture of a wonderful event.
This is not hitch-hiking in its most romantic sense (footloose and fancyfree), but under the veil of a charity event, and contest at the same time, which necessarily flavours the whole ordeal in a unique way. It is a short event, run over the course of a single weekend, so there's a little of the urgency and haste that otherwise doesn't belong in a hitching adventure. Howell and friends are hitching all through the day and the night. They get more than a little tired in the process.
All the same I don't detect a strong air of competitiveness in Howell's logs, not much of the the race, so to speak. The focus seems rather to be upon having a wild time for the weekend. Which is calming in a way, I have my reservations concerning competitive hitching, it seems to pose many paradoxes (see my earlier articles World Records and More Records).
Above all, it is very heart-warming to see that in this age that seems to be obsessed with security to the point of paranoia, that a public establishment like a university, still finds it acceptable to promote hitch-hiking in a charitable context. But then this is Britain, and Europe, where hitching still enjoys a moderate acceptance socially, I'm forced to wonder if the Americans have a similar event to boast. In Australia I've yet to come across any hint of anything like it.
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