IF YOU’VE EVER SEEN THE MOVIE (or read the book) Nomadland, this is our tribe. Those in the movie and many more across the western US are our extended family. We love them very much and I am very proud of them because they are such good people.
When we first became nomads we were headed toward our first Rubber Tramp Rendevous (RTR) held in the desert near Quartzsite, AZ. A man named Brent, who had never met us, took us under his wing. He told us where to boondock and that he would stop and check on us. He was there the day we arrived at Quartzsite. He is actually a ‘part-timer’ but he’s still a very integral part of the tribe. Another nomad needed a house battery (deep-cycle 12V). We had a battery. Brent picked up the battery from us and got it to the nomad in need.
Nomads come in all sizes, shapes and flavors. Some of us have enough money to live comfortably in the so-called “civilized” world, but we prefer the nomad life. Some of us have found our way to the nomad community because they were the victims of the so-called “civilized” world, as in the book Nomadland. Very honestly, when I hear the song line “he’s not heavy. He’s my brother” I think of nomads.
One time I was standing near the tarp at RTR where people put things to share and others can take what they need. I saw a very expensive set of jacks on the tarp and happened to overhear someone speaking to the person who had left them. “I wasn’t using them. Someone might need them,” was his reasoning for putting them there. That is a nomad. One couple dropped off four large boxes of canned goods left from downsizing their “stick-n-brick” (nomad term for permanent house). And I have seen people, almost totally destroyed by ‘the system’ that they hardly have enough to go from one month to the next, leave something on the tarp because “someone might need it.”
Perhaps being a nomad is as much of a way of thinking as a life-style
One Thanksgiving we were camped in the hills just north of Cottonwood, AZ. It was a small encampment of people with one class A, two trailers, one class C, three cars and a couple living under a tarp. The people in the cars were going to go to Sedona where there was a charity Thanksgiving dinner. Those of us who had the means to have a Thanksgiving dinner suggested that the entire encampment join together. At first those who didn’t have anything to offer were hesitant. We didn’t force them to join us, but we were happy when they did. The couple living under the tarp did a lot of the prep work. The man with the big Class-A had us use his kitchen. The rest of us brought what we could. The Class-A had one of those televisions on the outside. The man had never used it. The men in the camp spent much of the morning, while the rest of us cooked, figuring out how to use the TV so we could watch the football game. There was so much food that it was like the story of Jesus feeding the multitude. Those of us who had plenty found excuses to send the left-overs home with those who had less. It was nomads being nomads.
Pamela had flown back to Kentucky to help with grandbabies. I stayed in the desert south of Ajo, AZ. I ended up spending 22 days in the desert only going to town twice to get drinking water. Looking back at the time, almost ten years before, that Brent helped us start our nomadic journey, I realized that we’ve come a long way.
It was so much fun when I learned that the couple camped next to me in the neat little (obviously brand new) trailer were new nomads. I can’t explain how good it felt to share places for them to boondock, and answer questions about water and solar. It was like giving back.
But perhaps the most important thing I left with them was the knowledge that nomads are a tribe into which they will be welcomed. Nomads don’t care where you’re from and don’t ask your pedigree. We are an extended family that is there for one another. “He’s not heavy. He’s my brother.”
Well written. I am not a Nomad, yet. However, I rent rooms to four gentlemen and we all share your philosophy. We had dinner around a campfire in my back yard last night. I would not be able to keep up our home and my car except for the spontaneous help of all my “roommates” who bring in water bottle, take out trash, take care of the yard, wash “our” car and make minor repairs on it.
I appreciate these articles. I’ve been following Bob since I think around the crisis of 2008. I think I’m a nomad at heart and have been trying to minimize my physical possessions. Part of me sees them as survivors of hardship- coping with life but part also sees them as artists living on the edge – in the flow, not bound to a lot of weight and routine. Also very much surrounded by nature constantly- sharing the photos we can all enjoy vicariously. One thing I’ve wondered is if there was a way
some would offer to take along a rider for a few days or a week just to let us experience it- and this might be a good way to make money.
You might be interested in the caravan program sponsored by the Homes On Wheels Alliance. You can hang out with other nomads for a while. https://homesonwheelsalliance.org/caravans/
This just brought tears to my eyes, the sharing and caring of one another like that. I’m living in a city right now and not sure why I’m still here other than being very anxious about just heading out in my car (that’s all I have). The fear is of being alone (and likely a whole lot of other anxieties) and you’ve just (kind of) quelled that one with this beautiful article. Since I’m not witnessing this kind of “love-in-action, I somehow think it doesn’t exist. Once again, you have shown that is not so. Belonging is everything to the human spirit and you’ve just shown that one can belong here. I’m encouraged.
Russell, beautifully written account.???
In a world where we, disproportionally, hear the bad from the media, its is a breath of fresh air to have well written articles like this. Reminding us that fresh air and people join together for true life
Once again, thank you for sharing your experiences and perspective on the nomad life. At this point it’s a fantasy, having a husband who is not interested (which is fine … we get along just great), but I like the idea of your kind of freedom. The burdens of city living are definitely weighing me down. I take my camper van off into the woods as much as I can to self-heal.
The best Thanksgivings I ever had were in the Navy. We were all Corpsmen so the ones that had to work, families brought in dinner. The ones that got the day off, spent it with those families. i can’t wait to retire & start my nomad life.