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Post a Comment On: Bruce Charlton's Notions

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Blogger David Stanley said...

I think the Yorkshire ripper case led to a fear for women to hitchhike and men became wary of being seen as predators. This was possibly because American films portrayed it as dangerous and we caught their fear?

I hitched back from the Alps to Paris and then to Amsterdam and I probably didn't smell very good either!

28 December 2021 at 10:12

Blogger Bruce Charlton said...

@David - I don't think that was the reason - because sensible girls never did hitchhike alone. That was just asking for trouble.

A boy and girl together was probably the most attractive combo - the easiest alignment to get a good lift.

The best and most reliable lifts were from lorry drivers on long haul. These were mostly very decent characters, and of course found conversation helpful in their work.

My best lift was from a bearded chap in a Land Rover who lived in Walsall; a real salt of the earth character; who gave me a cup of tea at his house, the material to make a sign, and dove me down the road to a suitable place for the next lift - from pure goodness of heart. Never forgotten!

I did have a few 'weirder' characters, when I 'made my excuses' and got out more quickly than strictly necessary - but none were pushy or nasty.

The positive coincidences were remarkable. I got one lift from Keswick to my front door in Fenham, Newcastle... Another from Chorley to the door of where I was staying in Southport, Cheshire... what were the odds?

As I say, there was a kind of benign magic about it all.

28 December 2021 at 10:57

Blogger William Wildblood said...

I hitchhiked now and then in the early to mid '70s. The best one was from Calais in the north of France to Beziers in the south west in 1974. It took about fortnight and another fortnight or so to go back again but we (I was with a friend) weren't in a hurry. We started off sleeping in campsites but eventually just bedded down in a field like the hobos we romantically thought we were. Our daily diet was a baguette, camembert, wine and cigarettes except for one memorable occasion when the person who gave us a lift invited us back for a splendid dinner chez lui.

I suspect one reason hitching went away was because of the loss of trust in strangers and that's on both side of the transaction.

28 December 2021 at 11:57

Anonymous Epimetheus said...

Never tried it myself, always had a car or could hitch with friends and acquaintances. With the right partners, there's certainly an enchantment in a good road trip. I've had at least one dozen-hour trip which ended up being a single long invigorating conversation.

Hitchhiking still takes place in rural Canada, mostly for the poor or indigenous. But then, the country is incomprehensibly massive, and the Anglo countryside still has some of the leftover glow of Red Tory high-trust society.

28 December 2021 at 13:31

Blogger mobius said...

I never did any hitching, but up here in Maine, if you start walking, someone will pick you up. Usually the next person, though we have lots of new imports, now.

Same if you break down.

28 December 2021 at 15:15

Blogger whitney said...

I will stop and ask people that are walking in a sudden rain storm if they want to ride home... if they look like normal people. I know they probably live in the neighborhood. They always seem a little nonplussed but sometimes they take me up on it and are really happy about it. And I'm happy to do it. Last time I hitchhiked was when my car broke down on the interstate it was probably 91 or 92 and me and my friend, male, were picked up by a couple kinda weird guys but they took us to a truck stop and I got my car fixed

28 December 2021 at 16:33

Blogger Bruce Charlton said...

I'm not claiming it is extinct; but there is little doubt that hitchhiking in the UK has massively declined from being normal and everyday, to something only very rarely seen. Indeed, I can't recall the last hitchhiker I saw, it was so long ago - although I have not travelled much in the past several years.

As a telling instance, Channel Four made a documentary about Newcastle University during 1985; and depicted the medical student arriving at college having hitchhiked from the south, and being dropped-off on the Tyne Bridge.

The scene was, of course, staged (he was driven by Channel Four people... after all, who would stop and drop off a hitcher in the *middle* of a bridge - except to film him walking into the city!).

But the point was that this was at the time still a bit of a cliche (or at least a possibility) for how an undergraduate might arrive at college (having sent his trunk - containing a whole year's worth of necessaries - on ahead by rail).

28 December 2021 at 16:51