Baltimore Sun Sunday

A lonesome look at America

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By Stephen Hiltner

I was only a few days into a meandering trip across America, and already I was easing into something of a nighttime routine. Earlier in the day I’d pinpointed a promising campsite in Ozark National Forest. Now, I found myself ascending an isolated forestry road to get to it, my tires crackling over its rough, potholed surface.

When I could no longer hear the road noise from the scenic highway that carried me into the mountains, I found a small clearing in the woods, shimmied my car into a level position and climbed into the back. Gathering my camping stove, I stepped outside into a light rainfall and, under a tall canopy of trees, lit the burner.

All night I’d been enveloped in a thick foggy haze: not much to see, wipers running full tilt. I hadn’t interacted with anyone in days, and now even the landscape was hidden from view.

But the rain seemed to be letting up — enough in this small glade, at least, for me to heat a pot of water for a solitary cup of tea. In the morning, I thought, if things cleared, there’d even be hope of seeing the surroundin­g mountains in their autumnal glory.

So it went, it seems, with much of 2020: our lives — and our country — enveloped in a haze of uncertaint­y, without our knowing whether the next day would bring a modicum of relief or a deepening of our solitude.

In October I set off on a trip to witness and document this singular moment in American history — to look quietly and intently at our country, to parse its scenery.

To limit interactio­n and prevent exposure, I outfitted my car as a makeshift camper van, removing the rear seats and installing a sleeping (and living and working) platform in their place.

After stocking up on food and water, I headed southwest from my hometown, Hudson, Ohio, largely avoiding highways and preferring instead to pass more slowly through less populated areas. Most nights I spent at remote, unimproved campsites in our sprawling network of national forests.

On many of my previous trips across the country, my spirits have been buoyed by the fleeting social interactio­ns that occur sporadical­ly throughout the day — at diners, motels, knickknack shops, campground­s.

Traveling in isolation, though, was a categorica­lly different experience.

Even in the casual places where travelers still gathered — gas stations, coffee shops, rest areas — there were generally no offhand conversati­ons, no sharing of experience­s, no sense of spontaneou­s connection. Strangers transacted and, still strangers, went their separate ways.

Without the promise of social interactio­n, the landscape itself — both natural and built — became my focus.

Often it felt like a companion. Often it felt like a manuscript, open to interpreta­tion.

Reviewing the photograph­s from my trip, I found that my eyes were drawn to projection­s of my own isolation: lone structures, unpeopled scenes, solitary sets of tire tracks.

Looking outward, I saw within. What also struck me were the scars. In town after town, I saw sidewalks emptied, shops struggling, restaurant­s barely clinging to life.

It all added up to the same bleak assessment: The pandemic has acted like an accelerant, hastening trends toward online commerce that threaten the future of brick-and-mortar stores and streetside businesses — the economic and communal mainstays of small towns throughout America.

The economic fallout wasn’t the only visible trauma. In Colorado, Oregon and California, the widespread effects of the worst fire season on record were ubiquitous.

Heading west from Fort

Collins, Colorado, along State Highway 14, I watched as crews scrambled to battle the Cameron Peak fire, the largest in Colorado history. The devastatio­n along Highway 22 in Oregon was astonishin­g.

There was, of course, an endless array of beauty. Gazing at the sandstone arches in eastern Utah, standing silently over the pristine waters of the McDonald Creek in northern Montana, looking out at a herd of bison in southern Colorado, I saw the sublimity and the precarious­ness of our natural treasures reflected in their own forms.

If much of the American landscape can be read, then much is also continuous­ly rewritten — particular­ly in our forests, grasslands and wildlife refuges, the arenas for our never-ending attempts to strike a balance between conservati­on and extraction, between profit and preservati­on.

In many ways the trip felt like an extended ode to such places — our national forests in particular.

Twelve days and some 4,500 miles in, I woke before dawn in the southern stretches of Bitterroot National Forest, near the border between Idaho and Montana. Temperatur­es outside had fallen into the low 20s; cocooned in my car, I hadn’t noticed. But, cracking the door open, I felt a rush of cold air. I peered out into the darkness. Startled by the cold and beckoned by the Montanan scenery, I opted for an early start, descending the mountains north toward Missoula. I fell into an early-morning trance — until, 20 minutes later, I saw a fellow traveler who’d pulled his car to the side of the road and exited it. He was staring into the distance.

I turned to my left, in the direction of his gaze, and saw Trapper Peak, purple and majestic, dressed in unspeakabl­e beauty. Somehow, inexplicab­ly, I hadn’t noticed its grandeur.

I pressed the brakes and slowed to a stop some 100 feet away.

I, too, exited my car and stood alongside the road.

Together in solitude, we took in the scene.

 ?? STEPHEN HILTNER/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Kootenai National Forest in November in northwest Montana. On a 10,000-mile road trip, a journalist found an America in solitude.
STEPHEN HILTNER/THE NEW YORK TIMES Kootenai National Forest in November in northwest Montana. On a 10,000-mile road trip, a journalist found an America in solitude.

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