Read The Further Adventures of an Idiot Abroad Online

Authors: Karl Pilkington

Tags: #General, #humor

The Further Adventures of an Idiot Abroad (39 page)

I knocked on the door of the trailer where Joe lived. A big fella with a handlebar moustache answered. He wore a whiter-than-white vest, black jeans, boots and a gun holster. It was Joe, looking
like he’d just stepped off the set of
Die Hard
. The gun stayed by his side like a colostomy bag all the time I was with him. Didn’t it bother him? I mean how often can you
possible need it?

Joe told me why he wore the gun: ‘You never know, so I always wear it. I’ve been shot at before when I was younger, so ever since then I’ve carried a gun. I don’t need a
gun, but if someone else is gonna bring one out and take a shot at me, I’m gonna be prepared, and I’ll take care of it from there.’ He went to get another gun from inside the
trailer.

I haven’t seen them but I bet they’re covered in bird shit. Statues always are. I don’t know what it is, but birds seem to use them as target
practice.

What I like about these statutes at Easter Island is that no one really knows why they are there or even how they got there. It would be impossible to do something like this these days with
all the CCTV or neighbourhood watch schemes.

I like to stop and look at most statues. There’s a load in London. I always think that sculptors must have been well happy once soldiers no longer went to battle on horses as it must
have made their job a nightmare, having to sculpt all them horses. It’s tough enough drawing a horse on paper, never mind sculpting one out of stone.

The odd phase at the moment is that they’ve stopped putting them on plinths and started putting them on benches. It’s barmy – there’s not enough benches here for the
amount of living people without giving them to statues.

JOE
: Do you like these ones here?

KARL
: Oh, Jesus . . .

JOE
: Well, when you deal with gold you never know . . . Safety’s on. That’s an AK-47.

KARL
: Yeah, I’ve heard of them.

JOE
: I bet you have.

KARL
: Bloody hell, you don’t need this, do you? I mean, it’s a nice bit of gold you’ve got, but you’re not at risk that
much, are you?

JOE
: I dunno. Gold’s getting to $1500 an ounce.

Before we headed off on the search for gold, Joe brought out a box of stuff he’d found when out mining. There were all sorts of bits and pieces including a miner’s lamp from the
1800s, a broken harmonica, pocket watches and old gun barrels.

JOE
: I’ll be out in the middle of nowhere, 100 miles from the road, and find a piece of a harmonica laying out there in the desert.

KARL
: But what you gonna do with that? What’s the point in keeping it?

JOE
: It’s a piece of history, man! Look, these were all found way long-aways from any roads, so it tells you there was a bunch of cowboys
out there playing harmonicas, and they got shot by Indians or something, cause they lost their harmonicas.

My mam wanted a metal detector, but my dad put a stop to it knowing that she’d be like Joe – just collecting bits and bobs that are pretty much useless. She finds enough pointless
stuff in the Pound shops she likes to go in without her digging up more crap. Every time I go round, she’s bought another odd thing like a gnome that whistles when you walk past it, or a
banana holder (so you can unpeel it, eat half of it, and then put it back in a plastic case), a big sticker of pebbles for the toilet seat, and toenail cutters that come with a magnifying glass
attached.

Joe then showed me a little pot that contained all the small pieces of gold he had found over the past few months that were worth a couple of hundred bucks. It turned out that his son Esra, who
wandered out of the trailer, collected things, too.

ESRA
: Dad, can I get some of my rocks and show him?

JOE
: Sure, go get some of your rocks.

KARL
: Is he happy just playing with rocks?

JOE
: Oh yeah, he’s got more toys than you can imagine.

KARL
: That’s brilliant though. Hard to break . . . don’t need batteries. Most kids want Xboxes.

JOE
: I’m not gonna give him a video game because he’s just gonna be sat playing that all the time. That’s his car there
(
points
).

KARL
: What do you mean, it’s his car?

JOE
: I gave it to him. I gave his brother a ’71 Mark I, and I gave him a 88 GT HO. But that car will do 200 miles an hour, so I’m
gonna take that engine out of it when he gets a little bit older (
laughs
).

KARL
: How old is he again?

JOE
: He’s five. But he likes that car, so I gave it to him. I kind of spoil him, you know.

KARL
: Yeah, it’s one extreme to the other. One minute you give him rocks, the next you give him a car.

JOE
: Oh, he’s got everything.

KARL
: Does he go to school?

JOE
: Yeah, he goes to school. Pre-school on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays, and then all the other time he has – what are they called?
– T-ball practice and T-ball games, but other than that we’re out in the hills or doing some work here and there.

KARL
: Are there many other kids round here?

JOE
: Not very many. I mean, he’s got a few friends around here. Most of them are older than him, and, you know, they try to boss him around,
but he’s pretty good with it. He can take care of himself.

Joe is a bit like my dad in the way he would turn his hand to all sorts to bring money home and get everyone fed. I can’t ever imagine Joe using the
Yellow Pages
to call out a
plumber or mechanic, as he would tackle any problems himself. You don’t get many blokes like that, these days. That’s probably why
Scrapheap Challenge
isn’t on TV any
more. I think it’s partly due to the fact that if you take something apart to try and fix it, the warranty will no longer apply, so we’re scared to give it a go.

We got in Joe’s Ford Bronco, and he said we should do some off-roading. And with that, he put his foot down and hit the hill at speed, so the whole vehicle was in the air. When he said
‘off-road’ I didn’t think he meant it literally. I was in the back, being thrown all over the place, shouting, ‘Is there really no other route?!’ But Joe just drove
along chewing on a bag of jerky that was so tough he still had a use for his wisdom teeth. Twenty minutes later, we pulled up. Joe hopped out and grabbed a rifle out of the boot and some dynamite.
He said he was going to show me how he creates big holes in the rocky mountain to make an entrance for a mine. He placed a tub of dynamite on the rock where he wanted to blow open a doorway, and
then we retreated 50 or 60 feet back. Joe handed me the rifle to shoot the target to ignite the dynamite. I’d say I’m pretty good with rifles. I used to always win a prize at the
funfairs on holiday, which was normally a coconut. I don’t know why they gave coconuts as prizes. I never see coconuts in supermarkets, only at fairs. Saying that, right then, I’d have
been happy with a coconut, as it would have made a change from all the meat.

I took aim. Fired. And missed. The noise from his rifle shocked me, as it was a lot louder than the ones at the fair. The funfair guns only shot pellets. This one had proper cartridges. I took
another shot. Missed. But, third time lucky, I hit. The dynamite exploded and blew a hole in the rock face. Joe then packed some more dynamite into the hole with a fuse. We lit it and ran. This was
a new experience. The closest I’d ever been to doing something like this was throwing grit on the roof of metal caravans as a kid at our holiday camp and trying to get as far away as possible
before the owners came out. Not quite as dangerous, to be honest.

Joe decided that we shouldn’t go too far into the hole we had made, as it could have collapsed on us, like the song by Jimmy Dean called ‘Big Bad John’ (another song I’d
been listening to on my iPod). We then headed to the river where we would be panning for gold. Joe gave me a panning dish. It’s basically a rubber dish with grooves round the rim so you can
scoop up soft ground and then use water from the river to wash through the finer gravel until any gold you’ve gathered up is caught in the grooves. Sounds simple, doesn’t it? We did
this for over an hour.

KARL
: So what would you do then if you found a big bit?

JOE
: A big nugget?

KARL
: Yeah.

JOE
: I’d keep it.

KARL
: Why?

JOE
: Well, once all the other money’s gone, I think gold might have a little value still. But if I find a big one I’m gonna keep it.
I’ll keep the biggest one I ever find. Just as a trophy, you know.

KARL
: Alright then, the second biggest one?

JOE
: The second biggest? I’ll give it to my son so he can keep it.

KARL
: Okay, the third one?

JOE
: Sell it if it’s good enough to sell. What I like to do is take all the little ones and put them together and then sell them – you
know, the real small stuff, like we find right here in these pans.

I don’t think Joe was that bothered about becoming rich from his gold hunting. He just enjoyed the chase, a bit like my mam when she goes round those Pound shops and Oxfams I mentioned
earlier.

KARL
: So you been down Route 66 much?

JOE
: Oh, a little bit.

KARL
: You like it?

JOE
: What I like to do is go down Route 66 or any of these old highways here in Arizona and go off the highway and get on the dirt roads, off the
side streets, cause that’s where you find the places to pan for gold, or you find old cars, old dumps . . .

KARL
: But if you’re just having a day off though, forget the gold . . .

JOE
: If I have a day off? What would I usually do? Just go and look for an old ghost town, or an old dump or something. Just go out and relax, or
come down to the river and just relax and drop the line in for the baby, let him go fishing.

KARL
: Quite a relaxing life then, isn’t it?

JOE
: Yeah, sure, it’s all good.

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