Friday, August 22, 2025

OLD AUSTIN

My hormones have been running pretty high these last couple of years. My tolerance for bullshit is low. Call a bitch a bitch—that's my motto now, let the chips fall where they fucking may. It just hurts so bad because this town was, at one time, so cool. Good herb, fine pussy, low rents and all, or comparatively low compared to now that everyone has moved here. The growth is mind-boggling even if the selection of women has improved from very good to excellent. Even on what may otherwise be a bad day in River City you can see some really fine hos. 

        Swimming at Barton Springs, drinking at Scholz’s, sitting on the Capitol lawn in the twilight of a spring evening, doobie in my hand, that was the old Austin for me. State troopers were too intimidated to say anything, they didn't want to seem like hicks. Today you try that shit on the Texas Capitol grounds and you may end up dead. 

        For me personally the memory of a time is actually mostly audio. The de rigueur L.P. for my early years in the World Capital of Live Music was Rumours, you just couldn’t get Fleetwood Mac out of your head, even today "Rhiannon" or "Landslide" playing somewhere can still make me stop and just listen. Some of my memories of the old town are visual but most of those came after getting high and technically don't count because tripping is not real. Just call me Old School. Those were still some of the best times of my life. 

Saw only four live acts during almost 50 years unless you also count the house band at the Chili Parlour or the Elephant Room, this should give you an idea of what the music was like: Dough Sahm playing “96 Tears” on the Drag, at The Hole in the Wall, relatively recently which to me now means, like, in the last quarter-century, you know?

Springsteen with Clarence Clemons, thank you very much, and the Beach Boys, both at the Super Drum on campus, back in the prior day, like mid-80s. Junior Walker maybe five years before that, at Antone’s, a long long time ago in a different town. Later, in Africa on my pilgrimage to see the motherland, just for the record the most significant music was "Baker Street" by Gerry Rafferty. The last few years? Also British, it’s Simply Red, "Holding Back the Years." Looking back now at whatever this is, memoir or confession, that was the “old Austin,” back in the day. The town just isn't the same anymore. Let me ask you a question, this may seem incongruous: 

        You ever ride the Number 1? 

If you want to get a quick and dirty view of what River City has become you just need to take the Number 1 Bus. The route starts somewhere far south in, like, almost San Antonio? Comes up Congress Avenue past new and trendy shops, restaurants, saloons. Crosses the river, past the Capitol, past the Governor’s Mansion, past the Travis County Courthouse, past the UT campus, then past the State Hospital—and rolls by the headquarters of the Texas Rangers. Look for a building with antennae like a crawling and repugnant bug. 

The #1 covers many of the social services stops in town, then and now, if you're unemployed or “at risk” or just out of your fucking mind which has always been a significant demographic in ATX. The head-jobs and druggies used to mostly come out at night but my most formative experience in Austin, in almost a half-century, actually took place during the day and south of the river where there’s usually less chance of mischief. 

It was a Saturday, late morning, coming back on foot from Big Stacy Pool on the edge of Travis Heights? So, like, you walk up the hill from the pool to Congress Avenue and there’s this little park on the corner, across from what was a X-rated theater, now a tech start-up, remember what it was like back in the day? 

On the opposite side of the street from that nursing home, you know the location, you could almost smell the pee from inside when you walked by outside? So, like, homeless have always used the park as a place to hang out during the day, especially when it’s hot, which is like most of the year. Cops are usually not too far away waiting for a chance to bust some balls or break some heads. If memory serves me this was like right around where that Biblebelt East Texas white boy State Senator, Nixon was his name, same party but no relation to the former president, got busted as a John back in the day. 

        Now you remember? 

He picked up what he thought was a working girl but she was actually carrying a badge in her panties. That may have been before your time if, like so many, you’re new to River City. 

So, like, a lot of hookers work or worked the South Congress area after the Eastside became just another part of Hipsterland. That was kind of the way things were beginning to roll even in Old Austin, back in the day. So, like, this was the turn of the century, turn of the millennium, 2000, or just before, and on the bus my preference is always to sit up front, like, to watch the road?

Sometimes chat with the driver, like, if he’s got anything to say? Some of the drivers just sit there, it’s all they can do to handle downtown traffic, dodging all the new construction, but others got a decent rap. 

        That was part of small town Austin life, while it would never have occurred to me to chat with the driver on a bus, for example, on a visit to Houston. Bus drivers in Austin can get a rap going if they want to, this is a pretty high-brow town. Anyway sitting up front with me behind the driver that day was this couple, looked like small town folks, Ma and Pa Peckerwood from Giddings or Milam or some East Texas shithole like Bastrop County before Elon Musk arrived and the City of Bastrop got fern bars and French restaurants, to replace the feed stores and Western wear shops. Not to sound all ignorant or bigoted or anything.

So, like, there were a couple of black guys in the small park on South Congress Avenue, up the hill from Big Stacy Pool, two niggers just chillin', minding their own black business which the U.S. Constitution says a man has a right to do? Maybe getting high too which is cool, each to his own herb, indulge or not, that's supposed to be the mantra of this town. At least if you white. So, like, the bus was stopped at that corner next to the park, waiting for a green light. 

The old guy from Bastrop looks out the window at the two brothers in the park and he speaks to his old lady, straight up like they're still in Bumfuck, East Texas, or wherever, not like he’s in the New Trendyville on the Third Coast where he actually is. 

“There’s two kinds of coon," he says. His wife looks at him expectantly. "Them that walk on four legs and”— Bubba bends a finger toward the window, indicating the two brothers chilling in the park—“them that walk on two.”

 His wife chuckles. He slaps his thigh. Has a good laugh and smiles big. With both teeth. And then he looks over at me just sitting down on the other side of the bus aisle but pretty close and he realizes that he spoke loud enough for one of the ones that walk on two legs to hear. And he stops smiling. So, like, if this was Chicago or even L.A. the motherfucker would have been dead right there, boom boom boom, at least two in the chest, nine mil or magnum, no explanation needed. But this was happening in the old Austin where we always tried to be civilized, where we tried to be understanding even of rednecks—our challenged brothers and sisters from Bastrop and beyond. 

And what he said didn’t really bother me, you know? 

        Because he was up front about it. You knew what you were dealing with until relatively recently, because you knew what prejudice looked like, like Billy Bob, like this motherfucker here sitting at the front of the bus with his old lady. Like white trash or just plain trash irrespective of color. Nowadays the dentition is better but the sentiments can be the same. Hipsters have replaced hillbillies. That was actually one of the last times that this changing River City felt “real” to me, to tell the truth, that day on the bus with Ma and Pa from Milam County. It wasn’t the last day or anything, wasn’t the beginning of the end like Winston Churchill talked about but it was the end of the beginning like the great man said too. 

For me in the beginning, which meant arriving when the Democrats had just moved out of the Texas Governor’s Mansion for the first time in over a century and a kind of gloom was hanging over this allegedly liberal town. The D's in Texas were dead men walking but didn't know it yet. To set the scene.

        My first crib was on the third floor of the Alamo Hotel between the not-yet-extant Elephant Room, which would one day officially become my bar, my drinking hole, and the original location of Whole Foods. Which hadn’t yet been built. Not because the two sites, Whole Foods and the Elephant Room are related somehow but because they were my primary reference points downtown for years, basically the years when W was in office. The Elephant Room would become my personal bar like the Cedar Door was my professional bar back in an earlier day, as my first principal place in town to sit down for serious drinking. Long before the origins of Whole Foods, actually, as a funky little organic grocery store, just down the way on Lamar Boulevard. Back in the day only hippies and nature freaks and the wealthy shopped at W.F., btw, which had a selection the size of a convenience store and had not yet become a nationwide symbol of conspicuous consumption. To set the scene geographically every significant location in my new life in ATX was within a 30-minute walk from the State Capitol. 

        The Alamo was a residence hotel full of pensioners and transient musicians and people who couldn’t put together first and last month’s rent for a real apartment—people like me. The Alamo had a barbershop and restaurant on the first floor but you probably didn’t want to get your hair cut there and you definitely didn’t want to eat the food.

        My room had a four-poster bed, half-bathroom, hot plate and windows that opened out over Guadalupe at Sixth Street. Who could ask for anything more? The Alamo Hotel was a few blocks from the back door of the Governor's Mansion, too, which was about to be occupied by a family of Republicans from Dallas named Clements, the patriarch being an oil guy and ex-Reagan Administration defense official. To set the scene. Anyway for a year the Alamo was my home and the hotel still has a special place in my heart, not to sound overly sentimental, because my first and most enduring drug addiction was nurtured there, in that tiny little room on the 3rd floor. The hotel’s most famous resident, btw, living downstairs from me, was Sam Houston Johnson, former President Johnson’s little brother, btw. No lie—it was super-cool living that close to Texas Royalty! Sam Houston Johnson had been at The Alamo for years if not decades before my arrival on the floor above him. We met once in the hotel elevator and he looked to me just like any other old scary white man.

        This particular member of the Johnson family was already in his sixties at the time, some ancient age like that, like me now btw, and was alleged to be involved in a wide variety of improprieties and even illegal shit and was not a favorite with the rest of the Dead President’s family, hence his chosen location, the Alamo Hotel. A kind of exile, sure, but still on the LBJ Ranch so to speak. The city then, lo those many years ago, was what people moving here think they will find today, accessible in every sense of the word. My life and work almost never took me south of the Colorado River, except to swim, no farther west than Deep Eddy Pool or east of Montopolis Dam and only then to score a baggie. A task that seemed to occupy a good deal of my twenties. On the north side my effective range was the university or an occasional chat with a minor drug dealer or disgruntled graduate student, often one and the same, cooking crystal in the alphabet avenues beyond campus. 

        Today people would call the area inscribed by these borders "downtown" but back in the day it was the whole town and you ran into important people a lot on the streets downtown which were the few blocks between the south face of the Capitol and the Colorado River, not because you were important or somehow “in the know” but because you lived in a small town.

        So, like, he dies one day—Sam Houston Johnson we’re talking about because the great Lyndon Baines Johnson had already gone to the last round-up, like, five years before my arrival in River City. To set the scene chronologically. Hearing one day of Sam Houston’s demise my first instinct was to run home and check out his room and see if he left behind anything interesting and/or newsworthy. But the door was locked and the room had probably already been cleaned out by the Secret Service or whoever takes care of those matters.        

        Generally-speaking my first impression was that Austin was fucked up but it was a largely holistic experience. My metrics: Weed was cheap. As a young adult with a job, trying to be responsible, no longer just smoking other people's shit? Bought my very first bag, a full oz, for $35 dollars in 1979. It was called “Bastrop Special,” which was marginally better than homegrown although it most likely came from Mexico like every other smoke you bought locally. This weed had a lot of stems and seeds that you had to remove first, not to sound underprivileged compared to today's pothead. And pussy in ATX was free or reasonably-priced. 

Just like a bag of weed, $35 for a “half and half,” a vice cop told me, that is a suck and a fuck, in East Austin, along 11th Street, but at that Time maybe not yet on South Congress Avenue where Senator Nixon got busted later. 

        The good senator would have probably been looking to pay around $100, that's my guess, unless he wanted something kinky, and God knows what you would pay for similar services today, after the city's expensive high tech transformation. Anyhow in the old Austin, overall, a black man, if he had the right rap, could still run his game with enough dissimulation and white guilt to get away with shit seven times out of ten. That's my calculation. Any of the other three-out-of-ten chances a cop might shoot you but call me an optimist, seven out of ten was good enough. That was the old Austin too, it was kind of beautiful back in the day, but RIP, motherfucker, because that way of life is dead and buried now. 

If you asked me to put a date on when the world started changing for the worse that would be kind of hard to say but it was an era—a political era, a "social climate” you might call it, that coincided with a new family moving into town. Basically when the Bushes moved into the Governor's Mansion, yeah. You didn't want to say there goes the neighborhood but it was kind of true, bro.

        At first it was still go-with-the-flow even after they hit town. The family itself was kind of cool, especially the twins, even if they were Republicans. Weekends you could walk by and see the parties on the grounds of the Mansion, the back fencing didn't include barbed wire yet, and machine guns, you didn't feel like you do now that snipers are tracking your movements, waiting for a step too close. When the prior resident Ann Richards lived in that house, before the Bushes, and you passed by on the back sidewalk at night you could swear that you heard women's laughter and you probably did. 

At Governor Bush’s parties, though, during those late summer afternoons, the women wearing sun hats and holding drinks—even if W himself was on the wagon, which he was, born again and all that. It turned out he only drank blood. 

Sometimes, also in the late afternoon, if you visited Central Library down the street from the Mansion which was a place to hang out if you were on foot, and needed to cool down, you might see the Bush twins allegedly studying upstairs on the third floor. The Bush girls were old Austin, too, first LBJ’s daughters and then Jenna and Barbara, they were all somehow cool but their fathers most def were not. 

Anyway if it was a weekday just before the millennium you could stand on Congress Avenue and look up at the front of the State Capitol and if it was anytime, say, after 10 a.m. but before four in the afternoon there was a silver Continental parked out front like the owner was home, W's car. He was in. If he was already running for president, or so it is said, but not having seen this myself? 

        Are you interested in a little political gossip that is a sure thing?

You would see W walking south on Congress Avenue, towards the river, headed in the direction of the Elephant Room actually, but not for the booze. But because his campaign headquarters for president was in the building next door to the club. Next door to the club that was my bar, actually, not that there’s anything wrong with that, the old Austin was a small town in every sense of the word.

If it was early in the campaign before the Secret Service was all over him he might be walking alone, or so it seemed, because there was almost certainly a plainclothes guy in a car and on foot. If you watched the future President of the United States go into his campaign office and you kept watching the door, or so it is said? This is a great anecdote even if it's not true—but it is true. A few minutes later you might have seen a less familiar figure follow W into the building. Michael Dell. 

        Yeah, that Michael Dell, the computer guy. 

He was an early backer of W’s, a principal money guy, so they say or said and that's true too. Today all you'd need to do is look at the police surveillance tape to know about political hookups in downtown Austin, Texas, with the Colorado River as a backdrop. There are more cameras covering the Capitol District now than in all of Hollywood. That is another change this black man is not entirely comfortable with, the New Austin, but it's progress, no? Point is that you knew shit, even important shit, without having to work at it, back in the day. The lazy man’s way to be informed: You just had to be in ATX. At the time you were still seeing people downtown or you knew people who were seeing people downtown. 

My boss came into the office one day during those years, the Bush years as governor, and said, like, he just saw former Governor White at a wine store on West 6th Street, a few blocks away from our office. Which blew my boss’s mind. 

“Mark White buys bad wine just like me!” or words to that effect. That's what my boss said. A small town, yeah. Whole Foods was a few blocks past the wine store and was pretty much the center of my social existence for a time—no longer hanging out at my dealer’s apartment up near the Drag, which had been Ground Zero for me back in the day, not the Central Library anymore either, management didn't like too many street Negroes at the main location. Suddenly my principal hang-out was W.F. 

        To set the scene.

Not the current Whole Foods, not the present mothership but the prior mothership, next to Book People, just across Sixth Street from the main locale now. So, like, Whole Foods had these awesome muffins, outrageously over-priced like everything else on the aisles, and like only one good deal, one reasonably-priced item in the whole fucking store. Water. You could buy cold mineral water allegedly from Italy in a big green glass bottle for like one dollar and carry it around in your backpack and survive downtown during summer. When even an African-American warrior whose ancestors ran barefoot on the savannah, hunting alongside Simba the lion—and whose ancestors also worked in East Texas cotton fields, hoeing a tough row—starts to sweat. 

        You feel me? Personally, it was never my plan to shoplift at Whole Foods, even back in the day. Even in the Old Austin where racist privilege was so blatant and was so very hurtful to the Black Man. Not that the thought didn't occur to me to rip off the store, actually, as a kind of revolutionary justice, or wealth redistribution, you know? Except W.F. has always seemed like a risky environment for a Negro, not worth it, not in the old Austin, or even today, not for an aubergine or organic beet. 

        Done a lot of grazing thru the years, sure. 

Grazing makes up for the high prices on days you actually make a purchase, because it’s all such an outrageous rip-off? Stop me if you've heard that rationalization before. So, like, one time the state trooper working the Whole Foods front door, this one afternoon back in the day, his instincts about me were right on but his luck was bad because there was a receipt in my pocket. 

        Maybe not my receipt but a receipt nonetheless and it’s not like he was going to go item by item through my bag to be sure. To set the scene. At least the state troopers are usually polite even if they are profiling which this one was, he was a Hispanic dude which gave him points in my view actually, like, me sharing his pain as member of a minority group in the Lone Star State. 

        Suffice it to say he got me on a good day. My medication was working. So, like, he didn't really stop me but he was about to, so my preemptive move was to approach him first, save the pig the trouble. 

        He was cooler about his suspicions which the state puercos usually are, they're really polite, you know? But before the pig signals me to stop, which he didn’t really do, he’s looking at my bag of W.F. goodies—but doing it in a discreet way because this was an expensive store where wealthy/powerful white people came to shop and security didn’t want to make a big scene or put a liberal off enjoying his or her foie gras or Perrier by clubbing a nigger to the ground during store hours. Not while customers are still enjoying the shopping experience. 

So, like, you know, after his professional curiosity had been satisfied we got to talking and somehow the conversation turned to W who by then was President Bush and it turned out this state police porker wasn’t an ordinary trooper, not Highway Patrol, or a mere driver’s license examiner. He was Capitol Police, working store security as an extra gig. We got to chatting, yeah. Austin was still a small town and people were not too busy to talk, not like now with all these greedhead techdogs who never have time for human bonding

        Or time for small town gossip, either.

This Latino guy said that on Election Day 2000 or Election Day +1 when the new resident of the White House had not been declared, he was actually on duty at the Governor’s Mansion and W was home. Yeah, that's what he said. And that's where it got interesting. So, like, W came out out of the house early that morning, onto the front lawn, in his robe and slippers or whatever, to collect his morning newspaper, trying to act like an ordinary guy in Austin, Texas, in case the media was watching which they were. 

There were news vans and reporters already camped out, on West 11th Street, as close as they could get to the Mansion. So, like, my question to this state trooper working the W.F. front door was, like, stop right there. Stop right there. 

        Stop! 

This is completely professional curiosity on my part: what newspaper? What newspaper did W subscribe to? And the trooper said W actually subscribed to two newspapers that were delivered every morning to the front door of the Mansion, the Wall Street Journal and the Houston Chronicle. So, like, not the Austin American-Statesman which meant Bush was actually smarter than he looked. 

That’s a joke, actually. 

The trooper continued, we’re still standing in the sliding doorway at Whole Foods, just far enough inside not to trigger the electronic sensor. It's cool inside, he’s still checking out the people leaving, discreetly, but no niggers or Mexicans coming or going and therefore no one with probable cause to stop, right, isn’t that how the Texas criminal justice system works? He continued with his rap. 

And he said him and the other officer on duty that morning, on the lawn of the Governor’s Mansion, said to W, that day, that morning, Election Day 2000, Y2K, the Year of the Millennium in the World Capitol of Live Music: 

        “Hey Governor, how’s it going?” 

        And W, who was always nice to the help, pretty cool one-on-one—so people in Austin said—rolled his eyes and smiled what must have been his familiar good-old-boy aw-shucks peckerwood smile and replied, half-joking, “It’s going to be one of those days,” which it was. It was actually "one of those days" for like the next month or so until the Supreme Court ruled that those votes in Florida didn't count. 

Or, like, for the next few years, actually. 

        Through Hurricane Katrina, certainly, or until the waterline dropped. Until the surge started working in Fallujah too, that would just be an uneducated guess. And that, like, fit with all the available hearsay in ATX. 

        Never saw the big guy in person during those six years he was a resident but everybody told me, both D’s and R’s, that Governor Bush was very charming personally, when they went to his office in the Texas Capitol, or at the Mansion, or wherever, a very personable guy one-on-one. They also said he was always the smartest guy in the room, at least in Austin, which seems doubtful now in light of later events in D.C. and abroad, like in Baghdad. But that’s what people said who met him when he was governor. The smartest guy in the room, no shit. 

And this one chick, a hot little Chilean “abnormal psychologist” specialist-type chick who wanted my bone, frankly, not that it’s important here—this is a true story. Like 100%. 

She asked me once about W in a hostel somewhere during a prelude to a hookup, and knowing that Austin is my home, what is he really like, she wanted to know. 

Who? 

“President Bush,” she said, and my response was he’s very personable one-on-one because that's what everybody told me in River City. She looked at me and she answered, completely serious, this is absolutely true, “They said the same thing about Adolf Hitler.” After that—since then—when people ask me about George W. Bush, based upon my knowledge of this bucolic River City, my answer is to skip straight to the chase and say he’s a fucking Nazi. No lie. 

My last memorable encounter in the Old Austin was among the beautiful people and high prices of Whole Food but not on the bulk aisle. 

In express checkout one afternoon there was a striking older white lady, one or two customers ahead of me in line, and somehow she looked familiar. Don’t know what she was buying although it was too expensive whatever it was. 

She looked like she could afford it though, not Michael Dell-rich, not like she could buy the whole store, just whatever she wanted in it. What struck me most were her clothes. 

Her apparel. 

She was rich enough to be understated which in Texas means wealthy indeed. Fashionably broken-in jeans, almost chic, like someone had worn them for her to soften them up, and a sheer very expensive maybe even silk blouse and a thin gold bracelet on her wrist, not like the ingots that ordinary Texas mega-rich women wear. 

This wasn’t oil money, or cattle wealth, actually, it was political gold which means respectability as well as cash. Her hair, kind of golden too, actually, was perfect, a helmet but perfect. 

She looked well-cared for and sure of herself. It was Ann Richards. 

We chatted for a second. It had been twenty years, more, since we’d last seen each other, in the Travis County Courthouse when she was still Precinct 1 Commissioner, whose district was West Austin back in the day. We talked on the telephone once when she was State Treasurer too but that conversation was a long time ago in an Austin that no longer exists. 

Ann’s rap after she got beat for reelection as governor was that she never looked back. That’s what she told interviewers if she was asked, what happened happened, she said, she lost the election, W won. That was that and she moved on with her life. Which meant going to New York or wherever, working as a political consultant, a commentator or strategist or whatever. That’s what she said. That's what she did, documentary evidence proves it. 

But by the time we ran into each other at Whole Foods, that version of history was no longer holding up. What had happened in the meantime was 9-11 and Iraq, W had four years in D.C. at that point, as the most powerful guy in the world, when former Governor Richards appeared in express checkout—this was like September or October, the fall of ’04 at the end of his first term in the White House and a lot of people were dead who otherwise would not be. Those were the metrics as the old Austin came to an end, the numbers described it all, particularly body counts. 

And you could kind of see that on Ann's face. She had fucked up and she knew it. Ann Richards didn't say anything, she was too smart for that, too experienced especially after four years in the Mansion up the street and even longer in the Courthouse, across the street from the Mansion. She certainly wasn't going to say anything to someone who was not in her inner circle. She kept her mouth closed but her features were harder to control. 

Nothing was said but nothing needed to be said, it was all written on her face. You might think she was ill but the cancer hadn’t been diagnosed yet. This was something different, regret. It’s kind of like illness but the symptoms can be harder to diagnose or might mimic other conditions. Not being a psychologist or anything, not like my Chilean friend who called W a Nazi. My bet was that Ann felt responsible. She felt guilty for unleashing George W. Bush on an unsuspecting world. W’s political career was one baby that needed to be strangled in the crib. Ann Richards was the last person with the motive and the means to do it. She made the error that is unforgivable in this town. She ran a bad campaign. 

        The trouble is, and this may have been Ann’s thinking, when you bring in somebody to go dumpster-diving in Austin you can’t always be sure whose dumpster it’s going to be. A lot of shit happens here. Maybe that was what she feared about playing hardball. 

It's amazing that people who never knew her, talk about what a saint Ann Richards was. If she was a saint, the Texas Governor’s Mansion was the wrong place for her to be. Who a leader nurtures—who a leader praises—is important and she did a good job of that, encouraging women to join the process, and all, being a mentor you would call her, a role model. But just as important as whose political career you start is whose career you end. By that measure she failed. We shook hands and she went her way. 

        She was living around the corner in some condos. Whose other V.I.P. resident was one of President Johnson's daughters, Lynda Bird or Luci Bird, whichever one lives here in town. 

Watching Governor Richards walk away, no security, no assistant, nothing except the purchases in her hand. In this town that's what it sometimes came down to, yes, even “in the Old Austin.” No matter how important you were. One day you ended up carrying your own groceries out of Whole Foods. It could be a lonely walk through the parking lot. 

Anyway, that day, going back inside and collecting my shit—and the receipt—and saying to the checker, like, “Do you know who that was? That was Ann Richards.” 

The guy was a hipster, probably a glass-blower or mixed-media artist just working the cash register to pay for the $200-an-ounce herb that gave him inspiration. He was completely unimpressed. 

“I just saw,” he told me, “Sandra Bullock in produce.”                

Friday, July 18, 2025

Barack the Black Whale


    The captain of the small coastal trader on which I bought passage was steering south along Colombia’s Pacific side, in mild seas, listening to vallenato, a pile of crushed beer cans at his feet. It was 4 a.m. and crew and passengers were mostly asleep when suddenly there was a blinding light in the captain’s eyes and a loudspeaker order to cut his engine and prepare to be boarded.

            The Colombian Coast Guard had arrived to do a little interdiction.

            The costaguardas launch carrying four men and an officer slid alongside, and in a moment the four sailors had taken positions at various chokepoints across the tiny freighter, while the officer went to the bridge to chat with the captain. Someone shouted from the darkness for the passengers to present identity cards and passports. A look at the coast guard launch was enough to discourage any thoughts of escape. 

            The freighter had one 350-horsepower engine and we had been crawling along at less than ten mph. The coast guard launch, perhaps one-twentieth the size and weight of its prey, had a hydrodynamic aluminum frame and canopy, with three 350 HP outboard engines yoked together side by side and, according to the freighter’s helmsman, who had seen it in action, was capable of speeds approaching flight. Somewhere—off in the darkness—the mother ship, the coast guard cutter that had sent the launch, was waiting as backup. The old days when traffickers in this part of the contraband world had faster boats than the people chasing them, or when the smugglers had more and bigger guns, are apparently past.

            My bunk just behind the bridge offered a perfect view of the interaction between the coast guard officer and the captain. The officer asked to see the captain’s cell phone. We were about a mile offshore and the captain had been making and receiving calls, as had others on board who weren't asleep. The officer began to scroll down through the phone’s memory of calls while asking an occasional question of the ship’s master, without actually looking at him.

            “Five crew and ten passengers,” the captain answered one inquiry.

            “Scrap metal,” he answered another, about his cargo.

            That much was true. I had seen it loaded, up the coast, near the Darien Gap from which we had sailed. There are few roads on either the Panamanian or Colombian side of the border and most everything inanimate going in or coming out moves by sea. Beer and foodstuffs go north, as well as bicycles and motorcycles, medicine and military supplies. Various kinds of hardwood and any kind of recyclable debris that the captain can make a profit on comes back south to the port at Buenaventura. At least that describes the legal trade.

            The coast guard officer took his time and finally finished scrolling through the phone and handed it back to its owner. The officer made a lackadaisical search of the bridge, looking into cabinets. He stepped into the passenger berths, identified himself to me, and asked to see my papers. “Guardacostas,” he said rather apologetically, to explain the disturbance. He thanked me for my cooperation and was gone, with his men, over the side. What they had really come for was just to look at the captain’s phone.

            The crew had disappeared into the nooks and crannies of the ship at first sign of trouble and now reappeared on deck and joked nervously after the launch was gone. In the morning I asked the purser, who was by profession a civil engineer who had actually helped design this ship for the run it was making, “What was the coast guard doing here?”

            “They were doing their job,” he said matter-of-factly which increasingly describes the Colombian public’s attitude, with some exceptions, to the heightened security of recent years. He also explained about the captain’s cell phone.

            “There’s a lot of wiretapping that goes on,” he said approvingly. “Suppose they are listening to a particular telephone in Medellin, and there is a conversation about a shipment coming in tonight by boat, but the boat’s name is never mentioned. Or they just have a telephone number that they know is involved in the traffic . . . .” That traffic coming south like us would include guns and cash. Going in the opposite direction, toward Panama, would be, you guessed it, la blanca.

            If the coast guard had found the wrong number on the captain’s cell phone, the ship would have been seized and searched painstakingly, and the crew held until the authorities knew what was what. Another captain along the same route running between Buenaventura which is Colombia’s main Pacific port, and the border of Panama, told me that tracking devices had been placed on his bridge, paid for by the U.S. government, that showed the ship’s position at all times to a surveillance station in Chile. If the ship went off course for any reason, like to meet a smuggler, Bogota got a call from Santiago to send a vessel to investigate. It’s a good thing too. My last trip to Buenaventura, two years ago, pirates boarded a boat just outside the port, ordered crew and passengers into the water without lifejackets, and just took the vessel. That was all they wanted. It’s a rough coast—Colombia’s Pacific side—and seems much more dodgy than the Old World charm of the Caribbean and Cartagena. Where so many cruise ships stop and yachts run between North and South America.

            In the morning, the crew was mostly over the coast guard’s rude shock. We had seen whales breaching the day before. Now we were beginning to see trash in the water which meant civilization, in this case Buenaventura, was near.

            The captain was asleep. He only took the wheel at night and during the problematic actual entry into port.

            “How many states in the United States?” the helmsman asked me suddenly.

            “Fifty.”

            “How many did Obama win?”

            “Thirty-six,” I answered at random.

            The Pacific coast of Colombia is heavily-populated by African descendants and most of this crew was black. Barack Obama is the “Black Whale” in these waters, a kind of talisman, the most that any man can aspire to, short of being Pele or God. The helmsman and pursuer both assured me that the President will win reelection.

            On the horizon there was a big patrol boat moving fast, cutting through the waves, on its way to meet a container ship crawling in from Asia. They would ask to see that captain’s cellphone too.