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RiotKarma — Magic Bus

Published: 2008-04-16 09:49:40 +0000 UTC; Views: 42725; Favourites: 93; Downloads: 30708
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Description 'SOCIETY
YOU'RE A CRAZY BREED
I HOPE YOU'RE NOT LONELY
WITHOUT ME'

Eddie Vedder

CHRISTOPHER MCCANDLESS - ALEXANDER SUPERTRAMP

Christopher Johnson McCandless (12 February 1968 – 18 August 1992) was an American wanderer who with little food and little equipment, hiked into the Alaskan wilderness to live a life of solitude. Less than five months later he died near Denali National Park, of starvation. In 1996, Jon Krakauer wrote a book about his life, Into the Wild, which inspired a 2007 film of the same name directed by Sean Penn and starring Emile Hirsch as McCandless.

Childhood
McCandless grew up in Annandale, Virginia, located in affluent Fairfax County. His father, Walt McCandless, worked as an antenna specialist for NASA. His mother, Wilhelmina "Billie" Johnson, was his father's secretary and later helped Walt establish and run a successful consulting company.

From early childhood, teachers noticed McCandless was unusually strong-willed. As he grew older, he coupled this with an intense idealism and physical endurance. In high school, he served as captain of the cross-country team, urging teammates to treat running as a spiritual exercise in which they were "running against the forces of darkness....all the evil in the world, all the hatred."[1]

He graduated from W.T. Woodson High School in 1986 and from Emory University in 1990, majoring in history and anthropology. His upper middle-class background and academic success masked growing contempt for what he saw as the empty materialism of American society. In his junior year, he declined membership in Phi Beta Kappa, on the basis that honors and titles were irrelevant. McCandless was strongly influenced by Jack London, Leo Tolstoy and Henry David Thoreau, and he dreamed about leaving society for a Thoreau-like period of solitary contemplation.


[edit] On the road
After graduating in 1990, he gave $24,000 of the $42,000 bequest of a family friend for his last two years of college, to the charity Oxfam International and began traveling, using the name "Alexander Supertramp" (Krakauer notes the connection with WH Davies, Welsh author of 'Autobiography of a Super-Tramp' published in 1908). McCandless made his way through Arizona, California, and South Dakota, where he worked at a grain elevator. McCandless alternated between having jobs and living with no money and little or no human contact, sometimes successfully foraging for food. He survived a flash flood but lost his car (the car was not actually lost; because of McCandless' lack of knowledge of mechanics, he thought it was unrepairable) along with kayaking down remote stretches of the Colorado River to the Gulf of California. McCandless took pride in surviving with a minimum of gear and funds, and generally made little preparation.

For years, McCandless dreamed of an "Alaskan Odyssey" where he would live off the land, far away from civilization, and keep a journal describing his physical and spiritual progress as he faced the forces of nature. In April 1992 McCandless hitchhiked to Fairbanks, Alaska. He was last seen alive by James Gallien, who gave him a ride from Fairbanks to the Stampede Trail. Gallien was concerned about "Alex", who had minimal supplies (not even a magnetic compass) and no experience of surviving in the Alaskan bush. Gallien repeatedly tried to persuade Alex to defer his trip, and even offered to drive him to Anchorage to buy suitable equipment and supplies. However, McCandless ignored Gallien's warnings, refusing all assistance except for a pair of rubber boots, two tuna melts, and a bag of corn chips. Eventually, Gallien dropped him at the head of the Stampede Trail. The date was Tuesday, April 28, 1992.

After hiking along the snow-covered Stampede Trail, McCandless found an abandoned bus used as a hunting shelter parked on an overgrown section of the trail near Denali National Park ( 63°51′36.13″N, 149°24′50.62″W)[2] and began his attempt to live off the land. He had a 10-pound bag of rice, a Remington semi-automatic rifle, with plenty of .22LR hollowpoint ammunition, a book of local plant life, several other books, and some camping equipment. He assumed he could forage for plant food and hunt game. Despite his inexperience as a hunter, McCandless poached some small game such as porcupines and birds. Once he killed a caribou; however, he failed to preserve the meat properly and it spoiled. Rather than thinly slicing and air-drying the meat, like jerky, as is usually done in the Alaskan bush, he smoked it, following the advice of hunters he had met in South Dakota.[3]

His journal contains entries covering a total of 189 days. These entries range from ecstatic to grim with McCandless' changing fortunes. In July, after living in the bus for several months, he decided to leave, but found the trail back blocked by the Teklanika River, which was then considerably higher and swifter than when he crossed in April. There was an easy method of crossing a short way down the river. Unfortunately, McCandless was unaware of this because the only navigational aid in his possession was a tattered road map he had found at a gas station, which did not contain the type of detailed topographical information which could so easily have saved his life. [2]

On August 12, McCandless wrote what are assumed to be his final words in his journal "Beautiful Blueberries". He tore the final page from Louis L'Amour's memoir, Education of a Wandering Man, which contains an excerpt from a Robinson Jeffers poem entitled "Wise Men in Their Bad Hours":

Death's a fierce meadowlark: but to die having made
Something more equal to centuries
Than muscle and bone, is mostly to shed weakness.
The mountains are dead stone, the people
Admire or hate their stature, their insolent quietness,
The mountains are not softened or troubled
And a few dead men's thoughts have the same temper.
On the other side of the page, McCandless added, "I HAVE HAD A HAPPY LIFE AND THANK THE LORD. GOODBYE AND MAY GOD BLESS ALL!"

On September 6, 1992, two hikers and a group of moose hunters found this note on the door of the bus:

"S.O.S. I need your help. I am injured, near death, and too weak to hike out of here. I am all alone, this is no joke. In the name of God, please remain to save me. I am out collecting berries close by and shall return this evening. Thank you, Chris McCandless. August?"[1]

His body was found in his sleeping bag inside the bus, weighing an estimated 67 pounds. He had been dead for more than two weeks. His official cause of death was starvation.

Biographer Jon Krakauer suggests two factors may have contributed to McCandless's death in August, 1992. First, he was running the risk of starvation due to increased activity, compared with the leanness of the game he was hunting. [4] However, Krakauer insists starvation was not, as McCandless' death certificate states, the primary cause of death. Initially, Krakauer claimed McCandless might have ingested toxic seeds (Hedysarum alpinum). However, extensive laboratory testing proves conclusively there was no alkaloid toxin present in McCandless' food supplies. In later editions of the book, therefore, Krakauer has speculated a fungus Rhizoctonia leguminicola could have grown on the seeds McCandless ate. However, there remains no evidence to support Krakauer's theory, and all forensic data suggest starvation.

His journal entry for that date reads, "Extremely weak. Fault of pot[ato] seed. Much trouble just to stand up. Starving. Great Jeopardy." McCandless had been digging and eating the root of the wild potato—Hedysarum alpinum, a common area wildflower also known as Eskimo potato, which Kari's book told him was widely eaten by native Alaskans - for more than a month without ill effect. On July 14 he apparently started eating the pealike seedpods of the plant as well, again without ill effect.


[edit] Cultural legacy
Krakauer's book made Christopher McCandless a heroic figure to many. By 2002, the abandoned bus (No. 142) on the Stampede Trail where McCandless camped became a tourist destination.[5][6] Sean Penn's film Into the Wild, based on Jon Krakauer's book, was released in September 2007. In October 2007, a documentary film on McCandless's journey by independent filmmaker Ron Lamothe, The Call of the Wild, was released.[7] McCandless's story also inspired an episode of the TV series Millennium,[8] the album Cirque by Biosphere, and folk songs by singers Ellis Paul,[9] Eddie From Ohio,[10] Harrod and Funck,[11] and Eric Peters.[12]

Unlike Krakauer and many readers, who have a largely sympathetic view of McCandless,[13] some Alaskans have negative views about those who romanticize his fate.[6][14] Because he had not bothered to buy a map and a compass (items which most people in the same situation would have considered essential) McCandless was completely unaware that a hand-operated tram crossed the impassable river ¼ mile from where he attempted to cross. Had McCandless known this, he could easily have saved his own life.[1] Additionally, there were cabins stocked with emergency supplies within a few miles of the bus, although they had been vandalized and all the supplies were spoiled, possibly by McCandless, as detailed in Lamothe's documentary. The most charitable view among McCandless' detractors is that he was somewhat lacking in basic common-sense i.e. venturing deep into an isolated, unforgiving wilderness area without adequate planning, preparation and supplies was almost guaranteed to end in disaster.

Alaskan Park Ranger Peter Christian wrote: “I am exposed continually to what I will call the ‘McCandless Phenomenon.’ People, nearly always young men, come to Alaska to challenge themselves against an unforgiving wilderness landscape where convenience of access and possibility of rescue are practically nonexistent […] When you consider McCandless from my perspective, you quickly see that what he did wasn’t even particularly daring, just stupid, tragic, and inconsiderate. First off, he spent very little time learning how to actually live in the wild. He arrived at the Stampede Trail without even a map of the area. If he [had] had a good map he could have walked out of his predicament […] Essentially, Chris McCandless committed suicide.”[15]
Related content
Comments: 62

werejaguar In reply to ??? [2016-05-21 17:49:19 +0000 UTC]

I agree fully the fact that the people that live out there hate him, they keep having to rescue fools that follow him there.  He was a fool of the highest order that need psychiatric help before it got that far.  This man choose a slow suicide.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

joe1492 In reply to werejaguar [2020-01-20 12:17:19 +0000 UTC]

He actually was fairly well prepared. It's a myth that he just went into blindly. What some speculate killed him (take it with a grain of salt because I haven't looked into his story in a while) was eating some sort of thing that looked near identical to an safe edible food. It poisoned him and he died slowly. He might have went in with less supplies than most, but he succeeded save for the one mistake which even people familiar with the region would make

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werejaguar In reply to joe1492 [2020-01-21 07:36:36 +0000 UTC]

In Alaska there is no fairly, you are either prepared or you don't go.  The Alaskan wilderness is not a place to be without knowledge or fear.  Is it sad what happened to him, absolutely but to me its not surprising.

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Ying-Yang-Twiinz [2013-03-17 03:20:21 +0000 UTC]

I read this story in High school. We had to read this for English class. It was internsting to me on how he struggle to go to Alaska and how he thought of society back then.

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T0ASTK1NG [2011-10-17 05:04:27 +0000 UTC]

very inspiring person indeed to bad he died

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

carlie5474 In reply to T0ASTK1NG [2012-01-11 02:10:32 +0000 UTC]

ha in bed DID YOU WATCH THE MOVIE ?????

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T0ASTK1NG In reply to carlie5474 [2012-01-12 00:38:25 +0000 UTC]

yus i love the movie

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carlie5474 In reply to T0ASTK1NG [2012-01-12 22:48:05 +0000 UTC]

same

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celluloidfairy [2010-12-18 20:09:23 +0000 UTC]

[link]

"Consider where he died. An abandoned bus. How did it get there? On a trail. If the bus could get into
the place where it died, why couldn’t McCandless get out of the place where he died?
The fact that he had to live in an old bus in the first place tells you a lot. Why didn’t he
have an adequate shelter from the beginning? What would he have done if he hadn’t
found the bus? A bag of rice and a sleeping bag do not constitute adequate gear and
provisions for a long stay in the wilderness."

Materialistic, or not, first, we all need to have common sense. Survival instinct. If all the experience on living in wild is by watching a postcard....what's there to say. It's not called "The Wild" for nothing.

None of you goes out on a snow without a good coat, no matter how free-spirited you are.

No offense, RiotKarma, but I really hope you don't think that Chris is some sort of Jesus, and that you do have enough common sense not to go barefoot to Alaska. Because, even Chris eventually, but too late, realized that human being needs other human beings in order to live properly. At the end, he needed a help from a society he hated so much, but no one was there.....just our mother Nature, and she is kind of ruthless.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

carlie5474 In reply to celluloidfairy [2012-01-11 02:11:31 +0000 UTC]

he did find out how to get homeits just the river was blocking him from getting across so he died cause he was so hungry he ate NOUN EDIBAL leaves and stuff

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SlightlyTintedRed [2010-07-16 21:21:47 +0000 UTC]

He went to my high school. Wow.

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carlie5474 In reply to SlightlyTintedRed [2012-01-11 02:12:28 +0000 UTC]

me dad would love to meet you cause he loves this movie

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

carlie5474 In reply to SlightlyTintedRed [2012-01-11 02:11:41 +0000 UTC]

WOW REALLY OMG

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Lord-Jack [2010-07-10 12:31:38 +0000 UTC]

so true....

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brokenheartsbleeding [2010-06-24 15:10:13 +0000 UTC]

my cousin was one of the hikers/hunters/it was the bus he/they used when they went hunting...

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iLoveToBeHappi [2009-09-13 06:09:46 +0000 UTC]

Man this movie makes me wanna cry!!

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

RiotKarma In reply to iLoveToBeHappi [2009-09-29 16:34:41 +0000 UTC]

then...cry

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

iLoveToBeHappi In reply to RiotKarma [2009-09-29 16:43:37 +0000 UTC]

suuure thing!!! i already did!

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

KaleidoscopeWoman [2009-09-11 18:48:34 +0000 UTC]

So many people say how stupid it was for him to die out there... But he would've never gotten any satisfaction, he would've never learned that one thing that he was striving to learn if he hadn't died out there... And if he hadn't died there then we wouldn't have learned all of his wisdom either. Some are sent down on this earth not only to figure something out themselves but to share it with others...

"Happiness, only real when shared..."

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

RiotKarma In reply to KaleidoscopeWoman [2009-09-14 16:31:19 +0000 UTC]

that last sentence of yours should be... universaly true...IT SHOULD...

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

KaleidoscopeWoman In reply to RiotKarma [2009-09-14 18:21:28 +0000 UTC]

I agree to the utmost level.

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RiotKarma In reply to KaleidoscopeWoman [2009-09-21 16:03:56 +0000 UTC]

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thekidwasalright [2009-08-20 12:53:02 +0000 UTC]

what an incredible story. and the movie is fantastic; i've seen it recently. great picture

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

RiotKarma In reply to thekidwasalright [2009-09-09 09:49:36 +0000 UTC]

this is just a pic..story is worthwile to be told..thank you by the way..

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

thekidwasalright In reply to RiotKarma [2010-02-23 12:44:41 +0000 UTC]

i've seen the movie again. and last week i found the book in a store. you can't imagine how happy i am. can't believe i'm so lucky to read Chris story over and over again

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ericl3414 [2009-08-08 19:20:05 +0000 UTC]

Great book i'm actually reading the book while im typing this for a scrapbook project at school ahahaha...

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

doedyjepang [2009-07-20 10:47:47 +0000 UTC]

I hoped could like him....

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

orangeradiohead [2009-02-02 10:27:31 +0000 UTC]

i need no possessions. I can survive with just nature

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

RiotKarma In reply to orangeradiohead [2009-05-07 12:09:07 +0000 UTC]

it is what i am trying to do too..in the North of Portugal from where actualy i am writing...

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orangeradiohead In reply to RiotKarma [2009-05-09 12:02:51 +0000 UTC]

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Nights-Eyes [2009-01-26 02:40:25 +0000 UTC]

I actually have to do a project in school that in a round-a-bout way ties in with his story.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

RiotKarma In reply to Nights-Eyes [2009-05-07 12:10:52 +0000 UTC]

hope the notes will help you in your project

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Nights-Eyes In reply to RiotKarma [2009-05-07 21:02:02 +0000 UTC]

They did thank you.

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alternative-beauty [2009-01-24 04:03:46 +0000 UTC]

I wonder if when he took this picture he realized that it would be in a book, on the web, etc..

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

RiotKarma In reply to alternative-beauty [2009-05-07 12:11:57 +0000 UTC]

I don't think so..i better think that he took this photo for makin it be found by someone else..just to keep in memory ..and yes, he did!

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

super-illustrator0 [2008-12-08 18:49:23 +0000 UTC]

Yo, thanks... this is gonna help with that bullshit analysis essay that I have to write!

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

RiotKarma In reply to super-illustrator0 [2009-05-07 12:12:48 +0000 UTC]

i really hope it can help to have less work in terms of stress!

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Rock-Raider [2008-10-26 15:28:36 +0000 UTC]

Nice work. I saw the movie last night, & thought it was quite good. Chris McCandless was a great man. He shirked off the materialistic trappings of society, & returned to his most basic roots as a human, something most "humans" these days are too spoiled & soft to do. Albeit he could've prepared a little bit more, but really, our ancestors used to navigate the same way, & look at where that has lead us. The movie was good too. It wasn't some 2-hour toy commercial like every movie in their grandma nowadays. It was a deep, spiritual, thought-provoking tale about his journey of self-discovery. I salute you Christopher Johnson McCandless.

On another note, I wonder how his family had taken his death.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

RiotKarma In reply to Rock-Raider [2008-11-04 17:13:08 +0000 UTC]

christopher to me represented what mayu for many people jesus christ was...thnx!

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Estella-Brandybuck [2008-09-30 11:29:02 +0000 UTC]

Meraviglioso, il film 'Into the Wild'... Adoro la colonna sonora di Eddie Vedder, ma ancor più stupefacente è il libro.

Amo Chris McCandless. La sua storia... La sua libertà... La sua anima.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

RiotKarma In reply to Estella-Brandybuck [2008-09-30 14:43:11 +0000 UTC]

si..commovente...per quanto di VERO Chris ci ha raccontato....

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Fecciax [2008-07-03 09:48:19 +0000 UTC]

odoro questo film , la foto è originale! del vero Alex , oooh che bellezza!

saluti LIbertari
NE PATRIA NE DIE
ps ti consiglio di dae un'occhiata ai miei link, che sono sul journal entry

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RiotKarma In reply to Fecciax [2008-07-03 16:11:19 +0000 UTC]

il vero Supertramp..uno che l'Anarchia, quella vera, e quella più dura , l'ha messa in pratica...a costo della vita

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RiotKarma In reply to Fecciax [2008-07-03 16:04:09 +0000 UTC]

andrò a vederli, non temer...que viva l'anarchia

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celil [2008-05-24 08:51:31 +0000 UTC]

yes, he was a huge heart man..
love his story. a masterpiece life..

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

RiotKarma In reply to celil [2008-05-26 16:04:51 +0000 UTC]

there's a big hard sun beatin' on the big people in a big aheart's world-sang the song...

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rentgirl42 [2008-05-04 03:06:27 +0000 UTC]

omg
i just watched it and.....what i can say abou this man??????
he was free
his spirit was so pure
what he did and how he died.....
the big prise for his great adventure
all the ppl he met...
he earned their love only with his smile and his mind
with his ideals
the magic bus..142...............42
his courage was unique
a great man

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

rentgirl42 [2008-05-04 03:06:19 +0000 UTC]

omg
i just watched it and.....what i can say abou this man??????
he was free
his spirit was so pure
what he did and how he died.....
the big prise for his great adventure
all the ppl he met...
he earned their love only with his smile and his mind
with his ideals
the magic bus..142...............42
his courage was unique
a great man

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

RiotKarma In reply to rentgirl42 [2008-05-04 17:26:14 +0000 UTC]

yes, from whome to take example...

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

ChrisDumont [2008-04-27 21:05:01 +0000 UTC]

what a great man..

👍: 0 ⏩: 1


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