The Mitten Channel

Leaving Flint to See America on a Schwinn Bicycle

The Mitten Channel Season 6 Episode 13

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0:00 | 13:25

I Left My Blue-Collar Hometown On A Schwinn And Learned How The "Other Half" Actually Lives

Have you ever felt that crushing pressure to leave home just to "figure out your future"? 🤔 In this episode, I’m looking back at 1970, when I ditched the factory smoke of Flint, Michigan, for a 2,000-mile cross-country bicycle odyssey that changed everything.

Expect to hear about:

  • Why riding at dawn in the Mojave Desert is basically a 110-degree survival horror movie. 🐍
  • The "poor man's air conditioner" that totally blew my Michigan mind.
  • What happens when you’re 16, solo, and realize postcards have been lying to you about Los Angeles.

It’s a story about "sea to shining sea" on two skinny tires, outlasting the factories that defined my youth. Hit play for the full "Rest of the Story."

#FlintMichigan #BicycleTouring #PaulHarvey #Schwinn #RadioFreeFlint

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Arthur Busch

I grew up in a blue collar city where leaving was both a promise and a risk. Before I ever left Flint for good, I left it once on a bicycle. It was early June 1972. In a few weeks I'd walk in a graduation line and collect the high school diploma. Life in Flint had finally started to click. I had a girlfriend, my own car, and a decent job. For seventeen year old in a blue collar town, that felt like a the whole package. What more could I want? Everyone around me seemed to have an answer. It was time to leave home and figure out my future. When they said future, they meant college, careers, maybe another city. When I said future, I meant next Friday. Perhaps Saturday night and whether I had gas money for a date. I felt that pressure to blaze a new trail, but leaving home wasn't just an idea. I already knew what it meant to go. Two summers earlier I had left Flint in a way that changed how I saw everything, not in a car or on a greyhound bus, but on a bicycle. In the summer of nineteen seventy, I joined a group called Wandering Wheels out of Taylor, Indiana. It was a small Christian cycling ministry that started in the nineteen sixties. It took young people on a cross country ride as a way to stretch their bodies, their faith, and their sense of the world beyond their hometowns. We had headed from Huntington Beach, California to Rehoboth Beach, Delaware. See to Shining Sea on two skinny tires. My mom drove me to Detroit Metro Airport for my first airplane ride. She hugged me at the gate and watched me walk down the jetway toward a flight to Los Angeles. She didn't think I was leaving home for good. She knew I was leaving to learn something about myself and that I would be back. Just before I boarded the plane, she said something she told me many times before growing up in Flint. Art, see how the other half lives. It took a long time to understand what she meant by the other half. I'd spent my life in a blue collar city surrounded by people from all over Hillbilly Nation. I didn't need to leave Flint to see that half. The half my mother wanted me to see was different. Other cultures, other landscapes, other ways of being. So I flew west with a brand new Green Schwinn Super Sport, one of the steel road bikes built during Schwinn's Chicago heyday, when it dominated American bicycle manufacturing. And I still have it today, rebuilt, good as new. That Chicago built frame has carried me over hills and highways in Michigan, Virginia, North Carolina, and back again, outlasting most of the factories that once defined my hometown. I was sixteen. The longest ride I'd taken until then was around the Dixieland subdivision, four small hills that felt like felt big at the time. Those hills were decent training for the flatlands of Kansas. They did nothing to prepare me for the Rocky Mountains. If you want to know why I was ready to leave Flint, you have to understand the soundtrack. I grew up under clouds of factory smoke drifting over the house almost every day. On the radio and in the movies in the nineteen sixties and early seventies offered a different horizon. Hit the road, roll into some other town, find out who you are somewhere else. Films like Easy Rider in a hundred highway songs romanticized escape. What stuck with me wasn't the drugs or the rebellion so much as the scenery, and a simple idea, a river flowing toward the sea, a man wanting to go wherever that river went, anywhere, but where he was. Rolling into some other town sounded perfect. The problem was money and wheels. When the chance came to cross the country with wandering wheels, sleeping in churches and parks, pedaling hundred miles a day, it didn't feel crazy, it felt inevitable. We started in Southern California. Riding, a loaded bicycle out of the Los Angeles basin taught me that postcards lie. The smog was thick at the time, the traffic relentless. We wound through the foothills near San Bernardino, climbing and climbing, lungs burning. My four little hills in Flint hadn't prepared me for that. We pushed on into the Sierra Nevada foothills, then toward the desert on the way to the Grand Canyon. That's where I first felt how big America really is, and how small you can feel in the middle of it. We rode through small northern Arizona towns like Kingman, Seligman, and Williams. On a map, they're dots. On a bicycle, they're a lifetime. The distance between them is hot, empty, and humbling. Singing America the Beautiful doesn't tell you how far it really is from sea to shining sea. Riding, it does. Somewhere before Flagstaff the romance started to peel away. I found myself talking out loud, arguing with myself on the road. Arthur, trying to ride a bike across America is a ridiculously nutty idea. If you ever think about adventuring across America again, do not do it on a bicycle. Then another voice in my head chimed in. Maybe I'll do it on a motorcycle instead. Even at sixteen, I knew it was a dumb idea too. I kept pedaling. Crossing the Mojave Desert taught me more about survival than any classroom in Michigan ever did. Until then, my only desert experience came from the television shows like Death Valley Days. On screen, the desert was a backdrop. In June on a bicycle, it becomes the main character. We had to ride at dawn and after dark to avoid those worst to avoid the worst of the heat. We passed through towns that sounded made up. Yucca Valley, Twenty Nine Palms, Needles. One night in Twenty Nine Palms, California, we slept in a public park. Around two in the morning I woke up to water pounding my face and sleeping bag. For a moment I thought it was raining. Then I realized the automatic sprinklers had kicked on. By sunrise everything was dry again. The air was so arid it stole the moisture right out of the gear. Riding at night brought its own hazards. The road was littered with rattlesnakes, they crawled out to lie on the warm asphalt and soak up the heat. Many were already flattened by trucks and cars, but not all of them. As we slollemed through that mess of living and dead snakes, I kept thinking this is not how I want to die, bitten by a rattlesnake on a highway no one in Flint has ever heard of. The days were worse. One afternoon it was about 110 degrees. The air was so dry you couldn't even sweat. That sounds impossible if you spent summers in Michigan, where the humidity, the air felt like a wet towel. In the Mojave my skin burned, my mouth turned to sandpaper, and there was no sweat, just heat, thirst, and the road. I learned something that day I've carried into every hard fight since. You can do more than you think. You can as long as you don't quit. The moment that lesson really sank in was when we finally saw water again. We crossed into Nevada and reached the Colorado River and Davis Dam, just north of what's now Laughlin. After miles of shimmering heat, that blue green water looked like a hallucination. I dropped my bike, walked to the river, and poured cold water over my head. It shocked my skin and cleared my thoughts. I was 300 miles from where we'd started at the Pacific Ocean and roughly 2,000 miles from home. I was sixteen. For the first time in my life I felt truly on my own. From that point on, the trip wasn't about adventure or some movie soundtrack. It was about survival and getting to the next stop. There's one last image from that stretch that has stayed with me for more than fifty years. We were somewhere out in that wide open, empty country, tumbleweeds, scrub, dust, heat. We needed water. We came upon a shack with a corrugated metal roof, the kind of place you'd expect in a west in a western. Inside there were two men standing over a big metal trough, the kind you use to water cattle, with a huge flint fan blowing across it. They filled my water bottle. I asked what that contraption was. That one of them said that's a desert cooler, or man's air conditioner. I had never seen anything like that in Michigan. Back home we already had humidity. Pumping water into the air would make you feel worse, not better. And that shack in a in this climate, this cheap setup was the difference between unbearable and just barely tolerable. As they talked, my mind drifted back to Flint, to my dad sitting in front of his window air conditioner, listening to Ernie Harwell call the Tigers game on the radio. The whirl of fans, the crack of the bat, Harwell's easy Georgia Southern voice. In that moment Flint felt both impossibly far away and completely present. I was in the desert, but I was also home. Years after that first ride, the bike carried me along the mountain roads of Virginia, North Carolina, and around the LeeLanau Peninsula in Michigan. One structure road I cherished most, technically a ride it wasn't. Crossing the Mackinac Bridge in the bed of a Michigan Department of Transportation pickup, lying under what felt like a billion stars. Bicycles aren't allowed on the Mackinac Bridge. Once a year on Labor Day, it opens to pedestrians for the Mackinac Bridge Walk with the governor. A five-mile tradition that's been led by almost every governor since the late 1950s and now draws tens of thousands each year. I promised myself I'd come back to that span on my own power. In 2013 I did, joining others, other Michiganders to walk across the bridge on Labor Day, trading the home of tires for the rhythm of footsteps and conversation. By then I knew a few things. This country is bigger than any one town. Heat and distance can strip you down to your basics. And no matter how far you travel, from a desert shack with a poor man's air conditioner to the Mackinac Bridge in Michigan, under a full sky of stars, the place you're from rides along with you. I didn't understand it then, but that summer on a bike was rehearsal for every hard thing that came later. Law school, politics, the Flint water crisis, and the long project of not giving up on a city that taught me both how to endure and how to leave. Mom was right, I did see how the other half lives. What neither of us could have predicted was how much those roads and that old Chicago Schwinn would change the way I see our lives too. Thank you. This has been Arthur Busch for the Mitten Channel. We hope that you'll subscribe to our publication here on Substack, on Facebook, follow us, and download episodes at radiofreeflint.media. Goodbye for now.

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