| I've been living in Asia for over twenty years and I
can't remember a time when the new year's zodiac
animal made a more conspicuous entrance than the wild
boars did last January.
Within the first few days of
the new year a wild boar ran through the streets of
Uwajima and entered a school yard, a woman was
attacked by one and seriously injured, and in the US,
William Coursey of Fayetteville, Georgia, shot and
killed a 500 kilogram wild boar. To give you an idea
how big that is, Konishiki, the mammoth sumo wrestler
who reached the rank of ozeki, usually weighed around
270. Try to imagine being charged by a wild boar
almost twice the size of Konishiki.
I also had an experience with a wild boar last January
but since I am a bit shy and didn't have a camera to
document it with, I didn't bother to contact the
media. It really is a shame too because what happened
to me makes any of the stories they reported pale in
comparison. Anyway, now that I (and the wild boars
too, it seems) have calmed down I think I can talk
about it without too much of a hubbub being made.
Despite having lived in Hiroshima for almost two years
I don't know many people here. My current situation
doesn't allow me to get out much but when I do find
myself with a chunk of free time I often
go hiking alone in the mountains that border the city. Actually,
even if I knew more people, I would probably still go
by myself because of something that happened to me
when I was a senior in high school.
I grew up in the American southwest and every autumn
my friends and I would go as a group to the county
fair, but that year I got the plans wrong and wound up
there alone. I'd already paid to get in so decided to
see the sights and found it a completely different
experience from what I was accustomed to. I'd been
going to the fair with my friends for years but as I
strolled up and down the midway it seemed like I had
never really been there. For the first time I went at
my own pace and took notice of the smells, sounds,
lights and faces like never before. What particularly
caught my attention was watching the carnies as they
worked the crowd. They were like wolves and
communicated with each other with glances and subtle
gestures whenever a likely target approached.
Realizing how much I had missed affected me profoundly
and I began to drift away from my crowd.
I like hiking alone because I can linger whenever and
wherever I want and am able to wander off the trail
where a partner might not want to go. It's exactly
because of this freedom I sometimes make discoveries
like the odou where the incident took place.
An odou is a building that is neither shrine nor
temple but usually has religious overtones. As I
understand it they are erected by the local people to
be used for entertainment (I have found a couple with
small sumo rings made of straw embedded in the earth,
and I am guessing they are for oshirizumo, a playful
kind of sumo where you "fight" back to back or butt to
butt) and are usually located in somewhat isolated,
idyllic spots. They are built to be enjoyed and
nobody's going to get upset by your being there as
long as you are respectful of the property and clean
up when you leave. Just the same, I am not going to
give directions to this one because if it became well
known it could easily become a popular place for
drinking and then something unfortunate might happen.
I know of what I speak here: I used to go to an odou
surrounded by cherry trees on a mountain top in
Matsuyama that was burned down during hanami season a
few years ago. Suffice it to say that this one is on
the side of a mountain that can only be gotten to on
foot. It is a wooden building on stilts and has an
area of six mats, with a narrow, paritally covered
veranda in front. There is an open doorway under the
veranda and inside is an altar with a statue of
Kannon. It has no electricity nor outhouse but is
quiet, peaceful, and the air is always something
special to breathe. I am especially fond of spending
afternoons there in the rainy season.
It happened on January Third, an unusually warm day.
There was also a full moon, which is a great lure for
night-time hiking, though even when the moon is new on
most of the trail I don't need a flashlight due to the
abundance of ambient city light. I always use a
flashlight as little as possible because without one
you can sometimes see things you normally wouldn't.
For example, one night while seated on the odou's
veranda, I saw the sillohuette of a flying squirrel
crawl out onto a branch and leap down the
mountainside. It was amazingly aerodynamic and I never
would have seen it if I had been waving a flashlight
around. I always hope I'll see one again but it was
probably a once-in-a-lifetime experience.
I'd brought a change of underclothes (I'm usually
sweating by the time I reach the odou and will get
cold if I don't change), iPod, portable stereo to use
as an amplifier (now stashed there), three Steinies
(330 milliliter bottles of Asahi Dry beer), and a very
special chicken salad sandwich. (This sandwich is so
easy. First, go to your favorite Indian restaurant and
get a takeout order of chicken tikka {skewers of
tender chicken marinaded in coconut milk then cooked
in a tandoori oven}. Bring it home and leave it in the
refrigerator for a day or two wrapped airtight in
plastic. When you are ready to make the salad take the
chicken out and dice or mince it to the consistency
you want. Put it in a large mixing bowl with whatever
sounds good: onion, raisins, carrots, celery, cashews,
whatever. Mix it with mayonaise and/or mustard to
taste. Cover and refrigerate if need be. Just before
you are ready to make your sandwich go to Andersen's
bakery and get a fresh loaf of Dutch pan, a small,
round bread with a thin, crinkled crust. Slice the
bread in half like a hamburger bun and pile on the
chicken salad. Try it- it really is good.)
I'd timed the forty five minute bicycle ride from my
apartment to reach the trailhead just as the sun was
about to set. It's at the back of a graveyard at the
foot of a mountain and you really have to know where
to look to find it the way it angles off, then snakes
up through a bamboo grove. Though steep at first, it
has bamboo steps and soon levels off and meanders
along the mountain side at a gentle grade. There was
no one in the graveyard when I got there but as I
neared the trailhead I heard what sounded like someone
walking through the forest above.
I know hiking in the mountains at night is a bit
eccentric and I would be wary of anyone I met along
the trail, particularly in a city, so I stopped and
sat down on a gravestone to wait for for the person to
come down. Whoever it was wasn't making any effort to
keep quiet and judging from the sound of the limbs
breaking underfoot he (she?) was an adult. It was
frustrating watching the light fade but finally, off
in the corner, I saw an old, large dog lumber down
from the forest's edge. It kept its nose close to the
ground moving slowly and stiffly and I guessed it was
a stray and had been scaring up mice in the leaves.
When it started walking down the path between a row of
tombstones towards me, I leaned back behind the
gravestone just out of sight and waited for it to
notice me. When it was about three meters away I
flipped on my light and we both froze- "it" was a full
grown wild boar. Whether because it was blinded or
caught off guard and frightened, it didn't move until
I flicked the light out of its eyes. As soon as I did
it lifted its front legs off the ground, pivoted, and
tore off straight up the mountain banging its way
through the brush. I sat listening long after it was
out of earshot.
It was a long ride back to my apartment and I had been
looking forward to listening to my new iPod on the
stereo, but knowing a wild boar was up there was,
let's say, "unsettling." It was hard making a case for
not going home but eventually I concluded it was
probably more afraid of me than I was of it and headed
for the odou. Before setting off I got my flashlight
handy to blind it with again and sharpened one end of
the bamboo staff I keep hidden near the trailhead. It
was hard taking that first step but eventually I made
up my mind and took off at a good clip.
Philippe, a friend of mine who grew up on a farm in
France, once told me that the boars that lived around
his farm used to walk with him through the woods on
his way to and from school. They kept their distance-
it wasn't like walking with a pack of dogs (a group of
wild boars is called a sounder, by the way) but they
are essentially social animals and can be surprisingly
nonchalant around humans. I didn't believe him at the
time but now I was rethinking what he'd said and
wondered about this one: What was it doing there
alone? If boars are social animals was this one an
outcast? What would it take for a boar to be driven
from its group? Was it the last survivor of a sounder
with nothing to eat but offerings to the dead? Would a
boar consider me food? The more I thought about these
things the more uncomfortable I became and without
being aware of it I was tearing up the mountain side,
sure that it was on my trail. It didn't take long to
begin to sweat but I didn't stop until I reached the
spot where the trail leveled off. My underclothes were
soaked and I struggled to catch my breath as the worst
sort of scenarios kept rising to the surface of my
mind.
The city sounds were muffled by distance and foliage
and I let my ears adjust to the quiet as I paused. The
woods were dark and deep, the moon now just visible
above the opposite ridge, and if it hadn't been for
the boar it would have been a perfect night. It was a
comfort knowing that from there the odou was within
easy reach but my heart refused to stop pounding.
There was also something that kept gnawing at the back
of my mind, like that feeling you have when you know
you have forgotten something but just can't figure out
what it is. A limb cracked underfoot about thirty
meters away and suddenly whatever it was I'd forgotten
didn't seem so important.
I learned how to sail in Puget Sound and the first
time I sailed in the Strait of Juan de Fuca, we were
going along under a genoa (a large jib used for light
winds) when a wall of wind came slamming into us. We
had our shirts off and were basking in good fortune
when the wind sent everything flying. We took in our
jib and spent the rest of the day fighting a two knot
tide, beating into the wind under a double-reefed
main. For a while I didn't think we'd make it and was
stunned to realize that the sea has no choice but to
be indifferent to the lives it claims. As I stood
straining my ears for any telltale sound the boar was
near, that same sinking feeling came back to me.
"COME ANY CLOSER AND I'LL KICK YOUR ASS, PIG!" I
shouted... "I HAVE A SPEAR!"
My threat had no effect and I was desperate so I
switched to Japanese: "BAKAMONO! KOCHI E KURU NA!
KOCHI E KITARA SHINDE SHIMAU ZO!" but it kept moving
in. Then, less than ten meters away, it stepped into a
small clearing, broke into an easy trot and made a
shallow semi-circle around me before disappearing back
into the brush.
If its purpose had been to put me in my place it
succeeded. At this point I wasn't sure whether I
should advance or retreat but the next sound I heard
made me think it was back down the trail. As soon as I
caught my breath I took off for the odou.
I was on my favorite part of the trail. The
mountainside is very steep there- in many parts the
path is just a notch no wider than a shovel head- and
if it confronted me I'd either have to fight or jump
off the side and hope for the best. I was dwelling on
this when it came to me what I had forgotten: my
sandwich. How stupid could I get? I had left a ribbon
of beckoning fume that lingered and entwined itself
around everything I passed. The building was close and
getting there would be a race against time, but once I
did I could eat it and remove any reason for it to
attack me. If it did try to get me I'd be safe there
because boars weren't able to go up steps, I'd heard.
And if it did try, I could fend it off with my spear.
I had always considered that odou a sanctuary but
never before had that characterization been so true.
As soon as I arrived I slung off my pack and sank down
on the veranda to catch my breath and regroup. I sat
still, my ears keened for the slightest sound and
after a few minutes of no crinkled leaves nor broken
twigs, I began to relax. It seemed reasonable that a
wild boar wouldn't attack someone unless it felt
threatened and I am- I freely admit it- a coward in
matters like these. I lit some candles on the altar,
changed my underclothes and put them in a plastic bag.
I also figured that, like a fire, playing music would
announce the presence of humans and ward off any
animals so I got out the stereo and hooked up the
iPod.
A few years ago I became interested in opera when a
friend introduced me to Filippa Giordano's self-titled
album. She is a second generation opera singer (she
doesn't perform in operas, however) and on the
extreme, outside chance angels sing to me when I die,
if they sound anything like her I'll be happy to go.
She has a range of four octaves and makes everyone
else I've heard since Filippa so ho hum. Next to her
Maria Calais sounds like an old windbag. Whenever I
am upset or tense I listen to her first and within the
first few notes of "Casta Diva" I am calmed. Even on
this night she succeeded and I put away my thoughts
about the sandwich and opened a beer. When she reached
the first few notes of "Habanera" I was standing with
the crowd in front of the cigarette factory watching
her sashay back and forth as she laid down her rules.
By the time I opened my second beer I had put the boar
out of my mind. I switched the iPod over to shuffle
mode and Miles Davis' "All Blues" began. The backpack
was lying next to me and even through its wrapper I
could smell the sandwich and remembered it'd be best
to eat it right away.
The woods were quiet and the forest floor was dappled
with clear-edged pools of moonlight. The city lights
glittered through the trees limbs and brought to mind
pleasant thoughts of the holidays as I took that
first, glorious bite.
The odou is perched on a crescent of land that tapers
into trail on both sides. The clearing is fringed with
camellia and descends to a second, smaller flat spot
about five meters below. At the third bite the boar,
like the opening frame of a recurrent nightmare, poked
its head out from the camellias on the path I entered
on and stood watching me. It wasn't clear whether it
was blocking my escape or begging for food, but all
the strength drained from my limbs and I was powerless
to move. Shouting at it hadn't done anything so I
began to give it the silent treatment with a mean,
hard glare. We stayed that way for some time but I
finally gave in. What was the point anyway? Surely it
was hungry and in some small way I began to feel sorry
for it. It was, after all, a lot like me: a lone,
social animal. Then a new thought came to me: maybe if
I shared my food it would leave me alone once it was
all gone. I tore off a small chunk of sandwich and
tossed it about halfway between us. It made a series
of false starts but couldn't bring itself to leave the
cover of the bush. I tore off another piece and threw
it further away. After some hesitation it made a quick
move forward, snatched it and moved back.
Did you know boars eat with their mouths open? I
didn't. The noise they make is incredibly graphic and
I suspect the expression "eat like a pig" originally
meant more than to gorge oneself. I tossed another
piece its way and it immediately came forward and
moved back as before. Poor thing, I thought. Why are
you alone? It waited for another piece but when I
threw it it snatched it up as soon as it hit the
ground and stayed there as it chewed. I tossed another
one a bit closer to me and the boar moved forward.
When I tore off the next piece the boar continued
walking forward until it was close enough to let me
feed it by hand. I began putting the pieces in the
flat of my hand the way you'd give sugar cubes to a
horse, but as the sandwich began to disappear I had to
ask myself what I would do when we got to the end.
When the time came it began licking my palm but when I
began wiping my hands off on my jeans it seemed the
boar was in distress. It had probably eaten too fast
or its mouth was dry and the food was caught in its
throat. It was convulsing like a cat choking on a hair
ball and was having trouble breathing. Not knowing
what else to do I cupped my palm and poured beer into
it hoping the boar would drink and clear its throat.
It understood immediately what to do and was soon
breathing easily.
I am a city boy and though I grew up in an
agricultural state I don't know much about farm life.
It was obvious the boar was a sow and it looked to me
that she was either pregnant or had a litter of
piglets somewhere. Her teats bulged with milk (I
guessed) but it seemed to me that it would go against
nature for a mammal to have a litter in the middle of
winter. She was lapping up the beer as quickly as I
could pour and once the bottle was empty she began
nosing around my pack. My trepidation came roaring
back and I didn't want to confront her by taking the
pack away, but when she started to drag it off I knew
I had to do something. I latched onto it gently but
firmly and when I did she looked up at me and made a
noise. I'd always thought of pigs as squealing or
"oinking" but what it sounded like to me was, "orrr
may."
She kept sniffing at it trying to get at what was
inside even though all the food was gone. Finally I
set the pack down on the veranda and took out the
wrapper and spread it open for her to lick. When she
finished she started rummaging around the pack again
so I took everything out to show it was all gone, but
when I set the remaining beer down it was clear that
that was what she was after. She kept nudging it and I
had to do something right away or she would surely
break it. I took it away from her and when I did she
started crowding me trying to get at it. I was afraid
she'd turn on me if I kept it and in the end I felt I
had no choice but to give it to her. As soon as it was
open and I began to pour she took it in her mouth,
tilted back, drained it and flung it to the side.
After that she began pressing against me with her
snout and since everything I had to offer her was
gone, all I could do was shrug and say, "No more."
She kept looking up at me and shifting from foot to
foot saying, "orrr may, orrr may, orrr may." She was
persistent. I sat down on the veranda and she followed
me then began nudging me again. I moved into the
safety of the odou hoping she couldn't get to me
there. She started trying to hop up the stairs and I
knew that if she made it in she could cause some
serious damage. I had to do something quick and
remembered the bottle of Calvados I'd hidden under the
altar last fall. I figured that, like a child
experimenting with that first sip of whisky, she'd quickly
pull back from the flame and maybe even run off. And
if she liked it, well, she wouldn't be on her feet too
long and I could extricate myself from the situation.
There was about a third left and after I crawled over
and fished it out I fortified myself with a stiff
belt.
We had been listening to "Bolero" around the spot
where the kettle drums begin to make themselves felt
when I began to pour. She trotted over, took one lick,
shuddered, seemed to sneeze then said "ORRR MAY!!!"
This time- unlike with the beer- she was content to
drink from my palm and seemed to be enjoying it,
making little "mmm mmm" noises as she slurped. She was
licking the last moisture from my palm and fingers
when the music came to its rousing end. There was a
pause and then the intro to The Isley Brothers' 'It's
Your Thing" came on. It could easily be mistaken for a
Motown record but it was recorded by Epic. It starts
off with an electric guitar riff packed with tinky
clink ghost notes that sound something like this:
boom bubba boom bubba boom
dah da
bubbah boom bubba boom
dah da
boom bubba boom bubba boom
dah da
bubbah boom bubba boom
dah da
It's your thing
Do what you wanna do...
When the song started something came over her and she
backed up and froze. She'd put away a lot of alcohol
and I thought she was going to vomit, but then, when
the second dah da came in, she made a wide step to the
left with both her left front and back legs, then slid
the right ones over. She did it again at the next dah
da but this time to the right.
There are some profound differences between humans and
the animal kingdom (speech, opposing thumbs, etc.) but
one difference you never hear much about is animals'
inability to dance. Some animals, like the Leipzig
Stallions, can be trained to appear to dance, but they
are inattentive to the music and are following a
routine they suffer greatly to learn. When this boar
stepped to the side and slid her legs over I thought
she'd lost her balance and it was a funny coincidence
that she did it in time. But when she did it again at
the exact same spot in the music, well, it gave me
pause. I was willing to grant that that was a
coincidence too, but when the Isley Brothers came in
with the chorus, she took off in a circle with little
pitter pat steps locked on to that funky, irresistible
bass line. Not only that, she was tossing her head to
that drunk-in-the-afternoon piano player and waddling
her hips to the horn section. I stayed on the veranda
and at the first verse she stopped in front of me,
slid her front legs forward and began to weave to the
music in full-bodied, heartfelt ticks.
Many years ago my mother's long-term companion, John,
told me something that made a deep impression on me:
At the end of your life it will not be the things you
did that you will regret- it will be the things you
wanted to do, but didn't. I had never imagined myself
dancing with a wild boar but I knew that if I let this
chance go by I would always regret it. And so, when
the Isley Brothers started the second chorus and she
returned to her loop, I was off that veranda and in
the middle of her circle dancing like I hadn't in
years.
As a boy I'd once seen a documentary about a group of
Africans living in the traditional way. The village
was having a dance and the narrator explained how the
dance's purpose was twofold in that it served as
entertainment and as a way for the dancers to commune
with God. According to him the music was polyrhythmic
and the dancers were isolating different parts of
their bodies to the various rhythms. The more the
dancers were able to isolate, and the more
effortlessly they were able do this, determined the
intensity of the religious experience. That's what I
always tried to do whenever I danced, but when I
reached a certain age I found I could no longer keep a
beat. The passing of my ability to dance was one of
the saddest adjustments I'd had to make to middle age,
but when I leapt from the veranda and began to move
with the music, it all came back. The old Me/It
dichotomy disappeared and luscious, luscious music
coursed through my veins and flowed from my hips to
every limb and digit. For a few all-too-brief moments
I became the living, physical expression of music and
no longer followed the beat- I was the beat.
At the instrumental section she turned to face me and
rose up on her hind legs. It was, like everything else
that night, an unexpected development.
She was doing The Shimmy with a sense of purpose that
was heart stopping. My mouth dropped open and I,
against all my good manners, began to stare at her
chest. She slowed, arched her back and from her
shoulders began creating a double wave of ripples up
and down her smooth, pink belly. When she saw she had
my attention she cocked her head, her eyes took on a
saucy arch and she began to advance towards me, one
hoof at a time. The effect on me was like sliding a
needle across a turntable and I began to fuddle
through the music. She kept coming forward and to
break the tension I made a spin. She tried to follow,
but when she did she teetered on one leg, lost her
balance and went tumbling end over end down the
hillside.
I grabbed the flashlight and ran down to find her
splayed on her back in the lower clearing, all four
legs sticking up, bent at the knees and hooves. She
wasn't making a sound, and except for the fact she
wasn't moving, didn't appear to be injured.
"Pig! Pig! Are you OK?" I said and knelt beside her.
She stirred a bit and gave me a weak "orrr may"
followed by a belch.
Suddenly, I had a revelation and began to speak to her
in soft, soothing tones. "Oor-pay ing-thay...
Eep-slay."
When I said that something inside of her seemed to
gather and her body went rigid. When she winced I
thought she was going to die but she'd only wanted to
fart. I smiled, stroked her jowl and said, "Eep-slay
eetheart-sway." She closed her eyes and soon began to
snore and I stayed by her side till the cold forced me
to make the long ride home.
I've looked for her since then but without luck. The
other night on
Ushita mountain I startled another wild
boar but it ran off before I had a chance to speak to
it. On my way home I was telling one of my neighbors
about it in the elevator and he said that every twenty
or thirty years a bear will be spotted up there. It's
hard to believe but I know from experience that
strange things can happen.
I have had a lot of fun at odou and I hope you can
find one not too far from where you live. They aren't
marked with signs and you may not find one right away,
but they are out there and discovering them is worth
the effort. If you go I suggest you take a stout
walking stick, something good to eat and drink
(including water) and be prepared to meet the
unexpected. I would never want to give a wild boar the
feeling it was cornered, especially if it were a sow
with piglets, but if you unavoidably find yourself in
that position it is always good to have a bottle of
Calvados handy. Just dangle it in front of you and
say, "Alvados-cay? Oo-day esuka-day?" and you may be
at the start of a great adventure.
And remember- and this is really important- one who
walks up the mountain must walk back down. That return
trip will probably be the greatest danger you'll face,
so be sensible and don't do anything I wouldn't do,
okay?
Rick Nelson 3/2007
Rick Nelson grew up in Oklahoma and has lived in Japan for all
but a few of the last 27 years. His mother was a
librarian and professional storyteller and was
instrumental in developing his interest in literature
and writing. Hiroshima inspires him and he currently
divides time between Hiroshima city and Shikoku. |