"What are you rebelling
against?" a man in the food line asked.
"Whadda ya got?" I
replied, and the man was impressed that I recognized his reference to Marlon
Brando's The Wild One.
We were not in a bar. A Fork in the Road is the food truck parked alongside the pub for the Lazy Hiker Brewery.
Lazy Hiker doesn't sell food inside, but many people buy their food outside and
bring it into the taproom.
We'd heard about the Lazy Hiker from
a friend who's hiking the Appalachian Trail. (Kira also told us about the
church we are visiting this week.) Both the brewery and the church are in Franklin,
which is just over a hundred miles into the over two thousand mile hike. Trail travelers often take an overnight stop
here, enjoying the food, showers, and yes, beer, to be found herein.
Once we got our food and went inside
the Lazy Hiker, the man who'd referred to the 1953 classic motorcycle film
again, as he waited at the counter for a beer. I introduced myself and learned
his name was Terry. He's a local who frequents the Fork and Lazy Hiker every
couple of weeks or so. We talked about
the pub, and he told me that five years ago the town of Franklin was dying. The
Lazy Hiker Brewery and other businesses appealing to tourists stepped in and
turned things around.
Terry had ordered his food to go and
was drinking his beer as he waited. I told him about our bar/church project , and
he happily agreed to answer our questions. In answer to what makes for a good
bar, he answered, "Avant-garde." (Terry seemed to like short
answers.) I asked what he meant by that, and he said that this brewery brought
new ideas to town, which is a good thing. He said that plans were in the works
for another brewery in town that would perhaps be bringing even more business
to town, and he was excited about the possibilities.
In answer to what made for a good
church, Terry told me he was a churchgoer; he goes to the Unitarian church,
which he said was great. I asked again what made for a good church, and he
said, "Faith." (Again, short answer.) I asked whose faith, and he
said that of the congregation. He said
fellowship is important in the church, especially one on one fellowship.
He answered On the Waterfront. (That is a perfectly acceptable answer. Also
acceptable: The Godfather, A Streetcar Named Desire, The Freshman, Apocalypse Now, or even Superman. Not acceptable: The Island of Dr. Moreau or The Formula.)
"God bless you," Terry
said as he left.
We ate our food at a table, then took
our drinks to the bar (we later realized it was National Beer Day -- Mindy had a Winter Porter and Dean had Trail Mate Golden Ale). We sat next
to a couple who were locals but had through-hiked the trail (though not
together). Therefore, they had trail names; Eddie and Karaoke the Bard. (Many
people walking the trail adopt aliases as means of security and just for fun.)
Eddie has worked as a bartender in
the past, and she considers the owners of the Lazy Hiker friends. She
appreciates a bar where people are there to talk, not to get drunk. She thought
Lazy Hiker was a bar that people who are authentic come to, where they want to
build relationships with others. She said there are bars that just have a bad
atmosphere. She also said there should be good beer and good service
("Lazy Hiker has the best bartenders on the planet!" she said within
hearing of Kim the bartender.) She said that a good bartender will, even in the
midst of being slammed, acknowledge a customer with a nod or a smile. She
mentioned that this bar had an unusual, strictly followed method of ordering
from one place at the bar, rather than the mass confusion found in some other
bars.
The Bard said what makes for a good
bar is the same thing that makes for a good trail: good people. People seek a
bar with people of like minds. He said he appreciates a pub called Rathskeller
which tourists don't tend to find, but where locals gather to discuss local
events and politics. Conversation and community provide the heart of a good
bar.
Speaking of church, Karaoke the Bard
had been burned by a church. He said the church should have good people, but
instead politics dominated. It was more about being seen with the right people
than being good people. The Bard values what people do more than what they
teach or believe. "If you've never given food to a man in need; you've
missed out. You're the one suffering spiritually. What matters is what people
do...Otherwise it's just semantics."
I talked to Stefan, a man walking
the trail who was taking a break in town. Stefan hadn't been in a bar for
years, so he didn't have a ready opinion of what makes for a good one. He
appreciated that the place wasn't covered with in dirt, and there was a
bathroom rather than a privy. In a church, he appreciates when the person in
the front can communicate God's Word with stories, personal experience, common
sense, and simplicity that people can relate to. He said he was raised in the Catholic Church
so he has "a strict understanding of what God is, not that I agree with it."
He said all churches teach the same thing, even though they teach it
differently.
Kim the bartender took time to talk
to us even though she was trying to do her closing tasks. She's only been a
bartender for a year and questioned whether the Lazy Hiker was really a bar,
since it's more properly a brewery. (Mindy and I have been debating with
ourselves about the definition of a bar for this whole year.) But as for a
church, she said that she thought a good church is a community, and people will
travel a long way to get to a good community. For instance, we've traveled
about 10,000 miles for the good community found at the Lazy Hiker.
Statistics:
Our rough count: about six in
the outside seating area (it was spitting rain and chilly; hikers are tough.
Also, they had a dog) and about 17 inside at tables and the bar
Music: light rock
Snacks: burgers, chicken
tenders, quesadillas, etc., available for sale at the Fork in the Road food truck
Followup: none
Visitor Treatment: people
were happy to chat with strangers, and we saw at least one person buying a
drink for a hiker. Visitors were encouraged to sign a banner in the hallway.
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