
Q: Do you really talk? We’re speaking ethics here, Bone. Blogging is about transparency. That means honesty.
A. Are you crazy? Have you ever heard a bone talk? Of course I don’t talk. I just think out loud.
Q: Curt sometimes refers to you as he. Does this mean you are a male bone?
A. No. He makes assumptions, lots of them. He was showing me to a biologist at a writers’ conference in San Francisco and she suggested I have my DNA tested. “Just cut a small chip off of it,” she said nonchalantly. “You can determine its sex and breed.”
“Just cut a small chip off of it!” Outrageous! I am not some it to have chips cut out of. Besides, I lead a rich fantasy life and have no desire to know whether I am male or female. Call me she, he, or Bone, but never it.
Q: You have traveled all over the world and met thousands of people. How do they usually react to you?
A. With befuddlement. You should have seen the look on the face of the customs agent in New Zealand who tried to seize me as ‘animal matter.’ But emotions run the gamut. There was a Japanese man who got off a tour bus at Yellowstone National Park and wanted to hold me for good luck. Soon there were 40 other Japanese handing me around, oohing, and taking photos. I was thrilled. On the opposite side, I know a woman who refuses to touch me, like I have cooties. “I don’t know where Bone has been,” she states primly. Not surprisingly, there is also jealousy. “I want to be you and travel the world,” a good friend in Sacramento told me.

Q: What is your favorite thing to do?
A. Visit graveyards; there are lots of old bones there. My favorite grave is Smokey Bear’s in Capitan, New Mexico. I once stood on his tombstone for ten minutes trying to communicate but all I could get was something about ‘growling and a prowling and a sniffing the air.’ A close second is the grave of Calamity Jane in Deadwood, South Dakota. What a woman! These are difficult choices, though, when you toss in the likes of Hemingway, Daniel Boone and Billy the Kid. On the light side I once visited Ben and Jerry’s graveyard of discarded ice cream flavors in Vermont. My spookiest experience was a visit to the Capela dos Ossos, the Chapel of Bones, in Evora, Portugal, where an estimated 5,000 corpses were dug up to decorate the walls of the chapel. Those folks definitely have a skeleton in their closet, lots of them. The skulls kept whispering, “Join us, Bone.” I ran.


Q: So, what’s your second most favorite?
A. Too hard; I am a dilettante dabbler, but here are a few.
- Wandering, of course, anywhere and everywhere and by all modes: bikes, kayaks, rafts, skis, backpacks, sailboats, planes, helicopters, trains, cars, RVs, etc. I’ve been to all 50 states in the US and to over 50 countries worldwide.
- Visiting wild, remote and beautiful natural areas. I started life wandering the Sierra Nevada Mountains, John Muir’s Range of Light.
- Seeking out the strange such as ghosts and aliens (I’ve been to Roswell four times and Area 51 once).
- Attending unique events like Burning Man.
- Meeting weird people.

Q: Tom Lovering and Curt ‘discovered’ you in 1977 when backpacking south of Lake Tahoe. You have wandered extensively with both. Which do you like best?
A. Eeyore, the jackass who can’t keep track of his tail. We’re traveling companions and he saved me from being strung up and buried on Boothill in Tombstone, Arizona. I’d robbed a bank, cheated at cards and hung out with women of questionable character. (This is what I mean by having a rich fantasy life. It’s also known as evasion.)


Q: Which of your journeys has been most memorable?
A. I would have to say traveling the length of Africa in the back of a truck from the Sahara Desert in the north to Cape Town in the south with Tom. Almost falling off the back of a riverboat into a piranha infested section of the Amazon River would have to be a close second. I was perched on the back railing doing a photo shoot with Peggy. And then, of course, there was the 10,000-mile bike trip with Curt in 1989 and hiking 750 miles down the Pacific Crest Trail with him to celebrate his 75th Birthday in 2018.



Q: You are often seen scrambling over rocks in remote sections of the Southwestern United States. What’s that all about?
A. I’ve developed a fondness for Native American rock art. It resonates with my bone-like nature. It’s also another excuse to go wandering around in the outdoors. Plus, some those places might be haunted and it is a great place to look for UFOs. Some of the petroglyphs look amazingly like aliens. Finally, wandering in the desert is known to be good for the soul. Ask the Prophets of yore.

Q: Ah, being a born-again bone, do you have any insights into the great unknown?
A. Ommmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm.
Q: Finally, and this may be a little sensitive, but do you always run around naked?
A. What kind of a question is that? Do you think I am uncivilized? For shame. I am the epitome of haute couture! A bow and arrow toting, card-carrying NRA member in Montana has designed and made me two leather vests. What’s more, a 90 plus year old woman in Kansas going on 20 with a crush on Johnny Depp and a room devoted to the Egyptian gods, has made me a kilt and several other outfits. Face it; I am hot stuff, clothed or naked. I may take up a modeling career.









Curt, this is hilarious and the best interview I’ve ever read on WP!! Bone, you’re a natural at this! I laughed non-stop! You’ve travelled more than most in their life-time and non-stop adventures! What’s next?!
Thanks, Annika. Glad I could give you a laugh! As for travels, Curt is heading off to Africa, but he has been reluctant to carry me overseas ever since the agent in New Zealand tried to seize me. Sigh. I’ll just have to stay home and be entertained by the lovely Bonita. There are much worse fates. –Bone
Ho ho, on form Curt!
It’s easy with Bone, AC. He says thank you!
Bone, no wonder, considering the person you usually travel with, that you like meeting weird people. We are waiting to see you “in bone” sometime to see if you think we qualify.
I’d bet money on it, Ray! And you are right. They don’t get much weirder than Curt. Except Tom, of course. –Bone
OH MY GOSH! YOU ARE HILARIOUS!
THANKS TRISH… –BONE 🙂
My favorite photo’s the one with the boney footprints in the sand. That’s the essence of Bone: peripatetic!
Those tracks would certainly have people scratching their heads and thinking ‘What the heck?’
Going all the way back to when I called my blog the Peripatetic Bone. 🙂
Bone is great at thinking out load. Love the kilt.
Yeah, he makes a lot of noise for someone who is silent! 🙂
What a hilarious interview, Curt! So funny, and I needed the laughs today!
Thank you, Lauren. I’m glad I could could give you a giggle. —Bone
😂😂
Curt, you’ve put a whole new spin on picking a bone with someone. 🙂
Right, Dave. Tom and I sometimes joke about him being a Bone of contention.!
An oldie and a goodie. I enjoy this one every time it’s updated. I’m proud to be one of those who got to meet Bone and I look forward to a visit someday in the future. So glad Bone made it through all those dangerous times. Thanks for grabbing him off the railing in time, Curt.
It was touch and go on the Amazon! Scared the heck out of me. Bone sends you kisses. 🙂
What a riot. It took me a moment to reorganize my brain, and then it was all fun. Bone certainly has enjoyed some wild adventures. 🙂
Yes, he has D. And he likes to share them… from being blessed by the Pope in St. Peter’s Square to deep sea diving in the South Pacific. Sometimes, even I get a tad jealous… Grin.
Yes. I remember this one, and even more fun to read through it again. 🙂
Ah, thanks for rereading my story, D. –Bone
You my friend are a wise one full of tales, life, adventure and fun. It’s your season to let them rattle and scare more people out of their chairs and see the world.. Or maybe you just scared the bejesus out of them with these near boat flips and bike rides.. YIKES!
Now bone up on your African animals and don’t get “boned” by an animal.. No bones about it you will rile more fun💕
Curt won’t let me go to Africa, Cindy. Ever since the customs agent in New Zealand tried to confiscate me, my travels have been limited to North America. Not to worry, however, there is always plenty of mischief I can get into here, like my recent trip to Burning Man! Thanks for writing. –Bone