Sold on ADVENTURE
Paul Saitowitz
You’ve seen them. Carabiners with clip-on flashlights and thick
pocket knives -- complete with special blades and tools suited for
gutting fish, sawing down small trees and clinging on to rocks --
dangling from their belt loops.
And there’s the fleece top, warm enough to wear while sleeping
outdoors but cool enough for a day hike; pants with more pockets than
you can imagine -- good for carrying freeze-dried packets of chicken
and rice, pasta primavera and mashed potatoes; shoes that look part
mountain, part blanket, with thick, rounded laces able to withstand
thorn-laden shrubbery or a jagged rock.
It’s the unofficial uniform of the outdoor store clerk -- the one
who can’t get enough climbing, hiking and camping, but remains
shackled just enough by the day-to-day grind of city life that
gainful employment is necessary. For most, it’s just a means to an
end, a way to get enough money for their next fix on the mountain, in
the desert or at the lake.
“If I’m not sleeping or working, I’m doing my best to get away,”
said Grant C’Debaca, who works at Adventure-16 in Costa Mesa.
“Whenever anyone that works here comes back from their day off,
they’re filled with stories about their adventures, and sharing their
physical escape allows the rest of us to mentally escape.”
Among the clerks are two types of escapists. There are the nature
lovers intoxicated by the beauty and serenity offered by the
wilderness. Then there are those who live for the next challenge to
their psyche and intestinal fortitude, thrill seekers who see nothing
but fun in dangling hundreds of feet off the ground, suspended by
little more than a rope and a makeshift hold.
While those in the former group take pride in knowing the
differences between various repellents and the categorical
discrepancies indigenous among local plants and animals, the latter
are usually the gear-heads obsessed with the latest ice tool or
rock-climbing hang board.
Still, there is a synchro- nicity that exists between the two on
the retail floor, with each innately knowing which customer is more
suited to their version of the escape. When they find that customer
with a common interest, talking about it and helping them prepare for
their adventure serves as an escape of its own.
Jack Carver, general manager of the Grant Boys in Costa Mesa --
Southern California’s oldest independent outdoors store -- started
there 36 years ago as a maintenance worker. The store’s Wild West
ambience and Carver’s thick beard and slight-and-wiry build buttress
his lifelong career choice -- he’s an outdoorsman passing time as a
salesman.
“I’d say about 25% of the people that work in this store have been
here for five years or longer, and you just don’t find that at other
types of stores,” he said. “A lot of them stay because doing this is
what they love to talk about, and these are the types of people they
want to be around.”
Another pervasive sentiment is that the managers and higher-ups at
these stores are more in tune with the lifestyle. If an employee
wants to take time off in the middle of his or her schedule to take
an extended backpacking trip, co-workers will more than likely
scramble to ensure that they are accommodated. No one wants to hear
about anyone missing an opportunity. After all, most employees revel
just as much in hearing stories about adventures as they do in
telling their own.
Paddle Power, a kayak store in Newport Beach, makes getting away
as easy as going to work. The store, situated right on the water,
gives its employees easy access to get out and paddle as often as
they can.
“I’m out there paddling about every other day,” storeowner Jim
Smiley said. “You can’t really have a store like this if you are not
into it.”
Smiley started as an employee at Paddle Power a decade ago, and
after five years on the job he bought the store from its original
owner. Before that he worked in the construction industry, and finds
that outdoor stores are mainly filled with office castaways that
“rejected cubicle life.”
That rejection is the common theme among this group, a group that
prides itself on stretching boundaries and living outside the lines.
* PAUL SAITOWITZ is a news editor. He may be reached at (714)
966-4632 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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