Camp Monsters - Gumberoo
Episode Date: October 19, 2022Up in the Cascade Mountains of the Pacific Northwest, you can smell a Gumberoo before you hear it– a smell just like woodsmoke: faint at first, then thicker and thicker, like a campfire gone wild. I...f you’re smart you’ll get out of the woods right then– because Gumberoos can move fast. And if you gamble, and stick around, and the wind picks up and the Gumberoos came charging into the valley you’re in…well, there’s a reason that not many folks alive have heard the roar of a Gumberoo.This year’s sponsor is YETI. Check out all of their amazing gear in store or at REI.com. Drink it in – Shop YETI DrinkwareShop YETI Rambler Camp Monsters Mug
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is an REI Co-op Studios production.
You're a lumberjack in the old axe and saw days of the great virgin forests of the Pacific Northwest.
And you have to keep quiet.
You have to listen.
You have to listen for the whoosh
of a huge dead limb
knocked loose by the ring of your axe,
hurtling down to crush you.
You have to listen for the muffled pop
as some old snag
leaning its unseen top against your tree begins to
crack and crumble tumbling down huge chunks of rotten timber big as a horse
you have to listen for the ticking
of the tree you're cutting beginning to split and shatter
exploding under the tension of thousands
of pounds of soaring trunk and limbs above.
A sudden clunk, a hollow clunk, and you turn to run with splinters as big as your arm slicing
the air and the whole tree collapsing down around you.
But you're also listening for the distant roar of the creature that you fear
more than any of that.
Quiet.
Do you hear it?
This is the Camp Monsters Podcast.
As Halloween closes in, our favorite season of the year,
we ask that if you've been enjoying Camp Monsters,
you take a moment to write a positive review or share your favorite episode on social media.
It's easy to do,
it means so much to us, and it helps us continue to make more seasons of Camp Monsters.
Just wait until you hear about some of the monsters we're lining up for next year. Yeah! Oh, that's great!
Oh, there's nothing better than a song around the campfire.
And you all sound fantastic. Nice harmonies.
I tell you, there's something about this setting that makes the song sound that much better.
The way the notes come back off the trunks of the trees around us,
or maybe the pine needles on the limbs crowding above catch the tune And start to tremble along with it
Or it could be the campfire itself that makes the song sound so good
Something about the way you feel half-hidden in firelight
Maybe that lets us all sing with more abandon
Well, anyway, we're lucky to have this
fire tonight. There's been plenty of rain these past few weeks up here in the Cascade Mountains
of the Pacific Northwest. There was a fire ban on before that. And a good thing, too.
When these forests start to burn, it's more frightening than any camp monster could be.
Except maybe, well, there's one old legend that the lumberjacks used to tell
about a creature that only appeared when a wildfire was raging.
It's hard to imagine anything that could make a wildfire more terrible than it naturally is,
but those old lumberjacks
were a rough, tough crowd. Yet it was an open question which they feared more. A wildfire
or the creature that fed off of it. The one they called the Gumbaroo. The Gumbaroo That is a silly name, isn't it?
Sometimes, when you know you have to live and work
In the shadow of something so dangerous
Like those old lumberjacks did
It helps to treat it lightly
To give it a silly name
Tell funny tall tales, try to laugh at it
But that's all just so much smoke in your eyes Give it a silly name. Tell funny tall tales. Try to laugh at it.
But that's all just so much smoke in your eyes.
If you blink through it and catch a glimpse of the real creature
behind the Gumbaroo's stories,
the laughter catches in your throat
like a hot, dry cough.
You smell a Gbo first a smell just like wood smoke faint to
start then thicker and thicker like a campfire gone wild if you're smart you'll
get out of the woods right then because gumboboos can move fast. But if you gamble, and you stick
around, and the wind picks up, and the gumboos come charging into the valley you're in, well,
there's a reason that not many folks alive have heard the roar of a gumboos. Because
once you hear that low, rumbling roar, that phlegmy rattle like the snapping of thick green limbs,
the Gumbaroo's already too close.
And as for seeing one,
there are old legends describing it,
so someone in the old days must have escaped,
but you're a fool not to run as soon as you catch the gumbooroo's smoky scent.
Keelan learned that the hard way. The hardest way you can. A year or two ago, there she was,
stumbling along a trail not far from here, covering her face with a balled-up t-shirt and trying to squint ahead
through the smoke and the flurries of ash that a strong, hot wind kept whipping through the air.
Keelan was scared. Tears of panic were mingled with the constant stinging stream the smoke
wrenched from her eyes. She knew she was in trouble she could barely breathe visibility was down almost to zero she didn't see how things could get any worse any more
desperate but that's when she first saw the dark outline taking shape on the trail in front of her.
I should tell you a little more about Keelan.
Keelan was an experienced hiker.
Too experienced to make the kind of mistakes she'd made that day.
And as the nightmare had slowly unfolded around her,
she'd had plenty of time to kick herself for messing up so badly.
For breaking the basic rules of backcountry safety.
But the corners that she'd cut, when she'd cut them, had seemed so innocent, so harmless.
For example, normally she'd never have been hiking alone. She understood there's safety in numbers out in the wilderness where trouble can come on quick
but that day well true she was going to be alone for a few miles but she had friends on both ends
of her hike that summer she'd been trekking the famous pacific crest trail all the way up from
california making friends with so many other young hikers along the way. Her day was all planned
out. She'd wake up in camp with one group she knew, then make an easy solo hike on the well-marked,
heavily traveled trail to where she'd arranged to meet up with another group.
If she got into any trouble, rolled an ankle or anything, there were so many other hikers at this time of year that help would come along in no time.
It should have been easy.
It should have been a piece of cake.
When Keelan woke up that morning, the weather was fine and clear,
with a bracing touch of autumn in the dawn.
A fresh breeze kept the tops of the tall trees talking to one another.
Keelan struck camp and said good morning to the friends that were waking in the tents around her.
They chatted and made plans to all meet up again when they got closer to the Canadian border.
And then she hit the trail.
If you've ever been backpacking in these mountains, then you know what most of
Keelan's day was like. Up and up, gaining altitude, setting an easy pace, stopping now and then when
the trees opened for a peekaboo view down into the valley. Crossing shallow little streams that
bubbled off the hillsides above, stepping to the side of the trail and saying hello to fellow hikers heading the other way, trying not to get too bored on
the switchbacks.
Keelan got into a rhythm, got into the zone.
She could walk all day like that, not that she'd have to.
She expected to reach her friend's camp by three in the afternoon, four at the latest.
It was just before noon when she met the first little group of people who told her there might be some trouble ahead.
They were going the other way, but said they had heard that the trail behind them, in the direction Keelan was hiking, had closed due to fire danger.
They weren't sure how far back, though.
It might be well past where Keelan's friends were camping.
In fact, it probably was.
It must be, right?
There wasn't even a hint of smoke on the air.
Any fire must be miles away.
Keelan met a few more little groups going the other way, and most of them relayed some similar message about trail closures ahead,
but Keeling didn't give it much thought or spare any worry over it.
What could some rumors of distant fire have to do with a mountain day as glorious as that one?
She didn't even smell the smoke until she was closing in on a camping area where she'd agreed to meet her friends.
It was so faint that she'd been walking through it for some time before she realized what she was smelling.
Ever so slight, just like a faraway campfire.
So subtle it was almost pleasant.
When she came to a clearing, Keelan looked up at the sky.
Bright, shocking blue, without a hint of haze Well, there may be a forest fire somewhere, but it couldn't be anywhere close
That evidence, the blue sky, the barely perceptible smoke
Didn't make any impression on the two brown-suited forest rangers that Keelan met a little further along.
The trail ahead was closed, they informed her, and she'd have to turn around.
No, there were no alternate routes.
The whole forest district ahead was shut down due to fires in the area.
Well, Keelan tried reasoning with them.
Why close a whole vast section of wilderness because of fires in one or two parts of it?
That was ridiculous.
Just some lawyers for the Forest Service hyperventilating about liability.
That's how she felt at the time, and she let the rangers hear about it.
They'd never know how soon and how completely Keelan would change her mind. The worst part, though, was that
this team of rangers had come up on a different trail that didn't pass the camp area she was
headed to, so they didn't have any idea if her friends were still up there. They told her that
other rangers were working that area and would certainly inform her friends of the closure,
but she asked if she could just go the last few miles and find out if they were still there.
Then she and her friends could all hike out together.
But the rangers politely and firmly refused.
So Keelan turned around and made a show of hiking off in a speedy huff.
At least, until she put the rangers out of sight behind her.
That's when Keelan made her next big mistake.
It was so stupid, but so easy.
As easy as taking a few steps into the brush and hiding. Hiding until the two rangers
had walked past and disappeared down the trail. Keelan chuckled at their backs. These mountains
are a mighty big place. You can close a trail. Heck, you can even close a whole section of
the forest, but you can't hope to patrol all of it, or be able to really enforce the closure.
Once the rangers were well out of sight, Keelan got back on the trail and carried on, so tickled by her own trickery that she didn't notice that the wind had shifted and strengthened.
Smoke.
It's such a funny, deceptive thing,
especially in the forest.
Once you smell it and you get used to it,
it can thicken so gradually.
On a narrow path through the trees, your line of sight is limited anyway,
so it's hard to gauge how light or dense the smoke may be.
Once the wind shifted, Keelan noticed that the smoke was increasing, and that the sun
had disappeared from the tops of the trees, though she chalked that up to cloud cover.
It wasn't until she'd walked those last long miles.
It wasn't until she broke suddenly into that empty clearing at the top of the ridge where her friends were supposed to be camped.
Until she looked down into the next valley and saw the smoke rising up and pouring out of it.
It wasn't until then that she realized how completely conditions had changed.
Her friends were nowhere to be seen.
No doubt they'd been moved along by a different team of rangers hours ago.
And Keelan could see that it was past time for her to move along as well.
She couldn't actually spot any fire down there in the next valley but the wind that was blowing with unusual steadiness from that direction was
hot and dry heavy with smoke keelan could see this wind could watch it swirl and eddy over
the top of the ridge like lines of flowing script written in smoke,
pouring its story down into the valley she'd just hiked up.
And if Keelan could have read the roll that the smoke was writing for her,
she would have stopped reading right then.
As it was, she turned around and started back down her valley, as quickly as she could,
headed back the way she'd come, as far as she was able.
But even a well-worn, well-marked trail is hard to follow,
once your eyes start itching and filling with tears.
Once the smoke gets so thick you can hardly see the ground,
once the ash is pouring from the sky like singeing snow. It was incredible and terrifying how little progress she was making.
How short a distance she'd covered before the smoke thickened to a point beyond anything she'd ever imagined.
The smoke and that sound.
That sound under the roar of the heavy wind that raced between the trunks
and thrashed the invisible treetops.
That steady, constant sound, somewhere between a growl and a roar,
interspersed with crackling booms like the magnified snap of
green limbs popping in a campfire.
Then a shape appeared out of the smoke ahead.
A large shape, dark, moving toward her, fast.
Keething barely had time to cringe away before the thing had reached her. And she got a glimpse.
Just a momentary image of a shining eye, wide with fear,
and the foam of panic streaming from the mouth and nose of...
of a terrified deer.
And then it ran past her and was gone again, into the smoke behind.
It was followed by another and another,
shapes that raced out of the mist and were gone,
like phantoms in a fearful nightmare.
Keenan hesitated.
She didn't want to leave the trail,
to wander off on a steep hillside in these blinding conditions,
but it seemed foolish to keep moving in a direction that the deer were running away from.
So she backtracked a short way to where a small path branched off the main trail, and she took that.
It didn't matter, though.
She hadn't followed it far when a low shape came scuttling out of the smoke ahead,
heading in the opposite direction from the deer.
It was a small bear or a big badger or something.
It went by too quick, and the smoke was too thick for Keelan to tell.
But after that, she realized that the smoke and the ash and the roar of the fire
had driven the whole forest mad.
As she felt her way along the faint trail, low shapes would crash out of the brush up or down the hillside,
from behind or in front of her, and dash past with unseeing eyes, running in every direction,
and no real direction at all.
But the trail Keelan was trying to follow was trending slowly downward,
and that's where she wanted to go.
She wanted to get down this ridge.
She wanted to get off these mountains, out of this forest,
away from all these gray tree trunks stacked like firewood in this swirling smokehouse.
That's about where we found Keelan at the very beginning of this story.
Stumbling along through the smoke, coughing, trying to breathe, eyes and nose streaming,
covering her face with a balled-up t-shirt and squinting against the ash that rippled
along that gusting wind like driven snow.
She came to a little clearing, or anyway a small gap between trees,
large enough that all she could see was the smoke ahead.
Smoke and...
well, something else.
Another shape, an animal shape, like the others that had dashed by
Except
Except this shape wasn't moving
At least it wasn't moving much
As Keelan approached
She saw it shift a little bit
And raise its muzzle slightly into the air
Like it was smelling something
Of course the only thing it could smelling something. Of course, the only thing
it could be smelling was smoke, and plenty of it. Keaton wasn't frightened, at least
not of this animal, whatever it was, big and dark and round. She was terrified enough of
everything else that was happening, a fear she shared with all the other creatures that had crossed her path out in this smoky hell. She didn't
think she had any more fear to spare for whatever this animal was. But she was
wrong.
She was mere steps away when she finally saw it clearly, and the look of the thing stopped her in her tracks.
For an instant she thought it was a black bear.
It looked kind of like one, like a big, fat one, thick and full, rounded out,
except it didn't have any fur on it at all.
Its flesh looked thick and dark and wrinkled, cracked in places,
like something that had been badly, badly burned.
Was that it?
Was this some poor, maimed black bear with all its fur burned away? Pity and fear made a storm in Kiyun's heart as she started to back slowly away from the creature.
Pity for the pain the poor thing must be in, but fear...
Fear of what a creature in that kind of plight might do if it discovered her so close to it.
But then the thing turned its head and looked directly at her, and it didn't seem like a
creature in pain at all. In fact, its eyes were the first calm ones she'd seen out here in the smoke. Its gaze was placid, perfectly in control, but dangerous.
There was something fatal in that stare, so penetrating that Keelan froze.
She'd never heard of a Gumbaroo before. She had no idea that that was what stood there in front of her.
But she was about to learn, very quickly, very horrifically,
all about one of the Gumbaroo's more remarkable attributes.
The Gumbaroo began to glow.
Well, not the Gumbaroo itself, but like a halo.
A halo of beautiful, glowing light began to pulse and flicker in the smoke all around it.
Yellow and orange, red.
The glow began to spread, widen, radiating out with the gumbaroo at its center.
And Keelan realized that the light wasn't coming from the creature at all,
but from somewhere back in the smoke behind it.
Like colored lightning, flashing continuously behind clouds.
And the light was growing larger and brighter by the second then the gumbo roo waddled its round body around to face Keelan began to work its
jaws not snapping or showing teeth just working chewing grinding its muzzle back and forth,
and growling.
That was the sound she'd been hearing,
a low, ominous growl,
deep and staccato and threatening,
a sound that reminded Keelan of wet, living branches
singeing and burning and breaking.
She stumbled back.
She almost tumbled down the hill.
But before she could turn her eyes away,
the Gumbaroo opened its jaws and...
and transformed.
There was a roar.
A roar that pulled the air out of Keelan's lungs,
that sucked the wind back out of the world and ripped it through the Gumbaroo's jagged teeth.
A roar too loud for any creature to make, but the Gumbaroo made it.
A roar so loud that the burning lights behind the Gumbaroo turned into flames.
Flames that burned the smoke itself.
Flames that exploded through and out of the Gumbaroo until the creature was completely consumed by fire.
And the fire was consumed by the creature.
There it was, a tower of flame with the dark, calm eyes and the gaping mouth of the Gumbaroo,
charging toward Keelan and consuming everything in its path.
Keelan ran, or on a slope that steep she couldn't run but she threw herself down and through the thick
dry brushes that burst into flames all around her she tore her clothes and her flesh on the
jagged rocks that jumped out of the hot smoke the smoke that dried her mouth and swelled her tongue
and tried to choke and blind her she She was running and stumbling and coughing,
with unconsciousness and the searing breath of the Gumbaroo both racing at her heels.
She didn't know how far she'd gone when she knew she couldn't go any farther.
There was a boulder blocking the hill in front of her, with sheer cliffs on either side.
With the last trembling strength in her arms, she pulled herself up onto the rock and crawled across its top until she reached the ledge that dropped away on its far side.
And the view over the edge wasn't promising.
No path, no easy way down, just a drop into blind smoke. Only smoke
down there, nothing else. She looked behind her, saw the shape of the gumbaroo raging
and rolling in the fire that was already beginning to leap and scramble along the edge of the boulder, throwing little whirlwinds of swirling flame toward her.
She felt the blazing wind sucking her back, so she turned to the ledge and stepped off
into the smoke.
She enjoyed the feeling, that feeling of falling.
The air rushing past her skin felt cool compared to the fiery torment she'd left,
and she was minutely aware that this was probably the next-to-last thing she'd ever feel.
It seemed to go on for a very long time. So long that she had time
to wonder, as we all do in quiet moments, to wonder what it was going to be like. The
end. What it was going to be like when she landed. When she went through to the other side
as it turned out it was wonderful oh there was a terrible blow when she hit
bottom a terrific momentary shock and a roar. And then it was
wonderful. It was stillness and dark, but it was cool and slow and oh, so comforting. leisurely. No more running.
No more fear.
No more smoke.
The tears and the hurt were washed from her eyes.
She felt clean and calm.
She opened her dry, cracked, crying mouth and tasted the coolest, most refreshing drink she'd ever had all at
once she was perfectly content it was wonderful
and the best part was the feeling that this wasn't all the feeling that she was
still moving slowly without any haste at all, but moving through this cool, dark comfort to some place even better.
She was sure of it.
She wasn't in a hurry, but she was sure that something even better was waiting for her.
And it must have been a lifetime later,
a couple of peaceful, contented lifetimes,
before she broke the surface of the river she was floating down and began to realize where she was.
Keelan didn't know the river. She didn't know its dangers. Didn't
know the rapids and currents and waterfalls that might be downstream. The air was still
thick and smoky and dim. She couldn't see very far ahead. But she didn't care. Because
compared to the fury she'd escaped
No fate the river held for her could be that bad
And she still had that feeling
The feeling that wherever the river took her
She was going to end up in a better place
Well, Keelan made it. Downstream, she managed to pull herself onto the riverbank and stumble along it, out of danger. She was bruised and she was battered, but alive.
She still loves the forest, still loves the mountains, still goes out backpacking, but always with
a group. And you'll never meet anyone better versed in wilderness safety, especially when
it comes to wildfires. And Keelan will tell you the number one fire safety rule is to always put out your campfire completely before you leave or go to sleep.
Better give it one more douse.
And kick a little dirt over it.
There.
Now we can all sleep a little sounder in our tents,
knowing we won't have to worry about meeting any gumbaroos tonight.
But the next time you're out in the woods at the end of a hot, dry summer, remember to be smart.
Be safe.
Follow the rules, or you may wake up to the roar of a gumbaroo. And Keelan will tell you,
once you hear that roar,
it's probably too late.
Camp Monsters is part of the REI Podcast Network.
Hiking blithely into the smoky wilderness of this episode, whistling a happy tune,
is yours truly, writer and host of Camp Monsters, Weston Davis.
Our engineer, Nick Patry, looking very handsome in that forest ranger uniform that he sometimes wears without explanation,
tries to warn him of the dangers ahead.
But all Weston is worried about is getting to the next campsite
before executive producers Paolo Motula and Joe Crosby eat all the marshmallows.
Of course, he would have given up hope already if he'd known that our associate producer
and internationally recognized marshmallow-eating champion, Jenny Barber is already up there,
but he hasn't hiked far before he catches the wildfire scent.
And here's the unearthly roar of that legendary monster.
Our senior producer,
Chelsea Davis and Weston's last best wishes before the Chelsea Rue devours him
are sent to our very own Lucy Brooks,
who's equally adept at content and media strategy,
and creating a beautiful baby.
Way to go, Lucy.
Next week, we've saved the very best
for the last episode of this season of Camp Monsters.
Although I'm not sure best is the way to describe
the creature we're going to meet.
Huge, and silent, and terrifying,
it has a habit of appearing in the most unexpected places,
just before terrible things begin to happen.
Join us next week for one more campfire.
And remember that the stories we tell here on Camp Monsters are just that, stories.
Sure, some of them are based on things people claim to have seen and experienced, but
it's up to you to decide whether that roar you heard actually came from the campfire.
Please subscribe to Camp Monsters if you haven't already, and like, share, review,
and tell your friends
to give us a listen. It's your support that keeps us recording. Thank you.