‘Pedouin’ family takes time to smell the artichokes

"A Pedouin Life: Stop and Smell the Artichokes" is available
online at pedouin.org
"A Pedouin Life: Stop and Smell the Artichokes" is available online at pedouin.org

After wintering in a cabin 24 miles from Fairbanks with no water, no electricity and no car, the Harrison family — who last passed through the Mat-Su Valley on a custom bicycle built for five — is back in a bus this time.

The family has converted a 1960 Chevy bus, retired from Air Force service, into a drive-able home and says they now plan to travel the country selling copies of their self-published book, “A Pedouin Life: Stop and Smell the Artichokes.”

“It’s an American product and we like that, said Bill Harrison.

Metro Café let the family park the bus and their bicycle built for five in front of the business and sell and sign copies of the book there Thursday, he said. The family hopes to sell 100,000 copies of their adventure story as an avenue to fund further travel, Bill said.

“We want to travel the world helping people,” he said. “People help us. We help them.”

Starla Brewer lives along the Parks Highway in Houston and was one of several people who met the family last July when they biked through, and who stopped at the cafe Thursday to buy the book and have it signed.

Brewer said she’s followed the family’s story since she lived in Oregon and saw a story there about the bicycle shop that crafted the $17,500 bike for them.

In the interim, she moved to Alaska and was thrilled to discover through their website pedouins.org that they would ride past her driveway at Mile 52.9 of the Parks Highway in route to Fairbanks.

She said she watched their progress though the GPS on their website so she’d know the exact moment of their approach.

“I wanted to peg when I should go down to the end of my driveway with my camera,” Brewer said.

Their current digs they found abandoned along the Steese Highway and purchased from its owner for $500, Bill said.

To finance that purchase, he said they used money daughters Cheyenne, 8, Jasmine, 6, and Robin, 4, earned from crafting and selling purses, with help from their mom Amarins Harrison.

Bill said someone in Fairbanks loaned the family a treadle sewing machine and the girls used that to sew 47 purses, which they then sold through their website.

“They bought the bus,” he said.

The Harrison family left Fairbanks in their 1960 C60 Viking Chevrolet bus with 31,000 miles and a newly rebuilt engine at 9:07 a.m., July 31.

The engine itself is a good example of the sort of synergy that has kept this adventure going, Bill said.

When the bus needed a new engine, their friend George Bickel from CHS Machine Shop in Wake Forest, N.C., came to their rescue. He had a newly rebuilt 292 engine they could have and a friend in the shipping business who trucked the engine part way. Then Bill said he had a connection that was able to carry the engine the rest of the distance.

Total cost for the newly rebuilt engine and shipping from North Carolina: $40.

“It’s just been amazing,” Bill said.

Contact Heather A. Resz at heather.resz@frontiersman.com or 352-2268.

Metro Cafe in Wasilla offered Bill and Amarins Harrison and
their daughters Cheyenne, 8, Jasmine, 6, and Robin, 4, an
opportunity to park their repurposed 1960 Air Force bus Thursday
and reconnect with friends in the Mat-Su Valley while selling and
signing copies of their self-published book, ‘A Pedouin Life: Stop
and Smell the Artichokes.’ (HEATHER A. RESZ/Frontiersman)
Metro Cafe in Wasilla offered Bill and Amarins Harrison and their daughters Cheyenne, 8, Jasmine, 6, and Robin, 4, an opportunity to park their repurposed 1960 Air Force bus Thursday and reconnect with friends in the Mat-Su Valley while selling and signing copies of their self-published book, ‘A Pedouin Life: Stop and Smell the Artichokes.’ (HEATHER A. RESZ/Frontiersman)
Robin Harrison, 4, autographs a copy of a new book about her
family’s adventure riding their custom-made bicycle 7,000 miles
cross-country from their home in Kentucky to Fairbanks, where they
wintered. (HEATHER A. RESZ/Frontiersman)
Robin Harrison, 4, autographs a copy of a new book about her family’s adventure riding their custom-made bicycle 7,000 miles cross-country from their home in Kentucky to Fairbanks, where they wintered. (HEATHER A. RESZ/Frontiersman)

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