1995: “La Honda is a slingshot at the sky,” says Ken Kesey

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In August, 1995 I mailed a letter to Ken Kesey–the famous novelist, counterculture hero and former controversial La Honda resident–asking him to contribute a story, even “a fragment,” to an issue of “La Peninsula,” the San Mateo County History Museum’s journal. I was a member of the museum’s board of directors and I knew an article by Mr. Kesey would shake things up in the sometimes staid publication.

Hey, I didn’t really expect a response from the author of the highly acclaimed “One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest (1962)–yet, what’s the harm in keeping my fingers crossed?

Turned out fingers crossed helped because a few months later my original, letter typed on a white sheet of paper was returned to me, forever altered.

Ken Kesey, the real life central character in Tom Wolfe’s, “The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test” (1968), responded with a double blast of psychedelic energy. Kesey, who led his band of Merry Pranksters on a continuing adventure “tripping out” in the redwoods of La Honda, couldn’t resist the opportunity to play a prank. What he did was magically turn an ordinary sheet of white typing paper into an extraordinary work of art. At least I think so. You be the judge.

With Kesey’s creative contribution (in lieu of a story) I still needed one, a story, I mean.

I searched the Internet in quest of “Keseyana,” downloading articles by then San Jose Mercury News columnist Lee Quarnstrom. I tracked him down and we talked: Lee had been a “Merry Prankster.” [I think once you’ve been a “MP,” you’re one forever.]

In 1964, Lee, then a San Mateo Times reporter, interviewed Ken Kesey, whose latest book, “Sometimes A Great Notion” had been published. Kesey was already nationally renown for “Cuckoo’s Nest,” a smash Broadway play destined to become an Academy Award-winning film starring the irrepressible Jack Nicholson in 1975.

“Cukoo’s Nest” was based on Kesey’s personal experiences while working in a Menlo Park psychiatric ward–where experimental drugs were administered to the patients.

Reporter Lee Quarnstrom was a great admirer of Kesey whom he interviewed in the author’s neck of the La Honda redwoods. Some years later, Tom Wolfe, the great observer of contemporary culture, made the same trek, resulting in “Kool-Aid Acid Test.” Wolfe described Kesey’s home as a log cabin surrounded on three sides by Sam McDonald Park, with a creek flowing nearby, all as photogenic as a Merry Christmas card. Highway 84 slinked by in front of the cabin, reached by crossing a wooden bridge. Kesey had the perfect location with no neighbors.

“In those days,” Quarnstrom remembered, “half of the homes in La Honda were summer cabins. A lot of people were anti-social types. They lived up there because they didn’t want to rub elbows with anyone else.”

Though drawn to the mountains and the solitude of the fresh-scented redwoods, Ken Kesey was not anti-social, quite the opposite, but it was the right backdrop for this counter-culture hero.

“When he wants to,” Quarnstrom told me, “Kesey has a commanding presence and people flock to him. I was taken with Kesey and the Merry Pranksters.”

The vibes were so good that Lee quite his newspaper job and moved to La Honda to be near Kesey and the counter-culture scene that was then evolving in San Mateo County.

“We goofed off, smoked pot and listened to lots of rock ‘n roll,” said. Quarnstrom.

They also took LSD, popularly called “acid,” legal at the time–and the live rock ‘n roll music was provided by a band later to become world famous, the Grateful Dead.

“Kesey became a counter-culture hero,” Lee Quarnstrom told me, “because he was ahead of the curve of counter-culture that developed in the 1960s.” He was on the cutting edge of “acid tests,” long hair, and Eastern mysticism.

Soon Kesey bought a 1939 International Harvester school bus equipped with bunks, benches and a fridge installed by the former owner for his children. The old bus was christened with the famous destination sign that read, “Fuurther.” Yes, I spelled it corrected. Two u’s. Fuurther.

At the wheel of the bus was the unstoppable Neal Cassady, the real-life hero of Jack Kerouac’s beat generation novel, “On the Road” (1957).

Kesey’s first project for the Merry Pranksters was to paint the bus with yellow, blue, orange and red Day-Glo Paint. When they were finished, it was a yellow, blue, orange and red bus.

“We painted the bus constantly,” said Lee Quarnstrom. “It was a never-ending process. Some would call it psychedelic, garish or intricate.”

When the vividly painted bus was revved up for a journey to FUURTHER, Kesey’s entourage jumped on board, serendipity taking them from the redwoods to the Big Apple. They immortalized their travels by shooting 40 hours of film for a film called : “Intrepid Traveller and His Merry Band of Pranksters Look For A Cool Place.”

Somewhere in the pounds of Kesey material I downloaded from the Internet, there was a report that the Day-Glo painted bus may have been donated to the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. Well, was it, or wasn’t it?

I called David Shayt, whose official title was: Smithsonian Collections Manager, Division of Cultural History.

Shayt said he had visited the Oregon farm where Kesey had moved from La Honda with intentions of acquiring the famed psychedelic school bus for the Smithsonian’s 20th century collection.

He found the bus parked in a jungle of weeds–but David Shayt’s plans went awry when “we found a family of foxes occupying the rear seat. We said: ‘Why disturb them?'”

All was not lost, however. While searching for memorabilia in the barn, he discovered a six-foot tall multi-material, multi-media billboard, probably created in La Honda. Shayt said psychedelic colors covered both sides of the sign as well as fingerprints, drug paraphernalia and cartoons. He decided he had to have the sign for the Smithsonian.

“It’s a surreal montage,” Shayt told me. “Whenever Kesey and the Pranksters stopped at the Fillmore Auditorium in San Francisco, they propped it up against the bus to welcome people. I show it off all the time.”

While Kesey and the Pranksters were “freaking out” in La Honda, the locals were getting paranoid about the new residents–and there were more serious problems. Although a novelist of great stature, “the authorities viewed Kesey as a menace to society,” said Lee Quarnstrom.

And in April 1965 San Mateo County sheriffs raided the log cabin house, arresting some 14 people on marijuana charges, including Quarnstrom and Ken Kesey. While charges were dropped against most of the Pranksters, Kesey was sentenced to six months at the county farm, coincidentally located in La Honda.

The La Hondans had never felt warm toward Kesey; they were openly suspicious of this counter-culture hero. What was he doing in their redwoods? Perhaps they had reason to be wary when Kesey invited the Hells Angels to La Honda for a party. Never guilty of being subtle, Kesey openly publicized the event by posting a sign on his gate: “Welcome Hell’s Angels.”

The local merchants saw that sign and got their guns out. They watched the swarm of swarthy-looking Hells Angels in black leather roar across Kesey’s wooden bridge on motorcycles. Quarnstrom said the Angel’s first task was to collect money for beer.

Accompanying a Hells Angel to the local store, Quarnstrom recalled: “When the owner saw us coming, he reached for his shotgun. The Hells Angel said, ‘Give us $600 worth of beer’.” After being paid, the owner smiled and said, “Now you boys come back anytime.’

That might have helped smooth relations with the La Hondans but soon after Kesey and the Pranksters left the log cabin and moved to a place they called “the Spread” on the outskirts of Santa Cruz. That was in 1965. A year later, Kesey and his wife, Faye, moved to the farm in Oregon, where the author lived until his death following an operation for liver cancer in 2001.

The typed letter I wrote, transformed into a work of art, gives us insight in Ken Kesey. “His whole life was art” says Quarnstrom, “and we were the players.”

Ken Kesey, an American original, must have been a calamity to the La Hondans. Now, decades later, the genius of the man can be more fully realized. La Honda is richer for the brief time Kesey and his band of Merry Pranksters played in the beautiful redwoods.

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The San Mateo County History Museum is one of my favorite charities. Please visit the History Museum at the historic Redwood City Courthouse.

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