At the end of his journey our friend is reunited with his love, proud of his journey and the fact that she managed to comb her hair in a bun and in a fringe at the same time.
Finding his way to a road our protagonist hitches a ride on a truck. With no space on the cabin he travels on the back, enjoying the cold breeze, the beautiful scenery and the absence of having to make small conversation with the driver. Which is a bit mean.
Our man leaves the train and find himself in unknown country. From a hill far away a herdsman worriedly points at him, probably reminding his faithful long legged pig that traveling without a map - although seemingly romantic - is neither big or clever. The pig agrees.
Our hero takes a rather crowded train. All people have to do all day is sleep and cook pork sausages on the steam coming out of the engine. Unfortunately no one remembered to bring the barbecue sauce.
Ok, this is an attempt to create a little story out of 5 or 6 completely random doodles drawn in separate situations. Considering everything I draw looks exactly the same it shouldn't be too hard, so let's go.
Our story begins with a young gentleman starting a trip. An older man sitting on top of his well traveled suitcase reminds him of the vast possibilities the journey he is about to undertake present.
Loads of people, a happy dog, a little church and what seems to be a priest returning from a seminar, only to encounter his long lost love in the square where they spent their childhood together. It could just be a bloke wearing a hat bumping into a complete stranger.
Who are these people? What do they do in their free time? What do they like? Has one of them ever played for Rochdale United? All I know is the one on the far right is either a friendly fridge with a handle or a very large piece of luggage.
I spend an awful lot of time at work drawing, mainly when I should be paying attention to something else. I usually throw everything away with my notepads, so I thought that sharing it with a largely inexistent (and in weeks to come, I'm sure, unimpressed) audience would be a good way to save some of the stuff.