In the heart of Arizona’s sprawling desert, where the sun paints the sand gold and the stars whisper secrets at night, lives a 58-year-old beatnik named Arlo.
With his tie-dye shirts, a heart full of joy, and a 1968 Volkswagen dune buggy named Daisy, Arlo is a local legend. He’s the kind of guy who wishes love on everyone he meets, spinning stories that light up souls and, with a sly wink, nudge folks toward the ads for his tea company at the bottom of his blog.
But Arlo’s more than a storyteller or a businessman—he’s a vital part of the Arizona Search and Rescue, a community effort that bands together when someone’s lost in the vast, unforgiving desert.
This is the tale of one such mission, a late Saturday afternoon when Arlo, Daisy, and a billion neutrino-sized Groovatrons from Funkadelia teamed up to find a lost 16-year-old named Timmy.
The Call Goes Out
It was late Saturday afternoon when the Arizona Search and Rescue sent out an urgent call. Timmy, a 16-year-old with a love for adventure, had taken off on his motorcycle at dawn, promising his mom he’d be back in an hour.
Hours passed, the sun climbed high, and then sank low. By late afternoon, with no sign of Timmy, his mother’s worry turned to panic. She called Search and Rescue, her voice trembling as she explained her son was lost somewhere in the desert’s endless maze of dunes, hills, and abandoned mines.
In our small Arizona community, a call like this is a rallying cry.
The desert is no joke—scorching by day, freezing by night, and riddled with dangers like rattlesnakes, flash floods, and old mine shafts. When someone’s lost, we stick together.
The Search and Rescue team put out the word to every off-road enthusiast in the area: dune buggy drivers, side-by-side pilots, monster truckers, trophy truck racers, and even a couple of boat owners ready to search the banks of the Colorado River.
Over a hundred vehicles answered the call, ready to comb the desert for Timmy.
Arlo, lounging in his hammock with a glass of his own chamomile-mint tea, got the text from Search and Rescue.
Arlo, lounging in his hammock with a glass of his own chamomile-mint tea, got the text from Search and Rescue.
His heart skipped a beat. A kid was out there, alone, maybe hurt.
But Arlo had an ace up his paisley sleeve: his special connection with the Groovatrons, tiny, neutrino-sized beings from the planet Funkadelia, 100 billion light years away. These joyful creatures, quantum-entangled with the universe’s happiest vibes, had a knack for finding lost souls—not by scent or sight, but by the groove of their aura.
Arlo sent out a vibe through his cosmic connection, a plea for help:
“Groovatrons, little Timmy’s lost in the desert. We need your funk!”
In a third of a second, the Groovatrons answered. Over a billion of them, each no bigger than a speck of stardust, materialized on Daisy’s dashboard, their tiny iPhones glowing with eagerness.
They’d brought their own search party, ready to tune into Timmy’s vibe and bring him home. Arlo grinned, patted Daisy’s steering wheel, and said,
“Let’s roll, baby.”
Picking Up the Vibe
The search began at Timmy’s house, where the sheriff’s K-9 unit was already at work. Dogs sniffed Timmy’s bedroom, nosing through clothes strewn on the floor, picking up his scent.
Arlo and his Groovatrons, though, were after something else: Timmy’s vibe.
The Groovatrons, with their ability to sense joy and righteousness, huddled on Daisy’s dash, their microscopic ears perked. It didn’t take long. “This kid’s got good vibes,” Arlo muttered, feeling the Groovatrons’ excitement.
Timmy was a happy soul, a good kid with a bright aura. That was all they needed to lock onto him.
Search and Rescue divided the desert into quadrants, assigning each team a section to scour. Arlo raised his hand. “I know the hills around Oatman like the back of my hand,” he said. Oatman, a ghost town nestled in rugged mountains, was a maze of dirt roads, rocky trails, and abandoned mines—perfect for a kid on a motorcycle, but dangerous if he got stuck.
With Daisy’s engine purring and a billion Groovatrons buzzing with anticipation, Arlo led his posse of off-road vehicles into the darkening desert.
Into the Night
Night fell fast, the desert sky a blanket of stars. Arlo’s crew—about a hundred 4x4s, dune buggies, and side-by-sides—fanned out, their headlights slicing through the dark. Daisy, with her custom off-road lights and a coat of sunflower-yellow paint, led the charge toward Oatman.
The Groovatrons, invisible to most but glowing faintly to Arlo’s tuned-in eyes, were on high alert, scanning for Timmy’s vibe. Unlike the K-9s tracking a scent, the Groovatrons followed joy, a signal that cut through the desert’s chaos like a melody.
As they neared Oatman, Arlo’s convoy encountered a group of wild donkeys, descendants of the burros that once hauled ore for miners. These Oatman donkeys were local celebrities, wandering the ghost town’s streets and charming tourists.
The Groovatrons, with their knack for communing with pure souls, “asked” the donkeys if they’d seen Timmy. Through some cosmic translation, the donkeys shared that a kid on a motorcycle had passed by around noon, stopping to pat their heads before heading into the hills. Arlo’s gut tightened. Those hills were riddled with old mine shafts, some hidden by brush or loose dirt. If Timmy had crashed or fallen, time was running out.
The Groovatrons Light the Way.
Around midnight, as Arlo navigated Daisy along a rocky trail, the Groovatrons went wild. Daisy’s dashboard lit up with a billion tiny flashes—their iPhones signaling they’d picked up Timmy’s vibe.
A text pinged on Arlo’s phone, a direct line to the Groovatrons’ funky frequency:
“Timmy’s close. We feel him!”
Arlo’s heart raced. He slowed Daisy, scanning the terrain. The Groovatrons flashed again, brighter now, their iPhone flashlights turning the dash into a disco.
“He’s really close,” their next text read.
Arlo stopped Daisy and climbed out, his boots crunching on the desert floor. He peered into the darkness and spotted a ravine below. There, glinting faintly in Daisy’s headlights, was a motorcycle, its frame crumpled. Next to it, slumped but moving, was Timmy.
“I’m over here!” the kid shouted, his voice hoarse but alive. The Groovatrons had done it—they’d connected to Timmy’s joyful soul, pinpointing him through his vibe.
Arlo’s cell had no service this far out, so he dug into his backpack and pulled out his Starlink satellite kit. Hooking it up to a satellite 250 miles above, he contacted Search and Rescue.
“I found Timmy,” he said, giving his location near Oatman. “Follow the donkeys—they’ll point you my way.”
In the background, he heard Timmy’s mother sobbing with relief and his father whooping, “Thank You Lord!”
The Rescue
Search and Rescue helicopters roared over the horizon, their spotlights sweeping the desert. They were struggling to pinpoint Arlo’s location, so Daisy flipped on her high beams and off-road lights, and the Groovatrons lit up the sky with a billion iPhone flashlights.
The helicopter banked toward the glow, landing nearby within minutes. Rescuers rappelled down the ravine, securing Timmy and his motorcycle. They loaded him onto the chopper, bound for the local hospital to get checked out.
As the helicopter lifted off, Arlo’s posse of 4x4s rolled onto the scene. High-fives and cheers echoed through the desert. Daisy, ever the star, soaked up the praise, though Arlo knew the real heroes were the Groovatrons.
They found Timmy through their “righteousness indicator.”
By 2 a.m., the crew began to disperse, exhausted but elated. Arlo bid farewell to the Groovatrons, who powered down their iPhones to save battery for their billion-light-year trip back to Funkadelia.
With a final wave, they vanished, leaving Daisy’s dash dark but Arlo’s heart full.
The Moral of the Story
Arlo and Daisy rumbled home, the desert quiet around them. As he sipped a cup of his lavender-lemon tea, Arlo reflected on the night’s adventure. Timmy’s rescue wasn’t just about Search and Rescue or even the Groovatrons’ cosmic powers. It was about vibe—about the joyful aura that connects good souls across deserts, dimensions, and even ravines.
When you radiate joy, Arlo mused, you attract the kind of people who’ll find you when you’re lost.
Back home, Arlo typed up this story for his blog, his fingers dancing over the keys with the rhythm of a jazz riff. He hoped his readers would feel the joy, maybe share a smile, and—why not?—click the ad for his tea company at the bottom.
After all, a beatnik’s gotta keep the lights on.
But more than that, Arlo hoped his tale would remind folks that:
In a world of chaos, a little love and a lot of groove can light the way home.
Groove is in the Heart - Arlo
Sponser ......
Channels from Arlo......
For E mail notification of new content subscribe at arloagogo.substack.com