
Fruita, Colorado
IH70
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our Summary
Email:
Natt
D.Anson
Steven

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JOURNAL ENTRY
D. Anson Brody looked up Cisco, Utah
on Google and found a site that suggested Cisco had a beautiful, historic
downtown. We arrived to find no life until we saw a white horse inside
a corral. That gave us hope.
There was a store. We ventured inside
to find a woman who had come to Cisco recently to get a job.
It is easy to become discouraged as
we look about
the world and this nation, but it is often because we
fail to count all those things we have, and focus
on those things we lack. This is an element in a
world that was us to get more and more,
because they have more and more to sell.
While this is fine, we should take a moment
to count our blessings. Smell the flowers
and remember whe those people we send
to work for us, whether they work at the local
level, State level or National, will do what we
ask when we can speak in a unified voice.
I am always happy to see how people respond
to our project: THE WALK. Some are
a bit
skeptical whether such an grand project can be
built. But, I remind them about a rag-tag Army that
took on the Great Brittish Empire and then
went to Europe to help stop a World War - then another.
I can remind them it wasn't that long ago a President
Challenged us to reach the moon, and we did.
Is this really so big? Yes! But we can do it,
and when those who work for us know this is
what we want, they will help.
But, there are ways to pay for this
that
don't call for great government help. The
details of this are discussed at the link to The
Walk.
More details will be added soon. They are ready,
but I have been told it is already almost too
much to grasp at a single viewing.
.
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The front of this store was neat and clean. It only lacked evidence
of customers. Indeed, the town is somewhat less than Luckenbach,
Texas.

We bought some sodas as the woman talked about how difficult it was
to bring women into Cisco, partly because they had to use a water truck
to bring water in from the river, then allow it to sit for several days
while the silt settled so they could use the top half.

This young lady talks to D. Anson about the town she is from: larger
than the 13 that live in Fruita.

This guy allowed us to photograph him for about a minute before he
scampered off into the brush and into his hole.

The colors of these hills is difficult to imagine, even when I look
at the photo, which
does it little justice.

We saw more than twenty pronghorn this day, which began cool and began
to get
warmer around 1 o'clock.

Sometimes the road behind us seems so much straighter than the one that
lies ahead.

I believe this is a distant relative to the one that sells insurance.

I thought we should include a picture of the U.S. Post Office in Cisco,
Utah

This young pronghorn pranced off as we approached.
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