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Boy And His DogI was busy. The window of opportunity was open. After six mapping sites across the state I had to refuel. The fuel truck was empty and was being filled.
I had hundreds of more miles, another mapping site, an office visit and an errand on the way home. I was in a hurry.
I looked out across the desert and it did not look particulary interesting but somehow I was drawn into it. Down a low ravine and there it was. A beautiful little desert stream. All of a sudden I wasn't in a hurry anymore. I only had ten minutes here but somehow those other things were not as important anymore. I took this feeling with me.
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<b>GTG</b>I love it when I can just stop hiking for a moment and soak in all the environment around me.
It's a point where I reach a kind of zen-light.
<p>Trail location makes no difference. </p>
<p>Being able to take a picture of it all is the greatest. </p>
<p>Then I have to move around to try and get my shadow out of the picture. </p>
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<b>montezumawell</b><p>These are the kind of words which make reading a hiking book worthwhile. Now, they come here on this Internet hiking list. It doesn't matter from where such words come. They ring eternal. They resonate to the soul. They spark kindred feelings humans surely have felt since they huddled around fires under some sandstone overhang. I cherish these words. And I hope that some of you on this list may feel free enough to speak from your spirit in words like these again. For it is those soul-felt words which echo forever in the minds of wanderers. As we travel between the rocks and the trees and across the flowing streams of the trails of life, we hear those echoes. They ring like well-wrought bells in our hearts, calling out the clarions of beckoning. Over here, over here, over here, over here!
Your friend at Montezumawell