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H Leaves the Desert!!!

leanin' H

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Joined
Nov 8, 2007
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Location
Western Utah Desert
After much gnashing of my teeth and a few small, insignificant cuss words, I accepted an invitation from the company I work for at my day job to attend a weeklong training course in.........wait for it.......................any guess's................................................................................................PHILADELPHIA :shock: :shock: :shock: I ended up kinda, actually, sorta enjoying myself. But that may just have been the Bute that i was given in order to get on the plane. :D Spent a week learning about high voltage splicing on under ground cable. Guys in class were from all over. 2 from Florida, 2 from Tennessee, 1 from Philly, our instructor was from Delaware and 2 fellars came clear from Eygpt where they work on power in the Suez Canal! It was durn cold back there and we bundled up while outside practicing. Group picture. Sad that the Eygptians (left) look more at home than the cowboy.
:D


Learned a lot in class and never blew anything up which helps you pass. The highlight of my trip was we were just a few minutes from Valley Forge. Only had a half day on the last day so got to look around. Special place in America's history. This is a bell called the justice bell at the chapel in the park.


A view of the tower that is part of the chapel. It was neat with tributes and monuments to folks who fought for our freedom. And my favorite part is the entire park was open spaces! Philly is one big city which never ended. The park was 800 acres of history and allowed me to breath a tiny bit deeper although I prefer not to see my air.


The troops started out camping in tents and like 24000 strong. Winter was fierce and a lot went home and some never went home. One of the lady nurses wrote a book about it called "The winter of red snow". 1600-1800 amputations due to frostbite and gangrene. The built little log cabins like these replicas' and managed to stay alive to fight if needed. Thankfully the fight never came. By spring the numbers were down to 9000 and Britain coulda wiped them out but they were led to believe the numbers were much higher and never mounted an attack.


I simply had to share this picture as it was a welcome sight to see a man with a leg over a horse! General Anthony Wayne's statue and some homesick feller from a ways to the west.


George Washington was just about perfection for leading our fight for independence!!! Read anything you can about him cause he is a true giant in American history. He could of been king for the asking. Instead, he turned in his commission and returned to his beloved home to farm. One of the men he helped to defeat called him "surely one of the greatest men of our time". I have no shame in feeling very blessed to have stood where he once did and as I stood at his statue, I took off my hat and offered a heartfelt prayer of thanks to my Maker for MEN like him! God Bless George Washington!


Then I ran to the rental car, listened intently as the nice lady gave me gps directions to the airport. Then I jumped a plane west and headed for the desert. Bless you folks hearts who live in big cities. I have no idea how ya do it. I have never felt more alone and upside down than surrounded by the masses of civilization. Talk about a fish outa water, or in my case, one lost lizard! When the Rocky Mountains came into view out the window of the plane I wanted to dance a jig. Yipeeee!


Rio Tinto's Giant open pit copper mine was even a welcome sight as I could walk home from there if I'd a had to. May a taken a week, but it was still good to see home terra-firma!


There's HOME! Can't see many folks out that window can ya? :D I live out there amongst those desert mountains where my fellowman is scattered some. And that's where I will stay. :D


I managed to get on home to 80 odd miles without getting a single speeding ticket. Tonight, me and littlest H went looking for rutting muledeer and found a few. Not the biggest buck, but pretty as a picture for my eyes. After a trip to North Carolina and now this trip for work, I hope they have about got me trained as I need about 20 years before I am ready to cross the Mississippi. Hope ya enjoyed the pictures and please have a fine evening.
Happy Thanksgiving to ya'll. Thanks to George and the boys, we have the freedom we crave!
 
gcreekrch said:
Ya resemble "Pepper" in the Cowboy Way movie.

Glad you made it there and back. The instructor is likely still banging his head on the wall.........

They asked me to stay on as an instructor as they had never met anyone as naturally gifted. But, alas, I could not stay as at that point I had developed a twitch and started talking to myself like I was trying to calm a green broke colt I was attempting to teach to ice skate.

The second part of that paragraph was true. :D
 
Your description of Philly reminded me of my first time in LA, and behind the wheel of a truck, to boot. Back in those days there was no GPS, my company cell phone (the one in the bag :wink: ) worked everywhere but in LA, and all I had was a map and some barely decipherable directions scribbled on a yellow legal pad. Talk about an adventure!

The best part about going to LA was leaving. Once you're out of the area, you're in the middle of nowhere, be it on 10, 15, or 40. My kind of country! I've been east of St. Louis once, and that was enough!

Glad you learned something and saw some new country. Going to new places has a way of making that place we call "home" even more special to us! Thanks for sharing!
 
Glad you made it back! Spent a week in NYC years back & those Rockie Mtns sure were a sight for sore eyes when we flew into Alberta. Guess I`m just lots happier being where there`s more cows than people!
 
Got to go to Chicago a few years ago , The MERC paid for the trip. Great steaks great people. But I was lost the whole time , I knew the streets run N-S, E-W but when you can't see the sun.
Dad rode with steers on the rail road to Chicago years ago.
Good to see you had fun on your trip H :D
 
Thanks for filling us in on your Philadelphia adventures, leanin' H. It looks like you had a great opportunity to combine work and pleasure. Your pictures and narration of the trip were just perfect for a Thanksgiving Day, and we can all thank God and men like George Washington for our blessings and opportunities.
 
I was up that way twice this week...

and you drove right past me on the way to the airport and didn't even wave.... :lol:

sure glad it was a good trip...
 
Thanks for sharing the great travel story. And especially for the tribute to George Washington and his exemplary service in building out country and assuring it was a nation of God given personal freedoms.

Just heard a bit of news you could have used. On FOX News a bit ago there was a story of a woman removed from a plane because of complaints about her "emotional support" animal..........a miniature pig!!!! I did not know people are allowed to take such animals on an air plane.....in the passenger compartment, no less! Apparently even miniature horses have been allowed, however the squealing and smell of the pig was just too much for the passengers and human passenger and her pig had to leave.

Re. the underground line splicing: there is quite a bit of underground electric line being installed in SD after several blizzards took out relatively new lines, I believe. Makes sense to me!

Thanks for the photo's and story of the battle. At least one of my husbands' ancestors died fighting that war. He re-enlisted after being refused to go with his old unit because of being over 60 years old. He was Irish and absolutely hated the English, and had been a soldier all his life, so a fitting end, I guess. His home in KY is now a museum. He was given a land grant there in early days to 'take care of' Tecumseh, and he is credited with success doing that job. Seems to me his wife was the true 'hero' of the family, having ridden horseback from VA, carrying an infant, with a three year old behind the saddle, and pregnant with another. She managed their farm while her soldier was off fighting, and they had several more children.

mrj
 
Thanks for the pics! I also had to go to Philly one time for work, but I was not on a high enough pay grade to get a rental car, the folks at the office I was working at drove me. I was there for 3 days and all I saw was the airport, hotel, and office. Bunch of inhospitable twerps never even took me out to dinner. Room service for 3 days at a one star hotel, ugh. When people traveled to our office, we at least took them out for some bbq or a steak. I would have liked to see some of the historical sights (sites?) out there but never got the chance. (anybody want some cheese to go with that whine?)

Perspective is everything. I always enjoy traveling west, but then coming back home to where things are greener makes me feel good. Green grass everywhere and tall trees, not an irrigation pivot in sight but the corn is tall.... I'm home!
 

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