July 24th, 2007
Day 30
Tues 24th July
Intend to leave today. There is a hot spring and mineral spa within an hour or two which has RV camping and it sounds good for my back. In the morning, as a present, Angie turned my simple idea into a finished work by printing it full size on canvas. Concept to finished work in 24 hrs. I am amazed and delighted.



New Mexican lethargy and complicated arrangements on indian time keep us from leaving until its late in the afternoon so we put off leaving until tomorrow.

Angie has been amazingly generous and unselfish to us. We would have been stuck in an RV park without her. There has been a general openness and trust among people here that we haven’t experienced for a while from strangers.
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July 23rd, 2007
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July 22nd, 2007
Day 28
Sun 22nd July
Felt a little better so as an experiment tried driving Angie’s Jeep into the town with River . I expected an East Coast Sunday shopping experience but found closed shops and limited supplies. Did buy a cheap car radio so we could have ipod music in the car. Met sympathy and kindness as I drove my shopping cart like a bag lady, but the pain had returned, so I realised we’d have to stay another day.

Retired often to the camper to go horizontal.
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July 21st, 2007
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July 20th, 2007
Day 26
Friday 20th July New Mexico Taos
I lay in bed all day and took many pictures of a tree outside. Angie left on a 6 hour mission to drive Bond to the airport at Alberquerque. Lisa did washing by the basketload, dinner cooking and bill paying while I looked through all my old notes in an semi successful attempt to come up with some interesting projects.



Couldnt really move without pain so I didnt much. We’d parked in a mint patch so a lovely smell filled the air every time someone came and went.
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July 19th, 2007
Day 25
Thurs 19th July New Mexico Taos
Important that we leave the campsite today to take on water, pay bills and recharge our batteries. I set off to the campground toilet confident I can hobble there with my new stick but halfway I am felled again by agonising pain and lie in the mud. Lisa backs up the camper and I manage to crawl back on board but we obviously have a major problem. Angie drives our camper to her house 4 miles away while her 16 yr old Bond takes her jeep.

She offers to let us stay until I am recovered which is a godsend. Not much left for me to do but lie on the couch in the camper, type this and watch the lightning storm passing over. Not very interested in taking pictures. Earlier, each visit to our onboard loo was a painstaking manouevre planned out in intricate detail, accompanied by imps ripping nerves out of my lower spine.


This evening I feel a little more comfortable and hopefully i will be recovered soon. Now drinking a lot of water as apparently one dehydtrates very rapidly up here in the high desert. Lisa is making a roast dinner for everybody tonight. If I’m not cured by tomorrow I may be forced to see a doctor. Fortunately, being an art town, there are many to choose from, of all persuasions.
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July 18th, 2007
Day 24
Wed 18th July New Mexico Taos
River, the 8 yr old, comes over and chefs us a fried breakfast of tortilla, eggs and diced potato before his family wakes up. The local couple leave, having been there a week fishing and we prepare to leave and retrace our steps to find the buffalo herd which is apparently crossing our tracks 50 miles behind us.

Then I leaned over to pull on my flipflops and twisted my back. We settled down to wait out the pain since I couldn’t drive. Angie made photos of Lisa’s work in the river while Bob played guitar. I think I can make it to the toilet but get as far as Bob’s RV. I rest there and he explains the workings of engines to me.

Manuel arrived and said we were in the perfect position to see the fabled golden eagle of these parts as her nest was high above our camper (its a camper now not a truck) on the canyon wall. I tried to get up too soon and was dropped for good by the paralysing pain. Lisa turned the camper around so I could lie on the couch with binoculars and hunt eagle.


As I point out the nest to her a humming bird stops to examine my finger. Tooth appears to have stopped hurting.
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July 17th, 2007
Day 23
Tues 17th July New Mexico Taos
Day starts with local Leona from the riverside tent coming over to sit with Lisa. I talk to Bob in the bigger brother Toyota, a V6 Winnebago from West Virginia parked among the trees. I’m interested in his clever system of straps and torsion bars which secure his motorbike to the bumper but move the strain to the chassis.


Bob is a mature single guy on the road with a giant stag’s head in the bed and a stuffed mountain lion behind the sofa. He plays a melancholy guitar - singing soft slow rhythm and blues. Leona’s man Steve arrives with freshly caught fish using flies made by Luke, a semi-homeless wanderer from Wisconsin. We start a fire and all share a sumptuous lunch of brown and rainbow trout, bagels and ice cream.


Lisa matter-of-factly washes our dirty clothes in the river. I go into town with Luke for supplies. Afternoon spent laughing and relaxing together, playing cards and carousing into the evening when we are joined by the only other campers in the area, Angie and her two kids, River and Bond. Angie once owned an art gallery and is taken by Lisa’s sculptures. She encourages Lisa to exhibit and resolves to photograph them. Bob and Steve alternate on the guitar between C&W, Blues and traditional New Mexican. I learn to play the gong by firelight while the boys throw the illuminating balls at eachother and Luke tells stories about fish, accordions, bears and frostbite. A very pleasant day which arrived from nowhere.



Had a good day, washing clothes in stream to the surprise of others. Steve and Luke caught fish and cooked them for us - we gave ice cream and bagels. Bob from West Virginia in other toyota, a sad and gentle new divorcee, played his guitar. Angie and her two boys were camped higher up but joined us for dinner - more fish. She likes my sculptures and told me to sell them for at least $150 but start higher. These people are all struggling to survive, L and S camping up here for free to save on gas for their hours commute from home to work. Bob very careful with his life and belongings but would share in a heartbeat to have a woman to sing with. For 30 years he went out womanising and drinking with his father-in-law every night and hunting every weekend. He carries a complete stuffed mountain lion and an antlered stag head - both of which he regretfully murdered himself. He sits and puzzles his past behaviour and attitudes in a cloud of remorse and wonders if this new life will ever fulfil him. Leona left her 4 kids and abusive husband to find Steve 6 years ago. Tries to forget it all while tattooing their names on her body in ever more whimsical ways. Her latest a ‘prison tattoo’ done with a home-made gun, the needle made from a guitar string so the inkwork is fantastically fine with a wonderful paintbrush effect. Her sister and family live in 2 jacked-up 5th wheels at the woodyard where he works and are tiredly grateful for a place to live. There is so much wealth here yet these lovely people dont have it - they just provide the services. Sounds familiar doesnt it - seems all that changes is the colour of the workers’ skin. A magical little campground with dive-bombing humming birds, tumbling river sounds and more gorgeous butterflies.
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July 16th, 2007
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July 15th, 2007
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