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					Slim Randles' Home Country
 
            Road signs for city folk 
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            [November 10, 2018]  
			
			I 
			was recently invited to join Bob Milford, manager 
			of the prestigious Diamond W Ranch, on a drive-around tour of the 
			place. It’s a huge, private ranch, with tiny ex-logging roads 
			winding around through 13,000 acres of pine trees and rocks. A real 
			paradise. | 
        
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			 But I was horrified to see wooden street signs 
			nailed to trees wherever two of these old logging trails came 
			together. 
 “Oh no,” I said, out loud.
 
 “What’s the matter?” Bob asked.
 
 “I see you’re planning a subdivision here.”
 
 Bob started laughing when I pointed at the signs. “Those are for the 
			owners,” he explained. “They live back east and visit here one 
			weekend a year. When they get out here, they take the pickup and 
			drive around and get lost.
 
 “Once I got a call on the cell phone from the owner, who said he was 
			lost and couldn’t find his way back to the house. So I asked him 
			where he was and he said he was right there, sitting on a rock and 
			close to a pine tree.”
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			 He chuckled. “That narrowed it 
			down to about 13,000 acres. Well, I managed to find him, and after 
			that, I put these signs up. I tell them now, if they get lost, to 
			drive until they come to Home Road and then head downhill. It solved 
			the problem.” [Text from file received from 
			Slim Randles] 
			 
			
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