MOUNTAINBORN CHRONICLES

The Redneck Ramblings of a Ouachita Mountain couple

Monday, January 31, 2011

REASONING

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As with most of the things we do, thinking and rethinking is a major part of the process. Replacing our fishing boat was no different. The f...
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Sunday, January 30, 2011

TUNE

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Our Nissan 4x4 has mostly sat in it’s carport as we traveled about for a couple of years. Usually we jump start it, change the oil and take ...
1 comment:
Tuesday, January 25, 2011

TANKED

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Today was the day that we went to Hot Springs and picked up our Boat. You know that we just had to get it in the water ASAP ! A quick stop...
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Sunday, January 23, 2011

RUNDOWN

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Two years on the road have left their mark on our house and all of the out buildings. We just have not been here to do the many little thing...
1 comment:
Tuesday, January 18, 2011

BOAT

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Last year while at lake Greeson, during jugfest 2010, Harm’s Weigh, our deck boat for many years, sold. As it gets closer to time for jugfes...
1 comment:
Saturday, January 15, 2011

ICE

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Snow topped mule barn. Plum Tree broke down from snow weight. Cedar tree sagging heavily. Ice forming on 5er. 15 inch whee...
1 comment:
Wednesday, January 12, 2011

DAYDREAMIN’

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We displayed our senior pass to enter the National Park at no cost and to only pay half price for our campsite. The sun was shining and it w...
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mountainborn
Vandervoort, Arkansas, United States
Deep in the heart of the Ouachita Mountains of Arkansas, Mountainborn lives the ancient hunting lifestyle of his forebearers, while blending modern technology into his mountainer’s daily activities. Millitary skills learned in South East Asia during the Viet Nam era, compliment his woodsman’s techniques, and saturate his life. Mountainborn’s Grandmother worried about her grandson while he was away in the military. She wrote a widely published poem about him titled MOUNTAINBORN, the name stuck. He longed for those misty mountains, while overseas, but the ancient lifestyle was the thing that he missed the most. There was just something about roaming those remote mountains with a gun and a dog that he constantly dreamed of. His descriptions of the Ouachita mountains and hunting to provide for his family constitute the MOUNTAINBORN CHRONICLES. Currently serving as Chief of Police, Larry Harmon lives with his wife Betty and retired drug dog Dillon at the foot of Cross Mountain, near Vandervoort, Arkansas.The MOUNTAINBORN CHRONICLES is dedicated to the memory of CLARA GANDY ANDERSEN.His Grandmother taught him to dream beyond the Mountains that surrounded him.
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