We had made reservations to rent a car, but daddy had lost his credit card *clears throat* and they wouldn't take just the credit card number. They needed the physical card... and no, they wouldn't take cash either. Great. Just Great. Ok, so after renting a motel room for the night, we gained access to wireless Internet. Then, following one of his brilliant ideas, daddy created a company letterhead signed by the "owner" of the business and used that to authorize the credit card number.
We were feeling jovial, so we walked to a local shop and nibbled pizza and sipped soda. The black and white squares that chequered the floor and the music and Hollywood memorabilia decorating the walls and ceiling made you feel like it was the 1960s all over again.
On Wednesday we visited their son James' farm. He keeps racing horses for the Arab Emirates. These are some of the yearlings.
These horses are some of the mares he is holding that are worth anywhere from $50,000 to $1 million.
This is a picture of the wheat fields and vineyards in the background. I think I was either bored or extremely interested, or maybe I was doing some kind of Mennonite yoga. I'm not an anthropologist, linguist, or social psychologist; neither do I have a masters metaphysics so I can't really tell what's happening in this photo. I mean "who can know the intents of the heart?"
3 comments:
Ah, this tugs at my adventurous spirit! My Da wishes he were 20 years younger. Thanks for keeping us posted-it really is an interesting place. (Jason Melody is my 2nd cousin)
The pictures remind me of southern New Mexico. Looks like a great place to ride bicycle!
Tasmania is even more beautiful to ride a bike in! Ha, wanna do a trans-Australia trip next year?
Oh and, Mattie, tell Glenn that from what Caleb and I have seen of him this past spring (and the stories I've heard about him)... somebody with his energy is never too old to do adventurous things.
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