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Episode: 3850
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Title: HPR3850: New Mexico 2
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3850/hpr3850.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 06:39:35
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3850 for Friday the 5th of May 2023.
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Today's show is entitled New Mexico Part 2.
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It is part of the series Travel.
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It is hosted by Ahukah and is about 14 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is.
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We finish our stay in New Mexico and head to Presidio, Texas.
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Hello, this is Ahukah, welcoming you to Hacker Public Radio and another exciting episode
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in our ongoing series on RV Travels in the southwest of the United States.
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We are picking it up now, Friday March 4th, and we had just finished two days of pretty
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strenuous hiking at the White Sands National Monument, so we decided to take a rest day and
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do the laundry.
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It was a warm, comfortable day to go barefoot in shorts and t-shirt, and you know, isn't
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that why you get out here and away from the Michigan winters.
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But in the afternoon, the wind picked up and then we were treated to a New Mexico dust storm.
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Now the mountains next to us disappeared.
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That's what it's like.
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And when I say they were next to us, I mean, they really were next to us.
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Ah, Saturday, March 5th.
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The info that we received, and this is similar to what we were told in Deming, is that the
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winds pick up in the afternoon, but if you get out in the morning, it's usually fine.
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So we left around 9 a.m. to go into Las Cruces to check out the museums.
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And when we got there, we discovered that Main Street was blocked off to traffic so they
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could have a craft and farmers market, which they do every Saturday.
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So we checked out the market and walked through there and saw exhibits of artwork and crafts
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and things.
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And we got to the art museum and saw more artworks, mostly from local area artists.
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It was a small museum, therefore a small exhibit.
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But you go to local museums to get some of the local color.
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Then we walked into the nature and science museum, which was pretty easy to do because
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the two buildings were attached.
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This museum had some neat exhibits aimed mostly at children, but it doesn't matter.
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They had fossils and preserved fossil animal tracks from the Permian period.
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Animals from the various desert locales and some exhibits about astronomy and light.
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Then we went for a walk to check out the railroad museum.
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It was housed in the Las Cruces Depot.
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And they had artifacts from the age of the railroads, as well as several model train setups.
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Then we walked back to check out the Brannigan Cultural Center, which is just across a courtyard
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from the art museum, where we had started this.
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First we saw photographs of a Chateatta, which is a Mexican form of rodeo, designed to
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show off the skills of the Hacienda hands.
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Then a very piercing exhibit about the Japanese-American citizens that were put in the concentration
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camps around here during World War II.
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The government eventually acknowledged that it was wrong to do this, but I hope Sunday
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we might realize it is wrong before we do stuff like this.
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But given what we've been doing recently to Mexicans, Asians, and Muslims, I doubt
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we're going to get there soon enough.
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Sunday March 6th, it looked to be a cool day when we got up, and we didn't want to do
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anything outdoors.
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So we took a day off.
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You're good thing too, because the winds were ferocious.
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The RV was shaking all afternoon.
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I'm glad I didn't have to drive in it.
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Monday March 7th.
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We went to the Dripping Springs Natural Area, which is on BLM land, and is also part of
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the Oregon Mountains National Monument.
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We have a number of nice hiking trails, and we picked one to do.
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It took us to Fillmore Canyon, and at the end was a trickle of water coming down the mountain.
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When it's rainy season, that trickle is more like a waterfall, but right now it's pretty
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dry.
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We really enjoyed the hike, and we may come back and do another one.
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Today was cool, but not too much wind, and tomorrow is forecast to be about the same.
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That makes for nice hiking.
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Tuesday March 8th.
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It looked like a nice day and not too windy.
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We decided to get an early start, and this time we went north to the three rivers Petroglyphs.
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This is also in the Tula Rosa Basin, north of Alamogordo, and is a site of prehistoric
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settlement where the inhabitants scratched pictures and designs on the rocks.
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To see them, we took a hike up to the top of a ridge, and along the ridge, which is where
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most of the best petroglyphs are found.
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The site is on BLMland and is a national monument, so our national parks pass got us in
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for free.
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I just want to mention, if you have any interest in seeing the United States, a national
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parks pass is wonderful, well worth the small amount you have to pay to get it.
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After viewing the Petroglyphs, we took a short walk to an archaeological site that is excavating,
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and in some cases, recreating the original settlement of the people who created the Petroglyphs.
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Now, that all added up to an active day, so we headed back, and on the way, we of course
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had to stop at the world's largest pistachio for a photo.
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Pistachios and pecans seem to be the major products of southern New Mexico.
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Now, the world's largest pistachio is a statue of a pistachio nut that is very large.
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It's not an actual pistachio nut.
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But if you want to see a photo, as always, links in the show notes to all of the photos.
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We went to, on Wednesday, March 9th, we went to the El Paso Zoo.
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It's a nice zoo.
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Features a Chihuahamun Desert Botanical Garden has all the usual animals, but perhaps
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a better selection of reptiles and desert dwellers than some other zoos.
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We also decided we don't ever want to go back into El Paso, if we can help it.
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The city traffic is just more than we want to deal with, and Las Cruces is much nicer.
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Thursday, March 10th.
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As mentioned before, Route 70 through White Sands is closed today for missile testing, so
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we couldn't go north that way.
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We still had trails to explore back at dripping springs, so we headed there.
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The dripping springs' natural area is inside the Oregon Mountains Desert Peaks National
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Monument, so again our passes got us in free.
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We had previously hiked the Fillmore Trail to see a trickle of water.
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This time we went to see dripping springs itself.
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The trail is mostly well-graded gravel and goes consistently upwards, which is good because
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it means the return trip is consistently downwards.
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When you're hiking, you always think about stuff like that.
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We saw a small herd of deer about ten animals just off the side of our path on the way up.
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The trail also took us to the Van Patten Mountain Camp, which is now in ruins, and the
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Boyd Sanitarium also in ruins.
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We learned that Boyd rented the land from Van Patten, who once owned most of what is now
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lost cruises.
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But Boyd stopped paying rent, and Van Patten took him to court, and basically lawyers
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fees bankrupted Van Patten and he died penniless.
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The dripping springs turned out to be just a drain pipe out of an old and now filled in
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cistern, and the water comes down from the mountain tops, so not in itself much of a deal.
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As we returned, a deer crossed the path about fifty feet ahead of us and stopped to look,
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which we also did until it took off.
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Then we saw what we think was the herd that we had passed earlier, now up on the mountain.
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So that was three deer sightings in one day, not bad.
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We finished our trip by hiking to the cave on the site.
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Now, it's not technically a cave, it's a rock overhang, but they call it a cave.
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A hermit lived there in the nineteenth century until he was murdered, and the crime was
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never solved.
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That was a lot of walking in one day, and after making it back we were pretty tired.
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So Friday, March 11th, the day started with high winds, then rain, which turned to snow.
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We had done so much walking the day before, we were not planning to do much of anything,
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and this weather just confirmed it would be an off day.
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We'll be leaving the area soon, but we feel we've done what we wanted to do here.
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And when it was good, Las Cruces is a place that I would be very happy going back to.
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Saturday, March 12th, basically an errands day before we leave for Texas, laundry, all
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of that kind of stuff.
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Friday, March 13th, travel day, pack up everything, hitch up the truck, drive to a new location,
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they get everything set up again, unpack, and settle in.
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Travel days are tiring, and they don't really leave room for anything else.
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That is why a wise traveler will plan on staying in one place for a week or so if not longer.
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The Loma Paloma Park seems very nice with full hookups, level sights, and a social happy
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hour every day at 4 p.m.
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Monday, March 14th, well the surprise department showed up today, our toilet decided to run
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the water continuously, that's not a good thing.
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We found an RV repair place about an hour and a half away in Alpine, Texas that had the
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part we needed, so we drove up, and then in discussion with the manager there decided
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a new toilet with an added shut-off valve would make sense.
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Since we were headed to Alpine as our next stop anyway, we scheduled the work for a week,
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in other words Monday of the following week, and they'll come to our RV and do the work.
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By the time we got back and did our shopping the day was shot basically, so what do you
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do when something like that happens?
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The place that we visited, the RV repair place, gave us a little cap that we could put on
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the pipe that feeds water into the toilet, so first we turn off the water supply and then
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disconnect the pipe bringing in the water, put the cap on, and then we can turn the water
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back on, and then basically what we do is we fill up some gallon jugs with water, and
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you know, you pour a little water into the toilet, do your business, and flush.
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So that's basically how you solve that problem, so we did that for about a week.
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Tuesday, March 15th.
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We visited the local office for the Big Bend Ranch States Park and got some information,
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so there is a state park and there is a national park.
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We ended up getting to both, but this part of the trip was the state park.
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Now a permit to enter is $5 per day per person, and it looks like they have a few trails
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that we would want to get into.
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It is getting hot early here, so our plan is to do an early start tomorrow and do one
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of them.
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Definitely shorts and t-shirts weather here.
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After lunch we went for a walk to the hike along the Rio Grande.
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The river is a little bigger here than in Messia, but still not very large, and we really
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don't see any science offenses, so I don't know if anyone around here cares about people crossing.
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I suppose they do, there's probably stuff I don't know about.
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We did find out that one of the long-term residents of the RV park we're in is a Customs
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and Border Patrol person.
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The folks at the RV park seem to go to Mexico regularly to do their shopping because the
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stuff is cheaper there, but yeah, I mean we kept being right along the border and just
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really did not see any fences or any of this kind of stuff, so not quite sure what that
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means, I'm just pointing it out.
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So anyway, that was our foray into Texas.
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We're going to talk about the rest of that in the next episode, but this is enough for
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now, so this is a hookah for hacker public radio signing off and is always encouraging
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you to support free software.
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Bye-bye.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org.
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Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast, then click on our contribute link to find out
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how easy it leads.
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Hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by Anonsthost.com, the Internet Archive and R-Sync.net.
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On the Sadois status, today's show is released under Creative Commons, Attribution 4.0 International
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License.
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