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It was the summer,
and my dad wanted to treat me to a vacation like never before. He
decided to take me on a trip to the wild, wild west.
We took a plane to
Albuquerque, a big city in the state of New Mexico. We reached
Albuquerque in the late afternoon. Uncle Paul, my dad's friend,
picked us up from the airport and drove us up to his ranch in Pecos.
His wife Tina
cooked us a delicious dinner and we got to know his sons Ryan and
Kyle. My dad and I spent the night in the guestroom listening to
the crickets, owls, and coyotes. Very early in the morning, uncle
Paul woke us up to have breakfast. "The day starts at dawn on my
ranch" he said. After breakfast, I went to help aunt Tina feed the
chickens, while my dad went with uncle Paul to take the sheep out to
graze. I was impressed to see my dad and uncle Paul riding horses,
they looked really cool.
In the afternoon,
I asked uncle Paul if I could take a horse ride, and he said yes, as
long as my dad went with me. I wasn't going to take a horse ride by
myself anyway. So, my dad and I put on our new cowboy hats, got on
our horses, and headed slowly towards the mountains. "Don't be late
for supper" uncle Paul cried "and keep to the trail so that you
don't get lost". "OK" my dad cried back. After a while we could
hardly see uncle Paul and his farm house. It was so peaceful and
quiet and the colors of the brown rocks, the deep green pine trees,
and the late afternoon sun blended to create a majestic scene. It
looked like a beautiful woven blanket spread out upon the ground
just for us.
Suddenly a
little coyote jumped out in front of my horse and startled him. He
was so startled, he took off running faster than I imagined he could.
I was holding on as hard as I could and my dad was trying to keep
up with me. My horse got off the trail and kept running, and only
stopped once it reached the river. It seems the water must have
calmed him down a bit. It was a beautiful spot and as frightened as
I was just a few minutes earlier, I was happy that I got a chance to
see such a place.
My dad thought
it was gorgeous too, but he said that we had to leave because the
sun was setting and he did not want us to get lost. We had left the
trail and we did not have a compass. The last thing we wanted was to
try to find our way home in the dark. We turned around to start
back but the trail was nowhere in sight. The frightened horse had
run so fast and so far that we had no idea where we were. By now the
sun had almost dipped behind the horizon and we had to think fast,
so we...
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