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The New American Digest

For Followers of Gerard Van der Leun's Fine Work

  • About American Digest
  • About New American Digest
  • “The Name In The Stone”
  • Remembering Gerard Van der Leun
    • from the website: Through the Looking Glass
    • from the website: Barnhardt
    • from the website: Neo’s Blog
  • Articles
    • The Overland Stage
      • The Holladay Overland Stage: 1 – The Central Route
      • The Overland Stage – 2 Company Operations
      • The Overland Stage – 3 Exploring The Route – An Overview
      • The Overland Stage: 4 – South Platte/Julesburg/Ft Sedgwick
        • Jack Slade
      • The Overland Stage: 5 – Julesburg to Junction Station (aka Ft Morgan)
      • The Overland Stage: 6 – Junction Station to Latham
      • The Overland Stage: 7 – Latham Crossing to Fort Collins
      • The Overland Stage: 8 – LaPorte to Virginia Dale
      • The Overland Stage: 9 – Virginia Dale to Cooper Creek
      • The Overland Stage: 10 – Cooper Creek to Pass Creek
        • Fletcher Family
      • The Overland Stage: 11 – Pass Creek to Bridger Station
      • The Overland Stage: 12 – Bridger Pass to Duck Lake
      • The Overland Stage: 13 – Duck Lake to LaClede
      • The Overland Stage: 14 – LaClede to Almond
      • The Overland Stage: 15 – Almond to Rock Springs
      • The Overland Stage: 16 – Rock Springs to Fort Bridger
      • The Overland Stage: 17 – Fort Bridger to Weber Station

I find I don’t wish to explore new lands, but to explore again those I have already passed through, trying to see what I’d missed in the first hectic rush … Gerard Van der Leun

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Author Archives: DT

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‘Simmons

The New American Digest Posted on October 26, 2025 by DTOctober 26, 2025

Waiting for the first hard freeze

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Technology

The New American Digest Posted on October 25, 2025 by DTOctober 25, 2025

lifted from the bluebird of bitterness

I'm not anti-tech, I spent much of my life at the leading edge of some of it.

I just don't trust it - especially if software based.

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What’s Going On Here?

The New American Digest Posted on October 25, 2025 by DTOctober 25, 2025

"Civilian Casualties Reported As US Conducts Record Number Of Somali Drone Strikes"

Are we attacking Minneapolis now?

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Posted in Uncategorized | 6 Replies

All Good Things Must Come To An End

The New American Digest Posted on October 25, 2025 by DTOctober 24, 2025

No, not this web site ...

It's been an unusual October here. The weather's been more like September - we haven't had a hard freeze yet.

As I write this in early evening, the sun is shining and the temperature poked its nose up into the 70s.

Never say never but I don't expect to see 70s again for a few months.

But this is it. A storm is predicted to blow in tonight and predictions are for 12" snow above 4500 ft. Rain and sleet down here.

It's been 50s and low 60s for highs the past couple weeks - even those temperatures are warm for this time of year at this latitude (44° or so) and elevation (2500-3000 ft. Not really all that high. Not even in "high-altitude" cooking zone. Foothills, not mountains. Those are 10 miles or so east). I expect the pass to close tomorrow - first heavy snow usually has problems - but it's a main route (for here. It's a gravel road) and it's usually open.

The bugs know what's coming; out doing chores today, the gnats and other unidentified such creatures are swarming to the point of a choice between additional unexpected, undesired protein or a face mask. Had enough of those.

The stink bugs are making their presence known.

The wind's already picking up, the clouds are moving in, and the predicted highs for the next week or so are 40s and 50s. I guess the inevitable first freeze is here.

But I got the lawn mowed for the last time this season, got the new shed enclosed, hose lines from the garden and watering hole (for the critters) have been pulled in. Plenty of firewood stacked up and ready.

The greenhouses have been "de-summerized"; not sure they're winterized but we'll know in a month or so. The harvest has been beyond expectations. I guess the cantaloupes are finished. Probably the tomatoes as well. Too bad for the late starters, but they had an extended season. Beans, beans, beans. I like beans but who's going to eat all this butternut squash? Not I.

It's a little early to turn on the water line anti-freeze heaters. At least my water lines don't extend a foot inside the house like they did when I lived in Montana - nonetheless ...

Am I properly winterized yet? Close ... but what's winter prep without the weather pointing out what one forgot to prep?

Have I mentioned I'm ready for Memorial Day?

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Michigan Schoolhouse

The New American Digest Posted on October 24, 2025 by DTOctober 23, 2025

Up at the base of the thumb of Michigan sits this old schoolhouse: District 2, 1896 per the date plate above the door.
Farming country then; farming country now.
Certainly a different world than metro Detroit.

That's all I know of this structure.
I wonder what happened to the bell. I wonder what it's used for now - it's in pretty good shape.

I passed by and took the photo.
Then I drove on.

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Fall In The San Juans

The New American Digest Posted on October 23, 2025 by DTOctober 22, 2025

I was up with a buddy at the old Ruby Trust Mine a few miles outside and uphill from Ouray, Colorado when a minor storm passed over. Coming downhill, the clouds were breaking up showing one of the season's first snows high up. The aspens were still in transition here at roughly 10,500 ft but it won't be long before they begin to look more like bare white sticks when the brilliant foliage turns from green to yellow to brown to gone. The tallest peaks in the background top 13,000 ft. The location is near the ghost town of Sneffles and the Revenue Mine. (The location of the Ruby Trust as marked on Giggle Maps does not appear to be correct)

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Waiting For The Wrecker

The New American Digest Posted on October 22, 2025 by DTOctober 22, 2025
Someplace in Nevada

I notice the engine is missing

A not-quite-so-old mine site. 1940s-1960s; maybe into the 1970s. A fair number of abandoned vehicles laying around. Off to the right is a shaft that's been fenced off.

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Posted in Uncategorized | 4 Replies

Tunesday – T Bone Burnett – Shut It Tight

The New American Digest Posted on October 21, 2025 by DTOctober 20, 2025

A sample of some obscure – and some maybe not obscure – tunes from my strange and off-the-wall collection.

Today’s selection: T Bone Burnett "Shut It Tight" 1983

T Bone (Joseph Henry) Burnett was a guitar player for Dylan in the '70s, worked on several movie soundtracks, and produced the Alison Krauss/Robert Plant collaboration on "Raising Sand".
Along with all the other work he has done: more producer than performer.

Shut It Tight is off the album "Proof Through The Night"

I don't like to win but then again I hate to lose
And in between is something I can't stand
I don't care what you think and I hope that you approve
I am just an ordinary man

Sometimes I want to stop and crawl back into the womb
And sometimes I cannot tell wrong from right
But I ain't gonna quit until I'm laid in my tomb
And even then they better shut it tight

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Posted in tunes, Uncategorized | 4 Replies

In Not-Important News …

The New American Digest Posted on October 20, 2025 by DTOctober 20, 2025

Headline: "'No Kings' Color-Revolution Turns Into White Liberal Boomer Parade"

Now I'm a member of that most dreaded group, white boomer conservatives - yet the news is making it seem that all us boomer types are ex-hippies. (Actually, "ex"-hippies are OK but too many of them never left that playground)

I don't know that I've encountered such a group of people - liberal ex-hippies and wanna-bes - so willing to be so ignorant, so unwilling to look at details, so unwilling to think maybe they should change at least some of their beliefs - yet know so much better than anyone else about just about any topic that comes to their minds.

Way back when in the 80s, I lived in Santa Cruz where I first seriously ran into what I call "hippies with money".

They struck me as mean-tempered, holier-than-thou hypocrites even then.

All those glorious ideas when they were poor about the "proper" society went out the window when they got money and it became "their" money, not "the man's" money - or even "our" money.

Now they've organized.

I liked living in Santa Cruz - I like the regions within the Santa Cruz mountains - but SC was more quirky than insane then, before the earthquake. No way would I live there now.

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Posted in Uncategorized | 4 Replies

Suggested By SK

The New American Digest Posted on October 20, 2025 by DTOctober 20, 2025

A little bit of some foot-stompin' music.

https://twitter.com/i/status/1980076437697646868

I dislike live links on the main page but the video could not be embedded.

This stuff's as good as bagpipes :)

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Contact: dt@newamericandigest.org

Gerard Van der Leun
12/26/45 - 1/27/23


Gerard's Last Post
(posthumous): Feb 4, 2023
"So Long. See You All a Little Further Down the Road"

When my body won’t hold me anymore
And it finally lets me free
Where will I go?
Will the trade winds take me south through Georgia grain?
Or tropical rain?
Or snow from the heavens?
Will I join with the ocean blue?
Or run into a savior true?
And shake hands laughing
And walk through the night, straight to the light
Holding the love I’ve known in my life
And no hard feelings

Avett Brothers - No Hard Feelings

The following was posted along with the announcement of Gerard's passing.
Leonard Cohen - Going Home

For a 2005 interview with Gerard


April 2026
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Most Recent Comments

  1. DT on Color/GrayscaleApril 17, 2026

    Never, ever click to open a suspicious page. Once you connect to open a page, bad things become possible -…

  2. Joe on Color/GrayscaleApril 17, 2026

    A beautiful picture which brings back memories of places I have been that truly have a warm aura. That said,…

  3. ghostsniper on Color/GrayscaleApril 17, 2026

    Sitting on the porch last evening my wife remarked how big the hosta's were already that are all along the…

  4. DT on Color/GrayscaleApril 17, 2026

    We've had more winter in the past three days than we had during all of "winter"

  5. ghostsniper on Color/GrayscaleApril 17, 2026

    We got hummingbirds! One showed up yesterday, a mammy, and my wife immediately got 2 feeders up on the shepherds…


Blogroll
The New Neo
Jean's Blog - Pondering
The Feral Irishman

Hey, Mr. Tambourine Man,
play a song for me
I'm not sleepy
and there ain't no place I'm goin' to

Hey, Mr. Tambourine Man,
play a song for me
In the jingle jangle morning,
I'll come followin' you

Take me for a trip upon
your magic swirling ship
All my senses have been stripped
And my hands can't feel to grip
And my toes too numb to step
Wait only for my boot heels to be wanderin'

I'm ready to go anywhere,
I'm ready for to fade
Unto my own parade
Cast your dancing spell my way
I promise to go under it


Men who saw night coming down about them could somehow act as if they stood at the edge of dawn.


From Gerard's site. The picture always caught my eye.

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Contact: dt@newamericandigest.org

About "DT"

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