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Post by edgewalker on Mar 7, 2020 0:24:02 GMT -5
It's not far, but afer a two four I can't walk.
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Post by kaotkbliss on Mar 8, 2020 19:46:04 GMT -5
And when I came home I was, I was tired. I was tired mentally. I was tired physically. And, I wrote a story that’s in my memoir that’s called My War For Me. If you don’t do anything else, read that story. I think it’s 7500 words, but I’m very proud of that story. It tells, uh…and in my new book Too Far To Walk, I tell another story that’s an aberration to My War for Me story. Moby Dickens Bookstore Q/A I wonder what story he's talking about. I don't have TFTW so I may have to order it, see how the 2 stories differ.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 8, 2020 20:00:06 GMT -5
I read it that WWWh is placed named after a place that can and is only recognized by canyoning down not far but too far to walk.
What's a word for canyoning down and not far but too far to walk? The two phrases put together corresponding and complimenting each other give WWWh. This is just what I think simplify means.
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Post by Jenny on Mar 9, 2020 6:13:29 GMT -5
And when I came home I was, I was tired. I was tired mentally. I was tired physically. And, I wrote a story that’s in my memoir that’s called My War For Me. If you don’t do anything else, read that story. I think it’s 7500 words, but I’m very proud of that story. It tells, uh…and in my new book Too Far To Walk, I tell another story that’s an aberration to My War for Me story. Moby Dickens Bookstore Q/A I wonder what story he's talking about. I don't have TFTW so I may have to order it, see how the 2 stories differ. In the following thread are some previously written articles by Forrest: mysteriouswritings.proboards.com/thread/3962/previously-published-forrest-ttotc-storiesBelow is the link to My War For Me: www.85fis.doncondra.org/Forrest%20Fenn%20Story.htm
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Post by edgewalker on Mar 9, 2020 6:39:42 GMT -5
I wonder if it is not the traditional too far so you have to drive. Ladders make frequent appearances in the narratives. Use of a ladder would meet not far but too far to walk.
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Post by me9 on Mar 10, 2020 6:31:12 GMT -5
I’ve also read that you wrote the treasure hunt for an unemployed redneck with 12 kids. Does this mean that all of those people who are delving into Native American history, Greek mythology etc are looking too deeply? Can hunters really get to the treasure location with just a good map, the poem, and a decent knowledge of words? FF: I wrote the book for everyone who feels a sense of wanderlust. In your last question if you change the last word to geography, my answer would be yes. dalneitzel.com/2017/02/25/scrapbook-one-hundred-sixty-six-2/
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Post by seannm on Mar 10, 2020 7:11:49 GMT -5
All,
Well if I take that line literally then the starting point is not warm waters halt.
Seannm
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Post by thrillchaser on Mar 10, 2020 7:33:13 GMT -5
All, Well if I take that line literally then the starting point is not warm waters halt. Seannm forrest has said start as wwh. I think I'll go with what he says to do since he hid the treasure chest and knows where it is.
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Post by seannm on Mar 10, 2020 8:23:21 GMT -5
All, Well if I take that line literally then the starting point is not warm waters halt. Seannm forrest has said start as wwh. I think I'll go with what he says to do since he hid the treasure chest and knows where it is. I don’t believe he has ever said you start at warm waters halt. He has said that you start with the first clue, and he has said the first clue is: begin it where warm waters halt. Therefore, you might infer that he means you start at warm waters halt, but I don’t believe he has ever definitively said you start at warm waters halt. If I’m wrong please cite where he has said that. Seannm
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Post by edgewalker on Mar 10, 2020 18:43:37 GMT -5
forrest has said start as wwh. I think I'll go with what he says to do since he hid the treasure chest and knows where it is. I don’t believe he has ever said you start at warm waters halt. He has said that you start with the first clue, and he has said the first clue is: begin it where warm waters halt. Therefore, you might infer that he means you start at warm waters halt, but I don’t believe he has ever definitively said you start at warm waters halt. If I’m wrong please cite where he has said that. Seannm Stop making me think Seanm. Ok, don't stop. But stop making me think after a second glass of Malbec. I have done enough fuzzy thinking, as is clearly evident from my posts.
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Post by thrillchaser on Mar 12, 2020 6:05:25 GMT -5
forrest has said start as wwh. I think I'll go with what he says to do since he hid the treasure chest and knows where it is. I don’t believe he has ever said you start at warm waters halt. He has said that you start with the first clue, and he has said the first clue is: begin it where warm waters halt. Therefore, you might infer that he means you start at warm waters halt, but I don’t believe he has ever definitively said you start at warm waters halt. If I’m wrong please cite where he has said that. Seannm forrest says to simplify. if you want to complicate things go ahead but it's synonymous to me that we start at wwh, and that is where I'll begin. happy hunting
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Post by me9 on Mar 31, 2020 18:14:26 GMT -5
Are there signs that people are getting closer to solving your puzzle? How many clues have people solved now? Searchers have come within about 200 feet. Some may have solved the first four clues, but I am not certain. dalneitzel.com/2015/11/02/forrest-gets-mail-9/
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Post by Deleted on Mar 31, 2020 19:52:51 GMT -5
I'm kinda certain that the not far is the distance and the too far to walk is another way of putting the name of the canyon into clue form.
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Post by johnwayne11 on Apr 1, 2020 21:34:21 GMT -5
I read it that WWWh is placed named after a place that can and is only recognized by canyoning down not far but too far to walk. What's a word for canyoning down and not far but too far to walk? The two phrases put together corresponding and complimenting each other give WWWh. This is just what I think simplify means. I'm thinkin it may just be a "slip and slide"....
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Post by Deleted on Apr 3, 2020 16:33:28 GMT -5
I read it that WWWh is placed named after a place that can and is only recognized by canyoning down not far but too far to walk. What's a word for canyoning down and not far but too far to walk? The two phrases put together corresponding and complimenting each other give WWWh. This is just what I think simplify means. I'm thinkin it may just be a "slip and slide".... Hi johnwayne11 I see your imagination. Npftm is running through the grass back to the line for another turn. So what's hlawh in the scenario? My solution has the chest in a old ash pit from an old steam locomotives That's the cold wood for me. Ashes to ashes and dust to dust back to the beginning to return we must.
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