HOA Blamed Me After Their Illegal Build Triggered a $10M Landslide-Ginny

I knew something was wrong the moment the ground groaned beneath my boots.

You do not forget that sound after growing up on a hillside that once swallowed half a logging road in 1974.

It is not thunder, and it is not a tree settling in the wind.

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It is deeper than that, heavier, like the earth is grinding its teeth under your feet.

The rain had turned the south slope slick and dark, and the air smelled like wet clay, crushed juniper, and cold stone.

I stood there with mud pulling at my boots, listening to the mountain speak the same language my father had taught me when I was six years old.

Then the new HOA town homes began sliding down my family’s land like toys on wet glass.

Walls cracked.

Rooftops folded.

Cars dipped nose-first into brown water and disappeared behind waves of mud.

By sunrise, the damages would cross $10 million.

And somehow, the Highland Bluffs HOA decided I was the villain.

They ignored the warnings, the emails, the survey maps, the notebooks my father left me, and every sign the hillside had been giving for weeks.

Then, when the mountain finally moved, they pointed straight at me.

My family land is not a backyard with an oak tree and a drunken uncle’s shed.

It is 40 acres of steep hillside, granite shelves, stubborn juniper, and underground veins of water that shift beneath the soil like sleeping animals.

My father used to say, ‘This mountain is alive, son. Treat it like you would a tired old bull. You respect it. You do not poke it.’

He learned that in 1974, when a landslide took half his logging road and left him staring at a scar in the earth that never fully healed.

After that, he documented everything.

He took pictures.

He measured soil.

He dug test pits.

He mapped moisture veins by walking the same ridges year after year until he could read that land better than most men read a newspaper.

His notebooks filled with sketches, warnings, calculations, and dates no county clerk ever bothered to care about.

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