HOA Ignored His Warnings, Then a $10 Million Hill Collapse Exposed Them-Ginny

I warned the HOA not to build on my land because I knew that hillside better than anyone in Highland Bluffs ever would.

That was not pride speaking.

That was memory.

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My family’s 40 acres sat above the valley in steep layers of granite, clay, juniper, and hidden water, and my father had taught me to read that ground before I could drive a truck.

He used to take me along the south face at sunrise with a tin cup of coffee in one hand and a battered notebook in the other.

“Listen first,” he would say.

As a boy, I thought he meant birds or wind.

I learned in 1974 that he meant the mountain itself.

That year, after weeks of rain, half of his old logging road disappeared with a sound that came up from the dirt like something waking angry.

I was six, watching from behind the cabin door while trees tilted, rocks rolled, and the soil opened as if it had been waiting decades to move.

After that, Dad documented everything.

He photographed cracks.

He measured slope movement.

He dug test pits.

He mapped seasonal water veins and wrote warnings in waterproof notebooks that smelled faintly of oil, damp paper, and old truck dust.

By the time he died, those notebooks were more than a record.

They were a warning system.

I inherited the land, but I did not try to turn it into money.

I fixed fence lines when elk tore through them.

I cleared brush so wildfire would not take the cabin.

I walked the ridge each morning with coffee, checking the same old fault lines my father had marked.

The mountain rested, and I let it.

Then Highland Bluffs HOA decided my land looked like opportunity.

The first notice came as a flyer taped to my mailbox.

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