The HOA Ignored His Landslide Warnings. Then the Mountain Answered-jingjing

I warned the HOA not to build on my land because I knew the sound a mountain makes before it moves.

It starts quietly, under your boots, too low to be thunder and too deep to be a truck on the road.

It feels like the ground is clearing its throat.

My father taught me that when I was six years old, the year the landslide of 1974 swallowed half his logging road and left a scar across the south face of our hill.

He spent the rest of his life studying that scar.

He photographed cracks after every rainstorm, measured soil movement with stakes, dug test pits, mapped water veins, and wrote everything down in notebooks that smelled of old paper, graphite, and damp cabin air.

He was not a licensed geotechnical engineer, as Chad later reminded me with a smirk.

He was something rarer.

He was a man who listened to the land long enough to know when it was telling the truth.

When my father died, those 40 acres became mine.

I did not build condos on them, or flatten them, or try to turn granite and juniper into a revenue stream.

I walked the boundary lines with coffee in the mornings, fixed the fence when elk broke through, cleared brush before fire season, and left the south face alone.

That was the promise I thought I was keeping for him.

Then Highland Bluffs HOA taped a flyer to my mailbox with a watercolor sketch of luxury townhomes sitting on land my family had owned for decades.

The first meeting with Karen Maddox told me exactly what kind of fight was coming.

She stood at the HOA entrance in sunglasses large enough to hide behind and told me my own driveway was “HOA controlled property.”

I showed her the deed.

She treated it like an inconvenience.

A week later, orange stakes appeared on my hillside.

Then surveyors appeared.

Then bulldozers.

Then Chad, the foreman, waved me away from my own property and told me I was interfering with an active job site.

I warned him the slope was unstable.

I told him my father had documented the 1974 slide, the clay layer, the water veins, the whole history of that hill.

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