Here's a final look back at the accumulation of Off Road Elmers so far this morning before we packed our cameras and note pads and vacated the area before the main glut of expected new arrivals.
To the left is Highway 39 and the brush-covered, relatively safe hillside from which we normally observe Elmer. To the right down a small hill of about 20 feet is the floor of the canyon where the Elmers putter around back and forth, at times colliding into each other in amusing ways but otherwise burning gasoline for no good reason.
Behind us is the U. S. Forest Service's two shacks, which we'll see in the next photograph of this series.
This is a good photograph because it shows how we're surrounded on all sides by mountains and hills, most of them covered in green brush despite the dry season we've had in Southern California for so long.
We here at the Stop Elmer Fudd web site mention this fact because it would be a much nicer place here -- and around the world -- if none of these subhuman monsters were out there freely among us, beshitting and befouling the world that normal people live in. Without laws governing the rounding up and enforced treatment of Elmer Fudds across America -- something that would be wrong and unconstitutional in any event -- we must all live with these people among us and try to do as best we can despite the low quality of life these people inflict upon Americans.
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