Circle Drive, Las Cruces, New Mexico.
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Photographer 📷 Charlie Lansche, aka @charlie_lansche on Instagram - "High desert peaks and blooming claret cups pair nicely together in the Land of Enchantment. Headed north soon, hard to leave this beautiful place and its amazing people. April 2022."
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Gifting Albuquerque to Tucson, Knocking Out Las Cruces!
Oct. 24, 2023
We gifted from Albuquerque to Las Cruces this morning. To our surprise, we got a bonus city on this gifting mission, which has been our largest yet.
There were an inordinate number of cell towers along I-10 through Las Cruces, which we neutralized very quickly. The energy in the atmosphere was already very highly charged, with our thorough grid of Denver and Albuquerque towers, as well as everything in between, fighting against the still unbusted Tucson cell towers.
We hit a downpour in Las Cruces following gifting the towers, which included marble sized hail. The winds were strong as well, as we drove toward Tucson in the afternoon. We hit two more extreme downpours before reaching our destination. Driving conditions were dangerous, but there was no road flooding. There was pooled up water on the land surrounding the freeway.
The energetic release of neutralizing hundreds of cell towers in California, Nevada, Utah, Colorado, and New Mexico in just over a week was creating dramatic textures in the clouds throughout the afternoon. Although Las Cruces is a much bigger city than I expected and could use more orgonite throughout, the concentration of busted towers along the freeway was enough for today! We continued gifting all the towers we saw in the pouring rain.
This evening the rain has stopped. There is a chance of more rain tonight in Tucson. Once we finish Tucson, the southwest will be extremely well gridded with orgonite.
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Organ Mountains, New Mexico
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The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo ceded the territory that became the states of California, Nevada, Utah, and Arizona and New Mexico to the United States, including the village of Doña Ana. The U.S. Amy patrolled the region to protect the influx of settlers, soldiers and resources. Rapid population growth overwhelmed Doña Ana. The mayor successfully petitioned the U.S. troops to establish a new town to relieve the pressure on the village.
The U.S. Army designated a site for the new town six miles south of Doña Ana, establishing the first 84 blocks of Las Cruces, each containing four lots. 120 men gathered to draw lots from a hat to determine who got which site. The Mesquite Historic District encompasses the initial allotment, stretching across Campo, San Pedro, Tornillo and Mesquite streets, between Chestnut and Colorado avenues.
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