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Banjo Road
You see something.
You think about what you’re seeing. You happen to have a
guitar in hand. You start noodling around on the strings and mumbling
some words. Before long, you have a bit of a song. Nothing too
ponderous or thoughtful, just a snapshot of that thing seen. That’s
how this little piece, “Banjo Road,” came to be.
A few months before Tyler,
my beloved Australian Shepherd, passed away, Gary, my beloved
brother and across-the-pasture neighbor, got an Australian Shepherd
of his own. He named the puppy Banjo. 
On the farm where I live, there are three houses.
The one I live in sits at the edge of the south pasture. About
a quarter mile away, to the northwest, is Gary’s house.
Banjo figured out as a puppy that, if Gary was
away from home, there was a chance that I might not be. He would
leave Gary’s house and, in obedience to the law which says
that “the shortest distance between any two points is a
straight line”, would run through the pasture until he was
at my place. So many times did he make that trip that, before
long, there was an easily visible path, like a tire track, through
the field.
Banjo Road seems like the right name for that
little path.
I’ve only sung this song a time or two.
On one of those occasions, my good friend Bill Goans was in attendance.
Not long after that, I was a guest in the Goans’ house.
At breakfast, Bill, Joanne, Daniel and Rachel presented me with
two “Banjo Road” signs, one for each end of his self-made
path.
I don’t mean to be pretentious or overly
analytical about a song that was written merely to freeze a moment
in time. But maybe “Banjo Road” has something to say
about people life. Dogs, like people, go where they are loved,
where they feel welcomed, where somebody is home for them. Many
of us spend our lives, or a good part of it, looking for the path
that leads to something wonderful, something warm, something welcoming,
something sure.
It’s Easter morning as I write this. The day reminds me
of the true road home. It’s a road that starts in a garden,
wanders through a wilderness, meanders by a manger, past a seashore,
up a hill, into a tomb, to the skies … home. Where Love
is always waiting.
Banjo Road

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My brother bought a puppy, brought
him to the farm one day
He named the puppy Banjo, tried
to teach him how to stay
But little Banjo likes to wander
and he can't make up his mind
He's made a path across the
field from Gary's house to mine.
It's the Banjo Road, the Banjo
Road
He's made a path we call the
Banjo Road
At least a dozen times a day
you watch him come and go
Cause love is always waiting
at both ends of Banjo Road
It's a little trail just wide
enough for little puppy feet
It winds up through the pasture
grass, his private 'easy street'
It's just a quarter-mile and
he will smile his way along
Cause at either destination
he knows love is always home
It's the Banjo Road, the Banjo
Road
He's made a path we call the
Banjo Road
At least a dozen times a day
you watch him come and go
Cause love is always waiting
at both ends of Banjo Road
When you are just a puppy with
no work you have to do
With a hundred acre front-yard
and a sky that's big and blue
You just run, you just run,
run, run all day
Down the Banjo Road, the Banjo
Road
He's made a path we call the
Banjo Road
At least a dozen times a day,
you watch him come and go
Cause love is always waiting
at both ends of Banjo Road
He knows that love is waiting
at both ends of Banjo Road
He's certain love is waiting
there at both ends of the Banjo Road
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