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Conejo

Conejo may refer to:

  • Conejo, California
  • Conejo Valley, in Southern California
  • Conejo Island

Usage examples of "conejo".

I can recommend a man named Amadeo Montoya from up in Río Conejo, that's in the mountains.

I told you to get winter help on the place in Conejo, and said I'd pay half your help's salary, didn't I?

How could you help what happens up there in Río Conejo when you're down there in Alabama on the beach watching those sailboats in the warm.

Amadeo, who came in from Río Conejo every morning in the pickup, put snow chains on the rear tires and loaded the truck bed with three hundred pounds of concrete blocks to get traction.

You know my eight-year-old boy is named Francisco after your father, and he came to the church up in Río Conejo to be godfather to him?

Excilda hadn't asked me what I was doing in Río Conejo on a school day, and I knew it wasn't polite in the hills to come right to the point.

Well, it was a big fire for Conejo, and he lost everything except a few crocks of cider and his family.

The only telephone in Río Conejo is at the combination post office-opera house-alchemist's shop, and the girl who answered said to hang on, there'd be a truck passing pretty soon and she'd ask the driver to stop at the Montoyas' house and say there was a phone call.

Papa told me they used to do it in Conejo and the other towns but they stopped.

It's only fourteen miles or so from Conejo, but it's a tricky drive on a narrow road, and it climbs three thousand feet.

But one summer day he steered it off the gorge road on a return trip from a wood run to Conejos Junction, was somehow thrown clear onto a ledge, and from that spectacular vantage point he watched his rattletrap do a swan dive into the Rio Grande eight hundred feet below.

His dad stopped their old truck and pointed to a snake in the Conejos Junction road.

But one summer day he steered it off the gorge road on a return trip from a wood run to Conejos Junction, was somehow thrown clear onto a ledge, and from that spectacular vantage point he watched his rattletrap do a swan dive into the Rio Grande eight hundred feet below.