I was looking at an old post on the Outfitter forum, and came across this from Don:
"In fact, the "plan" to resign my job, sell almost everything to our name, and move to the hinterlands of southeastern Utah occurred in a shockingly short period of time (all the while, with our friends thinking that we had totally lost our minds).
After moving on from Genentech in 1989 to Syntex/Roche Bioscience/Oread BioPharma (all at the same location in Palo Alto), I had been consistently putting in 80 to 100 hour weeks for a 10 year period, while my wife was routinely putting in 60+ hour weeks at Genentech (she was there for a total of 18 years). During this time, one of our colleagues at Genentech dropped dead on the job from a heart attack, and after a one-on-one meeting in my office at Oread BioPharma, the director of Engineering collapsed on his way back to his office and died later that same day. Then after one of my wife's brothers died at 52 from cancer, we both started looking at each other and wondering if we were heading for the same fate with our kamikaze work schedules and never having time to smell the roses.
So, when it was becoming obvious that the wheels were coming off at Oread BioPharma as they were heading towards bankruptcy, I resigned in March 1999, and instead of doing the usual thing of looking for a new biotech/biopharma job in the Bay Area, I instead executed the plan B "head for the hills" scheme."
Don had the mind of an engineer and the heart of a adventurer. He insisted on creating the world he envisioned, always modifying his camper to suit his desires, and building his spread in La Sal. I envy his decision to move there, and it is wonderful that he was able to spend the last 13 or so years of his life according to his own terms. I never met him face-to-face, yet my heart has been heavy all day. It's guys like him that make this a community, and he will be missed.