Author Archives: John

Going Home

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Mothers to the weaned calves that went to town Wednesday were ready to head home when we arrived early yesterday morning. A small front passing through Yosemite left us overcast with a cool upcanyon breeze.

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The cows know the routine and really only need us to open and close the gates.

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A beautiful morning to be horseback despite the dust. No hoots, no hollers, easy business as the cows chugged up the hill, going home.

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Compadres.

 

 

PROLONGED MOMENT

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Change comes slowly,
only the moss on the rock knows
how the trees have grown.

 

 

COTTONWOOD

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Bright among the oaks,
rare and far between up here,
moisture and a spring.

 

 

Weekly Photo Challenge (4) “Between”

Last Bunch 2014

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It’s been a long, dry year, but we’ve begun to breathe easier now that our last bunch of calves is in the weaning pen and headed to town tomorrow morning. Born last fall, they are averaging about 100 lbs. lighter than normal due to the drought, but current prices more than make up the difference.

The country we graze is cross-fenced into pastures. We gather each twice a year to brand and wean while culling the cows that don’t fit our program either due to age or late calving dates. It takes about six weeks for us to wean all our calves, but longer to brand when it rains and while we’re helping our neighbors. We try to keep our cows in the same pasture their entire lives here, familiar ground where they can make homes and the gather becomes routine. Because of our terrain, rotational grazing is impracticable—so we understock to meet most feed conditions instead.

This second year of drought, however, has reduced our cowherd by 40% while feeding 500 tons of alfalfa since last fall. Because of the time and feed required for a heifer to have her first calf, we kept no replacement heifers this year. It’s disappointing for Robbin and I to see them go and the efforts of the past twenty years reduced so drastically, but we hope to take advantage of this heavy culling by improving the genetics of our cows into the future. We are encouraged with a good base to work with, as our cowherd now is fairly young, a third of which are first and second-calf cows.

Near term, we concentrate on improving stockwater until it might rain again this fall.

 

SAWTOOTH

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Grazing the haze between
the Great Divide—
over and over again.

 

 

Weekly Photo Challenge (3) “Between”

BETWEEN

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Summer gather,
the dawn below me,
we ride between realities.

 

 

Weekly Photo Challenge (2) “Between”

ASCENSION

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Native generations rise
at water, hoof and pad,
inhaled at dawn.

 

 

Weekly Photo Challenge (1) “Between”

BALANCE

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To the flutter and whir
of learning how to drink
water from a trough.

 

 

FOR CATTLE

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Trading a quart of gasoline
for six thousand gallons
of water.

 

 

LAST SUPPER

May 9, 2014

May 9, 2014

 

We have culled the cows again,
dependable girls
raising good calves every year

let me walk within the crowd
of old hides in the corral—
we’ve known each other well.

It was artful, the long trail
of green alfalfa flakes
spaced on dry grassless ground,

last evening’s table set before
I called them from their shade tree—
before today’s auction ring.

It’s time.
They will never look
this good again.