This gallery contains 12 photos.
With more visits than ever, we’ve found more photos: © Robbin Dofflemyer 2011
This gallery contains 12 photos.
With more visits than ever, we’ve found more photos: © Robbin Dofflemyer 2011
We got a last minute call from Kenny & Virginia to brand their calves before it rained. They’d been gathering Woolly Canyon for three days, one in the rain, hoping to brand Saturday, but with a week of forecast rain ahead, went Friday instead. Plenty of big calves under less than optimal conditions, I was pleased to be in the same pen with so many young and capable cowboys. Somehow, Robbin got some photos taken between vaccinating calves. It was, of course, heartening to see Jeff and Alie again – one more special day with our neighbors!
© 2011 Robbin Dofflemyer
Posted in Photographs
While Robbin & I went to put out salt and mineral and to take a look at the cows and calves, we ran into these pairs:
Click to enlarge.
We’re pretty happy!
Posted in Photographs
Robbin & I left yesterday morning with salt and mineral to look at the cattle in Greasy. We took our cameras hoping to get some early spring photographs, but ran into some cold, low clouds and fog instead. Visibility here in Section 17 was about 100 yards.
Below Buckeye, below the fog.
Posted in Photographs
It’s a hostile environment in Washington where no politician wants to be blamed for increasing the federal deficit to $14 trillion by voting for the $3.7 trillion budget before them.
Nevada’s Senator Harry Reid, in a recent plea for the National Endowment for the Humanities, used the National Cowboy Poetry Gathering as an example of good sponsorship that has subsequently fired the ire of both conservatives and liberals, but won’t bring consensus in any meaningful way. Though Reid misspoke slightly by saying, “The National Endowment of the Humanities is the reason we have in northern Nevada every January a cowboy poetry festival. Had that program not been around, the tens of thousands of people who come there every year would not exist.” We know what he meant, and we know what the Gathering has meant to each of us and the community of Elko for the past 27 years.
Eliminating NEH and the National Endowment for the Arts, budgeted for around $124 million, won’t balance the books – a drop in the bucket where over a $1 trillion has been spent on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan since 2001, where the current Defense Budget is over $500 billion. In the scheme of things, the NEH stands at less than .00003% of the FY2011 Federal Budget.
Long a measure of economic health, we are suffering the consequences of too much growth, a collapsed, debt-driven growth requiring nearly $5 trillion to bailout our economy. The National Endowment for the Humanities was not the cause, nor is its amputation from the budget a solution.
In hard times, our focus becomes especially short term, looking to cut where we can to get-by, but never really dealing with the issues, now more emotional than ever, that created our problems. If ever there were a time to take the longer view, it is now. As for the arts and humanity, a little more of both would serve us all well.
Posted in Photographs
Tagged Cowboy Poetry, FY2011 Federal Budget, Harry Reid, NEA, NEH
With plenty of moisture, the winter buckeye balls have germinated and taken root beneath the trees in Greasy. Most won’t survive the summer sun. Branding the last bunch of calves this a.m. Hallelujah!
Sampling of yearling heifers bred to the Wagyu bulls, Snake River Farms, to begin calving mid-August.
6:30 a.m. – 35 degrees, .81″ rain overnight, since Thursday, .94″, season 18.70″
Posted in Photographs
Posted in Photographs
Posted in Photographs
Good gather yesterday, branding calves this morning at the Paregien Ranch before the forecast rain.
While making a last circle in the Kubota, I had to stop to photograph the red lichen here at Windmill Spring, headwaters of Ridenhour Creek that contributes to Dry Creek, a mile and 1,500 feet down the canyon. There used to be a hand-dug well and windmill here, the latter disassembled and sold down the hill by a previous lessee, the former filled-in to keep cattle out. Good, dependable water, nevertheless.
Though I have no explanation, scientific or otherwise – lichen this red is rare around here – worth observing, occurring only one other place that I’m aware of at Effie’s (Hilliard) Spring on the Antelope Valley side of the Paregien Ranch, a stone’s throw from Wuknaw, the Creation Place for the Yokuts according to Frank Latta. And like any place with good water, there are native grinding holes atop these rocks.
With ample wonder and speculation, the stories come easily.
Posted in Photographs
Tagged Effie Hilliard, Frank Latta, Paregien, red lichen, Wuknaw, Yokuts