
Beautiful day on Dry Creek, good friends, good help.

Caravans of SUVs, militarily spaced in case one gets lost,
race up our pocked-marked and decomposing mountain road
on Fridays to Hartland and Hume Lake Christian camps
to thin, clean air and worship exposed to cedars and pines
only to return Sunday afternoons as if God were driving
irresponsibly—an ascension of modern day crusaders
sprinting with a gang of jeeps, retrofitted for climbing rocks
and spinning hookers in the melting snow, the whir
and hum of mud-grips from miles below. Always
casualties, strapped to the backs of tow trucks home.
Posted in Photographs, POEMS 2023, poetry, Ranch Journal
Tagged Dry Creek, photography, poetry

A bustling world of change
with all its shenanigans beyond
the renewed green after rain,
beyond the ridgeline that has stayed
the same for a thousand lifetimes,
ever since Tro’khud, the Eagle
and Wee-hay’-sit, the Mountain Lion
shaped a body from clay
and baked it in the house of tules
they had set afire. Then put a piece
of him in a basket and set it beside
Sho-no’-yoo spring to become his mate.
They made mistakes like paws for hands
they had to change—but for a moment
they were safe this side of the ridge.
Posted in Photographs, POEMS 2023, poetry
Tagged change, Dry Creek, green, photography, poetry, progress, rain, weather, Yokuts Creation Myth

I’s been a great week between Christmas and New Years with Robbin’s brother Joe here to help out cutting wood, splitting oak, hanging gates, cleaning-up the Horehound, Turkey Mullein and tumbleweeds along the driveway, not to mention vehicle maintenance while getting 0.34″ slow rain that has revitalized our green. We’ve taken time-out around the BBQ fire pit with Bloody Mary’s and a Mexican Coffee to celebrate our accomplishments.
Though I would have liked the rain to come a month earlier, the weather’s been perfect, rain spaced well with warm temperatures as the canyon has turned from blond dry feed to green. The cows and calves have moved to the softened ground uphill to get a bite of both as we watch the virgin Red Angus bulls, close-by, fumbled their way to breeding postures. As Robbin quips, “It’s a wonder we get any calves at all.”
This is what we work for, an uncertain future, and wish you all a joyful 2024 !!
Posted in Photographs, Ranch Journal
Tagged celebrate, cows and calves, Dry Creek, green, new feed, New Year's, perfect, photography, rain, weather

Warm-up cutting it.
Get warm stacking it.
Stay warm carrying it
into the house.
And once more, when
you haul the ashes out.
– for Gary Davis
Posted in Photographs, POEMS 2023, poetry, Ranch Journal

A bower for sleeping bees,
the ground begs softly
beneath the burning trees
to foster cotyledons
and change the canyon green.
No cars on the road,
silence weighs heavily,
not a bird or bull’s bawl
to claim the open space
that’s come alive.
The gray sky witness
floats in a cloud-fog
damp and undemanding
as the long pause of winter
moves into a new beginning.
Posted in Photographs, POEMS 2023, poetry, Ranch Journal
Tagged bees, Dry Creek, fog, photography, poetry, rain, silence, sycamores, weather

A few blue clouds float
upon a light gray sky
above Barnaphy after
the surprise last gasp
of a cut-off low
cruising south to flood
California’s coast—
a warm forty hundredths here
brings a tinge of green.
Sycamores like torches afire,
not quite ready to undress
their long white limbs
intertwined, plump Rockettes,
our native chorus line
burns along the creek.
The cattle stay high,
all but a hopeful clutch
spurn the feed grounds.
Posted in Photographs, POEMS 2023, poetry, Ranch Journal
Tagged Dry Creek, Fire, photography, poetry, rain, sycamores, weather, Winter Solstice

The poem has been ricocheting inside my head as we reconstructed a portion of the Paregien corrals last week to accommodate a calf table to brand our calves. Roads impassable for a crew, we were unable to brand our calves last year due to last winter’s Atmospheric Rivers, so we borrowed a calf table to try.
I grew up with a calf table, pushing calves up the chute at six or seven to my Dad and one other man to cut, brand and vaccinate. Part of the poem is how I’ve come full circle in a 70-year span, with lots of branding pen bravado in between. There is no substitute to be a horseback and roping calves to brand, but I’ve outlived my dependable horses and my hands have slowed with age.
Part of the poem would be my excitement as a boy to be asked to help brand, even though my shins would be kicked with calf shit up the front of my pants. Details like my Dad’s red bone Case carbon steel stockman’s he constantly sharpened on a small whetstone that he carried in his pocket. The one he thought he left at the corrals after cleaning it, only to find it on the running board of the old International pickup after driving 20 miles to the corrals and back.
Thanks to the Fry family for their essential help with the reconstruction, and with yesterday’s branding—just before, we hope, will be our first taste of El Niño.
Posted in Photographs, Ranch Journal
Tagged branding, calf table, El Niño, photography, Pregien Ranch, rain, weather
Yesterday, Robbin and I were checking the cows and calves on the Paregien Ranch while putting salt and mineral out when we ran into these two bucks and some does. Because they don’t get much hunting pressure and familiar with our comings and goings, the deer are fairly tame. Add the bucks’ tunnel-vision this time of year and it’s as if we weren’t even there. Robbin took the video from her cell phone.
We didn’t see many deer this summer due to the tall feed as a result of last year’s abnormal rainfall, so it was encouraging to know that their basic breeding routine has not been interrupted by all the drama and tragedies around the world—something solid to depend on.

Once again
storm forecasts
have driven our rain away.
Stovewood stacked
against
dry cold fronts
like woodpeckers
stash acorns
for a rainy day.
Posted in Photographs, POEMS 2023, Ranch Journal
Tagged Beaver moon, photography, poetry, rain, weather