Tag Archives: Effie Hilliard

WPC – Forgotten Monument (1)

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Caged from cattle,
who were her people
pioneering in the foothills?

 

 

Ides of March 2014

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Robbin and Lee took a load of hay to the Paregien Ranch yesterday to check on the condition of our cows and calves as well as the feed. On the first of March we measured 1.68″ of rain with temperatures in the 70s since—ideal grass-growing weather, one would think, except that the Paregien Ranch has only received 4.5″ this season. The ground is dry, competing with the grass, absorbing every drop.

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It was a comment on our March 1st, ‘Our Window’ post that “Drought is the worst limbo” that’s become richer since, the waiting and indecision the past two weeks, branding calves as if by some miracle we might yet have a grass season.

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We have a program for our cows that fits this particular ranch most all the time. Out of limbo, it’s now apparent that we won’t have enough dry feed to carry our cows through the summer and fall. More than likely, we’ll wean the calves early and cull the cows heavily at that time, ending this grass season with about half the cows we began with in September. Hopefully we’ll have enough stock water to support them. We will have to monitor conditions closely, as that will determine when we begin to wean. Robbin returned with photos that show some improvement in feed and flesh while I stayed home to assemble our tax information.

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The photo above is the remains of Effie Hilliard’s rock fireplace on the Paregien Ranch that overlooks Antelope Valley and Woodlake beyond.

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Great Western Divide - March 14, 2014

Great Western Divide – March 14, 2014

TRICKY TRADEOFFS AT HALLOWEEN

The earth sinks at the middle spring,
at the fairly flat and brushy head
of Ridenhour Canyon, huge Blue Oaks
and gooseberries covering forgotten
gossip rocks. I think of Effie riding
her white horse, string of ‘wolves’
beside her cattle following at a walk—

me on the Kubota, salt and mineral,
backtracking for my lost hay hook hung
on the flatbed rail to disengage Spencer’s
trailer backed beneath the pickup hitch
to transfer bales he borrowed for
his daughter’s party—lighter trailer rising
as the loaded feed truck bears down.

Gulf War veteran, he’s had a key since
he was sixteen, goes where he wants,
grins with canine teeth as he talks coyotes,
calls them in for instant death. A silhouette
at rest in the shade of gray chemise,
the bunch behind me, rises in my scope.
Mangy old dog down, forever relieved.

As they regard him crossways in their track,
a tall Brangus turns to search the manzanita,
ears flicking, another leaving I never see
though I comb hillsides clear to the corrals.
Ahead, bawling cows tuck two more tails, chase
chuckling tongues over year-old shoulders.
One down, but one slips off before I head to

Effie’s cabin, cows and calves come to salt,
hope for hay, survey and study another
nosing leaves beneath an oak on Wuknaw ridge,
animals’ rock circle—Yokuts Creation Place.
Three for three, cow dogs living with cattle,
waiting for the mother of the latest calf
to go to water. Haven’t found my hay hook, yet.

The Nature of Springs

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.