March and April both came in like lions and left no better than hyenas. The snow and wind, combined with a chaotic schedule, interfered with scout rides searching looking for a passage over the northern end of Mariano Mesa.
Why pack a horse for day rides?
It serves a number of purposes. First, it allows me to exercise 2 horses at the same time. Secondly, it is good for the pack horse to learn to follow correctly and carry a static load. The packing and unpacking take some horses longer to get used to. If you don't believe me, you are more than welcome to come along and try to get panniers up on Trooper. I'll visit you in intensive care. Third, I need all the practice I can get balancing loads, tying knots and all the other small details that are a definite skill set. I have wonderful friends that live just a couple of hours away by horseback that raise Rocky Mountain Horses. You can go to their link that is on the first page of this blog. They are both very experienced packers in the high country, and I mean the really high country of the Cascades in Washington. They are always so helpful to me and manage not to laugh when I rattle through their outfit because they know it takes practice. Fourth, I pack a horse for the same reason that I have roll out bags in all of the ranch and personal vehicles with food, water, clothing and gear. Things happen out here in the Big Open, and being unprepared is likely to hurry your meeting with the Almighty. Cell phones don't work and there are not many folks around in a part of the west still classified as a Frontier County. So, I pack along an extra horse and enough stuff to feed us all for a day or two as well as provide shelter if we get caught out "many miles from home."
The country is tough enough without all of the fences put up by the damn sod busters and sheep herders of the 1930s. Worst country, apart from Texas, I have seen for no gates or locks on gates if you can find one.
Road trips out of state, friends visiting and winter damage repairs here at the ranch have required my attention and interferred with getting the horses as fit as they need to be, though the rides have been getting progressively longer and harder in hours and miles under saddle.
On a late May afternoon, Stryker, Lancer and I again found ourselves moving along a fence line at the bottom of the northern edge of Mariano Mesa only to find that it went straight up the side of the slope to terminate at a sandstone outcrop. Another dead end. Tying Stryker to a stunted pinyon tree I sat down on the shale covered slope and carefully glassed the mesa’s northern edge. It was far too steep to climb and was cleft by boulder cluttered arroyos.
Mariano Mesa across Lopez Draw
I searched for a possible elk or cattle trail. Half a mile across the jumbled, cedar covered base of the slope, I noted a small finger that extended down to a long, dry meadow. If there was any hope for a trail to the top, it would have to be along the spine of that finger.
A two-track leading up the mesa crosses a neighbor’s place less than a mile to the east but it might as well have been in New York because there are no gates along the miles of western perimeter fence I had ridden along all afternoon.
Untying Stryker and making sure Lancer’s lead was wrapped around the saddle horn, I led the lads off down the slope wending through the storm battered cedars and pinyon pine. We came to the lip of a very steep arroyo and as we started down the winter-softened slope gave way and I tumbled several yards down into the soft, sandy bottom rolling quickly to avoid having a horse or two land on top of me. Not to worry. They did just fine with four-legged drive and as they slid to a stop in a choking cloud of dust, both looked at me with bemused contempt for my clumsiness. I was covered with the flour-fine silty soil and it filled my holster leaving the Ruger Blackhawk a mess. I drew the weapon and blew it out until I thought I would pass out from hyper-ventilation. It is one of the reasons why I have open bottoms on my holsters. I checked the action, reholstered the blue steel and we scrambled up the other side soon coming to the long meadow that followed northwest towards Lopez Draw.
A large herd of elk suddenly went banging away through the cedars and the horses took the opportunity to act silly. During the ruckus, my micro-cassette went flying ending its days in silt covered pieces. It is always something with those boys.
After things settled down a bit we continued north until we struck my neighbor’s two-track leading down the northern edge of Mariano. We leveled out on the valley floor and tracked northeast only to find ourselves wired out by an east-west fence that proved to have no gate at either end or anywhere along its length.
Sheepherders settled much of this country and I swear they did not even know how to build a gate. Who the hell does not put gates in fences? It is a maxim of handling livestock that critters escape whenever they can. How does anyone expect to get them back onto their home range again without gates?
Homeward bound, we passed through my neighbor’s headquarters area. No one answered my calls and we continued on. I have wonderful neighbors that kindly allow me the privilege of crossing their private land horseback, but it always makes me uncomfortable to have to pass through their headquarters. I am jealous of my privacy and I hate to trespass on the privacy of others.
I unwired an old gate along the highway and nearly an hour later, a saddle stiff rider and leg-weary horses came down the ranch drive just as the sun was setting behind darkening clouds.
Far Rider
See to your weapons and stand to your horses
1 comment:
Excellent story. I'm glad that you are still practicing your craft.
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