by Laura Crum
And
now for something completely different…anybody remember that Monty Python
movie? And yes, today’s post is pretty much the polar opposite of Terri’s
previous post, in which she tells the almost fairytale story of her triumphs at
the upper levels of dressage with her lovely horse, Uiver. Congratulations,
Terri and Uiver!
And now you get me, the has been
cowgirl, dinking around with my hairy pony, my young son, and a bunch of old
team ropers. Quite the culture shift. Let no one say we are not a diverse group
here at Equestrian Ink. Our common bond being a love of horses and a desire to
write about horses (!)
So, lately most of my riding has
involved gathering cattle. For many years now, I have been mostly trail riding,
but this last year my son preferred to ride with our team roping friends and
help them gather and work the cattle. I love moving cattle…I’ve done it my
entire life. So I willingly prioritized riding with the roping crew a couple of
days a week over the trail rides that we’ve been used to doing.
However,
the other day it struck me that I have very few photos of our gathers…etc,
unlike my trail rides. The reason, of course, is that trail rides have many
fairly quiet moments when it’s easy to take the ubiquitous ear shot, or turn
and photograph your companions. Not so when you are working cattle. Most of the
time you are focused on being where you need to be in relationship to the
critter or herd, and you are moving too quickly for photos. There is almost
never any handy person just standing around who can take photos OF you. Thus I
have almost no photos of gathering cattle, despite how often I have done it.
So
the other day I decided to try and “capture” one of our gathers with my camera.
I thought that many of you have probably never done this before, and might
enjoy a vicarious internet version of the experience.
It’s November and the fields are
pretty bare here. The green grass is just barely started. The cattle are being
fed hay every day. So the scene is not as picturesque as it is in the spring,
when the fields are lush and green.
Also,
despite my best intentions, I only got a few decent shots. I was just too busy
herding cattle the rest of the time, and the one shot I took when the cattle
were galloping up a ravine was so blurry as to be useless. So here is my rather
feeble attempt to take you all with me on a gather.
Sunny
and I are looking for the cattle. Can you see from his ears where they are?
After
this I had to pay attention to what I was doing as we went down into the ravine
and pushed the cattle out of the brush and got them gathered in a herd. Then a
certain amount of scrambling quickly up the hill and loping across the field
happened, as we worked to get the herd moving toward the catch pen. I was too busy
to take photos at this point, but here’s a photo from last fall, showing my son
following the other guys up the ravine toward the upper field.
Finally the cattle are headed in
the right direction and I hung back, pulled my horse up, and took a photo of my
son and our friends pushing the herd toward the catch pen gate. That’s my kid
on the far right and my uncle Todd and our friend/boarder, Wally, on the left.
Then,
more loping here and there, and ducking and dodging with the cattle took place,
as we worked to get the more recalcitrant critters through the holding pen gate
and then through the gate into the alley. Again, much too busy and moving too
fast to take photos. Then I had to lope ahead of the group to open the gate
that leads to the roping chutes, as someone had (ahem) forgotten to open it
previously. So, again, no time to take photos.
But here’s a shot from this spring
showing my son and our friend Wally pushing the herd up the alley toward the
roping chutes.
Once the cattle are loaded in the
chutes the roping begins. The big fun for my son comes when there is a steer
that is deemed no good to rope (lots of reasons—it “sets up” or it “drags” or
it turns left in a determined way…etc), and my kid and his trusty steed, Henry,
get to chase this animal down the arena.
Anyway,
thinking about gathering cattle reminded me of the many, many times I have done
this. First on our family ranch here in Santa Cruz County, then on the northern
California commercial cattle ranch where I worked in my 20’s, then in the
central valley and the foothills where I worked for various cowhorse/cutting
horse trainers (gathering the cattle was always the first chore of the day),
and finally here on my uncle’s little ranch in the Santa Cruz Mountains. Almost
fifty years of gathering cattle. I guess I should know how to do it by now(!)
Gathering
cattle (and working cattle in general) is all about a sort of intuitive
understanding of a cow’s body language. You have to be able to read the cattle.
A recalcitrant sort of cow will need you to be far more “in her face” to turn
her and get her moving in the right direction. A flighty animal will need you
to back off. You have to be able to tell what the cattle are thinking. It’s
also important to read the herd as a group. Some people can work with cattle
for many years and still they always seem to be in the “wrong place.” Just like
people who have horses for many years and never learn to “read” them very well.
And the skills that one uses in reading and moving cattle do translate to some
degree to reading horses, though the two species have some BIG differences.
Actually,
the skills used in reading cattle or horses also come in handy when herding any
sort of critter—including chickens. Trust me, I know.
(The above photo is Toby, our banty rooster, crowing defiantly at me as I attempt to "herd" the chickens back in the coop after a day out in the garden.)
Anyway
of course there are no photos of me cause I am the one holding the camera (as I
usually am), so I talked my intrepid companion into taking a shot of me when we
went riding the next day. A little blurry, but you get the idea. Sunny and
me—having fun covering some country in November.
I know some of you, like me, enjoy
working cattle in various disciplines, but maybe for a few of you it’s a new
experience. Many of our authors here on the site are involved with dressage.
And our readers do everything from endurance to reining. So our riding
disciplines are pretty different—does gathering cattle seem exotic to some of
you, just as high end dressage seems exotic to me? Anyway, this is what my
riding time has looked like lately.
Happy Thanksgiving to all—I am so
grateful for my happy life here with my horses and family (not to mention my
garden and other critters)—words can’t express it. I hope you all have much to
be grateful for, too.
And for those who are already
embarked on Xmas shopping (black Friday and all that), I would like to point
out that the first two novels in my mystery series featuring equine
veterinarian Gail McCarthy are currently on sale as Kindle editions for 99
cents each. For just shy of two dollars you can give a fun Xmas present to
anyone who likes horses, mysteries and reading on Kindle. Or you can give them
to yourself to enliven the darker days of winter.
Here is the link to Cutter,
the first book, set against a background of western ranches and cutting horses,
and
Hoofprints, the second book, which revolves around murder in the world of
professional trainers and reined cowhorses. Come take a peak at the western
cowhorse world where I have spent my horse time.
Cheers--Laura
PS For those who prefer to read "physical" books, I'm thinking to have a giveaway. If you're interested, leave a comment to let me know. I'm never sure how many folks prefer "real" books to digital.