Texas Learnings

I wanted to share some things I learned and did last week on my trip to Texas for the Texas Cattle Feeders.

In one of our many discussions on animal behavior, Joel Ham told me how he observed horses stomping their feet, when a big ant that is native to his ranch country started to climb the hoof, but before it got up the hoof to the coronet band. That’s even more sensitive than a fly landing on its back!

I rode a real nice horse at Dawn Feeders. We saddled him and I had some time before my demo so I went and helped them sort some calves out of the hospital pens. I didn’t have spurs on, and he worked real nice and was very responsive. After we were done the owner thought he may get pretty lazy before the day was done so he gave me his spurs. There was a surprising change in the horse when I stepped back on. I almost had to use a little spur each step and quite a bit at times. It was like he had to wait for the spur to go. He was a different horse after I put spurs on, and for him and me, it did just the opposite of what is should have.
I may have been because I had my buckles to the inside, as they are worn opposite in Texas than we do in Montana.

When I was flying out of Amarillo, I visited with a real nice older lady. She told me a story of how four  very young kittens ended up on her front porch, and she had four shiatsu dogs. The kittens would hiss at the dogs but they didn’t pay attention and would pack the kittens in their mouths and mother them. After a bit the kittens hooked on to the dogs and they
were real content with them. The dogs would try to sneak them in the house packing them in their mouths. She said the dogs paid no attention to the hissing and pretty soon the cats lost their fear. Something to think about when getting animals to trust us.

I am a huge fan of Red Steagall and listen to Cowboy Corner on KGHL in Billings, Montana.
He promotes the National Ranching Heritage Center, and I have wanted to go see t for a long time. I rented a car and headed south to Lubbock Texas on Friday, as I had the day before I flew out.

It was a great experience, and in Texas style, bigger and nicer than I could have imagined. They have taken barns, dwellings, and facility’s from different ranches and areas and set them up so you can walk around and go back in time as if you were at the ranch itself. They have created hills and trees and grasslands to really separate it out and it feels even bigger than it is.

As I went to each place, I would really look it over and compare then and now. The question I wanted to answer was this. Is life better now or then? After I had looked it over I would really take a little time to think it over, and have been thinking about it since.

Here’s what I have decided. We should have a way better quality of life now, because of technology and our modern conveniences. Machines have made Ranching much less physical.
I think we have a easier life, but the technology, machines, and debt make our quality of life less in the things that really matter in life.

Think about these these observations.

Rattlesnakes will make you very aware of your surroundings. Catching water off your roof will make you appreciate a drink. Hanging beef in a smoke house and no refrigeration will get you enjoying good food. Gathering cowchips and storing them in a cow chip house will make you appreciate a warm home in the cold. A home with a breezeway to cool it in the summer will get a family together to visit. A saddle horse and a team as your only transportation will make you a better horseman, and a milk cow and chickens will make you a better stockman. Working real hard all day will keep you in shape, and you will appreciate sitting and thinking about how to do things better at the end of the day. Having to put rifle slits in your home to survive Indian attack will bring you closer to your maker.
I don’t want to go back to those days, but I am sure going to try to live the good parts, and really enjoy the things my great grand folks enjoyed. I’m not going to let debt and technology take over my life.

A fellow I have been watching work for several years, Jim Brett Campbell is the Ranch Manager so to speak, and he is real proud of the National Ranching Heritage Center and all the folks that make it work. Check it out at “www.nrhc.ttu.edu” or better yet go visit and see what you can learn.

I am very proud to have my heritage from the Pate side of the family being Texans. I will try to do my part to keep the Ranching Heritage alive.

Adventures in Kinship

 

After I watched the the new Ray Hunt videos I spoke about in a earlier thrown loop, it got me to wanting to explore connecting with animals more. I had read a book before that Tom Dorrance recommended called “Kinship With All Life”. I decided to read it again and looked for it on my iPad. I found a follow up book titled “Adventures in Kinship With All Life” by J. Allen Boone.

I read it and really enjoyed it. It has got me to working on connecting with animals and people better. I have really been working on it.

I saw quite a change in my animals at home. I worked with our horses to get them better to catch. I didn’t want them to force them to hook on and be caught, but get them to decide to be caught because it felt good to them to be caught. There is a big difference there.

I have been in Amarillo this week working for Texas Cattle Feeders doing some cattle handling/BQA workshops. I got a lot of chances to work with different pens of cattle and I really feel like I got along much better than ever before at relaxing the cattle when I went in the pen, could move and place a single animal just how and where I wanted, and pulled the cattle out of the pen without fear and force but made it there idea. I have a real satisfied feeling with the way I got along with the nice horses I partnered with and the cattle I worked with.

The people that were in attendance were told to be there by their boss. They are a tough lot that deal with very difficult work conditions with lots of rules. They were real interesting to present to. I really tried to use some ideas I learned from the book to connect with them and hopefully give them some ideas to get them better at their job and improve the quality of their life because of the work they are doing. I really hope I did.

Joel Ham was also presenting, and we spent a lot of time discussing stockmanship  in our free time. He is a real thinker and has studied the principals of Bud Williams and Ray Hunt for many years.

I love a good chicken fried steak. Green Chilly Willy’s is a great place to have one. It is kind of a hole in the wall type restaurant just south of Amarillo. We went there two nights in a row, and it was so good, and I think the waitress we had must have read kinship with all life, because she connected with everyone in there and made people feel so good. That’s what I like so much about Texas, it is Kinship.

 

Cattlemans Battleground

Cattleman’s Battleground

Dear Cattlemen, we hear your battle cry
Many are fighting, some are loosing. Ranchers in Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, and Colorado have lost their cattle and a in some cases their lives. Ranchers are living on a Battleground; not only are calving and branding season upon us, but the fight for ranchers’ lively hod is still to be fought. Many of our amazing customers have been effected directly with the recent fires, Greeley Hat Works is happy to help give back.

Trent Johnson

“punchy and progressive… but still profitable.”
Todd McCartney is a rancher, cowboy and family man. He manages the family’s ranching operation alongside his wife, Marianne, and their 5 hard-working kids.
The McCartney Ranch located in the rugged range land near Throckmorton, Texas. Their exceptional cow herd is Red Angus based and utilizes industry leading bulls from the historic R.A. Brown Ranch where Marianne was raised. In addition, the McCartneys’ ranch horse breeding and training program keeps them all very well mounted.

http://greeleyhatworks.cmail20.com/t/r-l-yushle-jdejtlyhi-r/
Hats to the rescue
Greeley Hat Works will serve as a drop off/contribution point for cash donations. We will be coordinating with our partners, The Colorado Cattleman’s Association, Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers and the Kansas Livestock Association to ensure 100% of the donations reach those in need. Those interested in aiding in relief efforts, please contact Greeley Hat Works: 888-367-2428