Slim Randles' Home Country
When You're Doing What You Love And Been Doing It a Long Time
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[November 30, 2007]
Steve slowly saddled his horse, Snort, and climbed
stiffly aboard in the cold snap of morning. He pulled his hat down a
little lower and pulled the wild rag up to cover his nose and mouth
from the morning chill. |
How many mornings had he done this? As Snort trotted out into the
meadows of the hills surrounding our valley, he looked with perked
ears for cattle. That's what Snort does for a living. Those ears
worked back and forth like radar, searching through trees and behind
logs for the telltale movement or color of range cattle.
And Steve just grinned. How many horses has he ridden on a
morning like this? A hundred? Well, 50, anyway. And the mornings all
stay the same in his memory even if he doesn't stay the same. On a
morning like this, his daily dose of "cowboyitis" lets itself be
felt. That aching hip? Oh, he remembers when that colt dumped him
into the rock pile, putting him on crutches for two months.
The shoulder ache? Too many years with a rope in his hands.
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But he also knows that when the fall sun gets a little higher,
he'll stretch and suddenly get younger. His gray mustache will, in
his mind, turn brown again, and once more that young cowboy who
terrorized stray cattle so many years ago will come back to life.
He began kicking cows out and heading them back to the home
pasture, and both he and Snort watched and waited for that one rogue
that would make the morning complete.
It was a black baldy cow who made a dash for the high-ups, and
Steve and Snort were flying through trees and over rock piles and
finally headed her and turned her back with the others. A
19-year-old cowboy couldn't have done it any better.
Steve smiled and reached down to pat ol' Snort on the neck.
Thanksgiving can be more than turkey and cranberry sauce.
[Text from file received from Slim Randles]
Brought to you by "Ol' Slim's Views from the Porch," available
at www.unmpress.com
and wherever cowboys are celebrated.
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