by Julie Carter
In my book, fall is about as perfect a
season of the year as any of the four.
It is the time when all things that
make cowboys, rednecks and assorted combinations thereof the very happiest.
At the ranch, it's payday time. Cattle
buyers resurrect from out of nowhere and all eyes, ears and cell phones are on
the markets. Whether the crop is yearlings or fresh-weaned calves, every year
is a new episode of "let's make a deal."
The blooms on everything green,
nurtured by summer rains and sunshine, are at their peak of beauty. Flowers
abound both in the yards and thanks to a few rains here and there, also in the
fields and on the hillsides.
While your cowboy might not be big on
posies, I guarantee you he's happy if he’s got any grass at all and practically
gleeful over the fat cattle lying in that grass, bellies full and hides licked
slick.
The camouflage corps have their
binoculars focused and their weapons of choice tuned while they dream dreams of
the perfect hunting season(s). Let a hint of crisp slip into the morning air
and hunters everywhere trade in their hammocks and barbeque tools for game
calls and camping gear.
Cattle trucks start rolling down the
highways between the ranches and the wheat fields or feedlots. Every small-town
café has a parking lot periodically filled with flatbed pickups pulling stock
trailers along with other pickups loaded with 4-wheelers, coolers and all the
trappings of a Cabela's made-to-order hunting camp.
Here in the Southwest, throw in the
smell of roasting green chiles to complete the fall ambiance and life is just
about as perfect as you can get it.
If that isn't enough to paint a picture
of the best of the year, add to the mix some pre-season football that seamlessly
morphs into a regular season of high school, college and professional games.
Whether football is your "thing" or not, the onslaught of
sports-mania permeates the air, unsurpassed by anything including politics.
Neighbors helping neighbors to get all
the fall cattle work done is a jewel in the crown of ranching. Calendars are
full of marks on dates for the ranch up the road, the ranch down the road and
another one an hour or so away.
Those days will be dedicated to the
time-honored custom of "neighboring" -- where the work and the fun,
and there is always some of that, is shared with folks that know you'll be
there when they need an extra man, horse and help.
Now is the time for all good men ...
and horses, dogs, kids and ranch wives ... to rise to the call of long hours,
dusty corrals, sunrises that bless the "waiting on daylight"
mornings, rattling trailers, ready ropes, the smell of sage and cedar, hot
coffee poured from a campfire pot and the camaraderie of cowboys working a
vocation they wouldn't trade for anything.
The life is not all that glamorous or
romantic, but it does have an intangible something that anchors men's souls to
the land. Whether they own it or hire on to be part of it, it transforms an
occupation into a belonging and an existence into a passion for living.
1 comment:
Excellent!
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