The Plan
GRACE
The Pair
By Stephen L. Wilmeth
Grace, hold us in your arms and let this moment
linger.
Grace as
sung by Irish singer, Jim McCann
Pepe sent
me a text the morning this article was written. It included a video of a cow
and her calf crossing a grassy bottom. The scene was shot from horseback with
one of the cell phones we are all now carry.
Implicit in
it was the reminder, at least in this little corner of the world, there was joy
and relief for the moment.
The
backdrop to the video was the cow work that has been going on for most of the
week. In our normal rotation, it was time to move pastures with the equally if
not greater need to brand and bring everything current. We started Labor Day
with the small crew that is becoming a working pleasure.
Like so
much of America, our ability to find labor is increasingly difficult. Cowboys
are becoming fewer and farther between each year. People don’t want to work
is more than just an idle comment. A retired veterinarian friend suggests it is
the socialistic tendencies of our local governance that will never agree any
minimum wage is acceptable. Our Mesillero farmer friends, the very culture that
has been so supportive of democratic politics, blame it on the fellow who now
occupies the White House, our Commandante ese Entrecerrar los Ojos, who
seemingly adheres to a theme of permanence in dependency and welfare.
Regardless of the placement of
blame, the outcome is real, and it threatens our existence.
The Plan
The days began each morning at 3:30
AM when the horses were fed.
Those same cell phones provided
enough light to fork hay (and make sure snakes weren’t part of the mix). Soft
nickers were the both the greetings and the acknowledgement of the feed. Every
one of those horses have become as dear as the cowboys who still make this
happen.
They are part of this life.
When it was just breaking light, we
were loaded and gone. The drive to the ranch witnessed a combination of day in
review and stories. Cowboy lore is intertwined with stories, memories of
departed comrades, and work that much of the world seemingly refuses to do much
less understand. The strategy of roundup and corral work thereafter is akin to
any battle plan. It is part of the process, and the drive allows ideas to be
shared and reassessed.
Young and old are part of the mix.
On Monday, we gathered and got to
the Howard corral in the heat of the afternoon. The drive was turned into the
trap for branding and work early Tuesday morning.
Tuesday morning was an extension of the previous day with cows regathered and sorted by 8:30. Pepe roped and held all the calves. Tim castrated and ran the ground crew with he and Bryan flanking. Our 14-year-old cowgirls vaccinated, earmarked, and helped flank when big calves were encountered. Nery a calf had to be dehorned.
The old man branded.
Wednesday was another day of gather
as the west side of the pasture was ridden. The numbers were short of
expectation causing another sleepless night.
Where are these cattle?
Thursday started as normal, and the
cows were sorted and ready to process about the same time as the previous
branding. The day was hot by the time we finished.
Chris came to ride with us Friday.
We needed to cover the east side of the Trail pasture with its ridges and
canyons with the somewhat worried expectation of where the rest of these cattle
were.
They were there. The riders found
them and had them in the corral by noon.
As Pepe and I came out of the
canyons at the mouth of the Martin drainage with two bulls, a pair, and a
springer, we saw that expected cows at the water had already been picked up and
we could see them being penned two miles away at the corrals.
As we started down the slope with
those remnants, we found a newborn calf lying in the grass asleep. Her mama had
been with the cows driven off. Needing to pair that heifer calf we roped her
and tied her to a creosote bush. What played out was retrieving the truck and
hauling that baby to the corral only to find out the cowboys had turned that
fresh bagged cow back just like they should have.
We went ahead and branded the remaining calves and then hauled the baby back to where we had found it. No cow was seen, and worry of that unpaired baby dominated another sleepless night.
The Pair
If this way of life is embraced and
understood, it sings to the soul as strongly as any love song.
It becomes a way of life rather
than a profession or a career. It’s a marriage of sorts. The people, the
animals, the risks, the weather, and the seasonal elements all form a collage
of influences that envelope you. It is a bond of ever-growing attachment as
your efforts are observed across the landscape.
Is Grace the word that describes this
bond?
It can be if it is compared to the
lyrics of Jim McCann noted herein above. Further, you reach a point whereby you
know there isn’t enough time to share this love before its time to say goodbye.
So, you live each day remembering being placed here is not just an honor, but
trust by Grace.
So, it was that a text dinged by
midmorning on Saturday.
Pepe had been horseback looking for
the baby and, hopefully, her mama. As it turned out, the cowboys had recognized
the right cow and turned her back to find her baby and contribute to her own
legacy and the world we share.
She had found the calf, and, for
the moment … all was well.
Stephen
L. Wilmeth is a rancher from southern New Mexico.
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