Kids
© Baxter
Black, DVM
published in The Draft Horse Journal, Summer 2000 So
there I was pulling one end of the wire, patching fence.
The strand lay stretched tight in the claw of the hammer
which I had balanced against the post, bracing it with my
leg. I sighted down the wire, peeking under my arm and raised
the wire half an inch–perfect. I took the staple from
between my lips and set it against the post just behind the
barb and reached for my pounding hammer, which lay exactly
three inches beyond my grasp. Attempting to grab it I imitated
a contortionist trying to bite off his toenail, all to no
avail.
I turned to my assistant–Are You Kidding! I had no
assistant. Just another case of one man doin' a two man job.
You run the cow down the alley nearly into the squeeze chute,
manage to cram a piece of pipe behind her, run around the
chute, open the head gate wide to entice her to come forward,
close the tailgate, keeping one hand on the head lever you
try and kick her through the bars as she sulls up and drops
to all fours. I turn to my assistant–
You've got both corner posts of the south side of your corral
set and tamped. You stretch your line, dig a hole equal distance
between them and stick in the post. You prop it up with the
shovel and cottonwood limb then walk back behind the first
post for a sighting too short and leaning to the west. You
return to the offending post, kick in some dirt, carefully
readjust the shovel and limb props, then return for the second
of what turns out to be 300 trips back and forth before you
complete the job. By yourself.
Two man jobs crop up often, especially when you're alone:
-Hanging a 4 x 8 sheet of floppy paneling to a wall.
-Leveling a cross beam between two uprights eight feet off
the ground.
-Peeling your rope off a steer's head or foot in the middle
of a pen.
-Or buying every other round at the tavern.
But to our credit we get it done, and by ourselves if we
have to.
When I'm asked what my definition of a cowboy is, I reply “Someone
who can replace a uterine prolapse in a range cow in the
middle of a three section pasture with nothing but a rope
and a horse.”
We who work the land are that wonderful combination of cleverness,
belligerence and immunity to pain. |