There are some skilled people that I envy; good ropers, flat top guitar pickers and songwriters to start with. I’ve always prided myself on my ability to build a good fence. But when I’m ridin’ the fence line with a major domo wire wrangler and see him use fencing pliers with the dexterity of a surgeon tying knots, I realize my shortcomings.
The fleeting thought goes through my mind that if I only took the time to learn and then practiced for 20 years, I could be as good as them.
Another ability that I appreciate but don’t envy is a good backhoe operator. I watch them manipulate their bucket, for a 16-inch to an open-pit mining monster with the finesse of an Englishman using a knife and fork.
The same goes for farmers in tractors large or small, pulling Rube Goldberg-looking implements over fields that sweep and curve and dip and climb through coulees, swales, creek banks, rock piles and car bodies! They turn their mighty machines on a dime and lay a line straight as a soldier’s backbone.
But I guess the one talent that eludes me most is my horseshoeing skills. I would never aspire to the level of those master farriers who build their own shoes from a steel bar over a forge and shape it to fit perfectly with just one glance at the upturned hoof! I’m like a lot of cowboys who never took a shoeing lesson. I learned by guess and by golly. And, I actually enjoy shoeing my horses. I don’t shoe other people’s ... most people can’t afford to have them lame that long.
Shawn’s dad and grandpa were horseshoers so he picked it up naturally. He said when he was 13 his dad directed him to shoe Skeeter. Skeeter was one of their good saddle horses. He was 16-1/2 hands and wore No. 2 shoes. To Shawn’s surprise, it turned out to be easy and so, he was lured into complacency.
By the time he was 16 he’d shod Skeeter many times, so when he set about trimming him on that fateful day, Shawn was cool and collected. He pulled the old shoe off on the left front, picked up his nippers and went to work. I can almost hear him humming a tune. When he woke up he was under the hitch rail! The shoeing box was broken, the foot rest overturned and he had a knot on his head the size of a lamb’s kidney!
Skeeter stood warily six feet away with the broken halter snap hanging off his chin. Salvo, the barn cat, was sitting in the windowsill licking his paw. Shawn sat up and looked around. As his vision improved he noticed Skeeter’s hindquarters. Two sets of claw marks coursed from his rump to the lift-off like ski trails down a mountainside.
Shawn studied Salvo who continued licking his paw. “Don’t ask me,” he mewed. I didn’t see a thing.”
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Black may be reached at e-mail coyotecowboy@theriver.com. Columns submitted to The Weatherford Democrat by guest writers reflect the opinions of the writer and in no way reflect the beliefs or opinions of The Weatherford Democrat.
Farm & Ranch
Farrier fan club
Baxter Black, Syndicated Columnist
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Cattle Raisers host ranch gathering in Decatur
FORT WORTH — Come join the Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association (TSCRA) for a ranch gathering Thursday, at the Wise County Sheriff’s Posse Arena in Decatur. The gathering will begin at 6 p.m. with registration followed by a beef dinner and presentations.
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Katrina’s good sports
In the fall of 2008, before the election, as the recession crashed down around us I gave up on politics.
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Planned grazing course with Kirk Gadzia this April in Fort Worth
FORT WORTH — Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers and Holistic Management Texas team up to offer a new “Planned Grazing” course at the Will Rogers Memorial Center April 21-25.
The emphasis for this five-day course will be on grazing planning, but instructor Kirk Gadzia will cover rangeland monitoring, financial planning and land planning as well. The content will be relevant to both managerial and operational level employees, with varying levels of formal education. There will be a lands-on Learning aspect if weather permits. Class runs from 8am to 4:15pm each day. -
One more for the tourists
Moira and Clive, British tourists, had taken in the Arkansas attractions of Eureka Springs, the Chuck Wagon races in Clinton, the sale barn in Green Forest, and now found themselves in Fort Smith for the Arkansas Cattlemen’s Association Trail Drive.
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Cowboy ingenuity
Cowboys are nothing if not ingenious. It takes that sort of out-of-the-box mentality to allow them to solve the myriad of problems that arise when you combine horse, cow and rope!
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Local wins at San Antonio Stock Show
SAN ANTONIO — The Junior Market AOB Steer Show was held Feb. 19, at the San Antonio Stock Show and Rodeo.
Taylor Cody won the honor of Breed Champion AOB with her 1334 pound steer. -
Olympic distraction
You know the inmates have taken over the asylum when you’re turning to PETA as the voice of reason! These are the animal rights extremists who compared eating chicken to the Holocaust, compared the murdering cannibal Jeffery Daumer to butchering hogs, and once proclaimed that it would be great if Foot and Mouth Disease infected animals in the U.S.
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Scholarships awarded to Parker County youth
SAN ANTONIO — Cade Hansma and Alannah Chalmers of Weatherford, and Jens Rudibaugh of Poolville, were the recipients of scholarships from the San Antonio Stock Show & Rodeo at this year’s horse and llama shows.
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Jake working overtime
In an effort to make managing the 20 section ranch more efficient, the boss bought Jake a Ranger, a four-wheel drive muscle car ATV.
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Local student wins at Fort Worth Stock Show
FORT WORTH — Dylan Mask, a 4-H member from Weatherford, exhibited a First Place Medium Weight Hampshire Barrow in the Junior Barrow Show at the 2010 legendary Fort Worth Stock Show & Rodeo Feb. 4. J
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Cattle Raisers host ranch gathering in Decatur





