Showing posts with label branding. Show all posts
Showing posts with label branding. Show all posts

Thursday, June 1, 2017

Branding Day: Part 2



Thursday June 1 2017

Part 1 is here.

There was a little twist to this branding day. After lunch, a couple of cowboys mounted up and went in the Other Pen. Don's longhorns needed branding. Fortunately the longhorns are rather gentle compared to those mean ol' mama angus cows, and while it took some skill to stay out of their way in a smaller pen, and to rope those bigger horns while they were ducking one behind the other, it all went quite smoothly. Once a longhorn was roped, it just sort of gave up and didn't put up any fight.

Here are some photos:












Thursday, April 27, 2017

Branding Day: Part I



Tuesday April 18 2017

It was branding day 5 weeks ago on local ranches. Friends and family gathered to help Don Barnhill brand his herd. Before lunch it was the new calves and a few new mean ol' mama angus cows that got branded and vaccinated.

Here are a few photos from the morning.


















Saturday, March 21, 2015

Joyce Ranch Branding Day: Part I


March 13 2015

Another branding day in Owyhee county, this one on the historic Joyce Ranch (established 1865). It's a tradition of hard work, skill, camaraderie, family, and culture, handed down through the years and generations - herding, sorting, roping, branding.

It's working art on horseback.

Here are a few shots from the day:
up top: a bit of silver

a bit of color


Fred - what're'ya doing down there??


Hmm, should I stay or should I get outta here?


The Joyce Ranch brand: MJ for Matthew Joyce, the founder in 1865


Neighbor Rocky on his Blazer, Comet. You don't see many Blazers working cows. You don't see many Blazers!


Dallas hunts through the herd of cows and calves


There's always a good cow dog or two around supervising


Aiming


Got one


Holding a calf


Ed aiming for one


Missed! Ed said "My timing was off today!"


This guy on the left was totally suspicious of my motives


Here is the complete gallery:
http://theequestrianvagabond.smugmug.com/Joyce-Ranch-Branding-Day-1-313/

Wednesday, February 18, 2015

Branding Time



Wednesday February 18 2015

When the grass begins thrusting out of the sand toward the sun's warming rays, and snows commence melting in the mountains (never mind it's a month or two too early this year), and the cows have (already) dropped their calves, it's branding time in Owyhee County.

It's a time that neighboring ranchers help each other out: cowboys pulling up in their rigs with their horses, rounding up and pushing and sorting the herd into pens, getting busy with the calf roping; the horse-less helpers jumping in with the syringes, snippers, stampers and branding iron. The cowboys (and one cowgirl this time) make roping the calves look easy though it's only easy if you've been doing it since you were knee-high to a cow horse.

And oh, the poor little dogies… in one swoop they get roped, dragged to the fire, stretched and sat on, vaccinated, branded, ear-tagged, and, if they are unfortunate enough to be boys, snipped down there, every single step of which they object to, and bawl shameless and lustily. The procedures are done quickly and efficiently.

After the calves are all done, and everybody feasts on a big extravagant lunch spread the rancher has prepared (with help from several more people), the mama cows are sent one by one into the squeeze chute, and my, that is not a job for beginners nor sissies. Talk about mad cows. One of those rank things'll kill you if given a chance, particularly if you're grabbing her nose with tongs then twisting her (killer) head to the side to inject a wormer up her nose, stamp a new tag in her ear, jab her neck with a couple of shots, and brand her to boot while you've got her squeezed tight in the chute. Be careful, too, when she's let out of the chute, because she just might charge you so you have to leap up on the fence, and keep your legs up while the mad cow smashes into the long table beneath your toes, upends it and spills everything on the ground, gets tangled up in the table and falls down with it, then staggers up snorting steam and snot out her nose and looking for something else to smash into, particularly something two-legged, until she's finally chased out to the calf pen to hook back up with her baby.

But, back to the roping.

Neighboring rancher Ed chats before he unloads his two horses.


Just you wait little dogie, your turn is coming.


Ed dallies his catch.


This gal could hit her mark 90% of the time!


I loved the expressions on this guy's horse.


There's no escape little dogie!


Holding their calves.


Dragging one to the fire.


Oh, the injustice, the ignominy!


This young boy can't wait to help with the roping on his own cow horse one day.


Monday, March 8, 2010

Branding Day



Saturday March 6 2010

A local Owyhee rancher had a branding day. Friends, relatives, neighbors, and neighboring cowboys showed up to help.


Watching the herd.


A sea of cows.


Getting the kinks out of the rope.


Separating the mamas.


Heating the fire for the branding irons.


Branding irons in the fire.


Git along little dogie


Git along I say.


Little dogie.


Spurs.


Comfort before.


Got the first one.


Ropes.


The adversary.


Got a hind leg.


Unceremoniously (and efficiently) hog tied and knelt on, branded, ear tagged, injected, wormed, castrated.


Hot branded.


Comfort after.


Next up.


This man was determined to be the header without a rope.




He got him!


Holding one.


Teamwork.


Dally.


Backhand.