Showing posts with label cartoons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cartoons. Show all posts

Thursday, October 18, 2012

A Stormy Halloween



Thursday October 18 2012

Stormy, and his friend The Raven, love the fall holidays. As you can see, Stormy's got a great imagination. He's created some new cards for Halloween and Thanksgiving this year. 

You can buy Stormy's fall holiday cards here (US and Canada only!):

http://www.theequestrianvagabond.com/ArtForSale.html

And for those of you who'd like to see your own horse in place of Stormy (though Stormy can't believe you would not prefer him!) you can order custom cards too! Same page, bottom of the card list. For custom cards email me: TheEquestrianVagabond at gmail dot com, and we'll get it done.

Happy Stormy Halloween and Happy Stormy Thanksgiving - Say it With Stormy!




Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Rollkur in Endurance


This is Part 2 of a 2-part series.
Part 1 is here.

Since many equine disciplines have adopted this cockamamie type of domination training, endurance wackos officials decided to jump on the bandwagon and give it the old college try too. What better place to test this ridiculous method than the 100 Miles in One Day Tevis Cup.

It is unknown as to when this event was held, and it is a mystery how many horses finished. The riders all have concussions and don't remember anything, the horses still can't see anything but their feet, and officials are in clandestine bars unlocatable.

This concludes the test of endurance and Rollkur. It was deemed a failure.




Saturday, December 24, 2011

Happy Holidays!


December 24 2011

Stormy and The Raven are still busy with Christmas.

Happy Holidays everybody!


Monday, November 28, 2011

Stormy Christmas II



Monday November 28 2011

Stormy's second line of Christmas cards! And if you want your own horse on the cards, Stormy can do that for you.

You can order these (and many other cards and goodies) for Christmas online at:
http://www.theequestrianvagabond.com/ArtForSale.html

Happy Stormy Christmas!

Saturday, November 26, 2011

Stormy Christmas I


Friday November 25 2011

Stormy loves to send real mail. Stormy loves to get real mail! Everybody loves to get real mail. Even better, is sending and receiving Christmas cards designed and created by a horse (and Raven)! Stormy (and The Raven) have just released his first Christmas card.

And if for some reason you prefer your own horse instead of Stormy on the cards, Stormy will personalize them for you!

Instead of fighting the Christmas shopping crowds, and instead of being pepper sprayed by frenzied Christmas shopping crowds, Stormy's staying home to design more cards. His next Christmas card will be out soon. Stay 'tooned!

You can buy Stormy's cards at:
http://www.theequestrianvagabond.com/ArtForSale.html

Sunday, November 20, 2011

Have a Stormy (and Raven) Thanksgiving!


Sunday November 20 2011

Here's to a good week, a good Thanksgiving with good food, good friends, good horses and good Ravens!


Monday, November 7, 2011

Have a Stormy (and Raven) Thanksgiving!



Monday November 7 2011

Early Thanksgiving wishes from Stormy and the Raven!

Friday, October 28, 2011

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Up To Something



Wednesday October 6 2011

Stormy's up to something...

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Rainbow Heart - Say it With Stormy!

Wednesday September 21 2011

Another of Stormy's greeting card series.

Rainbow Heart is blank inside, the notecard size is 4 1/4" by 5 1/2", and each card comes with an envelope. The original cards don't, of course, come with the copyright marks on it.

You can find these on Etsy in packs of 6 (various designs):
http://www.etsy.com/shop/EquestrianVagabond?ref=pr_shop , or, if you want single cards you can get them from my photography and art website:
http://www.theequestrianvagabond.com/ArtForSale.html.

You can get a preview of more available cards on the 2 site links listed above... or check out the slide show and link on the right of this blog... or you can just wait as Stormy posts them as the mood strikes him. (He's very busy with many projects... besides mowing the lawn.)

Until next Stormy post, happy trails!

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Celebrate - Say it With Stormy!



Thursday September 15 2011

That horse of mine, he's something else. In between all of that hay eating and lawn mowing, he's come up with a line of greeting cards. He's up late into the nights working on them.

The antics of Stormy (well... in his younger days) and his friends are the inspiration for these horse cartoon art cards. He's developing some for every occasion you might need, and those occasions you might not, and those occasions you might need but you might not know about yet.

Celebrate! is blank inside, the notecard size is 4 1/4" by 5 1/2", and each card comes with an envelope. The original cards don't, of course, come with the copyright marks on it.

You can find these on Etsy in packs of 6 (various designs):
http://www.etsy.com/shop/EquestrianVagabond?ref=pr_shop , or, if you want single cards you can get them from my photography and art website:
http://www.theequestrianvagabond.com/ArtForSale.html.

Best of all, if you aren't more than thrilled with Stormy as the subject, (and if you are not, what's wrong with you!), you can have your own horse be the star of the cards. If you're interested, send me an email, mer at theequestrianvagabond dot com for a price list and instructions. Sorry, just mailing to US and Canada at the present time.

You can get a preview of more available cards on the sites listed above... or you can just wait as Stormy posts them as the mood strikes him.

More to come, including some he's developing for upcoming holidays!

Friday, August 26, 2011

City of Rocks PIoneer Trails Endurance Ride



Friday August 26 2011

It is official! The City of Rocks Pioneer Trails multi-day endurance ride has been sanctioned for July 13-14-15-16, 2012, at City of Rocks National Reserve, near Almo, Idaho.

You'll see some amazing scenery and you'll ride on some old Pioneer Trails from the 1800's - the California Trail, the Boise-Kelton Stage Route, and the Salt Lake Alternate Trail.

Despite the "Rocks" in the name of the ride, and despite the 'toon illustration above, we won't make you and your horse rappel down cliffs; and the footing is amazingly non-rocky in most places. You'll ride from sagebrush flats up into alpine forests. Basecamp is at 5700', so when it's hot in July everywhere else, it will be milder there. Just to the north are the Albion Mountains; the trails will head up there one day.

Bring the family even if the rest of them don't ride: bring your climbing shoes or hiking shoes. City of Rocks is one of the premier climbing destinations in the country. Bring your fishing pole too, because the trails (or roads) in the Albion mountains lead you to the high alpine Independence Lakes where cutthroat trout are waiting to jump on your hooks. If you like ATVing, the Cassia Mountains to the west have an abundance of ATV trails.

In the nearest town (which you can see from basecamp) there is a restaurant and general store. If the weather isn't hot enough for you, there are hot springs (and maybe if we beg them) a cool pool.

We'll have a special name for each ride day, like, perhaps,

Beef Jello - Banana (don't ask me! they must be names of climbing routes)
Independence Lakes
My Own Private Idaho - Booby Rocks - Twin Sisters
Moulton - Emigrant Canyon (Moulton is a historic site where an old stage stop and school building is still standing)


We're headed back there next week to ride, ATV and hike, to scout more trails and lay more plans.


Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Save a Logger, Eat an Owl



Tuesday February 15 2011

Outside, the 3/4 moon is bright, reflecting off the snow burying the meadow. The surrounding woods are darker than black, hiding whatever wishes to be hidden. It's so still I can hear the horses munching on hay 50 yards away on the other side of the barn. Not a hint of a breeze moves the pine needles. I've got the three little dogs outside (one on a long leash). We are looking, listening to the sounds of the mountain forest at night.

And then from far down the canyon I realize there is a rhythm to the soft sounds I'm hearing. It's an owl - a barred owl!

I always think of spotted owls when I'm in the forest. Years ago I did spotted owl surveys, tromping around in the Pacific Northwest forests at night, searching for them, recording their steadily declining numbers. Out of habit (and hope, always hope) I look for them in every forest I'm in; I look for them here in this corner of Montana, even though the habitat doesn't suit the spotted owl. Around here, this is a logged forest, second- and third-growth trees where trees are still standing. No old growth forest that the spotted owl needs.

That barred owls would be here never occured to me only because it's been so long that I've heard one.

In 1990 the Northern subspecies of the spotted owl - which lives in old growth forests in the Northwest, from British Columbia to northern California - was listed as an endangered species. Because of that, logging in the Pacific Northwest on federal lands was all but stopped and was reduced by almost 90% by 2000. Jobs were lost, though the logging industry had already been in decline since World War II. Automation of the industry had already been stealing jobs for decades. Machines replaced the men that used the shovels and pulaskis to build roads, the men that used the saws and axes to cut and fall and load trees, and the men that drove horses to transport the logs. Machines replaced people in the sawmills. Society, and corporations, hail automation as progress. In the logging industry (as in any industry), it meant job losses. Perhaps the spotted owl was to blame solely for logging woes; perhaps it was a scapegoat.

Spotted owls were allegedly eaten at barbeques. You can still come across the "Save a Logger, Eat an Owl" bumper stickers on old vehicles. You still don't walk into a bar in one of those old Northwest logging towns and start chirping away about the environmental benefits of conserving the cute fluffy, endangered spotted owls you have left in your neck of the woods.

Then there's the barred owl. A little larger than the spotted owl, more aggressive, and not needing strictly old growth forest to live in, it's another reason the spotted owl is in trouble. They are cousins in the bird world; both are of the same genus, Strix, and rarely, they interbreed, resulting in a sparred owl. (I located one of these once on my owl job.) Barred owls moved from the eastern US to the west over the 20th century. In many historic spotted owl nesting sites in the Pacific Northwest, the barred owl has taken over.

Now, this night I hear a female barred owl down the canyon. I answer its call. In five minutes, she has flown further up-canyon in my direction. I am thrilled to hear her. She continues to hoot her 8-note call, and in another five minutes, she is closer, hooting from only a quarter mile away.

I am mesmerized by the call, by the fact she is answering my call. She's probably looking for a mate; it's that time of season. I have heard many barred owls, but I have never actually seen one, even though they have been close enough I could have hit them with a rock. I've jumped out of my skin and nearly had a heart attack before, when one has flown in silently in the dark and suddenly screeched an unearthly howl right above me. But I've never laid eyes on one.

I call once more, and suddenly, zeroing straight in on my call, she flies directly at me, 30 feet above me into the nearest tree. Oh my God!

It's so startling, she scares the leashed dog, who starts barking; and the second little dog takes off barking directly at her! Oh, crap!

I come to my senses and quickly reel the leashed dog in and grab her and throw her in the house. (I've already thrown the littlest dog-morsel inside.) Meanwhile the barred owl now starts hooting her territorial call in the tree above, loudly, insistently.

I'm hissing at the remaining barking little dog to get back here before the owl takes her, but oh, no, she's going to get that owl. I don't want the owl to get scared away, but I don't want to provide her a meal, either. It's chaos in the once-quiet forest: thundering hoots, piercing yips, and angry hissing human voice.

The owl is agitated by the noisy brazen barking meal-on-legs, and flies 15 yards away to another tree. Fierce Little Dog takes off after her, completely ignoring me. AHHH!

I run in the house and grab dog food in a can and run back outside and shake it. Thank goodness Fierce Little Dog is also a Fierce Little Hog, because she comes running back for food, and I grab her and chuck her in the house.

I run back outside and listen to this barred owl who continues her territorial call. For half an hour, I stand motionless and silent in the snow under the moonlight, listening to this booming melodic call of this beautiful wild creature as it echoes around the meadow and back down the canyon. I apologize for disturbing her... but forgive me - I'm selfishly glad I did.

And since there probably isn't a spotted owl for miles around anyway due to lack of habitat - I am thrilled with the encounter.

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

'Toons: Rabbit Quest Art

Wednesday January 26 2011











The Masterpiece!


The footwork behind the scenes:


Created by the feet of Owyhee


(No rabbits were harmed in the creation of this Owyhee masterpiece)