It’s late February and we’re having the most bitterly cold
morning we’ve had all winter.
We brought the two groups of cows closer to ranch
headquarters for calving. So far the babies are tucked safely inside their
mommas and we hope they stay that way until this cold snap passes.
I’m still on a ranch cleaning jag. Yesterday I emptied Grandma
Bonnie’s camp trailer. Gary rescued a few keepsakes - the box of assorted card
games, a cast iron griddle, and a warm sheepskin collared coat. The remaining
supplies will find new homes via the local thrift store. Now we just need to
pump up the tires that are melting into the sod and get it to the
local solid waste facility.
Of all the old items we’ve sent down the road, this one is
the most difficult. For all the memories . . . I almost said that will go with it, but they won’t of
course. We have the memories tucked away in our heads and hearts.
The 45 mile trip “up the trail” to deliver cattle to our
mountain range ground is an annual spring pilgrimage. Grandpa Eldro insisted
on camping overnight with the herd and Bonnie, his most trusted helpmate, was
the camp jack that made it happen. A circa 1972 Kit Companion trailer fit the bill. Bonnie shopped until she found a trailer with the perfect floor plan with lots of space to tend a big cowboy
crew. She could set everyone down at mealtime and when evening came, the tables
collapsed and the chair cushions doubled as mattresses so everyone had a place
to sleep. There was even a fold-up top bunk for the kids.
Mark remembers Grandma firing up the propane range for early
morning coffee. The fumes would travel across the ceiling to his bunkbed, and
as his asthma symptoms kicked in he knew it was time to get up.
Supplies for six days of meals meant a shopping spree that Mark got in on as a kid. The owners at Carl and Don's Market knew Bonnie by name. She stocked up on Shasta pop by the case, including Mark's favorite, cream soda. She baked pies, cookies and cakes and stuffed the trailer
house full of staples. On top of feeding the cattle herding crew, she fed friends and neighbors who happened along
tending their own cattle or taking a leisurely drive to the mountains. She
served hearty “from scratch” meals on real plates with real silverware.
She pulled the trailer with a 1975 Ford 1-ton with a stock
rack holding extra water in an old pressure tank, bales of hay for the horses and additional camp supplies.
She was a familiar sight on the road, shushing cattle with her dishtowel in
tight spots, picking up trash and negotiating steep mountain grades with courage
beyond her small stature.
I had just started dating Mark when I rode along for a day of herding cattle along Brush Creek. I hadn’t officially met the family when dinner time came around and I bashfully
headed to the trailer to eat. I took off my chaps and washed my hands at a
basin Bonnie had set up outdoors. We went inside for a delicious meal of roast
beef with potatoes and gravy and green beans, with chocolate cake for dessert. What
a welcome!
Things change of course and Anita and I do it differently. With
the utmost admiration for Bonnie’s method, we prefer to pack a cold lunch,
which when paired with a hot thermos of coffee and homemade cookies, feeds a
cowboy crew just fine. No, it’s not the same as Bonnie did it, but it will do.
What really matters is a kid in the saddle on a gentle
horse, well-fed cowboys and cowgirls looking out for each other, a smile and a
wave to passing motorists, and cows with calves at their sides at the end of the
day. And besides, if we were driving the truck and cooking who would work our
dogs?
(at the very last minute Gary suggested posting the trailer on Craig's List free stuff. It was spoken for in less than 5 minutes of posting by a guy wanting storage space!)
Eldro, Bonnie and Mark |
A familiar sight along the Trail |
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