
Sometimes, the wind makes us all a little tired. 🙂

Sometimes, the wind makes us all a little tired. 🙂

Aspen pauses for a moment to check out his neighbors. Usually, he’s always on the move. (He’s a bit of a micro-manager.)

Winter has not forgotten us after all!
Yesterday was typical Colorado: Wind, significant temperature drop, sunshine, wind, whiteout snowstorm for about 45 minutes, clearing, wind, clouds, sunshine, wind, perfect sunset. Just add mustangs. 🙂
What’s not to love about a perfect day like that??
It – “winter” – didn’t last long, of course, but it’s early yet. 🙂

Houdini-love has been visiting the spa. For all our lack of rain, we still have water for mustangs in Spring Creek Basin.

Sometimes, what glitters IS gold.
Hollywood was grazing on a hill above an arroyo, which resulted in the glittery vegetation in front of him when he tried to evade the lens – which he almost managed. 🙂

Even in the simplest movements, there is beauty in this world.

Terra’s attention was captured by another band nearby. The last bit of sunshine was just clearing the rimrocks to light her sweet mustang ears.

The little studly has a magnificent strut. 🙂

Comanche the bold.
The third rifle season is nearing its end. Hunters already are leaving. “Where are the deer and the elk,” they’re asking. It’s too warm and too dry for them in Disappointment Valley. They’re staying high(er).

On Monday, November’s “beaver moon” – also a supermoon – will rise. The moon will be closer than any other lately (70 years, it says below) … and it won’t be this close to Earth again until 2034.
Here’s more information – “Why November’s Super-Close Supermoon is a Full Beaver Moon” (isn’t that an awesome headline?):
“November’s supermoon — the name given to a full moon that occurs when the satellite is at its closest point to Earth during the lunar orbit — will be the biggest supermoon in about 70 years.
“Algonquin Native American tribes as well as American colonists called the November full moon the Beaver Moon because ‘this was the time to set beaver traps before the swamps froze, to ensure a supply of warm winter furs,’ according to the Old Farmer’s Almanac.
“An alternative name for November’s full moon is the Frost Moon, which was also coined by Native Americans, according to the Almanac. [Supermoon November 2016: When, Where & How to See It]”
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Deep gratitude to active-duty service members and veterans of America’s military. We cannot repay our debt to your service and sacrifice, and that of your families as you spend time away from them to ensure the protection of ours – of all of us.