That look

11 01 2017

Mariah

My gosh, isn’t she gorgeous? Mariah in all her mustang-ness is a classic beauty.

(Moment of photo-geekiness: Do you love the snow bokeh in the background? Delicious.)

This post is dedicated to my friend Roy, who named Mariah when she was a baby. 🙂





Another long view

10 01 2017

Two in a big land

Another visual puzzle for ya’ll. 🙂 Do you see the two wildlings?

Psst … lower right.

It’s a big, beautiful land, and the moisture is seeping in.

 





Do you see what I see?

9 01 2017

Pintos

Beauty, yes. 🙂

Do you spot the spotted ponies? They’re in a line at lower center.





Spot of red in the grey

8 01 2017

Gaia

We’re a bit snowier now than this photo shows because of the snowfall we received Thursday night. It took a while for reality to catch up with the week’s worth of forecast moisture, but it was worth the wait. As a friend says, “The mud doesn’t bother me. I love the moisture!” And temps dropped into single digits locally, so it’s still out there.

A shout out to Sand Wash Basin folks and critters: Maybell, Colorado, saw a low temperature of MINUS FORTY-TWO DEGREES the other day. Be safe out there, friends!





The very littlest things

7 01 2017

snowflakes4

snowflakes1

These pix were taken a couple of weeks ago – obviously, when we still had snow on the ground, and the cold temps to keep it there – when I was out in Spring Creek Basin, on snowshoes, with wild ponies. I remembered these images just recently and sifted through my cell phone’s gallery to find them for you.

Sometimes, Mother Nature’s beauty is in the very smallest items. We might miss it if we weren’t looking for a place to carefully kneel in the white stuff for a better perspective of the furry stuff(s). 🙂





Subdued

6 01 2017

Ty

Fuzzy ol’ Ty helps show off that promontory in the background.





Spotlight-worthy

5 01 2017

Tesora

Tesora helps show off another unnamed promontory, farther up the valley. Behind her is the shadowed ridge of Brumley Point, and above and beyond that is our previously unnamed promontory, now called Temple Butte in honor of Pati and David Temple, who advocated tirelessly for Spring Creek Basin’s mustangs (David still does, and Pati spreads her angel’s wings over our blessed basin).

The very last light lit up that promontory, and it was hard to balance its brightness with the already shadowed foreground – and mustangs. So that’s not snow; it’s very-bright sunshine spotlighting the golden rock of the promontory.





‘Every shift of light’

4 01 2017

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Temple Butte gleams golden in the last light of a “trying to snow” day while Brumley Peak has just a spot of light on its serrated flank.

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Brumley Point is mostly within Spring Creek Basin Herd Management Area. The southeastern boundary fence climbs a lower ridge to the first wall of rimrock. Temple Butte is outside Spring Creek Basin but visible from almost anywhere in the basin (and far beyond). They’re both within McKenna Peak Wilderness Study Area, which also covers a fair bit of the southern, southeastern and eastern parts of the basin.

The mustangs showed up just a bit after I took these photos from the road. … They weren’t quite as cooperative in the last light of day as the steadfast mesas and buttes. 🙂

And the trails I ride are new
Even though I’ve made the circle many times before
For they change with every season
And with every shift of light
From the summit where the clouds fall to the sweet, valley floor.

~ from “The Circle” by Dave Stamey





The light that shines

3 01 2017

Chipeta at the end of a day of "trying to snow" in Spring Creek Basin.

Grey and brown are our colors of late. We’ve been waiting for this big snowstorm that has been in the forecast for days, but it hasn’t hit us yet. Meanwhile, we have plenty of moisture (aka mud). 🙂

And every now and then, a ray of light.





Our horizon, our world

2 01 2017

S'aka, rimrocks, La Sal Mountains

S’aka pauses for a pony nap on top of the world. Not a bad place to stop and smell the clean wind. 🙂