Mamas and babies – and more

21 06 2011

Where does the time go? Father’s Day is past, so I thought I’d show off some mamas and babies …

Aurora checking out mama’s lovely ear.

Kestrel and her Juniper-girl

Enjoying the sunshine – love their sweet faces.

Mama Kestrel – back right – with her gorgeous girls: yearling Winona and baby Juniper.

More, random:

Juniper, glowing in morning sunlight.

Winona

Winona and baby sister Juniper.

Mama and her girls

Whisper

With baby sister Aurora.

One on the way …

Handsome Apollo, son of:

Kreacher!

Kreacher has just two babies that I know of (Shane (Mona) and Apollo (Raven)), but I’ll never know how many babies venerable Bounce has sired. Whisper and Aurora are the latest.

It was so cool so see her seek out this dead branch – that mama had walked past – up to it, sniff it, then deliberately walk over it. I love the concentration on her little face as she tucks that hind leg WAY up to step over the branch! Mustang skillz!

I don’t think I posted this one already? Whisper, 2, is apparently remembering the goods while baby sister Aurora nurses, and Alegre is nuzzling baby even as she pins her ears at her elder offspring, who has wisely approached from baby’s side, using her as a shield!

Using mama’s tail to rid her of the gnats, which aren’t that bad this year, probably because of the near-constant wind. Not that it’s rarely windy in the basin – it’s always windy – but this year seems particularly windy, though we haven’t had the awful dust storms of past years.

Lovely Alegre – her grace and beauty just astound me.

And one more …

Sego lilies before dawn (or at least before the sun topped the eastern ridges) that morning. On my way to looking for horses before the light found us, I “stopped to” admire the segos. They’ve been up for a couple of weeks now, but this was the first time I found them with just a light breeze, not the stout, alive thing that made them whip impossibly to photograph.





Happy Father’s Day!

19 06 2011

To all our daddies …

… from all your children and mamas and families who love you …

We love you and appreciate you and thank you for all you do!

Happy Father’s Day!

XOXO

Us





From the vault

6 06 2011

Not too long ago, though … I’m avoiding vacuuming … looking for some pix I took a couple of weeks ago of Apollo … and came upon these that I couldn’t resist pulling into Photoshop for cropping and saving.

So for no other reason than “wow, aren’t they beautiful,” enjoy!

Whisper

Daddy Bounce – loved the early morning light on their dark, handsome faces!

Cinch – he’s always watchful, and I relish being able to capture him when he relaxes.

Varoujan – really … do I ever need a reason to post such divine cuteness?! 🙂

The claret cups are blooming. A few years ago – a couple of years ago? – we had a wonderful variety of colors from pale pink to yellow to this deep rosy red. This year, I haven’t seen anything but red, but they’re very vivid. In my notes about the horses, I also keep track of other details about the range – the timing of greenup, what ponds are holding/shallow/dry, what’s blooming when. For such a dry place, we have a fairly wide variety of blooming wildflowers right now: wild blue flax, white daisies, still some phlox, Indian paintbrush, 4 o’clock, larkspur, prince’s plume, globe mallow, some little purple flowers, evening primrose. Last week, I saw the first sego lilies of the year. As great as the contrast between prickly cactus and gorgeous claret cup blooms, the oddness of seemingly fragile sego lilies in our rocky, dry, tan environment always blows me away. It was WAY too windy to even try to photograph the lilies, but they have won a place as one of my favorite wildflowers – for all they represent, for their ability to grow and thrive in such an unforgiving place, to bring beauty to a place some might call harsh, to bring life to a place some might call empty … and you know I’m not really talking about flowers anymore, don’t you? 🙂





Happy birthday, Whisper!

7 05 2011

Whisper was 2 yesterday!

He’s tall and handsome and takes as much after daddy Bounce as he does mama Alegre.

About a week old here.

With mama a couple of weeks ago! A few of his yearmates are off on their own already, but Whisper is still with mama and daddy.

And big sister Gaia went off with her own new family this winter. What a fabulous big sister she was to the little mister.

Playing with daddy Bounce.

Happy birthday, handsome boy – keep your sense of humor and don’t forget your lessons!





Waiting …

29 04 2011

I swear Alegre gets more beautiful every time I see her.

Love this look from cheeky Whisper!

He and Gideon were both in a mood to play when their families were together – they bucked and whirled and galloped – celebrating the new baby? Maybe! Who’s to say?!





Joyful

19 04 2011

My greatest joy is the time I spend with these amazing horses (I know, I use amazing a lot; if not amazing, incredible; if not incredible, wonderful … you get the idea). This time of year, there’s particular purpose behind my time: Documenting the foals born and the mares’ foaling dates. It all adds up to the store of knowledge I keep in notes and files … it all adds up to the increasing knowledge in my head, heart and soul that is added to every single time I visit them. I will never know all there is to know about them. I will never stop learning about them – soaking in all they have to teach me – and after a (relatively short) lifetime with horses, I soak up every beautiful lesson as if I were a child.

When I first spotted Bounce quite a distance away, Alegre and Whisper were out of sight. In fact, when Bounce turned and trotted farther away, sudden terror seized me that something was wrong. Alegre lost her foal last year – in May – and I’m not sure how quickly she bred back, so I’m not entirely sure when she might be due (as you’ll see, I think she’s probably on track for at least May again). But then he calmly allowed me to approach him, and Alegre and Whisper were completely fine. I said a little prayer of thanks … but it didn’t explain his odd (to me) behavior, though I have suspicions.

From our visit …

Alegre, I think, is a daughter of Alpha and Grey (Al(e)gre – get it? 🙂 I pronounce it “ah-leg-gruh”). As gorgeous as both, more beautiful than either alone.

Whisper, of course, has no chance whatsoever …

Between gorgeous mama …

… and handsome daddy …

… he is quite doomed to be a knockout! 🙂

Sister Gaia left this winter, so it’s just him, mama and daddy – until mama has her new little. He’ll be 2 in early May … he has amazed me lately at how tall and leggy he seems. Alegre has a bit of size to her, and I think he inherited that – daddy Bounce isn’t very tall!

You can’t see it under that long, thick forelock – that may be courtesy of daddy! – but it’s hiding a big-big star! (You can see a bit of it in the first photo of him above.)

Doesn’t she just make you sigh? With all the craziness and ugliness in the world – much of it human-caused – these horses teach us every day about treating each other with decency and kindness. Know everything about them?! I never will! I can only hope that I learn and learn and learn till the day I die! They are our teachers … not the other way around.

This might be my favorite photo of Bounce to date – and I love him so much I can hardly narrow that down! After incredibly, knowingly trusting me with Alegre and Whisper for quite a long while as they grazed and I enjoyed (that first pic is of him looking back to check on us – and he’s farther away than he appears), he decided to join us – and here he is with that jaunty step of his – tail up, mane waving, ears relaxed, in his home, part of his home … You can see just a hint of that … and I think that – knowing him so well, not knowing him nearly well enough – is what I love about it and him.

If I could bottle what they teach, I would give it freely away. It’s without any number-value estimation … and the world needs more of it. Hmm. The world HAS it – obviously! – whatever IT is, whatever THEY have that they so freely give (and some so rapaciously take and take) … The world just needs to recognize it more than we do.

Thank you and thank you and thank you and thank you …





Funny boys

25 03 2011

Monday, March 28 is the deadline to call the Dolores Public Lands Office at (970) 882-6800 *to request placement on the mailing list* to be sent the scoping letter for the Spring Creek Basin Herd Management Area roundup this fall. The scoping letter then should be coming out very soon. The scoping letter also will be online, and I’ll post that link when it’s ready. The deadline for comments will be in that letter.

********************************************************************************

A little entertainment to get you in the mood for the weekend.

A lone deer had bounded out behind the horses, which caught their attention and put them on the alert. A much bigger group had been grazing earlier nearby, so I’m not sure why that gal was lagging. Seemingly to lighten the mood, Whisper started playing with Bounce. He indulged, and they nuzzled and “chewed” on each other around the face, etc. But Bounce kept turning his back on Whisper to face me. He’d back into Whisper and raise one hind leg then the other in a clear signal to get Whisper to back off … but not only did Whisper not back off, he finally grabbed daddy’s tail, which – of course – had the effect of getting daddy to turn around and play with him again! This is the second time Whisper did it. 🙂

Horses with a sense of humor? Of course!





For the beauty of it all

15 03 2011

On that last visit to the horses, from which I ended up with 2,000+ photos, from which these last several batches of posts have come, I came upon Bounce’s toward the end of the day. It was about midafternoon, really, but I stayed with them longer than I realized, and the sun was sinking when I finally left. I saw all but four bands that day, including some I hadn’t seen except at a distance all winter. I was looking specifically for Bounce’s … and they were my last, ultra-glorious visit of the day.

I have two basic, personal “rules” of visiting the basin: Don’t flirt with wet weather, and don’t set an agenda.

So “looking specifically for Bounce’s” – or anybody – was breaking the “rules.” But sometimes some rules are meant to be broken (like “the rule of thirds” and “always shoot with the sun at your back”). And I just had a feeling … and “in the back,” where I thought they might be, sure enough, there they were.

Hello, lovely. It’s been awhile, eh?

Whisper is so big and so dark that when I first walked out, I was constantly looking between him and Bounce to determine which one, in fact, WAS Bounce.

But when I got closer, more characteristics – youthful – started to reveal themselves. Whisper was close to Alegre, and Bounce was farther out. In fact, I’m not really sure when Bounce realized I was there. I sat down up from Alegre, and I ended up there for goodness knows how long.

Definitely March. Gorgeous and sunny, but the wind – and it was stiff – had a chill edge to it; I should have worn my jacket. The La Sals were visible in the distance – unlike the previous day, when they were wreathed in clouds – but I stayed long enough that their crown became a shroud that hid them, eventually, fully. A storm brewing!

Not much later, even this view of the La Sals would be gone, hidden by snow clouds.

Over the basin, brilliant sunshine – to the northwest and across the north: clouds. Looking east, a normal sunny blue day in Colorado; looking north-northwest (toward the mountains) … something a little special with the light.

Lovely light on lovely Alegre.

And bugs. 🙂 I don’t know what they were – something I imagine the trout would rise to gobble (if there were trout in Spring Creek Basin!). Tiny – half an inch long? – mostly sheer shimmering translucent wings, bodies teeny. They came through the air with the wind all at once in a flutter of half a dozen, in waves, every so often. One landed near me … at least a couple kissed Alegre on her lovely nose.

Her reaction after her “kiss.”

There’s Bounce yonder … mountains winked out of sight …

We had mostly sunshine …

… and a few moments of cloud cover. Is it weird that all the shapes I saw in the clouds were carnivores – and upside down?

Is she not the most gorgeous of girls?

She paused her grazing for a nap …

… and we all napped together.

The ground, rocky as it is in that area, was surprisingly comfortable. The chill-tipped wind, not so much. I think I really would have drifted peacefully into full sleep except that I was shivering. ‘Legs stood close by, eyes mostly closed, checking on me now and then as I raised my head to check on her. I got the feeling a foal might have … mama standing protectively nearby … all right with the world. About a month now, and our first foals of the season will be feeling just that!

Bounce disappeared from sight. The ground dropped off between us and him – Whisper, in the photo above, is standing just on the edge, I think.

I can’t come up with a word for how wonderfulgorgeousbeautifulsublimephenomenalmagnificentastoundingbrilliantfantastic it was.

This is the first *I* knew that HE knew I was there. He may have known before, but neither Alegre’s nor Whisper’s behavior would have tipped him off – and he does look a little surprised, eh? 🙂

He went out of sight again … and awhile later, I looked over, and he had come up – just his head in view – behind Whisper. The next events were funny!

Staying just like that – just his head in view (I was still lying on the ground), he nickered at Alegre. She ignored him. He nickered again. She was grazing – ignoring him that I could tell. More nickering … she eventually grazed her way toward – but not to – him.

One of the funniest things I’ve seen yet. 🙂 She wandered on up the hill and above me and around the other side of me while he stood on the edge of decision.

How handsome is he? Shooting toward the sun as it was just above Knife Edge – my camera did not want to focus on him. This is him finally following Alegre.

Whisper followed, too, of course.

Handsome daddy Bounce + gorgeous mama Alegre = one good looking boy!

Bounce and Whisper. The boy will be 2 in May.

See the grey muzzle? Showing his wisdom. 🙂

Glorious

And that catches me up on my last visit!

It’s a tricky thing in the mountains to say too early “It’s spring!” But that’s just how it feels. I’ve lived here long enough now to know “the rule”: Don’t be hasty ushering in spring because that’s just the time Mother Nature alerts you that she’s the ruler of the universe and decides to go cavorting with Father Winter after she’s teased you with melting snow and 60-degree weather and glorious sunshine (do I say glorious a lot?). That said, it sure feels like spring! We had a pretty mild winter, though … which portends a rather dry summer.

Fuzzy coats are still fairly thick (and that’s another sign that it’s not quite over yet, winter …), and the horses look – say it with me: glorious. 🙂





Farther up the hill

7 07 2010

Steeldust’s band was quiet on the hill. They’re “together” again, Mouse and Aspen still the boys tagging along, the other boys guarding their mares closely – still. Storm and Gideon move freely. At one point, Aspen came a little too close to napping Gideon, and Luna stepped up beside him. Although she was then right beside him, Butch also stepped up – between her and Gideon! The little mister gave a little shift but otherwise didn’t move, content and confident that stepdaddy would protect him without stepping ON him. And he didn’t. Really a remarkable little event.

As I mentioned, Bounce also came over to have a little visit, and he found Storm a willing playmate.

I was sitting on a slanted flattish rock in a little drainage on the treed slope, trying to take advantage of a bit of shade under a sky with swiftly moving clouds. Love how Bounce is watching me watching him while he lets Storm nibble on him.

It was interesting to watch the interaction of Bounce with Storm, almost 2, and with Steeldust, a mature band stallion as Bounce himself.

A little sniffing, a little posturing.

Then it was back for another round of playing with Storm. The quality of their interactions was really interesting. He and Steeldust eventually had a rearing collision, and Bounce decided the party was over.

Now for something different. Two legs, yes, and two wings!

What is it? I noticed it when it flew up from right beside me – flew out just a few yards and landed – and settled. Didn’t make any sound, and it was so quiet even when I surprised it to flight that I wasn’t at all startled. It stayed at least as long as I did. I wondered if it had a nest nearby (July?) because it stayed so close. Hmm. Can you see it?

How about now? Talk about adapted! The intricate pattern of its feathers is just about the most beautiful type of plumage on a bird I’ve ever seen. Maybe it’s a “poorwill.” In the nightjar family, the book says. I’m not sold on that as the ID – the pic in the book is even worse than these of mine. I’d be happy if someone can tell me for sure!

I left the horses to their naps and went on up the hill, unsure if the grey I had seen earlier with Storm-chaser was Mouse or Hook. I was hoping it was Hook, but if it was, he was out of my sight. The horses were about halfway up the hill. I don’t very often think about snakes while I’m out in the basin. I did see a rattler in Sand Wash Basin, but the only rattlers I’ve seen in Spring Creek Basin have been on a road – at night – and I was safe in the Jeep! I grew up in rocky Texas hill country, so I’m not afraid of snakes, but I don’t want to surprise one as close as I did the bird!  No snakes, and I found a pretty little “park” below the cliff at the top of the hill – the confluence of at least two canyons.

I basically followed the edge back down: This is looking down at Wildcat Spring and on out to Round Top in the far distance. The hill in the middle distance is the north side of what I call the east-west hill.





Up the hill

6 07 2010

Bounce’s band were up the hill and across the canyon from Wildcat Spring when I visited with them last week. I can identify some of the grasses out in seed – needle and thread, Indian ricegrass – something that grows in green bunches, maybe one of those. Bounce was trying to get maximum scratching power out of a just-barely-tall-enough juniper, and I thought – not for the first time – oh, if only I could help you …

He’d shift forward and backward and – as you can see here – side to side.

Then he gave a whinny and strutted up the hill for a flirty (!?) visit with Miss Gaia.

You can see by their tousled forelocks that we had a bit of wind to keep away the gnats.

Most-lovely Alegre and Whisper were just a few steps up the hill. In addition to the grass, the hills hold much more surface rock and cacti. I always marvel at their ability to make comfortable the roughest places.

And little Liberty investigating a fallen tree …

Steeldust’s band was farther up the hill across a little drainage (at the top of this hill, the land falls off in a rugged cliff to the “canyon confluence” behind Wildcat Spring). I went to visit with them … and Bounce decided that was a good idea, too. He played with Storm for a few minutes until Steeldust chased him away. More to come.