Dynamics of spots and solids

19 11 2011

Ah, the pintos.

Like Poco and Roach, they have a “home territory.” The roundup disrupted it some, but they also had come “up” to the “front country” this spring – with Cinch and his band and Spook and Bruiser coming and staying. Chipeta is leading the band now, and after a bit of wandering, they’re back.

Apparently, “there’s no place like home,” and that’s where they are. Saw some of them from a distance Wednesday afternoon, then all the rest that evening (the first spotting not only was from a distance, obstacles of trees and hill prevented a clear line of sight). Thursday morning afore the sun rose, I was with them in a tiny “valley” between “islands” of trees … and on … after the sun rose into a glorious day. (And snow is back in the forecast in Southwest Colorado!)

Chipeta showing off her dredlocks.

Chipeta and her yearling daughter, Puzzle.

Band stallion Ty.

Former band stallion Copper, now kept at bay by Ty and lieutenant Corazon.

Corazon – and yep, he has some pretty fresh scars.

Ty and Copper

Copper being chased up the hill by Ty …

Up and over, around and down and across below the hill … Ty breaking off and making the turn back to the band!

Maiku and Puzzle. Maiku, born the end of June, is significantly smaller than Puzzle, born the first of September (2010).

Maiku and Chipeta

Maiku is the son of Kiowa and Copper; Puzzle is the daughter of Chipeta and Copper.

Puzzle, Chipeta and Reya on the shady side of the hill, waking basin behind them.

Gorgeous.





Sweet nothing at all

18 11 2011

And yet it’s everything …

Ty giving Chipeta some lovin’ early in the morning. She flirted with him for a few seconds, then pinned her ears, tossed her head, shot out a hind leg and walked away. He didn’t seem too put out. 🙂

After not seeing the pintos for a few visits, saw them from a distance … then right from the Disappointment Road. Had an excellent visit with them yesterday morning as the sun came up. Copper and Corazon are both with them. Interesting dynamic change with Ty, formerly one of the low men (until he got Chipeta earlier this year), now at the head of the band and Copper, former band stallion, on the outskirts. Corazon has become Ty’s lieutenant stallion.





Pinto band (Ty’s band)

29 09 2011

Ty is the color holdout in the new pinto band. Corazon was back in home territory, and Copper was alone, and Chipeta was leading her group on merry walkabout. Every time I saw them, they were quite a bit farther from where I’d previously seen them. They ended up back where I saw them a week ago.

Maiku at left, Reya behind Puzzle, Chipeta and Ty bringing up the rear.

Mama Chipeta and daughter Puzzle (1) make a striking pair. Chipeta’s colt is doing extremely well with his adopter.

Looking back at some of the other bands in the area.

Darn greasewood. 🙂 Ty with Maiku and Reya.

And off they went: 4-year-old Reya, her yearling brother Maiku (Kiowa’s daughter and son) and Chipeta (who is probably about 6-7). Hollywood’s and Comanche’s were coming to check them out.





Looking ahead

25 09 2011

With everything that has happened, the adoption behind us, people working for the horses at Canon City, the horses in the basin are now foremost in my thoughts. Getting back to them is what I look forward to now.

We’ve all been on an emotional roller coaster, but just like last time, we’re already at work evaluating what happened and what we can change, what worked, what didn’t, ways we can offer our help.

Lots of positives, starting with these:

Copper

Chipeta and Puzzle – they’re with Ty, still, and back with Reya and Maiku. Copper is with them.

Maiku

Ty, trotting out to have a chat with Copper. After so long in Copper’s shadow, Ty has asserted his dominance.

Reya, Puzzle, Chipeta in back and Maiku

Gaia … might be expecting a spotted baby in the spring …

Aurora

Alegre (Aurora is nursing – see her ear?) and Gaia.

Traveler … looks pretty good for an “old” man, eh? He was aged at “aged.” How I love him.

Always stunning.

Tenaz and Corona

Corona





Now

21 09 2011

All the BLM folks have been amazing. I’m not sure whether I should name them because I don’t want them to be targets any more than they already are, but they were excellent in all regards. We couldn’t have done anything that we did – and have done – without them. JD, WW, CC, TR, LA, JG, SB, LB, SW, JJ, MJ, HP, KW, SM, AB … thank you so much for your support and calm and level-headed approach – and for always thinking of the safety of the horses and humans. We appreciate you more than we can possibly express. We’re so grateful to have achieved what we have with your partnership, and we look forward to achieving our future goals with your help.

BLM has plans to re-seed the trapsite area, and that could happen as soon as next week.

Monday, after everything was over and everyone else was gone, I went back to basin.

If you go out looking for horses, be patient, use your binoculars, scan slowly and in seemingly unlikely places – and some of the same – and you will find them.

I saw Aspen almost right away (though I thought initially he was Duke, right in his home territory). Then Seven’s … Then black and grey – Bounce and Alegre?! Horses in trees … and below them … and nearby …

Bounce sticks out here … but he’s not with Alegre – he’s with Houdini. She’s right above the “C” in Creek.

While I was looking at them, I spotted another pair:

Right by the brown guzzler, Chrome and Hayden.

I went back around to where I’d seen horses in the hill, and that’s where the wild magic started to work its healing.

Traveler (back right) with Alegre (grey), Gaia (sorrel) and baby Aurora.

Tenaz and Corona. Tenaz was almost caught … Baylee was caught (she’s awaiting adoption – big, beautiful bay girl), and Storm gave observers a show when he galloped away right past them on the hill above the trapsite.

Watching the pintos …

Left to right: Reya (4), Maiku (1), Puzzle (1) and Chipeta. They’re a long way from “home” territory. Chipeta is the dam of the foal that has now been adopted. We don’t know how they got separated. The helicopter pilot was excellent about not even targeting the horses we asked him not to. That’s why he left the bunch alone when he realized they were with the youngest foal. What a story that foal could tell … I’m not even sure who the horses were that were with Chipeta’s band when the pilot did see the group. So all the pintos (and their hangers-on) are accounted for except stallion Corazon.

Here they are with Ty, who is now dominant over …

Copper, who is sticking with them.

I finally left them to find Seven’s and see whether Mona had had her foal yet. The pilot had seen “the pregnant mare” and of course left her alone. (We did see Kreacher’s band before the roundup even started – they ran across what would later be “the observation hill” with SUNDANCE immediately behind them and Kreacher following (?!). Chrome broke away from his band to follow them … leaving his band separated for quite a while (they were later captured all together). People were camped farther north on that hill at the time … we didn’t see the horses again. I am very eager to find them.

From left: Roja and Killian, Seven, Mona and Shane.

The lone bay turned out to be Aspen.

I also saw Shadow the end of the day Sunday – alone. But if I had to guess in normal circumstances where she might be, she was right there. Wind and Coal came to the trapsite with Iya and Cougar. Have not seen David.





Chipeta’s colt

2 09 2011

Thursday morning, I spent 3.5 hours searching for Chipeta’s band in the area they’ve been frequenting the last few weeks. I *knew* they were nearby, I just couldn’t find them. But Kiowa’s band came into the neighborhood, and I spent some time sitting with them, enjoying their company and the day.

Chipeta’s band and Kiowa’s band and David’s live almost exclusively in the McKenna Peak Wildernes Study Area of the basin. No roads, and by quirk of geography, there are more hills and more trees (pinon/juniper). I kept thinking they could be within 500 yards, and I’d never know it. I also had the idea that they wouldn’t be in the trees, though. We don’t have an overabundance of predators (mountain lion hunting is allowed and practiced in season), but I thought Chipeta would favor the more open areas.

I finally left Kiowa’s band to their grazing and headed into the main part of the basin, where I saw several horses way up on hillsides where I normally don’t see them. I drove to Round Top and hiked around it to look for Chipeta’s band from there. That hill is on the boundary of the WSA and affords a good view of the basin – both the “upper portion” (roaded) and the WSA. One scan across with the binoculars … another scan back … Kiowa’s band was not visible from there because of hills … Just one more scan, and then I’ll head back …

Shazam! A hazy bit of “white” at a long distance … dark frames – head and flank? …

When I saw them Wednesday from the Disappointment Road, I saw the same thing – though much closer. I was clearly thinking when I left them that day: “Please let them be easier to spot tomorrow.” Wishful thinking. 🙂

That white spot in an opening in the trees finally moved, and I was certain it was her. Same basic area I had searched just earlier that morning. While I watched, I was able to pick out Ty, moving, but I couldn’t see anything else because of trees and distance. (I wish I could begin to give you a distance … a looooooong way away.) Not wanting to lose the opportunity of knowing where she was and eager to know whether that very full udder did, indeed, mean a baby was imminent, I marked the landmarks and drove back around (and that’s a distance of several miles).

Would you know, I found them basically on the upper portion of the same trail I’d followed the lower portion of in the morning? 🙂 I *knew* they were there!

There’s his star, easier to see. You can see the end of his strip – it’s very faint above that – and I think he might have a tiny little snip, too, just a line by his left nostril.

There’s a seep in this arroyo that I had almost forgotten about until I saw it that morning. Lots of hoof traffic, so they’re clearly using it, even though the muddy water barely fills the hoofprints.

This one shows his hind fetlock better … it was harder to tell whether his left hind also had a marking or was just lighter. I think by his legs he’ll eventually go grey.

Wonderful miracle of wild life. All love. 🙂





Happy birthday! – aka – Right on time!

1 09 2011

Yesterday, there was this:

Do you see what I see?!

Today, we had this!:

Baby boy – born today. 🙂

And by the way …

Happy birthday, beautiful girl!

That’s right – baby girl and baby brother share their birthday. 🙂 How cool is that?





Chipeta bulletin

20 08 2011

Chipeta’s band was out almost exactly where I saw them last – and Kiowa’s band was just up the hill! It was good to see them, too, but I think the proximity and/or Chipeta’s impending due date had her more wary.

She doesn’t look quite as huge as I’d have thought she’d be (her due date and Puzzle’s birthday is Sept. 1), but she’s definitely showing signs of getting closer to foaling.

The pintos (Kiowa’s band) were just up the hill to the right.

I also took some pix of Kiowa’s band that I’ll post later. I didn’t stay with the horses too long. The bands haven’t been close to each other (that I know of) for quite a while, and I’d sure like to see them separate again before Chipeta foals.

Although I didn’t walk back to check it, I’m fairly sure the Round Top pond still has water, so they’re probably drinking there (this was somewhat close to the pond). David’s also were out right where I had been seeing them in previous visits – close to the Disappointment Road. There are at least a couple of places in the big arroyos nearby where water seeps up to the surface, so they could also be drinking there.





Spots

8 08 2011

On my way to the basin last week, I spotted spots. I had just seen David’s, closer to the road (but not as close as last time), but I hadn’t seen Chipeta for a while and wanted to check on her (due Sept. 1). I can hardly just “go for a hike” anymore, the basin has so spoiled me for the “rainbow pot of gold” at the “end” of each wonderful hike there.

Chipeta and daughter Puzzle.

I found another of those crazy balloons while I was with them. They’re let go from some birthday party or celebration somewhere, and the wind carries them to western Colorado and plunks ’em down amid the greasewood or saltbush, where I find them, deflated and sad and waiting to muck up the gut of some unsuspecting animal. My back was to the horses when I walked over and picked it up, balled it up and shoved it in my pocket … when I turned around, the horses were trotting right toward me! The sound of the crinkly material when I balled it up? The fact that they couldn’t see what I was doing? I thought I was picking it up in such a way that wouldn’t spook them, and here it brought them right to me.

The bugs weren’t bugging me at all, but the horses were almost constantly shaking their heads, stamping their hooves, swishing their tails … So I like this one anyway, despite Ty’s tail “gettin’ in the way.” 🙂

Ty giving Chipeta some lovin’ … She’s a flirt, but a quick-tempered flirt. I like how he’s staying well back as he gives her a schnuzzle.

Here they are trotting toward me after I turned back around from collecting the balloon.

Ty in the lead … I’m not sure why I like this photo … but I do.

Waiting for whatever came next … which was me walking away. I want them to know they have nothing to fear from me, that I’m OK walking away from them – it’s their home, after all.

Most of the above photos are zoomed-in and/or cropped; this one shows the belly. 🙂 No matter how they stand, Puzzle looks taller than mama – or at least as tall. I’ve always thought daddy Copper is fairly tall, but now I’m wondering how *short* is everybody else! Ha. Still, it looks like she has some decent size to her. I also finally realized that Puzzle has black around each coronet, right above each hoof.

Later, I was mentally comparing Chipeta and Kootenai. Chipeta doesn’t seem over-large, but her udder is definitely filling. Kootenai seemed pretty big (she’s also a bigger mare), but her udder is still tiny. Then again, this will be Chipeta’s third foal at least (Joven died at about 2 weeks), and it will be Kootenai’s first. Chipeta is likely about 6 or 7 years old, and Kootenai is 5 (if she was, in fact, 2 when she came in 2008, which seemed to fit). Chipeta’s due date (based on Puzzle’s birth date) is Sept. 1, but she may foal a little earlier, I’m thinking. Kootenai’s due date is known only to her, but I don’t think it will be before September.

In fact, now I’m kinda thinking about a guess-Kootenai’s-foaling-date contest … whaddya’ll think? I’ll put up photos of her next, and you can leave your guesses in the comments section of that post. I’ll close guesses, say, Sept. 1. You’ll have to trust my guesstimation of her eventual foaling date (sometimes I’m pretty sure about the date, sometimes, it’s a guesstimation). I’m semi kinda sorta probably maybe planning to do a calendar again this year (2012) – maybe different design/style than last year (2011). But I’ll guarantee a calendar to the winning guesser – how’s that? Something happy to offset the coming roundup … It would be nicer to have Kootenai and her foal grace September rather than a scene from the roundup … (I hate to say this, but it occurs to me, and so it likely has occurred to all of you: This depends, of course, on the survival of Koot’s foal.)





Seeing spots

18 06 2011

On my way to the interior basin, there are a couple of places I always look for horses from the Disappointment Road, which runs along the southwestern border until just past the Perkins corrals. This year, with the Round Top pond holding water and the horses able to drink there instead of searching for elusive salty seeps, I haven’t very often seen horses from the road, which means hikes into the McKenna Peaks Wilderness Study Area (non-motorized) to look for them – and why I don’t often see David’s band, the pinto band led by Kiowa or the new band of Ty, Chipeta and Puzzle. A couple of weeks ago, I saw David’s from afar and hiked in to see them (it’s always easier when you know their location, though it’s not a far “speculation hike” to get to a point where there’s a decent view), and that was the day I found Kiowa’s new baby. But I hadn’t seen Ty, Chipeta and Puzzle since earlier this spring, shortly after they made the split from the pinto band.

So when I spotted Ty and Chipeta from the road, that was a good enough excuse to park and climb through the fence and walk out to see them – plus, I couldn’t see Puzzle and wanted to make sure she was there. She was – napping.

Boy, has she grown!

If I didn’t know she was 9 – almost 10 – months old, I’d never guess (well, and if I didn’t know, I’d never guess she’d been born in September).

Would *you* ever believe she’s only 9.5 months old?! I never thought Chipeta was all that short until I saw her with her own less-than-year-old daughter!

Ty. He is a lesson in persistence, he is. He would seem to claim Chipeta only to lose her back to the band and Copper. But he seems to be keeping his little family far away from any temptations. He has also always had that short tail – I have no idea why.

Chipeta is clearly pregnant. Due Sept. 1, but I wouldn’t be surprised if she foals into August … and would be happier for her to have a slightly older foal by the time of the roundup. Mona, by contrast, is due the day the roundup starts – Sept. 15 – and yes, we have already talked about that with our BLM folks – and will continue to. Jif also is due anywhere from about late August to late September.

Because the Spring Creek Basin mustangs are documented and easily identified (individually AND by band), and because I know we have at least three mares due to foal very close to the roundup, and because, per BLM, we plan to be in radio contact with the helicopter pilot, we hope to convince him to ignore those horses and their very-young foals. Bait trapping would make this kind of selective removal much easier … but hopefully we’re moving in that direction now for next time.

Pretty Puzzle and mama Chipeta

We had company …

For Pat A: This was WAY south of where we saw the buck and does during the count – same guy? I keep seeing the does in the same general area – no fawns yet – and no buck, either.

I like the illusion of this photo, but in reality, there’s at least 2 feet of space between Puzzle and stepdaddy Ty. 🙂

Mama picked up a sprig of greasewood. She wasn’t terribly impressed with or worried about me, and I had a devil of a time getting both ears. 😉

That Puzzle is a pretty little (big!) girl, isn’t she?