
Winona soaks up the sunshine while the snow clouds linger over McKenna Peak and Temple Butte.
It felt much warmer than it looks!

Winona soaks up the sunshine while the snow clouds linger over McKenna Peak and Temple Butte.
It felt much warmer than it looks!

All that lovely snow is gone now (well, most of it, and especially in the scene seen here), but it’s too hard and too damaging to try to get in Spring Creek Basin in the mud, so for the next few days, at least, enjoy these scenes of winter white!
Corazon and his band were grazing when I first saw them up a hill in the northwestern area of the basin. By the time I trundled up to them, that ol’ Colorado sunshine was starting to melt the snow (and the trees’ roots were slurping it up thirstily!), and the horses were napping in the bright warmth.
If Punxsutawney Phil lived in Colorado, I imagine he’d see his shadow on most Groundhog Days (and the marmots at our Groundhog reservoir (a few thousand feet higher than Spring Creek Basin and snowed in) surely see theirs!). With his still-fuzzy coat, Corazon is not at all worried about six more weeks of winter … and we’re still hoping for more snow!

Our tan world got very white again yesterday morning! It was a snowfall of about an inch, and much of it melted during the day, that liquid goodness seeping into the soil – and into the catchment tanks. The last time I was at the first new catchment, water from the melting snow was gurgling noisily from the roof to the gutter and down the pipes into the tanks. What an absolutely MARVELOUS sound!
Tenaz may have been watching the clouds swirl around McKenna Peak and Temple Butte and the far eastern and southeastern ridges, but he was the star of the show to me.

Doesn’t he look great? Hollywood is one of our elder stallions now – about 21 this year, if my original guess about his age when we first met was right. The last couple of years, he was looking a little lean. He doesn’t have a lieutenant, which probably contributes to his good condition. He and his band of lovely ladies do wander quite a lot. I may know relatively where to look for and find many of the other bands at any given time, but it’s always a wonder where Holls will be.
I’m really happy to see him looking so good. He may be the oldest band stallion in the basin now, but he also has one of the biggest bands!


Sweet Mariah is so lovely, but she’s with a new band now and eager to stay out of the spotlight. … Or at least, not so eager to be *seen* in the spotlight.
Fortunately for us, there’s no mistaking her loveliness.

While we wait for snow (that sticks), how about another pic of our lovely dun girls? While Aiyanna watches the pronghorns half a mile or so away, Dundee keeps her eyes on me. 🙂
Interesting how their dorsal stripes mimic some of the erosion ridges on far McKenna Peak, eh?

With her perfect coat of winter finery, you could say that Seneca’s cold-weather suit is perfectly suited to her wild, wintry world!

Winter time is snowy-schnozz time!
The mustangs make practical use of being surrounded by frozen water to “eat” it as casually as they graze. It’s very handy for them to graze and browse and nibble mouthfuls of snow along the way. They do seem to relish it – like ice cream, perhaps!?

All that snow is BRIGHT under the Colorado sunshine! Alegre and the other mustangs do get a little squinty-eyed trying to keep out the glare.
Does she have some impressive wind knots or what?!

Elder Aspen cuts a dashing figure against the rimrocks of Spring Creek canyon in the far western part of Spring Creek Basin.
He’s starting to show his age, and he moves slowly and deliberately through the snow (not much *dashing* for him, really), but for a mustang that I’d guess to be in at least his mid-20s, he’s looking pretty fine, indeed.