Another great pinto, another great view

4 02 2019

Reya; Spring Creek canyon; La Sal Mountains

Reya, perfectly at home.

Our snow is gone, but our ground is SOGGY again. We got at least half an inch of rain yesterday, and news from up-valley is that Disappointment Creek is *raging*! This is good for our coming year.

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Went back and forth … finally decided to note that today is the sixth anniversary of Pati Temple’s passing. Even if you’re a new reader, you likely have picked up on how special Pati was to us and the mustangs of Spring Creek Basin. For Christmas, we got the news that Temple Butte’s name is official. It’s bittersweet that we honor her that way. We’d definitely rather have her with us … but she is, an angel with us always.





She IS the view

3 02 2019

Spirit

Spirit is the beauty for the trees. 🙂





Hearing the hounds

2 02 2019

Temple, listening to hounds baying

Fuzzy Temple listens to dogs baying in the distance. That’s not something we hear every day.





Oh no you don’t

1 02 2019

Comanche

Comanche has his eyes on a young stallion at the edge of comfort. He looks all handsome … but there’s steel in that look!





Glow in the snow

31 01 2019

Chipeta; La Sal Mountains

Chipeta shines. 🙂





Lovely

29 01 2019

Maia

Maia stands pretty as a picture with the south wall of Spring Creek canyon visible in the background.

The snow is melting fast, but in a week, we have a week’s worth of rain (!) chances in the forecast.





Snow white

28 01 2019

Piedra

Pure as the driven snow, Miss Piedra. 🙂

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Out here, government employees aren’t nameless and faceless, one or more of the 800,000 workers adversely affected by the government shutdown. They’re our partners, they’re members of our communities. They visit our local farmers markets, and their kids and our kids are classmates. We work together for common goals.

Yesterday, as I was driving out of Spring Creek Basin, our lead BLM law-enforcement ranger, Tyler, was headed into the basin, in uniform and driving his BLM vehicle. He and his law-enforcement fellows have been required to be on the job – without pay – but I know him and others like him well enough to know that it is at least moral duty, not simply required duty. It’s a duty to protect the resources of our local community, which, in our case (as in most across the West), is large, wide and sprawling, not easily connected.

And yet, on the Sunday before government resumes operations, Tyler was in Disappointment Valley, headed toward Spring Creek Basin, checking on our mustangs and the range that sustains them.

We ARE connected. And we’re grateful for our neighbors. We hope the (temporary) return to business is for the good of all our government-employed neighbors.





Squinty

27 01 2019

Kwana and Puzzle

All the horses have been a little narrow-eyed lately with the bright sunlight on the pristine snow. Even humans keep the shades on during these bright winter days!





Two good girls

26 01 2019

Temple and Madison; Filly Peak

In the great white winter expanse, these two girls are beautiful girls. 🙂





Hill with a view

25 01 2019

Mariah

Mariah has quite a view from the north hills of Spring Creek Basin.