
Do you love that face? What’s not to love?!
Temple Butte, of course, is always gorgeous when it plays backdrop to one of our stunning mustangs … in this case, Storm.

Do you love that face? What’s not to love?!
Temple Butte, of course, is always gorgeous when it plays backdrop to one of our stunning mustangs … in this case, Storm.

Can’t go wrong with mustangs, water and that amazing skyline in Spring Creek Basin. 🙂
McKenna Peak is the sunlit pyramid at left, and Temple Butte is in the shade at right. Spirit and Puzzle are the spotted girls in the foreground.

Happy St. Patrick’s Day from a not-so-green corner of the world!
Bits of green are appearing, but you have to look close and hard to see them.
Comanche isn’t too worried. Mother Nature provides for her creatures. (Only humans worry about it?!)

And who wouldn’t smile, to be on a good horse, packing good mules in Spring Creek Basin, Southwest Colorado, on a gorgeous spring day?!
Katy Bartzokis (above) and Glenn Ryan and their horses and mules were back to haul more fencing supplies into the basin for future work, and we had more help in the form of Mike Schmidt and Keith Fox, who came to help Kathe Hayes and Kat Wilder.
So many photo opportunities … so little time to actually peruse the images and select ones for publication! And we welcome Glenn and Katy, Sly and Karmel, and Joey, Karla, Lena, Roz and Skid back tomorrow for another few trips into the wilderness (McKenna Peak Wilderness Study Area, that is). (So someone has to get to bed!)
Locals: Glenn (and Katy?) will be at the Ag Expo at the Montezuma County Fairgrounds this weekend with the mules and horses that made this project happen. If you go, please stop by and heap thanks upon them for helping our beloved Spring Creek Basin mustangs. Their work will enable us to rebuild fence sections without having to carry in hundreds of pounds (1,000 or more? we should add it all up!) of materials. Just one wooden post for an H-brace weighs 50-some pounds.
Many, many thanks!!




Spring Creek Basin herd manager Mike Jensen leads Katy Bartzokis (BLM) and Glenn Ryan (Forest Service) and their mules to a drop site with fence materials for some upcoming projects – including alternative spring break!
We are so stoked to work with the Rocky Mountain Regional Specialty Packstring to get these supplies hauled into the basin by mule power!
This project is completely possible because of some big “horse” power, so BIG thanks to awesome mules Joey, Karla, Lena, Roz and Skid, and saddle horses Karmel and Sly. 🙂
And extended thanks to San Juan Mountains Association’s volunteer coordinator Kathe Hayes, who heads alternative spring break each year; Justin Hunt, BLM range tech; and tireless advocate Kat Wilder.







But it wasn’t always that way.
Hollywood is Tenaz’s daddy. One wonders what bit of fatherly advice he might be giving his son. 🙂


Not many words needed for these images, either. That’s a rainbow right over Temple Butte, guardian of Spring Creek Basin’s southeastern boundary … but as prominent as it is, ALL of Spring Creek Basin.
It has been four years (and a few weeks) since Pati Temple passed away. We miss her every day. And we feel her with us every single day.

What’s not to love about a gorgeous mustang who reflects her stunning home range … right down to the bits of mud that are reminiscent of the bits of snow still clinging to the edges of erosion-rilled flanks of Temple Butte and McKenna Peak?
Fortunately for us, there’s absolutely everything to love about all of it. 🙂



I couldn’t choose. 🙂
There’s magic in them thar hills.
Temple Butte itself isn’t in Spring Creek Basin; it’s just outside our southeastern boundary. The foreground in these photos IS Spring Creek Basin. The southeastern and eastern parts of Spring Creek Basin Herd Management Area also are part of McKenna Peak Wilderness Study Area – which also extends to the east beyond Spring Creek Basin. (Note: McKenna Peak also is just outside the basin, and it’s visible from this vantage, to the left. With my long lens, I couldn’t fit them both in the confines of one photo – and it was more wreathed in snow-mist. :))

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.