Family, complete

19 09 2012

With mama and daddy and “auntie,” life is good for the littlest.

Chrome, Kwana, Terra and Winona at home on the range.





Little blue eyes

15 09 2012

Coming up with a mustang baby’s name has never been so difficult – or seemed so important.

I wanted to choose a name for this colt that reflects his heritage as the grandson of our marvelous stallion, Grey/Traveler, this home he was born to, Spring Creek Basin, Colorado, and the legacy he has inherited.

Grey Eagle was the sire of Gen. Robert E. Lee’s famous war horse, Traveller. That might be swapping things around a bit, but because Traveller was gelded, he left no offspring. Eagles – both golden and bald – can be seen here (infrequently, though a couple of Forest Service folks were here in late winter to count them and check nesting sites, and I have seen raptors of both species in the sky and on land – and fence wire). A terrific, family-published book, Where Eagles Winter, by Wilma Bankston, paints a fascinating history of Disappointment Valley and the surrounding region. The Utes traditionally hunted and traveled this land, and knew it more intimately than we ever can.

The Ute word for eagle is kwana (kwah-nah).

He may be somewhat lacking in fierceness at this tender age, but little Kwana has some big hoofprints to fill.

And he’s going to turn grey. 🙂





Smooches from mama

14 09 2012

They’re the best!

Little blue eyes is doing well, but he had a bit of a cough and a bloody nose. Daddy Chrome also had a cough. I don’t very often hear the horses coughing. Will keep an eye on the little mister, but hopefully it’s just a case of a “boy being a boy.”





Dream land

3 09 2012

And we get to visit it wide awake. 🙂





Terra has a baby

27 08 2012

It’s official: Terra is a mama! You all can say you told me so. 🙂

Can you tell that he has blue eyes? Just like Terra when she was a baby!

He’s a colt. Bay now but will turn grey. He has a big blaze and white on all four legs – like daddy Chrome!

Daddy Chrome. The timing of baby’s birth fits. She must have conceived immediately after Chrome acquired her and Winona after the roundup last year. (That’s one of the basin’s boundary fences in the background.)

The rest of his family: “Auntie” Winona checks out the little mister while he’s down for a nap. She is staying close to the new mama and baby.

New mama with her baby boy.

A storm was trying to move through, so I got sunshine and shade. The light was fantastic.

Love.

Worth mentioning: Grey/Traveler, Terra’s daddy, is granddaddy. He surely is a grandpa many times over, but this baby is the first I can confirm. A legacy worth preserving!





Terra

13 08 2012

Pic taken yesterday of Miss Terra:

End of the month? September? OK, OK, I think we’re expecting. 🙂





Terra and the belly saga

28 07 2012

Busy, busy and rain, rain!

THREE ponds have been dug out, including the northwest pond previously featured (and it turns out that the panorama I posted earlier was NOT the finished product). There’s nothing too sexy about pix of dry, dug-out ponds, but I will tell you that the northwest, roadside and trapsite ponds all are dug out deeper now … just in time for the marvelous, glorious rain that (keeps coming today and) leaves me dancing for joy!

I am super grateful – again – to C and J from the Forest Service (Dolores and Durango offices) for doing such a fantastic job with those ponds!

And now, on to Terra. A friend and I were in the basin this last week and got a nice, close-up look at Chrome’s band, which were right by the road and Filly Peak as we left at sunset.

I know what you’re all going to say.

Go ahead and say it. 🙂 It’s possible that it could be probable.

Winona-girl and Chrome

Always handsome!





Advantage

20 07 2012

Chrome’s band is the only band that takes advantage of the water catchment. Not sure why this is, but I’m glad they know where the good water is!





Chrome’s band

8 07 2012

For a couple of weeks at least, I’ve had photos of Chrome’s band, hoping to have time to tweak and share. They’re usually visible very soon after entering Spring Creek Basin, and many visitors recently are familiar with them. The only pic I think I’ve managed to post is the one of Winona peeking around the tree. But a recent comment asking about Terra’s pregnancy status decided me that I’d better get some pix of these photogenic ponies posted!

As for Terra’s pregnancy status? I truly don’t know. She shouldn’t be. I hope she’s not. She looks pregnant or in very great condition. She has looked like this for months.

Chrome – as usual – was doing his very best impression of a wild stallion. Loved the light on his silver coat and the dark hills in the background.

Curious George – aka Winona – was doing her best to hog the camera.

Darling girl.

‘Nona and Terra grazing.

Oh, but you really want to see the belly, don’t you??

Vertical view.

Horizontal view.

Thoughts? From a different visit, a straight on view:

From about a week ago. Round, but not abnormally so … and certainly not enough – or little enough – or confirm – or deny! – pregnancy.

Let’s talk udders: None to speak of.

Handsome Chrome

Winona – “buckskin and blue”!

Lovely Terra. I don’t know how she can look so much like her mother – but all the best qualities and not the bold Roman outline. Must be where daddy comes in.

Walking into the sunset.

Chrome is NOT the sire if Terra is pregnant. If Terra is pregnant, Terra’s sire is the sire. Not unheard of, but you see why I hope she’s not.





Close and wide

28 06 2012

On our way out of the basin after working on the trickle, Chrome’s band blessed us with a visit right by the road. We stopped to admire, our curiosity matched by ‘Nona’s about us.

Winona and Terra

Terra and Chrome. The water catchment storage tank is visible in the middle background. Note also the cloud shadows. If it seems odd to note such “normal” shadows across the landscape, consider that our Colorado-blue skies have been nearly cloudless for nearly two months.

‘Nona walking across the road to get a better look. I took this out the passenger-side truck window. The weird vertical dark line on the left is the truck’s antenna. Isn’t she a most gorgeous creature?