Daddy daughter dance

26 02 2011

Some of my favorite moments in visiting the horses come when the adults have close, quiet moments with the youngsters. That these beings are so closely bonded with their family members is obvious in such an intimate way, and I love to witness and share these moments. These are some of my favorite images of that entire remarkable, beautiful day:

Winona peeking around Comanche’s tail.

Comanche and ‘Nona and mama Kestrel.

She loves her mama Kestrel, of course.

She adores stepdaddy Comanche …

… and I think it’s pretty plain that he adores her, too.

We have such a romantic vision of these horses … mustangs of the Wild West … How they’re portrayed in novels, in Hollywood movies … Reality is far more powerful, I think. In all their muddy-from-snowmelt glory … this is how they are. This is the life they lead. What would *they* tell us if they could?

These are the phenomenal, close, intimate, beautiful bonds they share. They depend on each other, rely on each other – Kestrel and Winona saw me first, Comanche saw them alert, looked to them, then looked where they looked, saw me a hill away – spend every moment together, eating, napping, playing, fighting, breeding, in curiosity, in fear, in bravery. Their language is richer than we could ever imagine, maybe than we can ever fully comprehend. Much to admire, much to aspire to in their behavior toward each other. We humans have not a fraction of their grace upon this Earth.





Random happiness

23 02 2011

Life got in the way of me posting yesterday (though I started one), so I didn’t quite make good on my promise to post every day for a week. The snow-weather that prevented weekend visits has given way to warm and wet (melting) weather now, so a visit to the basin this week may not be in my cards. The good news is I have a lot more photos from last week’s visit!

Here are some random images from the day that don’t necessarily fit into a “category” … they just are as they are.

Tenaz checks out some tasty morsel mama Piedra seems to have found.

Kestrel protested mildly, but Winona finally got her way.

Comanche – Kestrel and Winona were just up the hill to the right.

What a … stud! 🙂 Isn’t he just wonderfully handsome?

Scenery interlude: All the near foreground is within Spring Creek Basin. The La Sal Mountains in the background are in Utah.

What caught my eye was that through-the-clouds spotlight on the mountains. A long lens is essential for photographing wildlife, and it’s also perfect for isolating parts of landscapes. The first two “layers” in the foreground are in Spring Creek Basin – the hills in front and the hills rising up behind. Then the next couple of layers are outside the basin, in Disappointment Valley. And the mountains beyond.

The entire foreground here is Spring Creek Basin.

Layers and layers of beauty

Fierro catches a snack surrounded by family – Sable just out of sight to the right.

More coming …





Some girls

20 02 2011

Can’t ignore the girls …

Iya will be 3 in late April, and I’m definitely expecting a baby out of that belly.

Iya and her best friend, Baylee. Bayles will be 4 … if she’s carrying a foal, she’s hiding it as well as Kestrel did last year.

Winona and mama Kestrel

Kestrel

Baby ‘Nona … growing up. I was looking at some older pix recently, and it’s amazing how much she looks like Kestrel when she was little. OK, probably not so amazing after all. 🙂

Sweetest.

Winona

Hannah

Ember. She wasn’t as interested in me as in continuing her nap in the sunshine.

Curious Sable

Baylee

Iya and Baylee

Piedra

Raven at sunset. Looks like she’s growing a baby, too.

More girls – and boys – coming!





The art of self-entertainment

17 01 2011

I’ve been keeping a secret that I know will shock the most steadfast readers of this blog.

I am lost to the filly Winona.

Wait, you’re NOT shocked about that?! 🙂

With her outside genetics making her valuable to the Spring Creek Basin herd, I allow myself to dream she will stay wild.

Now and then, I’ve seen the foals entertain themselves with tumbleweeds, prickly big beach balls they seem to me. They entertain themselves with each other and all manner of  exciting toys, such as sticks and stakes, branches of saltbush shrub … When I saw C/G’s photos from her New Year’s Day visit, her photo of Winona playing with a tumbleweed delighted me (with permission, I’ll post a link?), and I admit I hoped to get as lucky during a future visit.

Sure enough, toward the end of my visit with Comanche’s and Hollywood’s bands, after mama Kestrel had given young Tenaz a rather forceful “nudge” toward his own family – and after which, he (apparently) waited (?) in vain just a few feet away for Winona to rejoin him – ‘Nona found a small tumbleweed (Russian thistle, and it is the prickliest thing in the basin after the cacti and saltbush and woody parts of the greasewood) and started playing with it – completely ignoring and/or oblivious to the little guy.

The find

She has an audience

Starting to play ...

(Can you see the prickles?)

Play invitation

Sorry, lovely little, too prickly for me!

Undeterred, she continues to mouth it – against a stunning backdrop of McKenna Peak and the unnamed promontory!

Clearly enjoying … something! She was mouthing it, but she didn’t seem to have been chewing it yet.

This was my favorite – when she flipped it in the air!

Picked it up again (check out her now-snowy schnoz!)  and started walking toward me.

Sure you don't want to play?

Psych - keep-away!

And here you can see she’s mostly devoured it! She really did eat the whole thing. It brought to mind the Assateague Island ponies eating poison ivy and greenbrier. (Southern/southeastern folks probably know greenbrier? We have it in Texas – green vines that can grow and drape so thick as to be impassable – with thorns, of course!) She walked past me and then came toward my back, decided, apparently, that I was no entertainment of any good kind and continued on her way …

… joined eventually by mama Kestrel. I’ve turned around now in my seat in the snow, so this is taken in the opposite direction of the above photos – gorgeous scenery in every direction!

Babies are growing in the mamas’ bellies … This year will bring Kestrel’s second and Comanche’s first (as far as I know)! It has been warm (30s F) since my last visit to the basin, snow melting. More in the forecast. It’s only January! March is typically our snowiest month. This has been a fairly odd La Nina year … but we’re apparently right in the middle (geographically) of the “streams” that bring whichever weather, so we’ve had warm and dry AND cold and snow!

Either way, the horses are doing just fine!





Maybe …

8 01 2011

… I should do it like this …

Winona and Tenaz

… get pix up to share …

Kestrel pawing through snow

… because they’re the ones that have caught my eye …

Tenaz and daddy Hollywood

… on my first trip through the images.

To me, they speak volumes … but I started wondering, what do they mean to you?

And that led to remembering something I think one of you touched on in a recent question … that led me to wonder, just what DO you all wonder about?

What questions do you have about the horses, their home, their relationships, their history, the future I (at least) hope for them … what else?

Winona and Kestrel

What can I tell you, share with you, increase your understanding of?

Sharing winter grazing

For example, Winona and Kestrel are finding something yummy here under the snow that occupied them for a few minutes … Baby learning from mama; mama ever-so-patiently sharing whatever she had found …

… until Hollywood’s band, down the hill, caught ‘Nona’s attention, leaving mama Kestrel to finish the morsel.

Some of the horses pawed – almost all of Hollywood’s band members – but some seemed to just snuffle along with their muzzles in the snow and barely pawed at all – those in Steeldust’s band. Why?

Disclaimer: I still have as many questions as I may have answers! 🙂

But I’d like to know your thoughts and questions and topics you’d like to see addressed here. This is going to be a big year of education for us, and what better place to start than the blog? I do plan to talk more about fertility control, but feel free to ask anything.





Brilliance

7 01 2011

Really, I have no time and fewer words for the incredible beauty and magic that is the basin and its inhabitants right now.

“I am blessed” “I am blessed” “How blessed am I?”

Kept running through my head all day(s) long.

I’m working on more.

Winona

Alpha

Baylee, Sage and Hollywood

Hollywood

Winona (buckskin and blue and white)

Ice flake crystal





A boy and a girl

4 01 2011

After spending time with Chrome’s band during my last visit, I headed back to the Jeep, and found Hollywood’s and Comanche’s bands just over the hill on the other side of the road, so I mosey out to see what they were up to. As it turned out, I visited during their visit. Oh, if they could talk in language we could understand (true in many ways, eh?)!

What caught my eye was Tenaz and Winona, the 2010 babies in each band, disregarding band boundaries, playing together while their respective bands grazed – respectfully – a short distance from each other. Babies are absolutely neutral ground, and I’ve seen this again and again.

Comanche and Kestrel – Winona’s dam and stepdaddy – were up the hill to my left; Hollywood (Tenaz’s daddy), Piedra (Tenaz’s mama), Baylee (aunt), Sage (big brother) and Iya (soon-to-be producer of Sage and Tenaz’s half-brother or -sister in the spring) were down to the right. The fence you see is part of an “exclosure,” designed to help BLM monitor forage. The horses (nor cattle) can get at the forage inside, so it gives a sample of what ungrazed vegetation looks like. I’m not sure how often (or if at all?) BLM monitors the exclosures (there are a few in the basin). I like this picture – stand by for anthropomorphization: Isn’t it just like a girl to be focused elsewhere (mama and stepdaddy), and isn’t it just like a boy to be focused on the girl? 🙂

I took a seat, and pretty soon, Tenaz came trotting past on his way to mama-security …

… and ‘Nona came by for a look after checking in with her own mama.

Eventually, Comanche came to “collect” his little girl, and she walked back toward mama (grazing up the hill) … Tenaz in tow.

Oh, little boy. Oh, stallion-to-be.

Either of these foals would be a candidate to stay in the basin … Winona definitely represents outside genetics: Her grandma Luna came from Sand Wash Basin in 2001. Tenaz might represent outside genetics; I think his sire, Hollywood, is a son of grulla mare Slate, who was brought with Luna and another mare (she died the winter after the roundup – unknown cause).

We got a major Arctic blast just as I traveled back from Texas – lots of snow and subzero temperatures. A visitor to the basin New Year’s Day reports lots and lots of snow – which represents summer water. I can’t wait to get out there. From her pictures, the scenery of the basin is vastly different than when I took these pictures three weeks ago!





Happy Thanksgiving!

25 11 2010

I am so thankful for the opportunity to get to know these incredible wild creatures. They give me so much more than I could ever return.

I am thankful …

I am thankful …

I am thankful …

I am thankful …

I am thankful …

I am thankful.





Buckskin and blue

23 11 2010

Any Ian Tyson fans out there?

“We will ride to the end, on the wings of the wind, until we’re home, and our circle is through. May the children read, may they understand, what is of true value, so the truth may be known. The glory of God, and the dark side of man. The one thing, they must ride on alone. And may they stay, where the river runs through, the range and the sky, buckskin and blue. May they ride to the end, on the winds of the wind, till their home and their circle is through…” ‘Til the Circle is Through, Ian Tyson

“Buckskin and blue” started sticking in my mind after an extended autumn trip to Yellowstone country last year. The buckskin grasses of fall, waving below turquoise-blue skies brought that song back to me. And now I think of it often when I’m out with our own buckskins, under the blazing-blue sky that is the dome above Spring Creek Basin.

Do blue mountains count? This is looking too much toward sunset for the sky there to be so blue, but the snow on the La Sals carries the tones.

These buckskin girls surely count! Winona and Kestrel

Not buckskin, but I liked how Comanche’s brown-grey dappled color mimicked the colors of his snow-dotted background.

Buckskin and buckskin and saltbush and winterfat and pinon and juniper hills. Little girl in a big country.





‘Nona and fam

24 10 2010

Had to share these pix of lovely Winona. She’s such a doll – clearly pampered.

In case anyone else wondered about a comment left recently about Comanche being alone – not to fear. It was a case of mistaken identity and both horses are quite well. Comanche, Kestrel and Winona are still their tight-knit little family, and the last time I saw them, they were close to Steeldust’s band, which really is Luna’s band (!) and her hangers-on. Luna, of course, is Kestrel’s mama and baby ‘Nona’s grandmama!

Doesn’t she have the most beautiful eyes? And that early morning light is just heaven on buckskins … and duns … and greys and bays and blacks and sorrels and pintos …!

Possibly one of my all-time favorite portraits – total “glamour” shot!

Stepdaddy Comanch had quite a lead on getting to the pond for the morning drink, and baby-girl was lagging behind mama … I think they do that on purpose because I’ve seen several foals lag behind … then BURST into a gallop! They always tease mama on the way past – and mama always continues on her deliberate way – then thunder on toward daddy or the others.

Backing up …

Family portrait. There’s some grass in there, but the rain this summer had the effect of boosting the Russian thistle – tumbleweed – population this year, too. I talked to a couple of Forest Service folks a few weeks ago who were doing a plant survey in the basin, which they said is done about every five years. The notes from five years ago indicated “Russian thistle has disappeared.” Argh. Is it an indication of overgrazing, a lot of rain making EVERYTHING grow … both? I don’t know enough range ecology to know. This area has seen a fair bit of grazing because it’s fairly close to the one consistent water source – the catchment.

A little bit of “background” on the way to the pond – the La Sal Mountains of Utah at upper left, closer hills crowding into the upper Disappointment at upper right – the continuation of our north boundary hills/ridges (outside the herd area there in the photo).

The easily identifiable rimrock above Spring Creek Canyon. And bringing back the “tumbleweed” theme … Last year, I met some folks bringing their cattle down from the high country for winter pasture. The patriarch of the family rides a mustang – a Spring Creek Basin mustang – whose name is Tumbleweed. This man and Tumbleweed were at the adoption in 2007 after the roundup, riding around the fairgrounds as an ambassador for mustangs. Tumbleweed is a big boy – probably16 hands or pushing it – and has the stocky build and tremendous bone that pins him right away as an American mustang. His adopter is quite obviously proud of him. He’s about 7 now, I think, and his adopter said he really started to put on muscle – and grey out – earlier last year. When I saw him at the adoption, I remember him being very dark – like Ty. But what struck me when I saw him last fall was his incredible resemblance to Comanche – in color, certainly, but also in build/conformation and that long-long mustang stride. Just another feel-good story about someone who loves his mustang. 🙂

Kestrel was following along – slower – and Winona was behind her at this point.

The invitation to play. 🙂

And then at the pond. Mama Kestrel went right for a drink while Comanche performed the all-important survey of the perimeter, checking to see who had made a recent visit. I found it very interesting that Winona didn’t drink at the pond at all.

She played with toys found at water’s edge … she walked back and forth between Kes and Comanch …

Then it was her breakfast time after mama had drank her fill.

Comanche, meanwhile, drank and drank and drank and drank and drank. Even accounting for the fact that Kestrel started drinking immediately when she reached the water and Comanche first patrolled for stud piles, I bet he drank at least twice as long as she did. I have seen bachelors that hang on at the outskirts of a band – the Bachelor 7, when there were so many of them following Steeldust’s band – NOT drink when the band went to water because by the time the main horses had finished drinking and it was the boys’ turn, the band was leaving … and the boys didn’t want to be left behind? Even in tiny bands like Comanche’s, the stallion is more likely to drink last, and I have noticed that, all things being equal and them feeling like they have the time, they will drink like the proverbial camel while they have the opportunity. A holdover from bachelor-day habits? Mama is producing the milk … why doesn’t she drink so very long? Just something else to wonder about. 🙂

After breakfast and yes, she is grazing with the adults (but how much at this point is nibbling and how much is actual nutrition?) :

Happy baby-girl on a full stomach, skipping her way back to (step)daddy (she doesn’t know any difference).

Leaving only memories on the water as they followed Comanche off to graze.