
Pretty, pretty Juniper … so perfectly, beautifully at home on her range.

Pretty, pretty Juniper … so perfectly, beautifully at home on her range.

Grey Storm was born nearly as red as those claret cup cacti blooms. 🙂
Here he’s investigating an intruder while the pintos graze in the background.

Handsome pony … stunning view of McKenna Peak and Temple Butte across Spring Creek Basin.
Yep, must be mustang country.
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Happy post-Memorial Day! Thanks to our vets for your service!

Lovely Tesora shines against Knife Edge, lit up by the setting sun. Check out that wind knot! Pretty impressive for a little girl. 🙂

Soft and prickly – (part of) the beauty of nature’s deserts. 🙂 Claret cup cacti are among my favorites.

Ever vigilant, Storm guards his family from all intruders – even little ones.
I was just walking along when …

This pronghorn buck was napping when I crested a little hill and saw him. He stood up, and I stood still. Apparently, he didn’t detect a threat, so he laid back down.

Note: All the little red bits are blooms of claret cup cacti, which seem particularly spectacular – and prolific – this year.

These photos all are significantly cropped. Pronghorns are much warier of intrusions by two-legged intruders than the mustangs. 🙂
Interesting trivia:
They’re the fastest North American land mammal – actually, the fastest in the entire Western Hemisphere, according to Wikipedia.
Wyomingites call pronghorns “speed goats.”
Pronghorns are not antelope, which is why it’s correct to call them pronghorns (pronghorn/pronghorns for plural animals? that’s one I’m not sure about).
Pronghorns prefer crawling under fences to jumping over them, which is why wildlife-friendly fencing that takes elk calves and deer fawns into consideration also considers this knowledge about pronghorn behavior – stringing the lowest wire strand at least 18 inches off the ground.
Pronghorns aren’t currently hunted in Disappointment Valley because their population is low (likely *because of* previous hunting). They seem to be working toward recovery because while they’re infrequently seen, they ARE seen.
Visit Wikipedia for more information about these cool mammals.
A fantastic book (thanks, David Temple!) is Built for Speed: A Year in the Life of Pronghorn.

Ty seems to be asking Tesora for some help with the gnats. The blasted (and blasting) wind is a big help to keep them at bay, but they’re still aggravating little buggers.

Chrome in all his wild handsomeness, right down to his sweet little mustachio and chewing on a sprig of grass!

Young stallion Tenaz takes his duties very seriously. Elder Bounce seems to just want some company.