Humans like to ride. They climb onto anything that can move and “go for
a ride.” Even inveterate “hikers” catch a ride to the trailhead, the
faster the better.
It begins when we’re little, with tricycles, and really never ends.
The
milk cow was one of my favorite rides when I was young. While her head
is in the stanchion and she’s busy eating, a kid sitting on her back is
a minor aggravation.
After a few days she’s sorta used to it, and
you can stay on after her head comes out of the stanchion and she walks
around the corral. We called that “breaking her to ride.”
The
milk pen calf, of course, was handy — in the pen all day — so he got
ridden most every day. By the time he got weaning age, though, he’d
figured out how to get rid of us fairly often.
My next favorite
— besides the horses — was a mule. He was saddle broke, but if we were
in a hurry we could forget it. If he didn’t care to go right then, he’d
just ignore all our kicking and spurring.
One day my brother
and I caught him in a good mood, and he took off in a long trot. There
was only one problem. We forgot to hook up the britchen strap from the
saddle around his rear end, so he dumped us over his neck, saddle and
all.
Mules, unlike horses, don’t have enough withers to hold a
saddle in place. We never forgot that again. He was smart, so I figured
his unusual eagerness to go had something to do with our forgetfulness.
My
least favorite was a really big old sow. She had the run of the horse
pasture outside the corrals along with most anyplace else she wanted to
go. We tried our riding skills on her many times, and got fairly good
at it.
Kids like to show off, you know, so when our cousins came
to visit we couldn’t wait to demonstrate our riding expertise on that
old sow. Soon as I got on she squealed — really loud — and headed for a
piñon tree. After she drug me off, the old biddy stood there snuffling
at me as if to say, “Wanta try it again, smart britches?”
I didn’t. I also didn’t give a dang if my “tough girl” image was ruined. I was in pain.
Once
I was photographing a Cattleman of the Year. We’d had a snowstorm and
his horses were out in the pasture, but he had an even better setting
in mind — a young pine tree overlooking a picturesque valley. It was
about half a mile from the house and the snow was only about 4 inches
deep, so I suggested we just walk over there.
He looked at me as
if I’d fallen out of a tree, and started up his 4-wheel drive pickup.
As we made our way to the photo spot, he said, “I’d rather ride.”
I’d forgotten for a minute that cowboys don’t walk.
Glenda Price has been a contributing editor to New Mexico Stockman magazine since 1982. Contact her:
glendaprice00@comcast.net
Cowboys like to ride
Published: Tuesday, June 3rd, 2008
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