• If you are having problems logging in please use the Contact Us in the lower right hand corner of the forum page for assistance.

Daughter's Horse!!!

Juan, you are 77 years old and you are on here with us?
Good for you!!!

I wish you could type with more than one finger too, you probably have more dandy stories to share with us. Loved this one that you just posted. Should have happened more often!!

Do take the time to post more stories!!

Have a great dayyyyyyyyyyyyyy!!
 
I say "out" every sorry and dishonest horseman out there. Reputation needs to be everything. I do appreciate that most of the stories allow the seller to be contacted to make it right, but if they don't, OUT THEM. The internet is a great tool for this.

This would let the honest guys make more,
 
Thank you F.H.
Someday I may get the "Better Half" to type up some.
I have heard many a good tale from some of the OLD TIMERS and if not told they will be lost.I feel so sorry for all those that did not grow up in our environment.When things get bad just think about yesterday and look toward tomorrow.
 
Juan, I liked your horse-trader turned sheepherder story. Keep 'em coming. Wish you lived closer to this area. My dad has been interviewing some of the old-timers around here, and writing down their stories. He is a pretty good typer, and can type about as fast as they can talk. These stories are invaluable for future generations.

Sweet talk your wife into compiling your stories and making a book. Put me on your list, and I'll sure buy a copy (if you autograph it :-) ).
 
Hear You Soapweed...With a little help I may be able to write like you.(well maybe more than a little)I'll be looking for some of your Dad's stories.Any suggestions?
By the way I see your sirname in a phone book,around Enning SD.Any relative?
 
Real Jake, I didn't buy the horses, someone who knows horses pretty well bought these two and he got suckered good. I don't buy horses, people don't train them the way I want. I think more good horses get a bad name as they are trained with leg pressure and good hands, then someone buys them and jerks on their heads, uses way too much spur and wonders why they find themselves sitting on the ground. So does these lady do this all the time that you know of her?
 
As far as I know, we don't have any relatives around Enning, SD, and I've never had the opportunity to meet those folks. My granddad was born in 1895, and grew up on his parents' ranch in southwestern Nebraska, near Imperial. He came up to Merriman to teach school in the late 'teens, and met my grandmother-to-be. After they got married, they ranched at Imperial for a year or so. Then they bought a small farm east of Martin, SD. When they moved back to this country, he and a hired hand drove six horses pulling a hayrack loaded with all of their worldly possessions. This was a trip of over 200 miles and took about ten days. My grandmother made the trip by automobile.

When they farmed east of Martin, my granddad was also the county superintendent of the Bennett County schools. He was instrumental in starting the Bennett County High School, located in Martin, and patterned it after a similar situation in southern Nebraska, where his sister was county superintendent of schools. While living on the farm, their house burned down one bitter cold day when the fire in the stove was roaring rampantly. This probably contributed to Granddad later leasing a ranch further south in the South Dakota sandhills. Later they had opportunity to buy a small ranch further south in the Nebraska Sandhills. Our families have been in this area ever since.

On my grandmother's side of the pedigee, her dad and three of his brothers came to Valentine in 1885, when that was the end of the railroad. The four brothers walked out into this area and established homesteads. They didn't keep the original homesteads for too many years, but traded for other nearby ranches. Descendants of just the one brother still live in this area.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top