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

Pan Phillips & Rich Hobson (Hobson books)

Help Support Ranchers.net:

Jigger Boss

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 18, 2007
Messages
1,183
Reaction score
0
Location
Lakes District, BC
For Tap & Nicky and anyone else that were asking about the "Home Ranch" , Pan Phillips and the Hobson books.
Now you can ask your questions :D . I see my neighbour has now joined us here at ranchers :wink: :clap: .
George has a bit of a history being at that ranch and knowing some of the characters in the Hobson books.
Welcome to Ranchers George!! :) Glad you made it. Is it possible to get Pan's daughter here too?
 
Tap said:
That would be great to get Pan's daughter here. Howdy George!

Those are 3 of my all time favorite books for sure.

Ditto for me too!! Well I'm still waiting for the last one...don't know how I went so long without reading them.

My first question is who owns the ranch now, and how much of it do they still have?
 
Sorry guys, I guess I should have started this thread after the new year.
I'm sure George left today for his christmas holiday in Mexico. He may... or may not check in during his holiday, but he will be back.
But in the mean time for those that are not familiar with the Hobson books, I've found some 'stories' from them. They are in no particular order. I'll post some everyday.

Pan and Rich
Disaster strikes. When Pan and Rich left their old foreman and the head of the Frontier Company that comprised investors in the huge ranch discovered by the two men, it was with the knowledge that they were now taking full responsibility for the ranch and the cattle and horses on it. Otherwise, the investors would have demanded all livestock be moved to the railyard at Vanderhoof and on to Vancouver.
Both Pan and Rich were savvy cowmen and more than aware that the war would eventually bring high prices for the cattle on the ranch. They just had to get past the hurdle of abandoned hay crops, no men, and no more money injected into the ranch. They stubbornly took that obligation on and headed for the ranch of an equally stubborn man that always had an abundance of hay taken off nearly 4000 acres of meadowland near his homestead. They struck a deal for him to feed 300 hundred head of their cattle, sealed the deal with some good rum and went to bed. They woke to an early snow with over a foot on the ground and more falling steadily. Not only did their host not have his cattle in off the range, but neither did they. They divided pack horses and went their respective ways. Pan to the Home Ranch to gather cattle and Rich to the Batnuni Ranch to gather cattle both to come to their hayman's place, and others to be farmed out to Nazko Indians that had lots of hay put up. Some cattle would be left at Batnuni where the range herd of horses could keep the snow pawed out for a few hundred cattle for the winter and the little hay that was put up before the war started would supplement them.
The huge enterprise located by Pan Phillips and Rich Hobson as described in "Grass Beyond The Mountains" and controlled by the Frontier Company was so large a tract of land that it had to be divided into several different 'ranches' with corrals, bunkhouses and hayland for each making it a more workable enterprise and with most layups being no more than 40 miles and up to 100 miles apart. But on horseback...that was still a long way.
The first thing Rich came upon on arriving at Batnuni after days of wading through snow were cattle dying and staggering around after eating poison hemlock brought up from the creek bottom by ice. The cattle had eaten their pasture down to nothing and were starving and so ate anything in their path, even if it was killing them. Rich finally managed to get the cattle away from the creek only with the help of surprise visitors, an Indian man and his wife that agreed to stay on and help drive the several hundred head of cattle on to the hayman's place. The drive would be through deep snow with no food for the cattle...and that was only the beginning.
As Rich says "Had I known what that winter would bring and what we were getting into...I would never have done it.."
 
Hi, I have no idea what I am doing, or even on the right page..if so, Hello...and yes Kim, I leave for mexico tomorrow. I will contact Diana, Pan's daughter and ask her if she wants to sign on.

I bought the guiding area off of Pan(indirectly) back in about 79. I think he passed away in 82 or something. I remember the day and the moment I got the phone call from his son Ken, but not the year. He was a character even in his last years. I got along very well with him. There is another book written about Pan, by Jack and Darlene Brown. I think it is back in print now. Diana will know how to get it.

Anyway, enough for now...have to rest up for my trip to sun-surf-sand and maybe some tequila..George..will be on line while in Mx..
 
Have good trip G. Pop in when you can. :)


Here's the 'blurb' for today.

The Brutal Winter Drive

The adventures of Pan Phillips and Rich Hobson in Chilcotin Country continues. With the help of the two natives, Rich gets the herd to the hayman's and arranges for a man to feed them through the winter. Now he has to return to Batnuni to gather another three hundred head of cattle to be moved to Pan Meadow and Lashaway's, two months later in the season than cattle would normally be moved. On his way back, a stranger enters his camp and agrees to cowpunch for him for the winter. With willing men in such short supply, this is a godsend indeed! Rich and the new fellow get to Batnuni where with the help of a few others, gather up the cattle, sleighs and fifty head of horses that will beat down the two feet of snow for the cattle, leaving a passable trail and pawed up feed for the animals following. It would take careful planning and much forethought to prepare for this drive because survivability could be low for both men and herd.
In the midst of this preparation an exhausted rider arrives from the Home Ranch 110 miles away through deep snow with a scribbled note from Pan. The passes through the Itcha Mountains to Anahim Lake are plugged with snow and he's unable to get the three riders he hired in the fall to come over to help him move his herd off the Home Ranch meadows where feed was fast being depleted. His note called on Rich to loan him whatever riders he could.
On the morning of December 20, 1939, Rich and his riders woke to clear, cold 40F below zero weather and started the Batnuni herd toward Pan Meadows with the horse herd in the lead to break trail followed by the two sleighs with food and equipment and then by the herd and the cowboys.
The men drove the herd on through days of cold down to sixty below zero, and then the worst thing that could happen, did.
It began to snow with blizzard like fury and the herd was now on a little broken trail with high timber and no feed for miles. They only had made five miles that day and still had eight to go before getting on a meadow with feed and a way of holding the cattle. If they didn't make it that night, the cattle would drift into the timber and head back home, with no chance of surviving the long winter.
Exhausted men and horses pushed cattle until after midnight finally getting them to a temporary meadow where the horse herd had pounded out feed under the snow. The men sat around the fire rubbing coal oil onto badly frostbitten parts of their faces, hands and feet while the cattle in the herd, too cold to feed after awhile, spent the night walking in circles to keep from freezing to death.

"Rich Hobson's descriptions of that drive are incredibly colorful, and I believe, quite accurate. As he describes in the book, few cowboys in the Chilcotin dressed for the Arctic, and yet the Government thermometers at Redstone, between Anahim Lake and Williams Lake, often registered the lowest temperatures in North America at 70F below zero and colder. That makes the incredible drive and determination of these cowboys all the more fantastic. Never mind that Pan and Rich had an obligation to the shareholders of the Frontier Cattle Company. Their main concern was for hundreds of head of cattle that if not moved that winter because of the shortage of hay, would die of starvation. "
 
often registered the lowest temperatures in North America at 70F below zero and colder.

Now that seems awful hard to believe that a place that far south could register temps like that. Well, I guess you learn something new every day :wink:
 
Silver said:
often registered the lowest temperatures in North America at 70F below zero and colder.

Now that seems awful hard to believe that a place that far south could register temps like that. Well, I guess you learn something new every day :wink:

Well its the "government" thermometer, so that might tell ya something. :wink:
I don't know if its true or not, I wasn't there, but I've personally seen and felt -57 without the windchill at Water Valley Alberta.

Anyone want any more blurbs? yes? no?
 
Ok, here is your 'blurb' for today.

"The Rancher Takes A Wife"

This is the third in the series of books written by Rich Hobson in 1966. In the second book he relates how he kept getting these dreams about this pretty blonde girl whom he had never met. At the end of that book, he sees her picture on friend's fireplace mantle while in Vancover on business and recognizes her right away from his dreams. In the picture she is holding the halter rope of a prize Jersey bull. He finds out as much as he can about her and where she would be. She happens to be at a cattle show that very day and he rushes off to see her. The resulting meeting is hilarious but after weeks she starts to take Rich seriously and soon they are engaged.
The third book, "The Rancher Takes A Wife" describes Gloria's introduction to the Chilcotin country in the middle of winter when Rich brings his new bride home.
Because the pass through the Itcha Mountains from Anahim Lake is choked with snow and impassable in winter, they must make their way by sleigh and saddle horses 75 miles to the Batnuni Ranch from Vanderhoof in twenty below weather and Rich can only hope his new bride doesn't freeze to death before they get there.
They eventually arrive after Gloria has had the opportunity to meet some of the 'interesting' and colorful characters that inhabit the country and after she has become somewhat acclimatized, she and Rich along with a couple of other cowboys decide to make a midwinter trek to Pan Meadow to pick up some equipment. The adventures along the way are a must read, especially where they, their sleigh and a heavy team of four horses must cross the roaring Blackwater on only three inches of ice at a dead run and hope they don't fall through. The temperature on this same trip eventually drops to forty below zero and the trip becomes a deadly one.
Money from shareholders in the Frontier Cattle Company and a supply of workers had dried up to such an extent that the line cabins were no longer in use and the only operating ranches on this huge spread were the Home Ranch run by Pan Phillips and the Batnuni run by Rich. Eventually, the only way to continue operating was doing a cow share operation, and Rich and Gloria choose to buy their own spread to run Frontier cattle on.
The one they choose is a beautiful creek fed basin surrounded by high rimrock but the ranch buildings and surrounding yard are in horrific condition.
Gloria does a good job of rolling her sleeves up and jumping into ranch life, however, there are many occasions when she nearly gets herself killed because of a stubborn will and her refusal to listen to Rich in an emergency.
 
'blurb for today'


The Contraption

Rich Hobson and Gloria visit Pan Phillips and his new wife Betty on the Home Ranch about 40 miles north of Anahim Lake.
The spring before Pan had shown up to see Rich and meet Gloria after a 200 mile ride in from his ranch. He and Rich had a lot of business to go over, including the lease of 250 head of Frontier cattle from the Home Ranch to Rich's new Rimrock Ranch to be moved in the fall. Rich had already purchased 60 head of Frontier owned cattle from the Batnuni Ranch the previous fall. It was early in the summer when Pan sent a note over the mountains to Rich telling him he had gotten married and to bring Gloria over to meet Betty when they went to the Home Ranch to cut out the 250 head of lease animals from the big herd.
The visit went pleasantly enough with Gloria and Betty really enjoying each other's company. One nice day the four saddled up to go for a ride out to the huge, lush meadows because Rich wanted to show Gloria the improvements he and Pan had made ten years before.
Where once there had been eight foot high willow brush, hard topped hummocks and deep holes, there were now miles of lush green grassy meadow for cattle hay.
Pan explained to the women how he and Lester Dorsey of Anahim Lake built a monstrous harrow to be dragged across the bush and hummocks to knock them down.
The Chilcotin type meadow is usually surrounded by heavy willow on the edges and into the middle anywhere the land is slightly higher. Where the land is lowest, there is boggy black soil, water, and sometimes grey muskeg. The rest of the meadow is made up of hummocks and they have to be the most frustrating creation ever. Hummocks can be one to three feet high and vary in size from little tiny six inch ones to four feet across. They have rounded tops with slippery saw grass growing out of the top and stepping from one to the next is a nasty proposition because you will slip. There's no maybe. It's a guarantee that you might make it across four hummocks, but you will soon slip off into the watery muck below, or if late in fall, dried muck. I don't know how hummocks are created, but you can't mow hay off a meadow like that, you can't even walk across it and it's difficult even for cattle to feed on them. But if you can flatten that meadow out, burn it off in spring, ditch it for flooding in early summer and draining later, you will have some of the finest quality hay and grazing grass in North America.
Pan and Rich had recognized this years before and so as the four rode, they eventually came upon this huge contraption that had cleared land where no tractor could ever have gone.
Pan explained that ten years before, he and Lester built a ten foot tall lookout tower of wood toward the front of this thing that would be the driver's seat. Seven hundred pounds of square iron, over a hundred pounds of bolts a flock of sharpened car springs and twelve inch squared logs made up the floor of this giant harrow.
They hooked up eighteen horses for the first time to pull it with Lester Dorsey sitting up in the tower with all these harness lines in his hands and the only way they could be started out evenly was for the boys to shoot off their pistols and bang on tin cans.
The result was disasterous and Pan's face took on a deeply sad look as he related the story to the wives.
Someone had pulled the king pin out of the contraption so that the horses, five gentle horses on the outsides and thirteen unbroken broncs in the middle, suddenly parted company with the harrow. As they took off, Lester tried to throw the lines down to Pan who missed them as the horses banged into each other on a terrified run across the meadow. Two of their best pulling horses landed in a tangle in a gully with broken legs and had to be shot.
Lester was determined to try again, and this time they hooked up sixteen horses, eight abreast in two rows with the gentle harness horses on the outside, and the jumping broncs in the middle. More noise, and the huge team exploded out into the field with Lester swaying and rocking ten feet above the contraption, harness lines in hand and brush flying in all directions. As Pan said, he still doesn't know how Lester stuck with the tower because it was like riding a bronc. Eventually Lester got the team turned, stopped for a 10 minute breather, then shot his pistol in the air and they were off again creating another wide swath in the meadow.
Pan said they needed 32 sets of harness to keep two teams of sixteen alternating on the harrow all summer, but it worked.
An eight horse team pulling a ditch digger put the irrigation ditch in the middle of the meadow and a giant heavy duty disc built by Massey-Harris just for them took another fourteen horses to pull it about what had previously been a willow jungle. The meadow was leveled and finished off by a huge spruce tree float that required ten horses to pull it. By the end of the summer, flat, clear ground ran for as far as the eye could see.
As they ride on through the meadow they first scare up a small herd of moose, then later a grizzly bear sow and cubs. Betty states then how much she dislikes them and in her isolated home some while later, it would turn out she would have a terrible run in with grizzly.
As Rich and Gloria leave the Home Ranch to go back to Rimrock Ranch, Gloria has a premonition that something terrible is going to happen to Pan and Betty at their ranch, 200 miles from the nearest small town and the most isolated cattle ranch operation in North America at that time.
 
Disaster At The Home Ranch
Back to Rich Hobson's final book where Gloria's premonition about the Home Ranch comes true. During the vicious Arctic blizzards of the winter of 1947/1948 bodies at the Home Ranch consisted of Pan, his wife Betty, two small children and their fifteen year old hired hand, Shag. Pan had been feeding cattle about three miles from home near the stackyards and on one of his outings he found a partially eaten heifer killed by wolves. Over the days, as the blizzards raged on, Pan could no longer buck the growing drifts with a team and wagon to the feeding grounds. The only thing for it was for Pan to saddle up a good strong horse, buck his way around the worst of the drifts to get to the cattle, throw them hay over the fence, open up their water holes and set traps around the slain heifer for the wolves.
The only problem with the whole plan was that Pan chose his big stallion, Wang Leather for the job, and he'd only been ridden three times before in the breaking pen. But Pan decided he would be big enough, and strong enough, to break through the drifts.
On the third large plunge across the drifts the heavy wolf traps slung from the saddle horn slapped Wang Leather in the shoulder and the horse folded in the middle and started bucking hard. The first time the traps arced around they hit Pan in the midsection with an impact so hard blood spurted from his nose and ears. As the horse jumped a second time the heavy traps hit him in the stomach agian with as much force as the first time and before blacking out, he freed himself from the stirrups before the horse could drag Pan to his death.
The weather finally calmed, the thermometer began to plummet and Pan lay freezing to death in a pool of his own blood. Finally, Betty and Shag came with a horse pulling a travois, bucking through the hole in the drifts broken open by Wang on his return to the barn with a beaten up and empty saddle.
For ten days Pan lay at the ranch house in the gravest of danger, his stomach distended with blood, his hips and back a painful mess.
The weather finally cleared enough for Shag to ride the big stallion, Wang Leather around the Ulgatchez Mountains (then known as the Algaks) to where someone could call in a rescue plane on skiis to pick up Pan. Shag embarked on an incredibly heroic ride of seventy five miles to Anahim Lake over a little marked trail through deep snow, hard snow drifts, dark woods and across icy lakes in twenty four hours, more than half of that time in the dark of night.
When Pan finally arrived at hospital he was told that aside from internal injuries, his pelvis was split over an inch apart, the muscles had been torn from his hips, and if all went well, he might heal up well enough to walk in about nine months and someday he might actually ride a gentle horse. Of course Pan was having none of this.
He was rigged up in traction and it didn't take him long to decide he didn't need to be in traction at the hospital if he could rig up the same thing at home. He left the hospital in a few weeks and eventually mended enough to get around on crutches sometimes, and the rest of the time still used the traction at home following the doctor's blueprint to mend himself.
In the meanwhile, Betty did an incredible job of holding the ranch together, feeding and moving cattle into the grizzly infested summer range in the Itcha Mountains, getting in hay, firewood, and killing a moose for the larder. In September of 1948, nine months after Pan's accident she drove her children and crippled husband, who lay in the back of a wagon, the 200 miles to Quesnel for a check up with the doctor.
Surprisingly, Pan was healing well but the doctor told him he was still taking a chance of being crippled for life if he didn't go to Vancouver for some operations. Pan refused of course and was riding in the wagon when they returned to the Home Ranch. It was on this homeward trail that Betty ran into the grizzlies.
 
Betty's Grizzlies

This is about Betty's run-in with the grizzlies at the Home Ranch. Betty was driving home to the ranch with their two young children while Pan lay in the back of the wagon. They had been on the trail for ten days and were only four miles out from the ranch house when Pan suggested Betty hop a horse and ride on to the house to get the fires started. The team knew its way and would not sway from the trail home. This way the house would be on its way to warm by the time the wagon with the two children and Pan arrived.
They had been away for six weeks when Betty arrived at the ranch and her old saddle horse began shying away and snorting so she tied him up in the barn and threw some hay to him. She started the two hundred yard walk to the house when a feeling of uneasiness came over her and she could hear growling and crunching sounds from the ranch yard. Suddenly, a bear not forty feet in front of her stuck it's head out of a row of bushes, sniffed then turned around to return to the yard. Betty turned to dash back to the barn when another, smaller grizzly broke out of the bush and made its way toward the barn and the horse tied in there. Betty knew she needed to get to the ranch house and angled toward it as she heard yet another large body crash through the bush. She made it to the four foot high picket fence that surrounded her yard and stifled a scream as she saw the remains of a dead horse scattered over her front yard and two large grizzlies snoozing on her front porch in the sun, while four more bears tore and knawed at the remains of the horse.
Terror came knocking when Betty realized her crippled husband and children would be arriving at the ranch house with the rifle tucked away out of reach under the bedroll, and not have a clue what was before them. She realized she would have to walk past the grizzlies to warn her husband and children up the wagon road. As she tried to ease up the road the first hundred yards seemed like the longest in history and as she went, another grizzly came swinging down along the wagon trail. She beat a path off the road and he passed without paying attention to her, more concerned about the scent of shredded horse meat in his nostrils.
Betty finally met the oncoming wagon and shouted a warning to Pan. He had her climb up and hold the horses with a death grip while they pounded into the ranch yard, he ready with the old 30.06 rifle and his six gun. Shots wouldn't scare four of the bears away, determined to stay with their abundant supper, so Pan was forced to shoot them. As he said, he hated to do it but they were determined to stay, and he couldn't get into his own home until they were gone. All in all, there were twelve grizzlies that they saw for sure.
 
This will be the last 'blurb'. Now you'll have to go get the books. :)
Maybe when George gets back he'll post some pictures of the "Home Ranch"

The Flood

The years 1947/1948 were arctic blizzard and flood years. According to Rich Hobson in his third book "The Rancher Takes A Wife", he was told the weird weather had to do with the dropping of the atomic bomb on Hiroshima that created extra dust in the air and changed weather patterns. Who knows? Maybe it's true.
In July of '47 Gloria received a message that her aunt living in Vancouver was terribly sick and Gloria left Rimrock Ranch to rush to the woman's side.
Late in the afternoon after Gloria left, Rich noticed ominous clouds building up, turning day into night and and blinding flash after flash of lightning heralded an unbelievable downpour that lasted all evening and until daylight the next morning. The Rimrock crews had just begun haying a luscious crop to carry cattle and horses through the coming winter, so there were two cowhands on the place, one in the bunkhouse with his family, a 'confused' lady cook, and Rich.
They woke the morning after the storm to find the ranch house standing alone above a rushing torrent of water six feet deep.
As Rich watched, he could see his fence posts, uprooted trees and his hay rolling past in the water. He lost his entire crop, both haystacks and hay that had not yet been cut.
The only other things Rich could see in his line of sight besides roiling water were the stables with milk cows trapped inside and a few young calves perched precariously on top of some manure piles.
The cowboy with his family in the bunkhouse rowed over in a wooden dinghy to the main ranch house standing only eight inches above the muddy, still rising water, to inform Rich that his own family was ok and the bunkhouse was still over a foot above water, and then rowed the boat with cowboys in relay to rescue the stranded calves. The calves went into the kitchen of the ranch house while a stranded wrangle mare was put out in the glassed in front porch with some hay. The rest of the horses and cattle had stampeded to the woods and higher ground the night before after a few loud crashes of thunder, and other than a couple of bloated cows that floated past the ranch house the first day, it was some time before they saw the herd again.
The cowboys gathered up a couple of the milk cow's calves and hauled them in the boat to the far Rimrock side hill where one of them held the bawling calves. The milk cows were then let out of the barn sitting in rising water to swim for their calves.
A remarkable scene ensued the following morning when everyone watches as Rich's St. Bernard cross pup swims from the barn yard to the front porch where he deposited the small form he held in his mouth. It was a tiny kitten from a litter born not long before to Rich's pet cat that had taken up residence in a now completely submerged calf shed, and it was still alive. The dog swam back again from the barn yard with another small form, this one no longer alive. The dog continued swimming back and forth between barn and ranch house until he brought six tiny kittens over, three of which lived. A little later everyone turned to see the mother cat dripping wet and purring over her three remaining kittens. No one new if the dog had brought the full grown cat over or not.
The dog had just fathered pups of his own shortly before the flood and the ranch house was beginning to smell and look like a zoo, with three calves, a mare, three dogs, four pups, two cats, three kittens and the mix of humans stuffed into the house.
The water had risen to lay a half inch on the porch floor but had remained stable most of the day and now looked like it might begin receding. Rich Hobson looked out on his Rimrock Ranch and could only be glad that Gloria wasn't there to see their ranch devastated and the probable stock losses.
The remainder of the story about the flood is quite funny in places, especially when Rich's brother arrives with two other friends at the ranch in a car and proceeds to drive into the six foot deep lake now surrounding the ranch because he was busy talking after sharing a bottle of scotch with his friends and not paying attention to what was up ahead of him.
That devastating summer is followed by a killing winter with blizzard after blizzard and temperatures that often held at fifty below zero. Somehow, like many frontier pioneers, Rich and Gloria continued slogging through horrendous temperatures, weather, bad luck, and horrible conditions year after year. They faced their losses with wit and the sheer determination to succeed in their dreams.
 
The Brutal Winter Drive

... yet the Government thermometers at Redstone, between Anahim Lake and Williams Lake, often registered the lowest temperatures in North America at 70F below zero and colder ...

In the mid 1960s I went to high school in Vanderhoof, where Rich had his "place in town". I recall it reaching 63 below - so 70 below in Redstone isn't that much of a stretch. [ That being said, in case you don't yet believe in global warming, my high school classmates say that these days it seldon gets colder than 40 below. ]
In passing, my dad and my brother were good friends with Rich. Rich's will left a large number of the books from his personal library to my dad. The will supposedly said "because Pete Redding is the only son of a [expletive deleted] in this town that would appreciate them". My brother was a high school classmate of Rich's daughter Cathy and delivered Rich's newspaper. At the end of the month, when my brother did "collections", my brother and Rich would go down to Rich's basement and lift weights.
Rich tried to get John Wayne to make a movie of Grass Beyond the Mountains. Around 1964 or 1965, my stepmother catered an event at Rimrock Ranch when Rich hosted John Wayne and entourage.
A high school classmate of mine started a Hobson museum in Vanderhoof.
Go to http://hobsonhistorymuseum.com
 

Latest posts

Top