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Photos from yesterday

Soapweed

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 11, 2005
Messages
16,264
Location
northern Nebraska Sandhills
Frostontheweed.jpg

Frost on the weed
FirstrideonGander.jpg

My new four-year-old, Gander
SoapweedonGander.jpg

Soapweed on Gander
Iwaslookingbacktosee.jpg

I was looking back to see
Thesnowisdeep.jpg

The snow is deep
SaddletrampandSoapweed.jpg

Saddletramp and Soapweed
Soapweedsandsnowandsunflowers.jpg

Soapweed, sand, snow, and sunflowers
Whowasthatmaskedhorse.jpg

Who was that masked horse
Cowpunchers.jpg

Cowpunchers--Peach Blossom is on the Goose horse
WhatsgoodfortheGooseisgoodfortheGan.jpg

What's good for the Goose is good for the Gander
Allchainedupandrootintotoot.jpg

All chained up and rootin' to toot
 
soapweed- That "Frost on the Weed" picture looks like "Old Faithful" Geyser at Yellowstone Park! I took a few pictures years ago up at about 9000 feet altitude in the Colorado Rockies of several "Cow Pies" with frost and ice on them - REAL close-ups! - and had a bunch of laughs when friends were attempting to recognize what they were! What a hoot! Had guesses all the way from Giant Flowers, to Invading Aliens to Jellyfish!

DOC HARRIS
 
Great pictures Soapweed, isn't spring supposed to be here. We'll be looking for pictures of green grass soon. You must have a broodmare band of paints hid out somewhere!
 
My dad had a cousin that just hated Paint horses. He was a rancher and good hand on a horse, but he'd have walked before he would have lowered himself to riding a paint. Guess just to be different, this brought out a strong urge in me to ride spotted horses. :wink:

My sisters and I learned to ride on a spotted mare. She was four years old when I was born, and she was a granddaughter of Gold Dollar. This Gold Dollar was one of the top sires of the Sandhills back in the 'thirties and 'forties, and it was said that more horses were sold to the military sired by Gold Dollar than from any other stallion. There were a lot of top ranch horses from him in the area, also. My granddad owned Gold Dollar at one time. The spotted mare that we rode was a great kid horse, and if a kid ever fell off, she'd stand plumb still so as not to risk stepping on the fallen kid. She was cowy and would buck the hired men off, but we kids could catch her anywhere and ride bareback to wherever we wanted to go.

In 1974, I acquired a good Paint four-year-old. He was on the thin side when I traded for him, so I turned him out for two weeks. This was a mistake, as the green grass acted like an aphrobuckziac (new word just coined for this occasion :wink: ). He took up bucking and could do a pretty fair job of it. I developed a technique that saved on wear and tear of my hide. I'd saddle him inside the barn with the door closed. Then I'd take off the halter and open the barn door in one quick motion. He bail out and buck across the corral rather rambunctiously for quite a little time, and I'd chouse him around until he quit. Then I'd put on the bridle, get on, figure eight him for a few minutes and we were ready to go. We had to go through this rigamarole every time I rode him for several years, but he was such a darned good horse that it was worth the effort. The best part about him was that I think the horse actually impressed my dad's cousin, who just hated Paints.

This horse even got his picture in the May 1974 Western Horseman, which was taken before I traded for him. Butch Livermont is riding the horse in the picture. Butch traded the horse off to Marvin Phillips because the horse bucked all the time, and I traded a black horse and a hundred dollars to Marvin for the Paint. I kept the horse until he was eighteen years old, and traded him straight across for the two-seated buggy that we pull behind our team of Belgians. When first considering the trade, my father-in-law advised against it. He said, "Don't trade for a buggy. They deteriorate awful fast." I said, "Well, what about eighteen-year-old horses?" I made the trade and think of my old paint, Rosebud Rebel, every time I ride in the buggy.

Anyway, spotted horses have kind of been my hankering ever since. :shock: :-)
 
Good picture story as usual soapweed,I bet yall will be glad to warm up in that part of the country,that snow needs ta get a lot thinner :wink: ............good luck
 
Enjoyed the story, Soapweed.

We had a friend, Tim, that was the cow boss of a pretty big operation. He was a good hand with cattle and horses. In his string was an attractive grey horse called "Slick" and he was Tim's favorite mount. Every time he rode Slick he would have to start earlier than everyone else because Slick had a morning ritual. Tim would saddle him and take him outside so the horse could buck with the saddle on. He looked really waspy and made alot of swoops and dives. When he got that out of his system he was as good a horse as was ever seen on that ranch. If you hurried him and got right on, you were in for it.
 
When I was a lad working on the Double N Art would always pick your mount he had this 17 hand thourobred that didnt have any withers and did'nt cinch deep at all if your saddle slid back he would got to bucking,(the one thing he was VERY good at)I was chose to ride the Snake horse all to often. About 6 years later I was at a Rodeo and there was Snake in the saddle bronc chute poor cowboy only made it about 4 jumps I used to ride him all day (Unless he went to bucking he could plant me anytime he wanted to) boy I hated that horse...
 
Denny said:
When I was a lad working on the Double N Art would always pick your mount he had this 17 hand thourobred that didnt have any withers and did'nt cinch deep at all if your saddle slid back he would got to bucking,(the one thing he was VERY good at)I was chose to ride the Snake horse all to often. About 6 years later I was at a Rodeo and there was Snake in the saddle bronc chute poor cowboy only made it about 4 jumps I used to ride him all day (Unless he went to bucking he could plant me anytime he wanted to) boy I hated that horse...

Was that, by any chance, Art Noble? If so, he grew up down in the hills south of us 25 miles.
 
Well, from your picture, I finally figured out what a soapweed is. We are in the sand here and have something similar or the same thing. We call them yucca or bear grass. The old timers said they use to make soap out of them. I decided to dig one up one day and it looked like an over grown bowling pen. Had to dig about 5 feet to get to the bottom of it.
 
efb said:
Well, from your picture, I finally figured out what a soapweed is. We are in the sand here and have something similar or the same thing. We call them yucca or bear grass. The old timers said they use to make soap out of them. I decided to dig one up one day and it looked like an over grown bowling pen. Had to dig about 5 feet to get to the bottom of it.


YUP! We call 'em Yucca plants, we have lots of 'em. I don't like them very much as they tend to CUT if you're not careful handling them. I surely can't imagine a cow EATING them but what do I know?
 
Yeap efb that's what I grew up knowin em as.....yucca or bear grass...or bare grass....I think the cattle only eat the seed pods, but in west texas I never seen a cow eatin anything off of em, they were too busy eatin mesquite beans......took me a while to figure out that soapweed and bare grass was the same thang.
 
efb said:
Well, from your picture, I finally figured out what a soapweed is. We are in the sand here and have something similar or the same thing. We call them yucca or bear grass. The old timers said they use to make soap out of them. I decided to dig one up one day and it looked like an over grown bowling pen. Had to dig about 5 feet to get to the bottom of it.

Yup, with us old soapweeds, the roots of our raisin' run deep. :wink:

Hanta Yo said:
YUP! We call 'em Yucca plants, we have lots of 'em. I don't like them very much as they tend to CUT if you're not careful handling them. I surely can't imagine a cow EATING them but what do I know?

And yes, we old soapweeds are kinda prickly and hard to get along with, if you're not careful in the handling of us. :wink:
 
Soapweed said:
Denny said:
When I was a lad working on the Double N Art would always pick your mount he had this 17 hand thourobred that didnt have any withers and did'nt cinch deep at all if your saddle slid back he would got to bucking,(the one thing he was VERY good at)I was chose to ride the Snake horse all to often. About 6 years later I was at a Rodeo and there was Snake in the saddle bronc chute poor cowboy only made it about 4 jumps I used to ride him all day (Unless he went to bucking he could plant me anytime he wanted to) boy I hated that horse...

Was that, by any chance, Art Noble? If so, he grew up down in the hills south of us 25 miles.

Yes it was.He ranches north of town about 12 miles.I lived at his place my sophmore and junior highschool summer's and weekends.He's the one who helped me get my start in cows.He's kinda like a second dad..I had him tell me he was proud of me about a month ago at our local cattleman's meeting after my first night as president left me with a lump in my throat.His youngest son worked for me for a year or so while he was in college.His grandson is in kindergarten with my son Lane those two young one's are a matched pair both trouble..
 
Denny said:
Soapweed said:
Denny said:
When I was a lad working on the Double N Art would always pick your mount he had this 17 hand thourobred that didnt have any withers and did'nt cinch deep at all if your saddle slid back he would got to bucking,(the one thing he was VERY good at)I was chose to ride the Snake horse all to often. About 6 years later I was at a Rodeo and there was Snake in the saddle bronc chute poor cowboy only made it about 4 jumps I used to ride him all day (Unless he went to bucking he could plant me anytime he wanted to) boy I hated that horse...

Was that, by any chance, Art Noble? If so, he grew up down in the hills south of us 25 miles.

Yes it was.He ranches north of town about 12 miles.I lived at his place my sophmore and junior highschool summer's and weekends.He's the one who helped me get my start in cows.He's kinda like a second dad..I had him tell me he was proud of me about a month ago at our local cattleman's meeting after my first night as president left me with a lump in my throat.His youngest son worked for me for a year or so while he was in college.His grandson is in kindergarten with my son Lane those two young one's are a matched pair both trouble..

He rode broncs at the local rodeos when I was just a kid.
 
Soapweed said:
Denny said:
Soapweed said:
Was that, by any chance, Art Noble? If so, he grew up down in the hills south of us 25 miles.

Yes it was.He ranches north of town about 12 miles.I lived at his place my sophmore and junior highschool summer's and weekends.He's the one who helped me get my start in cows.He's kinda like a second dad..I had him tell me he was proud of me about a month ago at our local cattleman's meeting after my first night as president left me with a lump in my throat.His youngest son worked for me for a year or so while he was in college.His grandson is in kindergarten with my son Lane those two young one's are a matched pair both trouble..

He rode broncs at the local rodeos when I was just a kid.

He rode bronc's here till he was in his 40s .

There was a kid having Art teach him how to ride.Art would tell him what to do and as soon as the chute gate would open he would fall off on the first jump.Art got to chewing his butt and told the Rodeo to put a Bronc into the chute for him the whole time he was saddleing him He was chewing ash.He nodded for the horse and was still looking back and chewing ash saying (See it is'nt that Damn hard.)He was Nebraska state champ in 63 and 64 if I remember right one year he was all around cowboy also I do know he had 4 or 5 saddles he had won those 2 years one was bareback a couple saddle bronc and an all around.
 

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