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Pictures of the day, Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Soapweed

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

Checking out a coyote den
Movingsomepairstoanewpasture.jpg

Moving some pairs to a new pasture
Meanderingalong.jpg

Meandering along
Feelssogood.jpg

Feels so good
CalfbyClubhouseLake.jpg

Heifer calf by Clubhouse Lake
LIttlegirlcalves.jpg

Little girl calves
Prettygoodpair.jpg

Pretty good pair
Lifesaholiday.jpg

Life's a holiday
Itscooltobecool.jpg

It's cool to be cool.
Feelingfitandfurry.jpg

Feeling fit and furry
Grassandwater.jpg

Grass and water
Otherthanafewflieslifeisgood.jpg

Other than a few flies, life is good.
Steercalvesinanotherpasture.jpg

Steer calves in another pasture
10-year-oldcowandhercalf.jpg

Eleven-year-old cow and her calf
Close-upofthecalf.jpg

Close-up of the calf
Yearlingheifers-2.jpg

Yearling heifers
Futurecow.jpg

Future cow
Oneofthebullsweareusingonheifers.jpg

One of the bulls we are using on heifers
Ourlittlecountrytowninthebackground.jpg

Our little country town in the background
Wegetmuchofourstockwaterfromwindmil.jpg

Much of our stock water is pumped by windmills.
 
Glad to hear from you, was having withdrawl. Pictures are great as always. Wish I could make myself post some. What is the town with the elevator ? How far are you from it ? What kind of supplys can you get there ? Also, looks like the horse rolling isn't wearing shoes. Is that true for all your horses ?
Thanks again, hope you keep good grass and water all summer.
 
After not seeing any for a while I realize how much I appreciate and anticipate you photos, Soapweed. Thanks again. :D
 
Green sure is a nice color. And now what did you call that other stuff??? Water??? I seem to remember that from my youth. Cattle are doing good it appears. Our cattle look pretty good for living on cake and sand.
 
efb said:
Glad to hear from you, was having withdrawl. Pictures are great as always. Wish I could make myself post some. What is the town with the elevator ? How far are you from it ? What kind of supplys can you get there ? Also, looks like the horse rolling isn't wearing shoes. Is that true for all your horses ?
Thanks again, hope you keep good grass and water all summer.

The little town is Merriman. The population sign reads 118 people, down from about 260 when I was a youngster. The Chicago & North Western railroad used to go through town, but it has since been abandoned and the tracks have all been picked up. Merriman is still in the Sandhills of northern Nebraska, but the South Dakota state line is just six miles north. The Sandhills extend into South Dakota for a few miles, but on to the north is good wheat producing country. Wheat is hauled down to Merriman, to the elevator, where it used to be loaded onto rail cars. Now it is loaded onto trucks, but there is not nearly the grain business that once happened.

Other businesses in Merriman are a gas station that does a large bulk delivery business with full-time mechanic and convenience store, one cafe, one bar, a ranch supply store, my son's welding shop, and another mechanic's shop, a bank, and the post office. The state highway department has several employees and a shop at Merriman, and so does the county road department. Merriman is a nice place to call home, even if it is sparsely populated. Maybe I like it so well because it is sparsely populated. :wink: :-)

We live quite a few miles from town, but for the past couple summers I have leased a little pasture right nearby where we run a few yearling heifers and a couple bulls. That is why the grain elevator was in such close proximatey to the cattle pictures.

Since we live in a sandy softly-sodded area, we don't need to shoe our horses. Some ranches sharp-shoe their horses when the ground gets icy, but we never do.
 
Nice Pictures, Nice to still see green grass

I have hauled a fair amount of Wheat out of that Elevator to Fremont.

The Tracks have been pulled out, all the way to between Chadron and Hay Springs somewhere Now.
I figured enough track for their Dinner Train, But I haven't seen it advertised Either.
 
At Hub's, we would put corked shoes on the front end in the winter. It helped a horse to stand up on frozen ground, it prevented getting other horses tore up when kicked with corks, but it also taught a horse to work on his front end more than he should. I didn't like to put the corks on my best horses for that reason. You didn't mention a nice little church in Merriman that we visited last fall :D . Good to hear from ya amigo.
 
I kinda did a double take when I saw the photo of the future cow....her front legs are so perfectly aligned that she appears to be 3-legged :???: The stem of grass that crosses her leg looks like it was the "stump" of a former front leg :lol: Nice to see the pics, Soapweed.....nice cattle and slick calves :D :D
 
Is this like the Emperor's New Clothes or something....all I see are little boxes with x's in them? :D

The down side for some of these little towns is the near absence of any type of law enforcement. I have heard some residents speak their concerns for the rif raf that's being attracted to Merriman, a number of registered sex offenders, druggers, etc.... especially during the summer months. Martin, to the north, is having similiar problems, just on a larger scale. The jail had to be closed because it didn't meet some questionable standards, the county is in very poor shape financially, and prisoners must be hauled 100 miles to Tripp County, and cost dearly to keep them there. Also a big shortage of law enforcement, combined with very little money to transport and lodge prisoners.
 
I was on a harvest crew in your area way back in 1955, hauled wheat to Merriman & Rushville. Guess that tells how old I am!! Nice Pictures, I look at all of your pictures.
 
Thanks for the nice comments.

BRG said:
Soap,

Living at Merriman, you must know Dan and Tara. Great people who love what they are doing.

BRG

They are great folks, and they run some nice Red Angus cattle. Dan was in my graduating class of 1970 from Gordon High School.

central fl cracker said:
Soapweed
Do you fertilize your pastures and do you cut hay during the summer?

No, we don't fertilize our pastures. We leave that up to the cows to do. :wink: Some ranchers do put commercial fertilizer on their hay meadows but we don't. It might pay to do it, but I prefer the au naturale method. Yes, we do cut hay during the summer. Some ranches have irrigated alfalfa fields, but our hay is all native grasses cut on naturally sub-irrigated hay meadows. The water table is just below the surface so the roots of the grasses stay fairly moist. Most of our meadow hay averages about a ton per acre.
 

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