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Tribute to a fine mare

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Well I'm kinda incredulous to even share this, but Range magazine has asked for permission to publish what I wrote about Reba in their upcoming issue 😳😳😳😳😳
Never did I think that would happen. Really humbled they would want to include my words in that wonderful publication.
It doesn't surprise me because your writing was great about a great horse. I enjoyed every word of it.
 
Well I'm kinda incredulous to even share this, but Range magazine has asked for permission to publish what I wrote about Reba in their upcoming issue 😳😳😳😳😳
Never did I think that would happen. Really humbled they would want to include my words in that wonderful publication.
Congratulations. Be sure to use spell check. And even if you can spell words like "incredulous" don't use them too often. It is a bad deal to have your readers running to a dictionary to figure out what you meant.

But truth is that what you wrote deserves to be read by a much larger audience than those who are here. You wrote from the heart and it comes through loud and clear. Again congratulations.
 
I have the utmost admiration for desert ranchers that name their horses.

horse no name.jpg
 
We had an great old mare put down last weekend. Such a heartbreaking and yet necessary decision. I'm sure y'all have been there a time or twelve. Spent some time putting my thoughts down this week. Thought I'd share them here with y'all.

Never-

That word is so final. It's a heartless word and hope and faith seem to flee from its presence. Never! It's a statement of people who are angry. It ends marriages and it breaks friendships. It sometimes has a few other words that run around in a pack with it. Words like pride, resentment, unforgiveness.

But tonight, my mind kept trying to think about another use of never. I will never see my sweet old mare again.

Reba was a plain little sorrel filly when she came to me as the only payment I'd ever get for an electrical job that had cost five times what she was worth. She'd been picked on by a bunch of older mares and wasn't very friendly to us two legged critters either. I loaded her and took her home with the intention to send her to the next horse sale so I could to try and recoup my money I'd spent on parts for the delinquent bill. But she grew on me. She had long pointed ears and she was rail thin and I took to calling her my little red mule. Unlike her previous owners, we had plenty of hay and she started filling out into a pretty mare.

She quit being a little bitch too. No longer did she spin her hips and pin her ears back and threaten to kick ya when ya approached. In fact, those tall red ears would silhouette over the corral rail and she'd whinny her hello as we went to feed her. I told my young wife that a broke horse would bring more money than an unbroken one would and she gave me her blessing to see how I could do. So to the round pen we went. I'd wanted to try a new-to-me method of breaking horses I'd been introduced to and Reba was the Ginny pig.

I'll never forget walking toward her with the rag tied onto a light whip. The white in her eyes was evident from across the corral. She came inside out and whichever direction she went, I was there to meet her with the rag on the whip and the pressure it placed on her. The videos I'd watched and studied said it may take several hours until the horse quit kicking and running and trying to get away and turned to face the hated man with the rag. It took Reba two minutes! She suddenly turned back towards me and trotted across that old wooden round corral and stuck her whole head against my chest. As if to say, enough already. From that second minute on, she did anything I asked of her. I had her saddled an hour or so later. I used a rope on all four legs and she released on every command. I lead her with a rope around her flank and even under her tail. Not a single blow up and not a single buck. She'd get confused and then she'd turn back to me and bring her head to my chest for reassurance. She won my heart that day. I wouldn't be selling the little red mule.

Reba was never a athletic horse. She wasn't super fast. But she gave ya all she had. We put on a bunch of miles moving cattle in tough, mean country. The desert is steep and rocky and makes for long days a horseback. I saw lots of miles looking at the view framed by two tall, thin ears. I rode or packed salt on her for 18 years. She seemed to enjoy every trip. We'd pull up in some high desert pass to let our horse puff a little. Other horses would start looking for grass while Reba would survey the scenery. I swear to God she loved the quiet high desert trails as much as did. And at the end of a long day, after she had a good roll, when I went to the corral to lead her over to water, she'd cross the corral and bury her head against my chest.

I buried my head against her a time or two as well. When my grandmother, the matriarch of our ranching family died, I walked to the corral with my grief. Reba knickered quietly and then sensed my hurt. I stuck my tear covered face on her neck and sobbed. She never moved. Healing began,thanks to the old red mule.

As time passed and more horses filled our corrals I gave her more time off. And I had a few horses with more skill and ability. She graduated from every day horse to once in a while and then on to kids horse. Both my kids grew up with the old red mule for a babysitter. They loped along the pony express trail as we re-enacted the mail delivery service in our little town every July 4th. They rode in parades and in the local roping arena. I even took the grand old lady up for a night with the young ladies in our church youth program. Some had never been around horses and never felt that amazing privilege it is to sit astride a good horse. Reba pricked her ears and calmly welcome each young woman as they fussed and fretted and bonded. I will forever remember those girls as they lost their fears and found their confidence with the help of an old red mule.

Age is an enemy that never relents. And time kept marching. We buried Hacksaw and Dandy, Topper, Wally, Vega, Bar Ran, Pumpkin and Ranch. We lost Bandit and Rooster and Cisco and Doc. If my math is right, Reba outlived 17 horses our family or my cousin's family, who have my grandparents ranch now, owned. She got a slight sway back and her knees got knobby. Arthritis started to spread. We treated her and coddled her and spoiled her. But time kept marching. 28 wonderful years I got to have those two skinny red ears turn toward my voice and send an unspoken beckoning.

Until it was time. I knew what needed to happen. And as tough and manly as I am, I knew I just couldn't be the one. So with a full, sad, thankful heart I called the vet and made the appointment. It was the hardest thing to walk into that corral the last time and have her place her head against my heart. It was a lonely ride the 60 plus miles to the veterinarian. It was a sacred moment as I untied her for the last time and led her to back of the trailer and handed the lead rope to the staff. I took a walk and when it was done, I turned west for home and the empty corral. I brought her thin, old red body home to lay next to her amigos. I dug a deep hole and gently laid her, and part of me, in the desert clay ground.

But tonight, through the tears, the word Never doesn't hold any weight. I buried her body but not her soul. She runs like a three year old across the tops of the mountains. Our mountains. My grandparents will keep an eye on her for me until it's my time to ride the high mountains of heaven.

The word never is powerless. Unless we weaken and lose the light of our faith. I will see and ride and snuggle my fine red mare again. Of that I know.
Man, H. That's a fine tribute and an understood, bitter-sweet story. Your life's experience and the way you write and tell it, I think, rank right up there with Soapweed's story-telling and journalism.
 
Man, H. That's a fine tribute and an understood, bitter-sweet story. Your life's experience and the way you write and tell it, I think, rank right up there with Soapweed's story-telling and journalism.
I agree, DustDevil, VERY well written, Leanin'H. Your words speak to our hearts just like those best-friend/partner horses have. Mine was Clavinova, named after our new little black piano bought in the same trip. I lost him at age 30, the year after I lost Steve. A hard year.
Peach
 
Don't mean to hijack this thread, but...it seems like RANGE liked the poem about Reba
so much, that Leanin H has a poem in the Spring 2023 issue of RANGE magazine
called "Dry".

Great poem, 'H and great job!!
Thanks FH. I'm amazed they want to print my scribbles. They've asked me to keep submitting things I've written and I'm happy to. Really humbled that folks enjoy the stuff I write.
 
I agree, DustDevil, VERY well written, Leanin'H. Your words speak to our hearts just like those best-friend/partner horses have. Mine was Clavinova, named after our new little black piano bought in the same trip. I lost him at age 30, the year after I lost Steve. A hard year.
Peach
Love ya Carol. Always will.
 

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