Category: Ranching


This is the most beautiful time of year and I love the cooler days, the smell of fall, and the colors of autumn.

But I hate hunting season, especially the first day of deer hunting. No, I am not a vegetarian, and yes, I love meat. I don’t care if you shoot Bambi as long as you eat the venison.

What is it in the air that makes guys come out of the woodwork with their shotguns and turf wars? What kind of craziness cause normally sane men to lie and trespass? It can only be a combination of gun powder, blood and caveman instinct that appears when the moon is full, or in this case, when antlers have sprouted.

The land we farm zigs and zags through canyons and draws. Most of the fences have been torn out, and the fields run together. Only the farmers seem to know exactly where one field ends and another begins. To add to the confusion, what is fallow or unplanted one year is in crop the next, so the landscape changes from year to year.

All the more reason for hunters to know their boundaries and not wait until the last-minute to contact the land owners for hunting favors. The hunters come, leaping for joy – their only care in the world to shoot the elusive 10 point big buck. They can’t understand why you don’t want to hunt with them or listen to their stories about the big one that got away.

Unfortunately, they don’t realize farmers here just finished harvest. Now they are seeding thousands of acres within weeks. My husband has tunnel vision, and all he can think about is getting the next crop into the ground. This is a busy and critical time of year. Unless a farmer hunts, he probably isn’t interested in stories and camaraderie right now. He’s tired from twelve hour days on the tractor, and it isn’t a picnic to have people camped on your living room floor – it is a royal hassle.

I love the company. And I love the treats hunters bring…wine, cheese, smoked salmon – yum! But oh, I feel like I am in the middle of a kindergarten class of children pointing fingers. Yes, I know who is lying and telling the truth – especially if they mention some long-dead relative who gave them permission to be here.

Run Bambi Run!

Hoards of  ”friends” and long-lost cousins come out of the woodwork. They fight each other for canyons and draws, arguing over who was first and who said who could hunt where.

“But last night Kevin told me I could hunt here.” No, actually Kevin said you could hunt there if no one else was already there…ah, semantics.

“What do you mean this is your ground? Kevin said it was his.” No, Kevin showed you the borders and you forgot where they were. You crossed the road or fence line you shouldn’t cross, and now you’re scared you’ll be thrown in jail, so you throw Kevin under the bus to deal with the problem instead. Nice.

Every year we end up telling people they can’t hunt here anymore. “Don Macnab told me I could hunt here. He gave me permission.” Hmm, Uncle Don has been dead fifteen years at least.

Miles and miles of land. Who would even notice if I trespassed to shoot just one little deer?

When you catch them in a lie, they back-pedal fast. But what makes them lie to begin with? Who does that? Some of our landlords have land leased out for thousands of dollars…others come to hunt on their own ground. You can’t trespass – they will call the sheriff.

And then there are the idiots on their four wheelers or in gas pickups who go cruising through the tall grass and wheat stubble. We haven’t had rain for so long that I could start a fire just by rubbing two sticks together. My girlfriend almost lost her house today. Maybe this isn’t my favorite time of the year after all.

I might have to get my gun-toting neighbor to come help me deal with trespassers....

Look out, here comes my neighbor!!

Okay, some parts of hunting season are fun!

The end!

Colt at the well. The soft start is on the right.

“The well pump is out.” My husband announced wearily. “That’ll be another $25,000 – $30,000.”

Shaking my head, I commiserated with him. It sucks to drop that much money with no guarantees that it won’t happen again. We’ve had issues with pumps ever since this well was drilled. The good news is that we haven’t had to pay for any of them before now – the wind tower project did. The well was just turned over to us a year ago.

The well was used to compact and build roads for the wind towers.

Actually, we haven’t had to pay for much of the $300,000 well ourselves – just half of the bill to bring in electricity and laying the pipe. And it was a good year farming, so we have the money to pay for it.

Plus it’s a write-off. Whoopee!

Personally, I believe that it went out the last two times because the people who were using the well didn’t respect the equipment. Instead of using the “soft start” system that was set up, they would just turn it on and off manually. That’s tough on a 100 horsepower pump over 600 feet down.

The wind towers are all up and running and the well has been turned over to us!

Dwayne, at Person Pump and Drilling, suggested a heavier-duty pump with a little more horsepower. The bearing that went out is suggestive of misuse, just like we thought, so it is no longer under warranty of course. Besides, this pump is two years old. http://www.personpumpanddrilling.com/

Bill Martin says we could have pulled the pump ourselves and saved money.

I think Bill's crazy!!! :) Person's is the only way to go!!

Now the well is ours, and the soft start can’t be bypassed, and hopefully the pump will last ten years! I know we’re going to cross our fingers and respect the equipment. Funny how many people don’t take care of things if they aren’t theirs….

All set to go

Every year we plan to start seeding on the 15th of September. Plan. As in have the drills and equipment ready, then wait.

Wait to see if we get rain. Wait to see if there is enough moisture in the ground already. Wait to see if it is too hot to open the ground up.

I love the fall weather and changing autumn conditions. But I don’t have to make farm-sustaining decisions.

Never eat pink seed wheat. It has a protective coating to control disease.
Never eat pink snow, either.    You can see the pink cast to the snow a long way away – Antarctic penguins eat pink krill and poop pink!

Never dive in without checking the conditions of the water…applies to seeding, too, but with the soil.

Then, when you do make the decision to seed, pray. Pray that you don’t get just enough rain to form a “crust” on the ground. Or a long hot and dry spell that dries it out too much. Or a severe cold snap in November. Pray that it rains within a couple of weeks so you don’t have to re-seed in the spring. And the later you seed, the better the chance that aphids won’t eat it.

A truck full of seed

My husband loves seeding. He loves the long days out on the tractor and he loves the time of year. But he hates the wait and see – try to figure out if conditions are right, part of it.

Oh, but that’s one of joys of farming, right? Diving into the unknown?

All ready and waiting… :)

http://pendletonroundup.com/

The Roundup is the 15th - 18th of September, but we went early and beat the crowds!

Finally! I finally made it to the Roundup!! After 23 years of life 100 miles away, I actually got in my little car and drove with my girlfriend, Patti. Of course we only went to “Slack” day – $2 each for Patti, Kayci and I, but we avoided the crowds and got great seats. Patti and I love taking pictures, and she had to get her kids on the bus, so we didn’t stay long, but we had a great time.

Kaylene and her boot!! (Well, one of 40+ boots...this girl loves boots!!)

Patti even bought some cowgirl boots from a really cute Justin Boots girl…Kaylene  knows her boots: she has 20 !!! pairs! And they’re on sale during the Roundup.

Kaylene's dad was in Patti's high school class :)

Patti says they are awesome – already comfortable and just the right fit.  (Just look for the big, red blow up boot in the booths down the street east of the arena…)

http://www.justinboots.com/en/

Kayci and Patti's camera lens :)

There were lots of people watching, but everyone was spread out, all over the stands. You could get close, for better pictures, without being in anyone’s way.

Whitney & Sandy

The funny part was that, even with the size of the arena, we still ran into lots of people we knew. And the whole place is covered now, so we were in the shade.

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