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Thread: Cowboy-Up
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12-15-11, 05:16 PM #2656
Slinger I learned that as a Boy and truer words have never spoken. Your a wise man
I don't have a wood stove or fireplace now and I miss it and miss that smell.
Semper Fi Buddy
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12-17-11, 11:44 PM #2657
aka Chief Joseph:
Hin-mah-too-yah-lat-kekt “Thunder Traveling to Loftier Mountain Heights”
Is that about the coolest translation of a surname you ever heard in your life, or what
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12-18-11, 10:08 AM #2658
Yep it is
Happy Trails
Semper Fi Buddy
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12-18-11, 10:29 AM #2659
old indian way of telling if its gonna be a bad or good winter is by lookin at the size of a white mans wood pile
after lookin at my woodpile for a bit i think we are in for a bad one...wonder if i give some of it away if it will make for a milder winter???
the worrysome things we have to deal with out this way
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12-18-11, 10:55 AM #2660
Montana that's a good one, hope you are doing O.K.
Semper Fi Buddy
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12-18-11, 06:08 PM #2661
Wood pile well last month i bought a pair of STABILicers and pair of Ice Claws, mostly for fishing but also eyeballing a pair of Tubbs snowshoes.
Heard on the news this is the driest and coldest December on record around here, The dry part usually means it's storing up to dump something, probably frozen/rain. Also, a wild Coho Salmon was "captured" in Johnson Creek. An urban stream that was thought to have been cleaned out of natives generations past
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12-19-11, 11:20 PM #2662
A SAVAGE SANTA CLAUS
"Talkin' about Christmas," said Bedrock, as we smoked in his cabin after supper, an' the wind howled as it sometimes can on a blizzardy December night, "puts me in mind of one I spent in the '60s. Me an' a feller named Jake Mason, but better knowed as Beaver, is trappin' an' prospectin' on the head of the Porcupine. We've struck some placer, but she's too cold to work her. The snow's drove all the game out of the country, an' barrin' a few beans and some flour, we're plum out of grub, so we decide we'd better pull our freight before we're snowed in.
"The winter's been pretty open till then, but the day we start there's a storm breaks loose that skins everything I ever seed. It looks like the snow-maker's been holdin' back, an' turned the whole winter supply loose at once. Cold? Well, it would make a polar bear hunt cover.
"About noon it lets up enough so we can see our pack-hosses. We're joggin' along at a good gait, when old Baldy, our lead packhoss, stops an' swings 'round in the trail, bringin' the other three to a stand. His whinner causes me to raise my head, an' lookin' under my hat brim, I'm plenty surprised to see an old log shack not ten feet to the side of the trail."
"'I guess we'd better take that cayuse's advice,' says Beaver, pintin' to Baldy, who's got his ears straightened, lookin' at us as much as to say: 'What, am I packin' fer Pilgrims; or don't you know enough to get in out of the weather? It looks like you'd loosen these packs.' So, takin' Baldy's hunch, we unsaddle.
"This cabin's mighty ancient. It's been two rooms, but the ridge-pole on the rear one's rotted an' let the roof down. The door's wide open an' hangs on a wooden hinge. The animal smell I get on the inside tells me there ain't no humans lived there for many's the winter. The floor's strewn with pine cones an' a few scattered bones, showin' it's been the home of mountain-rats an' squirrels. Takin' it all 'n all, it ain't no palace, but, in this storm, it looks mighty snug, an' when we get a blaze started in the fireplace an' the beans goin' it's comfortable.
"The door to the back's open, an' by the light of the fire I can see the roof hangin' down V-shaped, leavin' quite a little space agin the wall. Once I had a notion of walkin' in an' prospectin' the place, but there's somethin' ghostly about it an' I change my mind.
"When we're rollin' in that night, Beaver asks me what day of the month it is.
"'If I'm right on my dates,' says I, 'this is the evenin' the kids hang up their socks.'
"The hell it is,' says he. 'Well, here's one camp Santy'll probably overlook. We ain't got no socks nor no place to hang 'em, an' I don't think the old boy'd savvy our foot-rags.' That's the last I remember till I'm waked up along in the night by somethin' monkeyin' with the kettle.
"If it wasn't fer a snufflin' noise I could hear, I'd a-tuk it fer a trade-rat, but with this noise it's no guess with me, an' I call the turn all right, 'cause when I take a peek, there, humped between me an' the fire, is the most robust silvertip I ever see. In size, he resembles a load of hay. The fire's down low, but there's enough light to give me his outline. He's humped over, busy with the beans, snifflin' an' whinin' pleasant, like he enjoys 'em. I nudged Beaver easy, an' whispers: 'Santy Claus is here.'
"He don't need but one look. 'Yes,' says he, reachin' for his Henry, 'but he ain't brought nothin' but trouble, an' more'n a sock full of that. You couldn't crowd it into a wagon-box.'
"This whisperin' disturbs Mr. Bear, an' he straightens up till he near touches the ridge-pole. He looks eight feet tall. Am I scared? Well, I'd tell a man. By the feelin' runnin' up and down my back, if I had bristles I'd resemble a wild hog. The cold sweat's drippin' off my nose, an' I ain't got nothin' on me but sluice-ice.
"The bark of Beaver's Henry brings me out of this scare. The bear goes over, upsettin' a kettle of water, puttin' the fire out. If it wasn't for a stream of fire runnin' from Beaver's weapon, we'd be in plumb darkness. The bear's up agin, bellerin' an' bawlin', and comin' at us mighty warlike, and by the time I get my Sharps workin', I'm near choked with smoke. It's the noisiest muss I was ever mixed up in. Between the smoke, the barkin' of the guns an' the bellerin' of the bear, it's like hell on a holiday."
"I'm gropin' for another ca'tridge when I hear the lock on Beaver's gun click, an' I know his magazine's dry. Lowerin' my hot gun, I listen. Everythin's quiet now. In the sudden stillness I can hear the drippin' of blood. It's the bear's life runnin' out.
"'I guess it's all over,' says Beaver, kind of shaky. 'It was a short fight, but a fast one, an' hell was poppin' while she lasted.'
"When we get the fire lit, we take a look at the battle ground. There lays Mr. Bear in a ring of blood, with a hide so full of holes he wouldn't hold hay. I don't think there's a bullet went 'round him.
"This excitement wakens us so we don't sleep no more that night. We breakfast on bear meat. He's an old bear an' it's pretty stout, but a feller livin' on beans and bannocks straight for a couple of weeks don't kick much on flavor, an' we're at a stage where meat's meat.
"When it comes day, me an' Beaver goes lookin' over the bear's bedroom. You know, daylight drives away ha'nts, an' this room don't look near so ghostly as it did last night. After winnin' this fight, we're both mighty brave. The roof caved in with four or five feet of snow on, makes the rear room still dark, so, lightin' a pitch-pine glow, we start explorin'.
"The first thing we bump into is the bear's bunk. There's a rusty pick layin' up against the wall, an' a gold-pan on the floor, showin' us that the human that lived there was a miner. On the other side of the shack we ran onto a pole bunk, with a weather-wrinkled buffalo robe an' some rotten blankets. The way the roof slants, we can't see into the bed, but by usin' an axe an' choppin' the legs off, we lower it to view. When Beaver raises the light, there's the frame-work of a man. He's layin' on his left side, like he's sleepin', an' looks like he cashed in easy. Across the bunk, under his head, is an old-fashioned cap-'n-ball rifle. On the bedpost hangs a powder horn an' pouch, with a belt an' skinnin' knife. These things tell us that this man's a pretty old-timer.
"Findin' the pick an' gold-pan causes us to look more careful for what he'd been diggin'. We explore the bunk from top to bottom, but nary a find. All day long we prospects. That evenin', when we're fillin' up on bear meat, beans and bannocks, Beaver says he's goin' to go through the bear's bunk; so, after we smoke, relightin' our torches, we start our search again.
"Sizin' up the bear's nest, we see he'd laid there quite a while. It looks like Mr. Silvertip, when the weather gets cold, starts huntin' a winter location for his long snooze. Runnin' onto this cabin, vacant, and lookin' like it's for rent, he jumps the claim an' would have been snoozin' there yet, but our fire warmin' up the place fools him. He thinks it's spring an' steps out to look at the weather. On the way he strikes this breakfast of beans, an' they hold him till we object.
"We're lookin' over this nest when somethin' catches my eye on the edge of the waller. It's a hole, roofed over with willers.
"'Well, I'll be damned. There's his cache,' says Beaver, whose eyes has follered mine. It don't take a minute to kick these willers loose, an' there lays a buckskin sack with five hundred dollars in dust in it.
"Old Santy Claus, out there,' says Beaver, pointin' to the bear through the door, 'didn't load our socks, but he brought plenty of meat an' showed us the cache, for we'd never a-found it if he hadn't raised the lid.'
"The day after Christmas we buried the bones, wrapped in one of our blankets, where we'd found the cache. It was the best we could do.
"I guess the dust's ours,' says Beaver. 'There's no papers to show who's his kin-folks.' So we splits the pile an' leaves him sleepin' in the tomb he built for himself."

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12-20-11, 12:02 AM #2663

Equilox® acrylic filler, with reverse keg shoe for caudal support and easy breakover: Because sometimes a guy just doesn't want to build a rocker toed bar shoe, from scratch.
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12-20-11, 07:43 AM #2664
Great reads Dave,
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12-20-11, 10:56 AM #2665
thats some plum purdy work slinger....why was that hoof in that bad a shape???
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12-20-11, 03:04 PM #2666
Laminitis/prolapsed tender sole. In Need of support, relief from sole pressure, but probably wouldn't have tolerated the vibration of nails being driven. There was no wall left to nail anyway, that's why a bar for support. Well there was solid wall, about an inch up from the ground. #7 city head nail could have grabbed a bit.
The animal was uncomfortable while the acrylic was curing, but not enough heat to trigger a stampede
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12-25-11, 09:44 AM #2667
Merry Christmas Cowboy Marines,
Just finished breakfast and was thinking about all you Cowboy Marines
Slinger, Montana and SDK you three are the BEST and I wish you a Cowboy Christmas
Hope I feel like riding today or tomorrow
Semper Fi Buddy
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12-25-11, 02:56 PM #2668
I wanted a pair of full grain shoeing chaps *dun and green* with reinforced knees and a wide basket stamped belt with double roller brass buckle for quick release... two knife pockets *knives included* and a magnet to stick nails and stuff.
What i got was a 10 visit punch card to a health club.
Maybe next year
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12-25-11, 03:50 PM #2669
Slinger that's more than I got
With chaps like that youd be too pretty to shoe
Semper Fi Buddy
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12-28-11, 03:49 PM #2670
"Scotch Bottom" Draft Shoe making
The guy in the red chaps is Bob Marshall, he was judge when i won the Oregon State Championship in 91. Bob learned the trade as an urchin in his fathers farrier shop in England. He migrated to B.C. Canada in the early 80's. 5 time World Champion at the Calgary Stampede, He's been in the shoeing trenches over 50 years.
In a shop setting, the guy running sledge is most always the apprentice or "improver" - a farrier who is less skilled than his workmate. I don't know who the striker is in this video, but he's highly skilled, certainly no rookie
Between these two men there's got to be at least 100 years combined experience trimming and shoeing.
100 years!
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