Sunday, July 26, 2020

How the Sacketts Settled at Hidout Ranch...

See, the Ironclad Rule was:  No Smokey, Dusty, Blackie, Midnight, or Fluffy at Hideout Ranch. We wanted our nomenclature to reflect the West and the Cowboy Culture, so we selected names from classic Western literature, movies, local legends, and history which would prompt conversation with our guests about the names and the figure behind them. Prolific author Louis L'Amour wrote a lengthy saga about the Sackett family, whose founder came from Wales and settled in the Tennessee-Carolina area of a young America. The three most well-known Sacketts are brothers Tell, Orrin, and Tyrel of the Smokey Mountain branch of the expansive family. Brought to vibrant life in the film version by Sam Elliott, Tom Selleck, and Jeff Osterhage respectively, the Sackett boys were our favourite characters (and stars).

A friend had already brought us a big grey gelding and, when I asked the horse's name as he backed the horse out of the two-horse trailer, I was told, "We call him Dusty." In my mind, to avoid offense, I thought, "Well, we're going to call him Tell." Tell was not unlike Sam Elliott, the grizzled actor whose voice is deeper with more gravel than any river bed. He was grey, well muscled but lean, and he could back up any claim he made with confident action. Tell was a roundup machine - with flair. He was fast as heat lightning, embodying the assessment "He's forgotten more than you will ever know." Tell was, well, he was Tell. But, more on him later...

Craig and Tell up in Portal, headed toward the Wilderness...
A young girl who worked for us told us about another Quarterhorse gelding a friend of hers was selling. When I went to look at him, this young, powerfully built grey horse with an attitude and presence one could only term "fabulous". Instantly, I named him "Orrin" for the middle Sackett brother, portrayed adroitly and with aplomb by Tom Selleck. Two of three Sackett brothers were at Hideout Ranch...

Craig on Orrin...
Craig got a call one day from a neighbour above Rodeo. He was moving to Hawaii and couldn't take his two horses. Of course, we went right up there with the trailer, and came home with a lovely bay mare and yes, another grey gelding. Quickly naming him Tyrel, we had our three Sackett brothers...

Tyrel with a guest at Price Canyon...


Our three Sackett boys were simply amazing on trail. Tell and Orrin were great working cattle, as well - Tyrel not so much, but he was game for whatever we asked of him. It was easy to horse guests with the three of them.

A regular guest wanted to spend half the year here, and bought a horse to be his "ranch" mount. He found what he wanted in nearby Hereford, a grey gelding who, I told him, would have to be named for a member of the extensive Sackett family. My personal choice was "Lando", short for "Orlando", son of Falcon Sackett. However, it was overruled by the fear it would be confused with Lando Calrissian of Star Wars. So, this bright and lively grey was christened "Logan", twin to "Nolan", both from the Clinch Mountain branch of the Sacketts.

Logan, ready to head out up in Portal...
Craig was always the one to receive phone calls about horses. A couple had purchased the ranch where Craig and I had met, and had been trying to revive it. Well, they decided to close, and called Craig to see if we wanted to look at any of their horses. We drove over to the place where we'd met so many years ago and tried to set our uneasiness aside. We rode several horses, and finally decided on four, with one thrown in for good measure. One of the five was a lovely flea-bitten grey paint mare we just had to call, "Echo". Following naming protocol, this grey mare had to be named for a Sackett, but there was only one option - "Echo". "Echo " is also a Tennessee Sackett, aunt to Tell, Orrin, and Tyrel, and the only female Louis L'Amour ever had narrate a story.

Echo makes her music video debut...

Each of our Sacketts wove a distinct thread in the fabric of Hideout Ranch, adorning our hearts with their image and stitching our memories neatly with their adventures. Echo lives with a dear friend and her family now. Orrin continues to be fabulous right here with me. The others are across the rainbow bridge with Craig - but they live on in memories of guests and friends across the world....

Orrin at Rucker...

Logan at White Tail...

Tyrel (l), Tell (c), and Orrin (r) at Portal...

Tell begging lunch...

Orrin at the Stronghold...

Echo at Lower Rucker...

Orrin on the Lower Basin Trail...

Logan (l) and Tyrel (r) at Price...

Tell (l) and Orrin (r) on the ranch...

Tell at the Stronghold...

Tell (l), Orrin (c), and Logan (r) at Price...

Tell (l) and Orrin (r) at White Tail...

Orrin, "cowing" at White Tail with Craig...


Logan in a #Sackettselfie...

Logan, at home...

Tyrel on the ranch...

Echo, at the rail...

Echo, in the round pen with a guest...

Echo at Granite Gap...

Echo, with a fan...

Orrin, busy being fabulous...

Echo, under English tack on the flat...

Tell, with a guest in the round pen...

Logan (l) and Orrin (r) at the wash in Granite Gap...

Orrin (l) and Logan (r)...

Orrin (l) and Logan (r)...

Logan, in Portal...

Logan, on the edge of the Wilderness at Price...

Orrin (front) and Tyrel (back) at Rucker...

Logan (front) and Tell (back)...

Tell, below the E...


Saturday, July 4, 2020

Cap-boy...

Craig always wanted a Mustang. Through the twists and turns of fate and chance, an opportunity to get one honestly magickally dropped in his lap. It may have been the same place we got Yaqui. The people had gotten a Mustang gelding who'd gone through the Extreme Mustang Makeover program, but something happened and they didn't want to keep the horse. Without hesitation, Craig said he's take it, and in short order, a big bodied bay with a broad white stripe, white cuffs on both back feet, and the majesty of America's wildness stepped off a trailer and into our hearts.

Kiowa flirts with Cap upon his arrival...

Cap exudes majesty, regal...


Not long after Tell arrived and had been rechristened in honour of a beloved Louis L'Amour character, I told Craig we needed a "Cap". Veteran cowboy actor (though I am not at all sure he was "acting") Ben Johnson played seasoned cowpuncher, Cap Roundtree in the Sacketts movie where we meet those three Sackett boys, Tell, Orrin, and Tyrel, and Cap was definitely one of our favourites. Cap fit him perfectly, and there we were.

The Extreme Mustang Makeover is an event where trainers are matched with a Mustang right off the range. They have 90 days to work with the horse and prepare it for an exhibition and competition. Afterwards, the horses are sold at auction. Cap, then inanely called "Smokey", participated in the inaugural Extreme Mustang Makeover. He tied for second, half a point out of first, then was sold in the auction for $3,330 - just $200 less than the high dollar horse. Because technically he was still in his year's "probation" period, Craig paid $25 to transfer Cap's ownership to him. It took a year for the transfer to happen, and Craig let Cap just hang out and be Cap for that entire year. He was concerned that Cap had been dragged from place to place, and he wanted Cap to know he was home. To know he was loved beyond measure.

Craig also promised Cap as soon as the transfer papers arrived he would show them to him, letting him see for himself he was really and truly Daddy's boy.

He did. The papers arrived, and he took them out to the pasture and showed them to Cap. He really did.

After the year, Craig finally saddled and sat on Cap in the round pen. It was a successful effort, despite not being touched for a year. Craig remarked on how light and sensitive Cap was, how easy he was to ride.



Out, Cap would always call out, looking for his herd. He was born at 10,000ft elevation in Nevada. We would joke how Cap would look at our Chiricahuas dismissively, saying "You call these mountains?" Once at Rucker, Cap dropped his head and crowhopped a few times, but Craig rode it out and settled him back down. To this day, I couldn't tell you what caused the hiccup. Then, once at the Stronghold, a branch on Manzanita next to the trail got caught in Cap's back girth, and spooked him. He shot forward and Craig, caught off-guard, toppled off. I jumped off Taza, had a guest hold him, and ran after Cap who was nearby nibbling quietly. Craig got back on, and back to the trailer we went.

We didn't often let guests ride Cap. He was born wild, free, and you had to keep that in mind. Riding him involved some minor negotiation and a a sizeable amount of respect. I rode him. Our favourite young German girl and Cap would have weeks together. Josh loved taking Cap out. Our beloved Anne from Denmark sat him beautifully. Sometimes, I would let guests sit on Cap once we were back at the trailer so they could go home and tell family and friends they rode a real "wild Mustang". I loved riding him. Just loved it.

Cap with Josh...

Cap with Isis...
Cap, at the best lunch spot in Granite Gap...

Cap, helping me with my lunch at Bowie...

Cap and Isis at Rucker...

Cap and Anne headed to the wilderness at Price...

Cap's personality was bright, playful, curious. He would look at you sometimes with all the wildness in his eye, then do something a born-in-your-backyard horse would do. Like help Daddy build a shade.

Craig had the old red truck in Cap's pasture as he worked on assembling a shade for them. Up on the ladder, Craig looked down to see Cap nosing around his drill bag and the other tools. He lipped the handle on the bag containing drill bits, screws, sundry hardware, and who knows what all.

"Cap! No!" Craig called from the ladder.

Cap looked up at him with utter innocence, then dropped his enormous head to sniff it again.

"Cap, I said no. Leave it alone."

Cap, again dripping innocence, proceeded to pick up the handle on the drill bag and shake the entirety of its contents out into the dirt. Then, to Craig's consternation, he stepped neatly over to the truck, pushed his head through the open window, and proceeded to pull whatever he could find out.

Then there was the drinker incident. Cap would stand with his front feet in the drinker. Just stand and observe. He stood there long enough to snap the bottom seam and empty the drinker, flooding the pasture. In the interim, Craig put in a drinker with a float attached to a hose. Should be fine, Craig thought. Well, Cap reached and pulled the hose off, spraying the other horses.

Most likely, bad words were said loudly, but Craig went over and fixed it. However, before he reached the gate, Cap had the hose back in his mouth, spraying the others again. Craig shook his head, and Cap just looked at him, dripping innocence.

Cap in his kingdom...
Craig would stand and watch Cap out in his pasture, looking over the fence toward the mountains. He would look as wistful as Cap, and say, "Sometimes I think I should set him free..."

After losing Craig and faced with the overwhelming reality of running the ranch by myself, I decided to rehome as many of his beloved horses as I could - despite the pain it would inevitably cause. I called Josh, the young man from Wyoming who lived and rode with us for a year, and asked him if he could come down and pick up Hawk and Mac. Something, suddenly prompted me to ask, "Would you take Cap, too?"

Stunned more at the idea of my giving up Craig's much loved Mustang than the actual request, Josh said he would. He knew what it took for me to take this step and has ever been cognisant of the enormity of that ask. Before they left out, we took one more ride around the ranch. Josh swung up on Mac, and I stepped up on Cap. I know I cried as I rode this magnificent animal who was indelibly special to my beloved husband. He was fabulous. Cap was always fabulous.

Cap and me on our last ride...
Next morning, Josh and his dad loaded the boys into the trailer, and off they went to the wilds of Wyoming. Josh and his family kindly send me photos of Cap in his new life periodically, and I am grateful for them. I am grateful for Josh's generosity in taking on three mouths to feed. (Josh likes to think Hawk is his, but he's not. He's mine.) Cap will always be Hideout Ranch's Wildness, will ever be Craig's best boy...


Loaded up and ready to go...


Decadently lush living after the desert of Arizona...

Whomever approaches, Cap presumes they have treats...


Cap, seeing the world through once-wild eyes...