Wednesday, February 3, 2021

Not Quite Clean


Okay. Let's see you do this without getting grimy . . .
Ranching doesn't encourage cleanliness.
You heard it here first.
In fact, ranching and cleanliness don't go together.
At all.
Let me tell you about it . . .
I had worked on the ranch all my life and had finally been promoted to 'herdsman' where I served for two glorious years.
This included such things as:
Riding herd.
Checking herd.
Feeding herd.
Treating herd.
Worrying over herd.
Hovering when herd was ready to calve.
Calving out herd.
Recording herd.
Eating and sleeping with herd.
Okay, maybe that last is a little extreme, but you get my point . . .
Sooo . . . cleanliness.
Cows aren't naturally clean.
I know this will come as a shock.
I'm sure you've seen the romantic pictures of mama cow licking her baby.
I have one thing to say about this.
Cow spit.
How clean can that be?
Cows also have other orifices that are . . . nasty.
And to which I have one response.
Cow pies.
Enough said.
On with my story . . .
I was ready to go to work.
Clean shirt.
Clean jeans.
Clean kerchief.
Clean socks.
Recently cleaned boots.
I headed out the door.
Bridle and riding pad on my horse and I was away.
We made good time reaching the calving field. And almost immediately spotted a cow.
Calving.
But having difficulties.
I decided to take her back to the corrals. And restrain her. And help.
That's as far as my plans/actions went . . .
I grabbed the protruding calf feet.
And that's when the cow broke out of my hastily-built restraint.
Grimly, I hung onto those feet as the cow started across the corral.
Dropping me and baby in the middle of a puddle of - let me put it this way - it wasn't spring water.
I got up.
Carted the calf to safety.
And headed for the house.
My mother met me in the doorway. Her clean daughter had gone out the door only half an hour before.
Now, dripping from head to toe with--barn puddle, said daughter had returned.
Mom stopped me in the porch.
“You just left here. Perfectly clean!” she said. “What did you do out there?!”
“Well . . .”
“Never mind. Clothes off here!” she ordered.
I was divested of anything gooey.
Whereupon (good word) I sprinted for the shower.
In my underwear.
Ranching.
Not for the faint of heart.
Or the fanatically clean.
Okay, let's face it . . . not even for the somewhat clean.
Don't you wish you were here?

9 comments:

  1. Amazing, Diane. One of my favorite shows right now is "All Creatures Great and Small," the older 1978 version. Its amazing what those vets do, including what you did in that field! I'm awestruck.

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  2. But the thing is, I DO. I do wish it!

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  3. Haha I spent my summers on a ranch and I do indeed remember how dirty we got.....

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  4. Drove a wheat truck one summer. Got a little grimy every day but omg, nothing like that!

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  5. I don't wish it. Not anymore. I enjoy my lazy small city life too much!

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  6. That cow and calf were lucky you were so tenacious, and cared for them before yourself. I guess this is what it means when they say things can change "in the blink of an eye". Or the bolting of a calving cow. ;)

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  7. At least you helped the calf get delivered. and no, I most certainly do NOT wish I was there.

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  8. Yes, I wish I was there. Doing some of the most meaningful things you can ever do.

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  9. Raises even higher the respect i have for farmers/ranchers. You did a great job hanging on to that calf.

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