To get to Maybell, you can go several
different ways. I chose to go via Colorado 14 that runs from Sterling, CO to
the foot of Rabbit Ears Pass and US 40. From Fort Collins you go up the Cache
la Poudre river, a favorite drive if I’m not in a hurry. The area was heavily
burned last year but a fresh covering of snow covered the scars. Seems Mother
Nature was wearing her make up. The terrain is rugged.
Stopped to take pictures of some of the
locals.
The Rabbit Ears of Rabbit Ears Pass.
Community pot luck the night before.
There are probably fewer than five people in these pictures I’m not related to
by blood or marriage. I attended cowboy style. A cowboy is an appetite riding a
horse down the grub line.
The horses.
Some of the dudes who paid $2,500 to take
part.
Many of the riders were passing out
candy. Zoro was tossing dollar coins. Big horse he is riding (and riding very
well). At least 16 hands.
Tough duty. Later he was talking to a
couple. Seems their daughter and his daughter were at a track meet in Rangley
the day before.
What is an event without vendors?
Several of my relatives are members of
Sisters on the Fly. The outside of that spam can make look plain but the inside
is WOW.
One of my cousins taking care of the
important things while his lady is taking pictures.
Another cousin, a New Mexico LEO, proving
twenty+ years of eating donuts hasn’t hurt him.
My relative, being who they are, took the
strategic corner early and held their ground.
This is a local rancher who is the real
deal. Fourth generation on the land. When one of my aunts moved herself and her
five children from Illinois to Maybell, he became close to all of them. They
consider him family. That bottle is some Blackberry brandy. Just to take the
chill off, you understand.
Excellent timing. You have a big load to
move. You choose US 40 on a Sunday afternoon. Nobody told you about a damn
circus.
Highway 14 takes your through Walden and
the North Park. North Park is the headwaters of the North Platte River. After
the Civil War, a lot of settlers moved in from the upper Midwest. My maternal
ancestors came from Wisconsin. North Park once was the summer home of vast numbers of Bison and the
natives who hunted them. It also attracted assholes.
The modern day ones are the rich who buy
up ranches and consolidate them. Hobby/trophy ranches. Every time the park loses two to three
families. Logging has always been a staple economic engine and now there is a
minor oil boomlet.
But I digress. Many building were erected
along the same style of construction and many survive.
The natives used controlled burning to
kill off sagebrush and weeds. The next spring native grasses, which the bison preferred,
would grow. Get rid of the water suckers (sagebrush, etc) and the native
grasses will get belly deep to a horse.
The private land owners have an economic
interest in keeping the land productive.
Who were the better caretakers, natives
and private land owners or the fucking BLM?
Wow, WSF, you managed to write a long
blog without any profanity until you reached the end. Do you have a low opinion
of the government caretakers of our public lands?
ADDENDUM. No cell service or WiFi hot spots in Maybell. Two days of withdrawal symptoms.
ADDENDUM. No cell service or WiFi hot spots in Maybell. Two days of withdrawal symptoms.
7 comments:
A good post and some very good pictures. One of my best friends is from Walden and I am sending him the like to this post so he can enjoy it, too. He lives in TX now, but still has Walden in the blood.
Glad you enjoyed it.
Awesome pics! That looks like fun. I have not been to Walden for years. A college friend had a cabin there and that is when I last stayed there. Thanks for sharing that! Looks like a good time.
There were twenty five relatives plus their significant others there. Good to reconnect.
Nice AAR, and glad you had a good time! Family is always fun! :-)
Thank you. Didn't realize how much I needed a break until I got there.
That's usually the way it works! :-)
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