A Sheepherder`s Diary
Transcription
A Sheepherder`s Diary
MAY 1932 .dune XXVIU Number4 A S H E E P H E R D E R ' S DIARY Brother of O w Badger Chapter CYriter From Far-of Nevada IYhere Sheep Are as Important ar Banks o n Wall Street in New York Trirtrte Rntrch, A7ez~arla western air. Several thousand feet helow are spread out the sage covered E.4R RROTHER EDITOR: You have asker1 me to write tlats of the Dcep Creek \'alley where an article and su~gestedthat Kit Carson once trapped mustangs our Delta Chi Brothers might he in- and Mark Twain saw his first coyote terested in the state of Sevatia in e n - as related in "Roughing It." This cabin is a lonely ptace hut just eral and especially ib recent liberal divorce and gambling legislation. Any- now there was the echo of a yell something I might say of Sevada wouJd be where d o m a deep canyon we call either in its praise or its defense. I t "Choke Cherry." It was a long howlhappens that two or the recent amentlrnents to the divorce law k a r my name Lambs a 5 the in~rorlucerand I 1va.q among tho% who battled on the floor of the Fmver House for the gambling bill. Naturally, I take issue \vilh article!: or stron:: criticism written by some of our porl Eastern citizens \~lho{lo not seem to clearly untlewtancl Sevarla's problem!: ant1 I fear that if either ol the above subjects Irere chosen for this article it rvould prove to be only an argument cluttererl ~vithfipres, sharpener! hy retort, and sholr-ing a legal complexion throughout. For that reason I prefer a subject more common, more easily hantllcd, and one over ~vhichthere is no controversy. Plllom me to choose: D Spring "SHEEP" This letter is being started late in the afternoon in a small log cabin about nine thourand feet above sea level in the Deep Creek mountains. :Is 1 look out the open door now there is very Iittlc loreiround in the picture; that is overlooker]. ~h~ bac2;flauntl in distant, but plainly visible in the dear %ITUOP~IY ~ T P I I ~ ~ P I T I lnkm S c!ose trp. I I O W F I ~ m F ~o . ~ Io j t b ~ m~ l r j r c rl o pt,rfr,,jts- ing sort of yell: the kind of yell a distressed sheepherder will give -.hen he wishes to frighten sheep out of the timber. S o clouht it was kiven by one o f my herders who is trying to rouocl up some lost sheep. The herd is Fat short 01 its number and out several black sheep cailecl markers. Thme e l us are '"racking" lost sheep, and I happen to he here now because my goocl horse has had about all he can stancl Tor one clay. T might explain that I am a Tau Kappa Alpha man gone "Sheepy." Opportunity in the form ol the sheep bu~inesscame "knocking" and looked too good to turn down. It is not so long ago that wool was worth forty cents a pound and even these SevarEa feeder lambs sold for seven ant? eight dollars. In those days the bleat oi a sheep was music to my ears and that peculiar smell they have 5vas not offensivc. Today it is so different! For three p a t s now I have lorfeitecl my heritage to a place in civilization anrh have s p n t most of my time on the range learning why sheep herders go insane. Today that pcculiar smell is a hit sickening to me ancl the bleat of a sheep grates upon my ears and tliagusts me, especially, I f it is loud anit often repeated, became that means the old ewe has lost her lamb. Many writers have hewailerl the fate or the man who lost his "all" in the stock market crash, and the farmer Who has too much hut if any, have told the story of the tellow - .a s : . . 7.4 pritq:p slicb ns onr might scf an? t f r ~ ~orrf r o n 1111- Tn'11rri' R t l ~ r kor on rl1on.v nthrr rnnckrr (iuf ifr IBr. . \ l t * ~ ~ ~tl~t~t')) (lfl C tures it, he cannot sell those rirteen dollar sheep for as much m four, or the lands lor enough to pay two yesrs' taxes. That is a sad story. A f e n pages from a sheep man's diary might he interesting: herded the Figure Eight herd all summer tleserved a week's vacation now so he ran go to town and blow in his earnings while it is still goorl weather. This morning I paid him up. He had M O O coming-"Wow!" T h i n g are getting in a bar1 way. The price o f xrool ancl lambs must come up or wages must come tlown. This morning I took the herd myself ancl will now let my Ileard grow lor a week or more. September 24, 1928 "Domingo-the Rasque who has September 25,1928 "I am very sleepy torlay. The sheep who bought sheep at sixteen doIlars each and thousantis of acres of wetern range lantls at inflated prices and now that he has learnetl that a sheep is not the lovely little animal the Hitde pic- - - U N I I ~ ~ ~ . did not lie well last night. The moon was bright and they could not resist the temptation to get up and feed ateunrl. 'rhat old moon might be a big help at lave-making but it is surely na friend to a sheepherder. Last night, before I went to hetl, the sheep tried to leave l~stl ground several times. :ilter I went to I~erlthey made several breaks aver the hill hut my little dog Kelly was on pyarrl. I hatt to p t up only once-the rest of the time I mould poke my head out the small winrlaw at the hack of the camp and -. VWho ubo~~ldrt'! lifir. l o "rirlt. tltr "red jiudr" nrr2 cnllingr' 1 1 1 ~r,rlrph" 1 orrt in ,IT~vndo,with nxotbtbr Grnrgctln, ~ s p r c i ~ ~082 l l y onc o j fkrse sprirrg r h y s :irlrrn clothed in about four inches of snow. A very cold wind has c h W many an dd biddy to the point "fall down -no get up" We are moving the Anchor herd to the ranch to pull out "drags" (sheep too weak to follow thk herd) and Jack Rke is following with an mbdance wagon to pick up h s e old girls who have decided to Iie dam and die." - A p d 20,1929 - lhri r b r t h ~ v u bi e g h - d a few milu jn*.mt, we fidthe T sheep, and $ h t y of scensry fm o t r y m . "Give $em hell, Kelly." He would run elm wound the say from Kelly told me He had done the job of his own accord. I just love that little black "ypb" ('The drcumstances f am in today are quite a contrast to those that April 20 have found me in during the pitst four years. While writing this 1 am seated on the m e t of a hiU with what is left of a herd of weak winter hilled sheep spread out before doUu ahrrp at tht-Wha= has been-nothing has statted to wow vet-mavbe thev-are all mine to &e< * %id&& o i with the h Ranch, I -. L & ,. ,a ,- #-I V L God's nle--stand up and bleat." - Well-yes, there are times when the bleat of a sheep is a phasant sound. Shearing time is a very busy time and urnally full of dif- I - A $ d 29, 1929 "The Figure Eight herd went in the shearing cod this A.M. The weather is ideal. How fortunate 1am 1 All my neighborn a '928 an the sbeep bud- ness in Nevada. It sheared h that Wiz- ~ksw* a w u IHI #arid- e~ttrim, ma the brown* of my little brsdr dog Kelly. This A.M. the world was it rw k ...y to jwg~tdpr-, s ~ # w & @Y-' m aus, UI ~ e l mr a . lost Parks lost -4 a d sheep. V T h on'* "four kmmnnr" oJ the she@ WWM.Whoma cmc g # u ~wkkh arr is j~lshckwiu be awarded a m u wod nudater. 300, Warner 300, Catigne 125, Kempey over 100, Syms 25, et cetera, et cetera, on into the good weather and I believe I am not going to lose one from taking off their winter underwear. - A fellow must have a break once in while-but let us take a look at shearing time in 1930. - April 27, 1930 "The weather man has gone on a strike-We are having storms that are raising particular Hell with the shearing. The Jim Clover crew is at Tippett and not half through there. If the weather had been good, we should have been all sheared out by now. God knows when the crew will get here and in a few days the Figure Eight herd will be lambing. I pace the floor in vain attempts to decide what is best to do. There is no other crew I can get. Today I drove to Tippett to get some idea when they will be through. If it does not rain or snow tomorrow, they should be through by April 29. I pleaded for half the crew to come now and let the other half finish there -no luck-"Old Chief Clover" turned a deaf ear to my words of request and the picture of sorrow to come if my sheep are not sheared pronto. - May 2,1930 "My God, these are terrible daysI have heard many arguments as to whether it is best to shear before or after lambing but I have never heard any one say you should shear and lamb all at the same time in a snow storm. Speaking of trials and tribulationsconsider this-Here we are shearing in an old fallen down, dilapidated corral built in such a way that to fill pens you have to pick up nearly every sheep and throw it in, and a t the same time lambs are being born and tramped to death all day. We are short handed and what men I have are no good. The sheep not in the corral are not being "herded" but merely looked at by a worthless, flea bitten, lousy Mexican, who has let them spread until there are ewes and lambs for ten square miles. The Indian shearers go into their wigwams-pound on tlie tom-tom and pray for sunshine-all in vainI t rains or snows every day-We have a lot of beddin discarded because of the lice the Mexican brought and one camp wagon has been pulled out and left on a hill by itself-all set up with the "seven year itch." If I believed more in prayer I would raise my two branding paint-covered hands to the snowy sky and yell at the top of my voice. "Lord, Lord, what has brought thy wrath upon us?" Lambing Time-It is a bit hard on the patience and a man's good nature-Let us see what our sheep man had to write in his diary during Lambing time. May 15,1931 "We are having many twin lambs these days and they are the cause of much work. We usually number each pair and their mother with colored chalk so that when one gets lost we can carry him over near his mother and if she refuses to claim him we tie her by one foot to a bush for we know then that she is either a social gadder, or a woman who demands much time for herself and says to ''Hell with children." - May 16,1931 "Today I am very sleepy and tired. My face and my neck are itchy from four days growth of beard-my eyes are sore from dust-my feet are sore from walking and another place is sore from riding horseback." ewe puts her head high-spanks the earth a whack or two with her front foot, like an angry woman, and then starts up country. The little lamb, a few hours old, fills his lungs and says "Maaa." The old ewe stops short and turns around with a "Bababa" ahd then runs back to the lamb-that senseless thing that nine times out of ten tries to follow the man or the horse he is leading or even the dog-anything but its mother. Finally, Mother and lamb are together and then the whole act begins all over again. - August 15,1931 "Today we pulled all strays out of the Anchor herd. This was just an ordinary day in the dusty corral. A fellow admires the fat ones, pities the poor ones, and cusses them all before the day is done." Yes-SHEEP-How different they are from what the Bible pictures them. Let me adopt our sheepman's words. How true it is that any one who handles sheep might admire the fat ones and pity the poor ones, but he is sure to cuss them all before he is through. Fraternally and Sincerely, CLELGEORGETTA, Wisconsin '28 Carlisle Advances Dfay 17, 1931 "Just another ordinary lambing day. Hour after hour I rode from one bunch to another, catching a sheep here and one there-driving this bunch this way and that bunch that wayWill I ever forget the bleat of a sheep? Over and over again it happens that a tired and disgusted man-a fellow who knows what the world looks Iike at 3:00 A.M.-a fellow who is dirty, unshaven, itchy, sore-footed and legweary-such a man comes upon the scene as a wise man coming to call upon Mary, the Mother of Christ. But this is so different! He comes not with gifts but with swear words. The old 1 Gratgul Appreciation VWe recognize with thanks the courtesy of the Denver Daily Record Stockman, and especially Mr. Arthur C . Johnson, its president and editor, who has been kind enough t o lend t o us all of the pictures which are reproduced in this article written by Brother Clel Georgetta, Wisconsin '28. Brother Georgetta, in addition t o being a writer and raiser of sheep, is a member of the legis!ature of Nevada, and, w e predict, will be heard from again in his rise to fame. THEEDITOR 1 Floyd L. Carlisle, Cornell '03, and a former "AA" of the fraternity, is the newly elected chairman of the Consolidated Gas Company of New York. He also is chairman of the Niagara Hudson Power Corporation. One feature of this move is that another Delta Chi, George Bruce Cortelyou, Georgetown '95, and Secretary of the Treasury from 1907 to 1909 under Roosevelt, was re-elected president of the company for the twentyfourth time. IS THIS EDUCATION I can solve a quadratic equation, but I cannot keep my bank balance straight. I can name the Kings of England since the Wars of the Roses, but I do not know the qualifications of the candidates of the coming election. I know the income theories of Malthus and Adam Smith, but I cannot live within my income. I can explain the principles of hydraulics, but I cannot fix a leak in the kitchen faucet. I can read the plays of Moliere in the original, but I cannot order a meal in French. I have studied a psychology of James and Tichenor, but I cannot control my own tempqr. I can recite hundreds of lines of Shakespeare, but 1 do not know the Declaration of Independence, Lincoln's Gettysburg Address, or the Twenty-third Psalm. -N.E.A. Press Service