Sunday, November 29, 2009

PRICELESS

The ranch hand saw his first "deer in the wild" at the ripe ole age of 20, and promptly fell in love with the adrenalin rush of game in its natural environment.

Adrenalin rush: as in, shaking, heart palpitating, vision blurring...incredible "high"?

The years went by and the ole fat boy started to lose the excitement...don't know why..it just happened?

A couple years back, the magic reappeared when a small doe appeared on the landscape and did the "trick"?

Been enjoying it again ever since, but have a new related pleasure: "J" is 13 years old...all testosterone and six feet tall with feet that would choke an elephant?

Brother "J" has been hunting on the Tin Star for the last couple of years. Last year he harvested a doe while shaking like a wild boar sh***ing a peach seed. Yesterday, he saw a "spike" buck and completely "vapor locked"!

Yep, couldn't focus, stop shaking, or "pull" the trigger as too dadgum "EXCITED"~!!!!

How much better can life on the ranch get than that kind of excitement?

PRICELESS~!

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Country Roads

"Almost heaven....life is old there, older than the trees, younger than the mountains, growing like a breeze. Take me home, country roads" (John Denver)

A paradise generally includes fine trappings, but to inhabit said Garden of Eden requires a certain amount of infrastructure.

A roof and four walls is a good start. Add an outbuilding or two for storage, some landscaping, and ya start to call it home.

Today we acquired a formal "road" from the front gate of the Tin Star to the ranch house driveway. Ten loads of road base, an army of machinery, and a shiny new culvert made it look easy.

Might not seem like much to the casual observer, but ya had to know the mud holes of our previous "yellow brick road" to appreciate a more formalized approach.

"Almost heaven....take me home country road" (the ranch hand)

Saturday, November 14, 2009

MEXICAN EAGLES

The Crested Caracara is a member of the falcon family. It feeds on snakes, lizards, and other live prey, but it will also eat carrion.

Referred to as the "Mexican Eagle", it is a magnificent bird with regal plumage and a daunting appearance.

The ranch hand killed a doe last night and left the "guts" on the ground in the pasture. Dawn this morning found two mexican eagles feasting on the protein for breakfast.

No additional venison was added to the freezer this morn, but a visit by the eagles on our beloved ranch made the morning ever the more special.

Just one of a thousand special moments at a special place. Thank you oh Lord and Savior for these our many blessings.

Friday, November 13, 2009

A Tin Star Ranch Morning

Imagine pulling processed cotton bolls apart until they are wispy strings of white fluff.

Use your palette of colors to gently blend in every shade of pink one could conceive.

Feel total stillness, complete silence, and a light mist on the black broccoli shapes of a forest of live oaks.

Gently ease the morning sun from its slumber toward only the whispered hint of dawn.

Such was the sky on the Tin Star Ranch this morn as the ole ranch hand relaxed in the hunting blind.

Ya gotta love it!

Sunday, November 8, 2009

FOG

"The fog comes on little cat feet. It sits on its haunches, and then moves on." (Carl Sandburg)

Today silently eased into being with a cool blanket of moisture laden air gently enveloping the Tin Star Ranch.

As the dawn mused its wakening call, swirls of ghostly miasma hauntingly entwined arms with branches of the equally silent, but forgiving oaks.

There was no sound and no measurable movement of air, yet the eeriness of the moment was complemented by the beauty unfolding.

Inevitably, there are so many things associated with deer hunting which have no relationship to harvesting game.

Such was the ranch hand's pleasure today while sojourning in the ubiquitous "hunting blind".

Saturday, November 7, 2009

River Bottom Alarm Clocks

The Tin Star started opening day of the 2009 deer season in fine form. At 61 degrees with the hint of fog in the air and a light breeze in the trees, there was promise of interesting things to come.

The predawn stillness found the deer camera at the feeder busily popping its flash to allow illumination of ????? feeding on the dried corn kernels. Approaching dawn finally allowed sufficient ambient light to see a extraordinary size doe busily ingesting its protein breakfast.

Just as ole Sol began to cogitate eye peeking over the east horizon, a large flock of turkeys came off their overnight roost on the nearby San Gabriel river and began to trumpet their joy at being alive another day. One throaty "gobble" after another wafted with the pureness of nature's "wake up" alarm.

As the morn passed, a flock of maybe 25 crows began to circle the corn while screeching mocking taunts as to which would first sample the yellow feast around the feeder. Suddenly without warning, a hawk swooped into their midst as if to declare his/her defiance of their superior numbers. The crows went nuts....and if one could interpret their avian indignation...it would surely approximate the human equivalent of "HOLY SHIT!"

Things eventually settled down, but the hawk continued for a spell to glide thru the trees while loudly whistling his paean of triumph over the ebony marauders.

About 8:15A, the ole ranch hand was about ready to close the chapter on another opening morning when my river bottom alarm clocks began to filter from the surrounding brush toward the beckoning deer feeder manna.

Opportunity offered became "opportunity" taken as the ole fat boy leveled his newly acquired 7mm-08 downrange and let loose with one them lead lined sofa piller eliminators. Scratch one Rio Grande genre turkey.

Dang if ALL that herd of grasshopper wranglers didn't decide to hang round for the funeral? Brother opportunity whispered in the ear of the wannabe Daniel Boone again and round "two" planted ole gobblewski right where it stood.

Awesome morning...soul satisfying outdoor experience....and fresh meat for the table. Only way to top this is if the beautiful bride volunteers to dress out the groceries....yeah right!

Monday, November 2, 2009

COURTSHIP

The "rut" is the mating season for deer. The males will often rub their antlers on trees or shrubs, fight with each other, wallow in the mud or dust, and herd does that are in estrus.

A plainer explanation is that the bucks just go crazy. Normally cautious, they charge back and forth with a singular focus on the female of the species. Passing their own unique genetic DNA takes precedence over food, hunter bullets, or whatever.

This dawn on the Tin Star Ranch found four bucks and two does in the back pasture. The spike and the four point alternated between jousting with their immature horns and watching the "big boys" chase the does.

The "big boys" were two true wall hangers. Each sported eight long points of sharp protein enriched antler and a snoot full of testosterone fueled energy.

The season is six days away. Given the pace of this morning's courtship dance, these guys will be skinny rags by opening day if they don't slow down a bit?

Sunday, November 1, 2009

SATISFACTION

The Tin Star Ranch has a physical beauty that is beyond compare with any lush garden one could imagine.

Looking past the visual beauty of the ranch hand's abode, it is inevitable that the calming blanket of silence slows the pulse to that of complete tranquility.

There is no movement except for the wind blown flora and parade of a myriad of animals.

To merely be still and absorb the peace and pace is a balm that no Rx could provide.

Thank you, my Lord and Savior, for bringing me to the Eden that has no compare and for it's soul healing blanket of warmth, comfort, and satisfaction.