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Monthly Archives: April 2012

Mountains Above Ruidoso, New Mexico

As I sit in my black low rocking chair, I can hear adolescent and adult boy scouts in mostly deep voices saying the Boy Scout pledge then the Pledge of Allegiance. Seems religious, around the campfire in the dark with the waxing one third moon above and the stars just beginning to show themselves. Besides the boy scout troop, there is one other group here, older and handicapped. A motorized wheel chair seems incongruous here in the wilderness but so joyful also.

I’m here north of Ruidoso, New Mexico in a National Forest Service campground north of Bonito Lake. There are three horse corrals and Rio was the first occupant of the first corral. I picked this spot because there’s a place down from the rest of the campground nearer to the stream (dry here but wet down the way) where it’s more private. I negotiated the trailer and truck to be a buffer zone. On the opposite side from the campground, there’s just us and the mountains. Unfortunately, I fear my exit because the egress is up a steep rocky slope that looks rougher from down here than it did when descending it. Pray for us. Zoloft and I will make the escape and THEN load Rio in the trailer.

No riding today. I had to drive to town to get cell phone reception to call FedEx and redirect the AWOL package to Alicia’s. en route, the truck is having significant problems when turning sharply, like I’m dragging an elephant or something, Didn’t feel it prior to disconnecting the trailer. How strange. So I went to Western Auto and made a Monday 12:30 appointment to get it looked at. also dropped my bicycle off at a bike shop to get the derailleur checked after the rough-and-tumble ride through Big Bend Ranch.

Came back to the campground, Zoloft was howling and Rio was fine. Fed both then lit my new MSR backpacking stove (successfully this time) and heated up my leftover steak and yummy potatoes au gratin, sautéed portabello mushroom and other vegetables from two nights ago, adding some abused spinach from the cooler to the mix. Yum!. sat down to eat (the chair is LOW) and Zoloft managed to steal the steak! I tackled her and got it back, giving her the outside fat layer from the scrumptious New York medium rare. A little dog saliva – no problem!

Zoloft is IN TRAINING! She’s learning “Scoot!” when I get in the driver’s seat and she’s in it. This is to honor Bill and Zenith, who always scooted from Bill’s to my side of the bed when Bill came to bed, snapped his fingers and said “Scoot!” I’m also working on getting her to come with treats and love. Probably a losing cause but I have faith. Maybe it’ll save her life when the mountain lion attacks.

That’s all I have tonight. I hope my family and friends are all thriving.

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Posted by on April 30, 2012 in New Mexico, Uncategorized

 

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2700 feet up Turkey Creek Trail in the Lincoln National Forest of New Mexico

4.29.12
This morning Zoloft and I awoke around eight a.m after a lousy sleep, again. It was delightfully cool. The Boy Scouts next door were making breakfast and packing up to leave. I had the brilliant idea to ask them for any of their remaining water because my water tank in the horse trailer is very low and there is no water available at this site, for neither man nor beast. They kindly filled up Rio’s water buckets and asked me questions about my horse. Told them that when I was about fifty I decided, “Hey, I can buy me a horse!…….. Get a college education and when you’re older you can get what you want too.” They were from El Paso and ranged in age from eleven to fourteen.

It seems to take me forever to get out of camp on my horse but, finally, we made it. The three of us, Rio, Zoloft and I, started UP the Turkey Creek. The going was rocky and, almost immediately, we could feel the effects of the altitude. Austin, Texas is at about 500′ unless you live up on a hill, which we don’t. WELL, Ruidoso, New Mexico is at 6900′, our campground is at 8000′. the trail tops outta about 9200′. he s, I almost instantly was light headed and very tired very quickly. The trip is best told in photos. Met only three people the whole five hours we were gone – Chris, EX-owner of Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory in Taos, New Mexico and his two dogs who redirected me as I was about to take a very long trail and two fast day hikers who took the photo of the three of us when we met up with them on the Turkey Creek (#40) trail going UP. The Turkey Creek trail is not one to repeat, it was rocky and densely forested with no water. At the end of that I caught the Crest Trail (#25) which went through the beautiful grass and on sandy trails and wound around the ridges. Took the Argentina Trail down. It was much prettier than the Turkey Creek trail, had water (a trickle – enough for dogs and horses to drink), much more open space, was not as rocky and steep. We had left camp at about nine a.m., returned exhausted at about 2:30pm. We’d ascended more than 1300′, about half of it I’d walked, leading Rio because either it was steep and rocky or I just needed the exercise. Zoloft wanted to be UNDER Rio because he provided shade and, once, Rio stepped on the poor gal’s foot. Luckily, with all the padding on the basset’s foot, she seems unhurt.

Later in the afternoon Chris, the man from Taos, came by and told me about some of his favorite trails around Taos in Carson National Forest. The big question is whether the trails are open yet because they’re higher up and usually don’t open till later in May or even June.

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Posted by on April 29, 2012 in New Mexico

 

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Bonito Lake area

4.29.12
This morning Zoloft and I awoke around eight a.m after a lousy sleep, again. It was delightfully cool. The Boy Scouts next door were making breakfast and packing up to leave. I had the brilliant idea to ask them for any of their remaining water because my Water tank in the horse trailer is very low and there is no water available at this site, for neither man nor beast. They kindly filled up Rio’s water buckets and asked me questions about my horse. Told them that when I was about fifty I decided, “Hey, I can buy me a horse!…….. Get a college education and when you’re older you can get what you want too.” They were from El Paso and ranged in age from eleven to fourteen.

 
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Posted by on April 29, 2012 in Uncategorized

 

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Fort Davis to New Mexico Mountains

Drove north from Fort Davis, a few miles out of the way, to take a quick swim at Balmorhea State Park. By now my car’s thermometer registered 98 and it was cooking! I’d not jumped in the hotel’s pool at Fort Davis to save time, knowing I’d get to get some exercise in the cool spring water at Balmorhea. the drive had some stunning vistas along its deserted route and I wondered what it must be like to live on one of the ranches along the way. But, the swim was not to be. The pool was closed because some swimmers had been stung by some unknown something in the pool and it was closed till the Park Service could ascertain the cause. I was SO disappointed but used the park’s WiFi to check email then went down the road towards El Paso

 
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Posted by on April 27, 2012 in Texas Travel

 

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Fort Davis, Texas

Well, here I am, splurging. Totally unintended. I left BBRSP at about 2:30 today after a delightful ride to Cueva Larga (large cave) and headed to Fort Leaton in order to get there by 5pm to pick up the package UPS should have delivered. It contains prescription sunglasses and a cold weather sleeping bag, waterproof map cases that I can attach to the saddle, etc. Well, toured the Fort and searched the hot, dusty streets of Presidio for the UPS man (at the Park Rangers’ suggestion), to no avail. Came back to the Fort at 4:40 and the UPS man was there! but he had only one package and it wasn’t for me. So,I left Alicia’s address with the Park Rangers and with The UPS Man and headed north to Fort Davis State Park.

when I got to the primitive campground that has horse sites, it was padlocked closed. Now what? It was an hour to dark and where we’re Rio, Zoloft and I going to sleep? Drove down the road to The Prude Ranch, pulled in and asked an owner if I could pen my horse and camp there? She said they were full but could let me put Rio in a corral but recommended against it because they’d had sick horses and didn’t want to endanger mine. one more hour closer to dark….

So, I went back to Fort Davis and registered at the Limpia Hotel. Had to stay in a specific more expensive room because of Zoloft but got to park the horse trailer right next to the room in the shade. Opened up the divider in the horse trailer, took Rio’s halter off and gave him hay, water and grain. He seems quite happy. Held Zoloft in the bathtub and gave dusty her and dusty me a bath, then went across the alley to the restaurant adjacent to the hotel and ordered me up a steak dinner that’s too big to eat. Doggy bagged half of it. Had a constant stream of visitors to the table to pet Zoloft.

Despite the peaceful, high-ceilinged room with AIR CONDITIONING! And the comfortable bed with MY pillow, I had a lousy sleep. First I stayed up getting caught up on my electronic devices, writing notes, uploading photos to Picasa so I don’t somehow lose them…… finally fell asleep but awoke at 7:30, as did Zoloft – we both needed to go potty. I’ve been amazed at how our bladders are in tune. Is that a proven phenomenon, like women’s periods syncing up when they live together?

We drank a little room-made coffee in the rocking chair on the large verandah. The verandah must be 12 feet deep. Fort Davis, apparently is the highest town in Texas, just at 5000′ elevation. The prior evening was delightfully cool, as was the morning. By noon, however, it’s pushing 90 degrees…. Because of the dryness, verandah-sitting is delightful. Asked at the hotel desk the whereabouts of laundry facilities and headed to the RV park two blocks away that has a laundroMat, with just washers- no dryers. The desert air is SO dry that everything, including jeans, dried on the fence next to the hotel’s pool within about forty five minutes. After putting my was in the machine (had to knock on the grizzled owner’s door for change), I had breakfast at the “Drugstore” cafe…..as I went in, three couples on Harley’s were just mounting up and racing their motors to pull out of town. free Internet service along with my egg,hash browns, sausage and biscuit(which I had to exchange for a warm one, literally- the waitress said she had to take it back to the cook or he wouldn’t give her another one. The second one was warm, and good). quit the cafe after paying the bill with all of Bill’s change from the console in his truck., got my wet laundry and went back to the hotel room where I’d left Zoloft sleeping on a red velvet-covered chair on red velvet-covered cushions. such is the life! After being covered in dust for four days at Big Bend Ranch, she looked her old beautiful black and WHITE and brown self.

Now the fun began – truck and trailer cleaning. Driving about 70 miles on the dirt/gravel roads in Big Bend State Park meant that everything was covered in a layer of dust. I have plastic boxes of camping stuff – food, supplies, entertainment(including my precious beading supplies and books) and had naively left the tops off most of the boxes – lazy me. Well, I paid the price. I took everything out of the tack room in the horse trailer as well as the back of the pickup truck, emptied out containers and washed both the containers and the contents…..stuff was strewn all over the pool area and lawn in front of my room. I kept Zoloft in the room and Opened the door and let Rio watch the action. four hours later I was put back together, straightened out and tidied up and had two boxes packed to ship home- the books on Utah, the Pacific Northwest and Colorado I’d brought along just in case I decided to go those ways, as well as extra horse and people supplies. in my worry about not having the right stuff, I’d overpacked and couldn’t find anything in the back of the truck because there was no room to maneuver. Near the end of my work the hotels owners came out and pointed out a broken wall that apparently I’d backed into with the horse trailer. I knew I’d hit it but didn’t know I’d done any damage. Paid them forty bucks cash and a little later the woman-owner brought my a bottle of water and told me she and her husband were from Dallas, had bought the Hotel Limpia two years ago and moved to Fort Davis to “get away from the craziness.” To me, they seem lucky. Driving through El Paso later in the day I thought, “Who needs THIS!?”

on the road, my first stop was the post office to mail the two packages I’d taped up. I arrived at 3:07 and they were closed. I yodeled a bit and a woman behind the closed metal pull-down door said “She’s at lunch, Will be back at 3:30.” I was starting to worry about getting to my mountain destination but went and bought a few groceries at the health food market, came back and mailed the packages, second-in-line behind a National Park Service uniformed man picking up the Fort’s packages. Whew, finally, on the road. Good-bye Fort Davis!

Drove north, a few miles out of the way, to take a quick swim at Balmorhea State Park. By now my car’s thermometer registered 98 and it was cooking! I’d not jumped in the hotel’s pool at Fort Davis to save time, knowing I’d get to get some exercise in the cool spring water at Balmorhea. the drive had some stunning vistas along its deserted route and I wondered what it must be like to live on one of the ranches along the way. But, the swim was not to be. The pool was closed because some swimmers had been stung by some unknown something in the pool and it was closed till the Park Service could ascertain the cause. I was SO disappointed but used the park’s WiFi to check email then went down the road towards El Paso.

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Posted by on April 27, 2012 in Texas Travel

 

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Hanging Out at Hill Country State Natural Area

4.22.12
Met Amy Bray 775.721.5233 lives in Harper, near Kerrville & Fredericksburg, rides a tall Arabian, wears blue, loves to ride and would meet me for a ride if I’d like.
Enron Howell (210.386.2265), an older woman who rides a gaited horse

Well, I’m in day two awaiting the arrival of Kevin Tate, one of the local farriers, whom I finally hooked up with.  When the farrier, Scott, didn’t return my calls, I asked the Park Rangers if they had any referrals and one of them told me Kevin was great and she wouldn’t use ANYONE else for her horse. Kevin said he could come shoe Rio 10:30 am or so Monday after shoeing three horses at the Silver Spur Dude Ranch nearby. There wasn’t an equestrian site available unless I wanted one with electricity for $25 instead of $15, which I declined and Billlee says I’m not money conscious! So, I waited to ride till late in the day and hung out at the Equestrian Day Use area right near the Park Ranger/Check-In area and read books and wrote this blog….. Here’s what the spot looked like:

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Relaxing in Equestrian Day Use Area, Hill Country State Natural Area

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Rio loving the shade under a large live oak tree near the wildflowers.

While sitting in the day use horse area:
Met Amy Bray 775.721.5233 lives in Harper ,near kerrville,rides tall Arabian, wears blue,loves to ride and would meet me. Was riding with 50/60 year old woman named Enron howell 210.386.2265, woman rides gaited dark colored horse.

Suggestions from Glenna (830)688.9880, the blonde from Bandera,  of places to ride in New Mexico:
1. Bonita Lake pass Runnels’ stable Robert and Sandra . right at the entrance is Kraut Canyon. Stop in Ruidosa at Smoky Bear Ranger Station and buy $11 trail map. Will there I’m to say hello to Katie at the Smokey Bear Ranger Station and say I met the “blonde from Bandera” who says “HI!”

2. The Oaks other side of Capitan over near Carrizo

3. Reserve, NM go to the Gila Wilderness back near Snow Lake in the Gila. First get into Reserve, take a right and that will get us to the Gila Wilderness via Silver City, following signs to the Gila Cliff Dwellings.

4. Chama is pretty but it’s one way in, one way out (6 miles each direction), so there’s not a lot of variety in the riding.

5. She usually drives from here to Carlsbad and stays at the Sheriffs posse arena in Carlsbad with her horse for the night.

She also told me that in Bandera there’s a private ranch called Twin Elms with 400 acres. Nice place to stay with horses and ride.

 
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Posted by on April 22, 2012 in Texas Travel, Uncategorized

 

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Posted by on April 21, 2012 in Uncategorized

 

First Day in the Hill Country State Natural Area

4.20.12
Oh my god I just realized that Austen’s birthday is in four days. what to send him? Check out beautiful downtown Bandera tomorrow when I leave but oops it’ll be Sunday..will I want to leave before noon? Who knows!

Am sitting here under the trees at Hill Country State NAtural Area in Bandera, Texas, hearing an odd sounding bird. I look up and a little red guy is hopping through the trees like I’ve never seen before. I brought every guide book under the sun along so I’ll try and figure out what it is….

The Park Ranger was just here, helping fill up the air in my tires. Last night at a rest area I looked down and saw one very low tire. Put in my seventy five cents at the gas station for air and that got it from 20 psi to about 50, not enough, so I was registering at the park headquarters and mentioned I had a low tire and the Ranger said ” You should have asked him ( the ranger who just left) but she raised him on the color combos & easy makeovers and he shadowed up with a tank of air which he depleted and is now refilling with a promise to return. He returned and told me the bird is a Vermillion Flycatcher that loves the bugs and seed around horses and stays here year round.

I never saw the female Vermillion Flycatcher pictured here (or maybe I did but didn’t know it) but the male was EXTREMELY eye-catching!

I arrived at around 9pm after a stop at Cabelas in Budapest (thats pretty funny what the software does to Buda) and I bought Fireline for beading, clip on sunglasses and a little Gorilla tripod. It was of course dark and Rio, Zoloft and I fumbled around, figuring things out along the way. Zoloft’s answer to everything was to howl – at the noises in the woods, at the 200 feet away sleeping neighbors, at critters in the night. More about that later. I ate old slimy cheese and crackers, mixed an individual bottle of wine with a can of club soda and tried to sleep. Hahaha. Z kept up howling at everything. Every once in a while Rio neighed, emptied his bladder with a gush, pooped or moved around.

The next morning one of the Rangers came by, asked how I’d sleep and when I hesitated asked me if the turkeys had bothered me? That’s what Z had kept at bay!

Thunderstorm approaching…Hear the first rolls. and yes indeed it rained.

I was worried about Rio out in the elements with the storm coming.

The ominous clouds approached with deep, rolling thunder.

I put my cot,my chair, my footstool and my dog into the back of the horse trailer only to discover that it leaks! Right in the middle onto the bed and chair. I kinda fixed it with pink duct tape, a plastic bowl and a ziplock bag, which worked the best. Need to get a sheet of plastic to tape up the length of the leaking cross bar so it funnels that rain to the edges if it rains again. I got photos. And even video footage of the event.

Oh my god it’s nine or so at night and the incredible stars have come out, none of which I can see with the iPad on. I’m going to see if I can get some night photos. The answer is no, not with this machine.

Took Rio and Zoloft to the top of the mountain, how beautiful. A little hairy with all the rocks but that horse is a trooper.

My first “hold the camera up and get a picture of yourself!” photo on top of the mountain. A hard-earned but delightful view.

Look carefully for Rio…..We made it all this rocky way up together but the last six-foot climb was not horse friendly, so he stayed behind and let Zoloft and me conquer the top!

This is a copy map from Texas Parks and Wildlife, slightly cropped, with my comments added in pink, blue and yellow.

Called Hill Country Equestrian Lodge at the top to get a referral to a farrier.  She referred me to Scott with something-something-Horseshoeing, with whom i left a message. The new Easy Boot Edges (essentially, slippers for horses so that you can keep them barefoot and just put their boots on when you ride them on rough surfaces) that I put on Rio seem okay but one fell off and I just don’t want to have go worry about it. Here’s what they look like:

An Easy Boot “Edge” model. What every horse needs 🙂

Talked to Billee who seemed okay, and thought of Katey who was with me the last time I was there. Zoloft is sound asleep. What a dawg, that’s a tough climb!

Going to turn off the lights and look at the stars. I want to get in the habit of getting up early, taking a siesta and going to bed early. Exercise or ride early or late, bead or sleep midday.

 
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Posted by on April 21, 2012 in Texas Travel

 

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