Long Way To The Bus

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It’s a long ways down to the blacktop where the Contos kids catch the bus. Maybe four miles or so. They live back a ways on a make-do ranch that Rog and Emmy started just after they were married. It ‘s always been touch and go, some years ok, and ok means just getting by, and other years it’s been hell in a hand basket. This year has been hell in a hand basket.

The ranch has always seemed like an accident waiting to happen. In fact Rog would say, If he had a duck it would drown, that ‘s how bad the luck was. Two years ago the spring that fed the pond dried up and they dug a well but it’s been fitful to be charitable. Rog had to sell off a good third of the herd to pay the well digger and now it looks like he may have to sell some more to buy an old truck to haul water if that well stays slow.

Emmy goes into town to work a little, she’s helped out at the Grayson’s store but they don’t pay much, but Edith gives her a few yards of cloth every so often so she can make Mizzy a new dress or Fip a shirt, but cash hasn’t been plentiful. Used to be Rog would give the kids a ride down to the bus in the morning but now with gas like it is they have to save what they can for the tractor. If they don’t get the hay in they may have to buy feed this winter and that would just about tear it. So the tractor is now first priority. They’ve talked with Chas Cummings down at the bank to see if they could get a little more money but he said no and given the circumstances he didn’t see how he could extend that note anyway. He didn’t even bother to say sorry but he did say good luck. Emmy had to drag Rog out before Chas could call the sheriff.  Rog said he’d been wanting to hit that bastard ever since high school and man it felt good. They didn’t have a lot to say to each other on the way back to the ranch.

Mizzy and Fip were aware of the problem a little, it would have been hard not to be with Mom crying some and Dad yelling and cinching up Rebo too tight when he saddled him. Dad even threw the empty oil can he had from topping off the oil in the John Deere at Buck and he loved that dog. Fip told Mizzy they needed to stay out of sight for a while because he remembered that whipping he got last fall and didn’t want another one. Even if he had been good since then. When dad got mad it was best to lay low.

Mizzy was thirteen, gangly, tall for her age, whip thin. She had big green eyes and no hips. Not even the first sign of them. She was wearing one of her cousin’s hand me down jeans and she had to wear a pair of suspenders to keep them up because there was nothing there for a belt to hitch to. She was going to be pretty in an open, wide-face kind of way before too long. If her hair stayed red like it was she was going to be her dad’s biggest problem. Already a boy or two had hung around her a little too long. Ms. Dabbin her teacher had moved Mizzy up to the front row so she could keep an eye on things.

Fip was eleven. He was short and stocky like Emmy but he was quick, both in speed and thinking about things. Not much got past him and he thought pretty deep about what he saw and heard for a kid. He didn’t say much to others but he talked a blue streak to Mizzy until some times she just had to say Fip hush I can’t even think with you going on. Give me some peace. Fip would be quiet for a while but he had so much going on in his head he just couldn’t keep it bottled in. Then the dam would burst and out it would all come until Mizzy nearly frantic would lock her self in the outhouse to have a moment to herself. That was one place that was sacred for privacy and it was her last refuge.

On the way to the bus this morning Mizzy and Fip were walking along. Mizzy kind of quiet, keeping her head down, not picking up her feet like she should and Fip was like Buck was when he was a puppy. Running off 75′ or so then waiting for a minute and when you didn’t catch up fast enough racing back to you to tell you hurry up then taking off again. He must have walked that distance to the bus four times to Mizzy’s once.

Once he looked back and saw Mizzy sitting in the road all hunched over kinda shaking. At first he thought it was funny but as he ran back he saw she was crying and that really scared him so he ran back even faster. The sack she had been carrying had some how split and their lunch was laying all over the place. They were as close as brother and sister can be but they’d never been much for touching or hugging. Fip reached out to touch Mizzy’s shoulder and said What’s wrong? Did you twist your ankle? Something bite you? Mizzy just sobbed and kept looking at the ground. Should I run back and get Mom? he asked. Finally she said No, I’m just feeling out of sorts. Help me pick up our lunch. Fip immediately began gathering stuff up saying, See it’s alright it’s hardly dirty at all. We can brush it all off. Why you crying so much over dropped lunch? I don’t know she said. I’ve just been feeling funny for a while. Like I’m all itchy inside and can’t scratch it. I get sad for no reason, then I get mad. I don’t know what’s wrong with me. I don’t want to ask mom about it. I don’t want her crying no more, especially over me.

Well if you ain’t hurt, you better get up or we’re gonna miss the bus. If dad has to take us to school you’ll have plenty to cry about and me too probably. Here, I’ll carry that for you. Let’s go. I’ll race you down to where that rock is. No you run on, she said, I’ll be along in a minute. It’s a long way down to the bus.

 

Hey! What’s The Holdup?

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We just received an urgent message from one of our summer residents regarding the weather up here on The Institute’s grounds. Normally our summer people, in this case the Bluebirds, begin arriving at the end of February, first of March and find themselves up to their tail feathers in snow and cold. This winter however has been different with milder temperatures and almost no snow.

Apparently what is making the bluebirds itchy is the fact that now that satellite TV is so prevalent, even down in central Mexico where these guys winter over, they can watch the Weather Channel and figure out when they should start back. The Eastern bluebirds don’t have a problem. They watch the east coast getting dumped on and they go “No way, Jose. I’m good right here for another month.” They have no problem hanging out down here catching rays and eating Maguey worms until things break up North.

Our Mountain Bluebirds are of hardier stock and they’re tired of the good life down there in mañana land and they know how tough it is to get reservations in the better places. Their wives are reminding them everyday that egg time is getting nearer and if they want that good nesting box down by the pond where all the bugs are they better get their feathery little butts in gear and get this show on the road. Hence the cryptic message “Hey! What’s the Holdup? You guys ready, or what?”.

Well our response was “Hey yourself! We’re not in charge of Spring, buddy, if I was you I’d be gone already.” There is no holdup weather-wise as far as the Institute is concerned so we sent word down, the gates are open, and if you want that nesting box by the pond you better have your deposit here by the end of the week or we turn it over to our timeshare people and they’ll put it out there for bids. This is a cutthroat business. There are a flock of a lot of bluebirds out there and only so many nesting boxes so this is one of our critical times to maintain our cash flow. The Institute as you know is a non-profit endeavor but we do have expenses and if we don’t make our bottom line, people go home, you know what I mean? We love our little feathered friends but if they don’t pony up you’ll find them walking down the road dragging their little egg sack behind them.

Now that the word has spread that the weather’s ok, and we’re open for business, the deposits are pouring in and we expect to see out little blue buddies in a week or so. The only problem we have is the squatters that have hung around all winter, I don’t know where, someplace warm and out of the wind I guess. They sneak in the first warm day regardless of the date and set up housekeeping in our dryer vent way up high on The Institute’s wall where you can’t get at them. Last year we hired a team of Barn Swallows to evict them and that solved the problem. We lost about a week and a half’s rent but it could have been worse. The Barn Swallows made up for it, they pack about 30 of them in that space and as we charge by the head we came out ok.

Below is a shot of the offender that now hangs on our undesirable board. He has been put on the very bottom of the list for the next 11 years and since bluebirds tend to only live around 9 years he’ll be setting up housekeeping down by the landfill for the foreseeable future. The words’ out pretty good now “No Line Jumping!”

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Now onto the next big problem, where to put all those Barn Swallows.

Wolf Pack

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I don’t know how many of you have ever seen a wolf pack up close other than scenes from TV or a movie, but it is an entirely different experience in person. Wild things look at you differently, they treat you differently, and unless you are an overt threat they don’t seem to care that you are a human. They are willing to co-exist with you as long as there is mutual respect. This pack is known as the Blacktail Flats pack as it includes the Blacktail flats area in the northern part of Yellowstone National park in it’s hunting range. The pack was fortunate to come across a buffalo carcass near one of the many ponds that are in the area and spent several days taking full advantage of this large meal. This photo shoot took place about 75 yards across a small pond on what turned out to be the last day they were there. That was because there wasn’t anything left to eat when they left late that evening. This grey kept a close watch as it came down for a drink.

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Since this pack had been feeding on this carcass for several days, they came and went as they felt like it. Occasionally most of the pack would be there and sometimes just one of them.

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The carcass is being whittled down by the constant feeding. They eat everything, from bits of the hide to breaking the bones open for marrow.

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Sometime the younger wolves need to be shown who the bull duck in the pond is. This is usually a short lesson.

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When they get down to the point where there is nothing left but the big main bones in the carcass it takes a little cooperation to get them separated. With both wolves pulling from opposite directions something finally gives and somebody gets a nice big juicy leg bone. That seems to be the end of the cooperative spirit as they don’t share well at that point.

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They have been eating a lot, almost non-stop, so every so often they take a break and go goof off. Its time to run, roll in the grass, teach the young to behave themselves and just generally work off some of that buffalo.

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Even when everyone else can not eat one more bite there is always one who can fit in a little more. After all they don’t know when the next meal is coming so one more bite can’t hurt.

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OK, enough fooling around, there is still some buffalo left so this job’s not done.

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The carcass is almost gone. You can see by their stomachs that they have been giving this their all. There were five wolves at the most on this kill during this shoot. There were more wolves in the pack but since all this was taking place in about two hours the entire pack wasn’t there. Supposedly there were anywhere from seven to as many as twelve wolves in this pack.

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It is very nearly done now. Some of the more experienced members of the pack are taking away pieces of the buffalo for eating later. All that remains is the hide and horns and blood stains in the grass.

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Starting from a fairly respectable amount of buffalo when the shoot first started there is little left. Some of the younger wolves will come back over the next day or so to glean what ever small parts were dropped and lick the grass. Hopefully the ravens and other scavengers will have missed some.

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The last wolf leaves with one more small meal and the feeding is over. It now a little past 8:00pm and very nearly dark, in fact we needed flashlights to get back to the cars. The originals of these images are very, very dark, so much so that without the miracle of Photoshop you would have a hard time making out any detail at all. The experience of sharing a meal (so to speak) with these wolves has been a once in a lifetime opportunity and simply incredible.