Livestock Crossing -- a chapter from Killer Buyer
By Carolyn M. Bertin
How did my love affair with horses begin? It started
with a cat.
When I was seven, visiting my grandfather Edison Pettit, for several days I had gotten glimpses of
a cat. All I'd see was a flash of motion as it slipped away behind his home observatory.
I wanted to pet it. What the heck. Sing a song, and maybe it wouldhear me and like it. I sat in the
weeds where I had last seen it. As I began the second verse of
Silent Night, she climbed, purring, into my lap.
A few months later - this was 1953 - our family moved to the
McDonald Observatory on the top of Mount Locke in Texas. The night skies were
perfect there on the north edge of the Big Bend.
As an astronomer's kid, I didn't fit in at school. I was a
tenderfoot and the ranch kids let me know it. My first chance
to fit in came when a boy invited our class to a birthday party.
His home nestled under cottonwoods in a valley near Ft. Davis,
TX. It was the first ranch I'd seen outside of a TV show. I entertained
them with the Davy Crockett song -- all verses. The kids loved
it. It sorta made me an honorary Texan.
After we polished off the cake, the birthday boy told us about
his dad's bronc that no one could tame.
"I know how to tame horses," I said. I had zero
experience with horses, but what the heck, how different could they be from cats?
"Prove it." The boys were laughing at me.
We went out to the corral. A sorrel gelding flinched at the
sight of our approach. I mounted the top rail, took a seat, and began singing Silent
Night. It took more than two verses, but eventually I was scratching
the sorrel behind his ear. Later, I learned that is how Navajos tame horses, only they sing to them all night long for good measure.
A few weeks later, the two Krebs boys, who lived near the observatory on Mount Locke, invited me to play at their
ranch. They were showing off their Shetland ponies when 10-year-old
Manuel galloped up on a red mustang. He skidded to a stop in
a cloud of dust and reared him up like Roy Rogers on TV.
"How do you like Pepper?" Manuel asked.
Like? I was about to faint with admiration. Then - a miracle
of kindness - Manuel invited me to ride him.
I scrambled up onto Pepper's saddle. "I don't know how."
"Just lay the reins across his neck in the direction
you want him to go. To get him to start walking, kick a little."
Pepper stepped out at a walk. "To speed up, squeeze your
legs." Pepper broke into a trot.
I grabbed the saddle horn. My stomach knotted.
"Squeeze and you'll go faster." Pepper broke into
a lope. I caught the rocking horse rhythm. That was the secret.
The faster we went, the easier it was. I leaned the reins across
his neck and we headed for the Herefords in the meadow southwest
of the corrals.
The Krebs boys chorused "Don't run the stock. They'll
lose weight." They caught up and we veered west, past a
live oak grove and across a lava flow.
Manuel, the Krebs boys and I used to ride to school in the
back of a pickup truck. It was twenty miles our classrooms in
Ft. Davis. The driver always dropped off Manuel at a different
school. Only brown-skinned kids ran around on that playground.
Why didn't Manuel go to our school? The grownups said kids who
speak Spanish have too hard a time in the white kids' school.
I didn't understand. Manuel spoke English just fine. The Anglo
school was almost empty. My classroom combined first and second
grade, and there were only 15 of us.
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