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Horses in Love, continued ...

Below them hung a sign, "All singles sold as is," with a cartoon of a scruffy wrangler who resembled the broken down cowboys who hang out on the catwalk. I wondered if any of them would try to pick me up after the sale.

Auction ring at Cattlemen's Livestock Auction. This gelding is drenched with sweat from fear. Because he is being sold riderless, a killer buyer will get him. Behind him, to the left, is the iron gate through which livestock enters the sale ring. Photo courtesy Carolyn Bertin.

Behind me was a semicircular auditorium. Some 200 buyers and spectators crowded on vinyl upholstered benches. In front of me a welded pipe fence some 6 ft high cordoned off the sale ring. Inside, at each end of its oval, was a metal shield behind which wranglers take shelter when livestock attack.

A tall sorrel quarterhorse under saddle quick stepped into the ring. His rider whirled him in circles. Then he slipped off the bridle while still on his back and pulled a rein around the horse's neck. With just this rein he showed that he could still control it.

But -- was there a contracted tendon on the left foreleg? The horse didn't seem to be able to set his hoof down flat. There is always some reason a horse is run through this auction. It is the job of us buyers to figure out what that reason is.

I wasn't the only one to notice the contracted tendon. The sluggish bidding reached $600 dollars. The rider jumped off the sorrel and in seconds pulled off the saddle. He heaved it to an assistant who immediately lugged it out to the line of waiting horses. They would prepare another to be ridden into the ring.

A wrangler chased the sorrel around the ring awhile more. Then an assistant heaved on a rope that went through a pulley to open the iron exit gate. The sorrel ran through it. The gate slammed with a sound like a fractured bell. The horse ran over a twelve foot square scale which automatically registered his weight. A red light display above the auctioneer read out 1200 lbs. Another wrangler pulled on a rope and pulley and the gate on the other side of the scale opened. The sorrel dashed down a runway to the southwest holding pens.

"Sold Bill's Straightaway," cried the auctioneer. That sorrel was headed for the cattle semis. And Ft. Worth. And French or Belgian dinner plates.

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