My
Mom, Ruby Irene Mills Murfin, was my
Cub Scout Den Mother—eight or nine squirrelly, squirming boys in blue shirts and caps and yellow bandanas. I was a Bear
so that made me what, eight or nine years old?
That would make it about 1957 or’58.
Mom
liked projects. Big projects.
Projects that were not necessarily in her Den Mother’s manual.
Projects that helped us learn about the country around us, which happened to be the environs of Cheyenne, Wyoming.
Once
she had cut up a prized possession,
an old mink coat that went out of style with Joan Crawford’s shoulder pads.
A furrier could have used the
pelts for a fashionable stole or evening
jacket, but she gave them to us. We
made Indian war shields trimmed in
fur and lances dangling pelts like trophy scalps. We all whooped it up, terrorized
siblings and neighbor children,
and massacred settlers to our hearts
content for days.
We
made all sorts of things from the pine
cones she collected every summer on picnic trips along Happy Jack Road.
Ruby Murfin was going for glamor, not the Den Mother look in this photo.
But
this day she heaved a peck basket
full of rocks she had collected from
the bed of a fast, high country trout stream that my father
fished the summer before. They were smooth and oval or oblong and all rough edges long ago knocked off by some old glacier and millennia of rushing icy
water. They were about the size of a
good big Idaho potato. They had satisfying weight and heft
in a boy’s hand. Our minds naturally
went to what we could heave them at
and satisfactorily break because we
were, after all, boys which meant we were as wild and vicious by nature as any pagan hoard.
But
before we could commit mayhem, Den
Mother Mom sat us in a circle and read to us from a picture book—Old Blue the Cow Pony by Sanford Tousey. Blue was evidently a ranch horse of extraordinary
talents. Rounded up among the free and wild horses of the high
plains he was an Appaloosa, a nimble, sure footed horse preferred by the Shoshone and the far off Nez Percé. He
was tightly dappled. From a light
rump his coat shaded to blue-gray in the forequarters. Some folks called him a blue roan.
The front plate and title page of Stanford Tousey's Old Blue the Cow Pony
Once
broken and tamed, he took to the
rigorous demands of working cattle—the
intricate dance of cutting calves or steers from a herd for branding, running at full speed over broken
ground as his rider threw his lariat, knowing just how to taut the rope so that the cowboy could leap from the saddle and
throw the critter to the ground. He had endurance
for long days and nights of constant work and the speed
to win the Sunday afternoon races at the home
ranch.
Blue
was also extremely loyal to his cowboy. Together they rode through many seasons until the horse’s muzzle grew gray. He was the stuff of cowboy folklore
yet he kept working.
Then
one year—could it really have been 1886 the year of the Great Blizzard that buried
the high plains from Colorado all
the way up into Canada in several feet of white death?—Blue and his rider were caught in the high country
near the Great Divide searching for strays when the storm hit. As I recall the
tale, if they could not make it to the
safety of the home ranch, they would surely
die.
Through
the raging storm with winds blowing icy pellets sideways, in
the dreaded white out the man lost all sense of direction. But Blue knew. He kept plodding
on breasting drifts up to his shoulders. Two, maybe three days, the rider insensible and barely clinging to the
saddle. When the storm finally broke they were in the midst of a featureless plain far from the Mountains.
Fredrick Remington's Drifting Before the Storm captured the brutality of the Blizzar of '86 on men, horses, and cattle.
Finally
they encountered riders from the
home ranch not more than two or three miles away. When they reached Blue he gave up his burden to them, laid down and died.
They
had to leave him where he lay.
The body quickly froze and
was covered by drifting snow.
But
as soon as it cleared that Spring the
cowboys rode out with their shovels and
buried Blue where he lay. But now there
was a new danger…the hungry coyotes that would find the shallow grave and dig it up. So they began to haul stones from a distant stream to build a cairn
over the grave to protect it the
same as they would do for any fallen
comrade.
A
small pile a couple of feet high
would have done the trick, but they wanted something more—a monument. They built the pile high and fenced the plot with split rails. And on a tall board stuck into the ground they painted, “Erected to the memory of Old Blue, the best old cow pony
that ever pulled on a rope. By the cow punchers of the 7 X L Outfit Rest in
Peace.”
When
Mom finished telling the story to us she said, “That was a long, long time ago and some of the stones on Old Blue’s grave
have fallen. But we are going to help. We are going to bring new stones!”
She
let us each pick a stone and broke out the Tempera
paints and brushes. She had us each paint our rock and decorate it with the brands
we had designed for ourselves the week before. Mine was the P-standing-A-T, the capital
letter A standing on the top of letters P and T with a leg on each.
At
our next Den meeting Mom loaded us into my Dad’s Wyoming Travel Commission station wagon and drove out on the giant Warren Ranch. We found the grave by a rutted dirt road not far from the Colorado line. It was a raw and blustery day,
the sky leaden, but the frozen ground clear of snow. It must have been March. The grave was there
just like in the picture but the stones slipped
along the ground on one side, the sign had faded, and the rail fencing long since replaced with wire.
One
by one we each solemnly stepped forward and placed our stones on the pile. Mom took
some pictures with our old Kodak
Brownie Box camera. We may have said
a prayer for Old Blue, or sung a song. Or not. We piled back into the station wagon and
drove back to town in an odd silence,
not a single boy trying to start a round of Ninety-nine Bottles of Beer on
the Wall.
It’s
hard now to realize that almost as much time has passed since those Cub Scouts
piled their stones as there was then from the time the ranch hands began the
cairn 135 years ago.
And
that’s the story. Make of it what you
will. There may have been miracles involved.
Great story. Thanks for writing it up and posting
ReplyDeleteWhat a great story. Being originally from New Jersey we always envied you kids from out west!
ReplyDelete