This entry was posted on 6/13/2007 9:31 AM and is filed under uncategorized.
Saturday June 9 2007
Steph and John are leaving tomorrow for
Japan. Japan is putting on their first 100 mile ride, and Steph and
John have been advisors for the venture. Despite them still having to
pack, and take care of the never ending last minute endurance.net
stuff, we still had time, or made time, for a nice 15-mile loop ride,
over to and up Hart Creek. The Raven (Two) went along... time to get
him back into the saddle (bag)

!
It was a nice breezy evening,
keeping hot temperatures at bay, and we clipped right along,
cross-countrying up and down hills to get us onto the trail leading to
the Hart Creek valley

. Jose followed right along behind big striding
Rushcreek Mac and Hoss, and we kept up a quick pace for quite a while,
on coliche roads, in sandy washes, weaving through sagebrush on old
cattle trails. Hart Creek still had a bit of water running in it, and
the immediate area next to the creek was green green green, with grass,
healthy sagebrush, and big locus trees. At some places, especially
where we had to bull our way through willows, it looked like we were
riding in a mini-jungle. The horses stopped to grab some grass,
especially Mac, who probably hadn't laid eyes on such good grass since
he left Nebraska, unless you count the other day when he either hopped
the fence or crawled through it and helped himself to the grass in the
front yard. Floods in this area two years ago knocked out Steph and
John's bridge, and here in Hart Creek you could see where some
obviously pretty high and strong water carved a big channel right out
of the hillside that was taller than us on our horses. Swallows love
the overhanging blocky clay walls left behind for their round mud
nests. The creek narrows at one spot with hills on one side, and a cave
on the other. That's on private property, so we didn't go snooping
around, but some lucky soul is building a little cabin back there.
We
rode up away from the creek onto a little flat, and came to a gate
where John got off to open it, and I got off to scratch Jose's ears,
which had filled up with gnats that just seemed to hatch today,
particularly in Hart Creek-bed. (When we got home, they were there
too!) Steph was leaning over on Mac rubbing his neck, telling him what
a good horse he is. She just loves him, he moves wonderfully, is very
forward, but very light – the cowboys at Rushcreek Ranch taught him to
respond to seat and legs very nicely. He does wander off by himself
away from the herd at times, though, as if he's looking for something –
like Nebraska maybe? I think that when we take him out for endurance
trail rides, he's thinking, “Well? We keep going, and going, and going,
but we never find the cattle!”
John got back on Hoss, and we moved onto the road. Jose and I were behind Mac, when suddenly, out from under Mac's legs was...
“SH**!”
I booted Jose to the side, and we just avoided walking over the same
rattlesnake that Mac had obliviously walked over! John swerved out of
its way in the other direction, and we all stopped and turned around to
watch the maybe 18” rattler – not a big one - continue slithering off
the road and into a little sagebrush. I did have the instinctive urge
to follow it – I always want to touch wild things – but whoa! Stopped
that thought right away. They can only strike a distance of about 2/3
their body size, but I don't need to test that theory, and I've touched
enough bull snakes around here to fullfill my quota of snake groping.
He
never did rattle – I think maybe he was as startled as we were, and
like us, he didn't realize what had happened until after it had
happened. Rattlesnakes are fairly deaf, but they sense vibrations very
well; maybe since we'd been standing around a while and had just
stepped onto the soft road, and he'd been on the move somewhere, we
were all a big surprise.
Yikes!
We left the rattlesnake
behind and continued on the road which swung back around to Hart Creek
by where an old homestead used to be, and we kept following the
drainage up to where cliffs rise up on either side to squeeze the
creek. Jose and the Raven had a little photo session here

. From here we
left the creek and headed in the direction of home, only we had to turn
away from it again, to climb to the top of the mesa, to get home. Hoss
hadn't been this way before, but his internal equine compass was
working very well, and he was quite certain we were going the wrong
way. John had to do some convincing to get him going the wrong
direction, and up a steep climb to boot! Jose followed ever- agreeably
behind, while Mac hung back, grabbing abundant grass. He might have
just liked to stay there and eat, then find his way back to Nebraska,
and I bet you HIS internal equine compass was working just fine, and
he'd have found his way there eventually.
But we climbed up this
steep ridge, which got narrower the higher we got. When we reached the
top, the Owyhee Front range was once again ahead of us (follow Hart
Creek up – or Bates Creek the next big drainage over – and they will
take you right into the mountains), and to our side and behind us
spread the whole Hart Creek drainage, with a good view down to the
Snake River plain. The sunset had vanished behind gray and blue storm
skies, which layered the distant mountains and mesas to the north in
special shades of blue and purple. Any different time of day, any
different kind of cloud cover, gives you different colors out here, and
not one combination I've seen has not been new and beautiful. And every
time, the beauty just about knocks me off my horse - wow, what a
magnificent place I get to ride in.
Hoss was happy when we
finally turned in the correct direction towards home, and Jose took the
lead on the way back. We were trotting down the final road stretch to
home, when some sort of commotion took place in a bush to our right.
Jose and I thought it was a rabbit, and we'd already passed it so it
was no big deal, but Hoss, just behind us, apparently thought it was a
rattlesnake, because he leaped sideways and forward, scaring Jose, who
bolted forward. Steph, behind both of us, thought it sounded like
hissing.
Either way, that's plenty of rattlesnakes for me, don't need to see anymore of those.
And either way, the Raven had fun in his return to the saddle!
http://www.endurance.net/merri/stories/2007/06/rattlesnake-ride.html