The Endless Prairie Wind

25 comments

Now we move into spring. Both the Ides of March and the Vernal Equinox have passed. Dawn comes a little earlier each morning; the sun eases itself little-by-little northward in the eastern sunrise sky. The prairie winds blow and whistle and sometimes howl. But, if you are going to live on the prairie, you will live with the winds.

Purple clouds over the prairie


The ranch headquarters are about halfway down the bluff that drops toward the Cheyenne River. We face the river valley, which lies to the southeast of us. This location gives us a southern exposure for the winter sun, a great view of the river valley with a couple of main tributaries that help to feed the river, and a very welcome shelter from hard-charging, northwest winds of winter. So with our backs to the wind and our faces toward the sun, we guesstimate what the day will hold for us and try to plan our activities accordingly.

Regular chores come first. This can be the easiest part of the day or sometimes a pain in the butt. For example, dogs and horses never leave anything alone. I have watched the dogs bring in old bones from the pasture and deposit them everywhere. It doesn’t matter to them that someone else will have to pick them up and dispose of them. I have seen the horses surround the bed of my pickup and empty it of tools (pliers, hammers, fencing tools, bags of wire clips, etc.); anything they can pick up, they will and anything they can knock over will be on the ground. I have yet to be successful in my attempts to have them straighten things out and put them back where they belong.

The wind is a lot like the dogs and horses. It too never leaves anything alone. It whips panels off the windbreaks, rips roofing tin off the barn, and it brings tumbleweeds from miles away and deposits them along the fence line. If these winds are followed by snow, it will gather in drifts along the tumbleweed fence line and bend it to its will.

The wind can cut like a knife in winter and make the cottonwood trees sing in the summer. But mostly, it never ends, and the work can’t wait for it to stop. If you’re a fencer, the wind is job security, but if you’re a rancher, it’s a never-ending spring job. And, no seasonal element can stop the production.

Dressed for the conditions, we hunch up and keep our heads down to keep the dust, snow or rain out of our eyes. Posts are straightened. Nails are driven. Wires are stretched and fastened into place. Once the pasture is secured to hold buffalo, we can step back and take pride in a good, honest day’s work. Wind or no wind.

25 comments

  • Posted on by Susan

    Remembering how the mailman in King City, Calif measured the wind in inches per year and endured the stampeding leaves each fall and winter. Not the prairie but windy nevertheless!

  • Posted on by cindy hess

    I think of the book & movie Jerimiah Johnson and the crazy women that live on hill. haunting.

  • Posted on by pat

    What happens in the Spring in Oklahoma when the wind stops blowing.

    You fall over.

    From the Wichita Mountains, OK.

  • Posted on by Kathy Day

    I know that I would enjoy the way you turn words into images, no matter what. But every time I read one of your essays, the images of your ranch and the 2 times Bill and I brought our family to visit you and Jill come alive in my mind once again. Being able to share those visits with our grand daughters, son & daughter-in-law were among the most precious ever. The experience of riding in the 4 wheelers out into the midst of the herd with buffalo grazing all around us, hearing their grunts and snorts, feeling their majesty touched our souls. Thank you for bringing those memories to life again and again!

  • Posted on by Laura Culley

    I forgot to thank you for your words (and how you put them together). I’ve always loved your works—a LOT. Thank you for stringing your words together in such delightful ways and sharing them with us.

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