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Meet the Horses
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pictured is
Beebop and her foal, Buffalo Creek Tiponi, born spring 2002
At the Buffalo Creek Ranch you'll see many breeds and ages of
horses : from weanlings (babies!) to our hay burners (old
retired animals who've earned the easy life through many years
of honest service). We have huge draft horses who pull the
sleigh in the winter to feed the cattle (and take you on a
wintery ride). You can also see many young horses in training,
mostly quarter horses and paints. Their talents and
personalities tell us what they will be used for in the future.
The rest are classified as either our working cow horses or our
guest horses, our resident angels who take care of you and your
kids while out on the trail. All are highly valued and maybe
even a little bit spoiled. A yell and a whistle brings them in
from across a field and most of them love nothing more than a
good human scratch session. While we don't have the room to show
all 25 head on this page, here's a few to get you started. So
come meet the horses.
A couple of the
young horses. The young spotted horse on the left is a buckskin
paint colt named Buffalo Creek Takota. The mare on the right is
a mixed breed (draft/thoroughbred mix) named Anna.
Tecumseh is a
rare combination of animal that can work trails and cows equally
well. One day he'll be roping under a cowboy and the next he'll
be taking care of a novice on the trail. He's a big beautiful
buckskin quarterhorse.
Bear, the dark horse
on the left, is in semi-retirement, but he's yet to meet a young
lady he can't make swoon. As trustworthy as a horse can get, we
let him go for shorter rides with light children to keep both
kids and him happy.
This is Walker
mugging for the camera. When I climbed the fence to take his
photo, he grabbed the sidepiece on his bridle and stuck his nose
out at me. A funny picture because he usually poses
magnificently, knowing full well he is the classic model of a
beautiful quarterhorse. He is a color called a dun, so he has a
dark stripe down his back. He is almost exclusively used for
cowboy work, but in a pinch, we allow the better riders use him
on the trail. The young lady on his back won her state
competition in horseshowing.
Gunsmoke is a
"rescued" horse. White hairs on his withers attest to a previous
life of hard work with misfitting saddles that caused saddle
sores. A forgiving sort, he takes excellent care of our guests
with his surefooted ways and quiet personality. In turn, we take
excellent care of him.
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