A New Lens Around the Ranch

Last week I ordered a new, wide angle lens.

Now for you camera junkies, this piece of glass is a 28mm Wide Angle f/1.8 Canon Ultrasonic. The reviews say it should be an L series lens. I’m not going to disagree. And because I know what I’m doing with a camera (or not) I’ll give you guys the “technical” details of each shot below.

I picked it up from the post office yesterday morning, first thing, and then ran around the ranch taking photos in between doing chores.

Here’s Sookie, stalking something.

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ISO 400, f/1.8, 1/7999

You can really see her missing-due-to-frost-bite ear in this one:

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ISO 320, f/1.8, 1/7999

And more Sookie, because I’m sure you’re not bored with seeing her yet:

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ISO 250, f/1.8, 1/7999

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ISO 320, f/1.8, 1/7999

Then there’s the fence:

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ISO 200, f/4, 1/2500

And everyone’s favorite view of the fence, as was evidenced on Facebook last night:

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ISO 200, f/4, 1/1250

Maybe these are contributing to my allergies:

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ISO 200, f/2, 1/6400

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Same as above.

My traveling partner from the trip, Crystal:

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Same as above.

Tiger my wild Tom Cat:

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ISO 200, f/2, 1/640

And no photoshoot I do would be complete without photos of everyone’s favorite ranch dog, Jake:

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ISO 800, f/2, 1/3200

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ISO 320, f/2, 1/3200

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ISO 250, f/1.8, 1/1600
And my favorite shot of Jake for the day:

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ISO 320, f/2, 1/3200

Because I had extra energy last night I decided to make this with three of the photos I took of Crystal:

crystal collage

I guess stapling up 1/4 mile of fence didn’t take enough out of me yesterday!

Now that you’re all bored to tears, go enter my 1500 fans contest. Hurry!

I’m Brad And I’m Bad!

A couple weeks ago I got to photograph my first senior boy. Maybe for boys senior photos aren’t such a big deal or maybe I’m just not known to the boys around. Either way, I felt pretty fortunate to be given the opportunity. He and his girlfriend and her mother came to the ranch and a great time was had by all!

He’s a pretty handsome fella, no?

He brought along the most adorable puppy. We’re all lucky I didn’t just take photos of the dog all day!

Yeah, so I couldn’t resist!

Personally, I think he has an awesome smile!

We really had a good time. We were giving him grief about being a GQ model:

But look, don’t you think he could?

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And we tried to get him to goof off. This was as good as it got:

Ok, maybe not. We did manage to get him to laugh so hard he had to take a minute!

I sure had fun, taking these, and I hope he had as much fun as I did and will enjoy the photos for many years to come. Thanks for being a good sport, Brad!

Happy Trails!

It’s Contest Time!

This week, I should reach 1500 fans on my Facebook Page. And in honor of you folks, the fans that have made that happen, we’ll be having an online party contest!

There will be 5 winners in this sweepstakes- and you can have countless entries!

Here’s the really exciting part though- I spent my rainy Saturday creating a beautiful, 100-page, hard-cover journal just for this occasion. Two lucky people will win one of these. There’s 90 pages upon which you can write your thoughts, recipes or doodles if you’d like (though the pages are lined). Now, if you can’t wait to see if you will win one, or if you can’t leave it up to chance, check it out below and then go buy yours now!

The other prizes for this contest include two 8×12 metal float mounts (ready to hang and gorgeous -photo of the winner’s choice; retail value of $93.25), and a 16×24 signed print- again photograph of the winner’s choice (retail price $65.25). If you don’t know where all the goods are located, you’ll want to click here.

Now you’re probably all wondering what you’ll need to do to enter this contest, right? I need you to leave a comment right here, on this very blog post telling me you have liked me on Facebook, or already like me on Facebook, or even like me in real life or all of the above. There won’t be any Twitter entries this time, as I’m trying to make my life simpler! All the winners will be selected at random, thanks to my contest generator on the blog. You have from NOW until Friday (May 4, 2012) at noon central time to enter! Be sure to tell your friends!

Happy Trails, and Good Luck!

There’s Fence to Fix

It hasn’t been until just recently that I’ve started to fix fence. Last year we had a hired man, and before that, the boys did it as need be. But with the Cowboy working in town, leaving his brother and I to run the place, I’ve had to step up my game, especially if I’d like our mares and saddle horses to stay in their respective pastures. If you’ve followed this blog at all, you know that recently there have been horses all over the ranch and Armstrong county, in places they certainly needn’t be.

So, I thought, since I fixed some fence this week, I’d give you a little tutorial about what I did. Some of you will be bored, others may think, “I’d pay to fix fence, just to get away from my day job!” And to you, I would reply, “We’re happy to have you come visit. We’ll drink wine or whatever poison suits you, I’ll cook something amazing, and you can fix fence!”

I’ve digressed. Back to fencing…

Let’s start with a simple project- replacing the clip or the staple that you place on a T-Post.

In the photo below you will see a three-strand fence. The middle strand is being held to the post by nothing.

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This next photo, will show you how the wire should be held to the T-Post:

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We have smooth wire running on a lot of our fences as the bottom strand. It’s more animal friendly for birds or antelope that are apt to go through a fence, as opposed to over it, like a deer.

Here’s what the top wire looks like:

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Here’s my attempt at taking a close-up of the T-Post Staple:

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Siri was NOT cooperating this day and was having a terrible time paying attention (focusing) on the subject at hand. Bad iPhone! BAD! Sometimes I crack myself up!

You can see the staple on the fence post now! Even though it’s out of focus. See, even photographers have bad days. I think I’m still blaming Siri. She’s been pretty mouthy and unhelpful lately!

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Basically my goal this day was to replace any missing T-Post staples, so that the fence got tighter and it was harder for the calves and cows to sneak through. There was a cow out this particular morning, in case you’re wondering what brought on my insatiable desire to fix fence. If you didn’t catch the sarcasm there, you might should go back and re-read that last sentence. I jest, I jest. My life is the best, even if all I do for the day is fix fence!

In taking a closer look at the staple, you can see that there’s a short side, and a long side. The short side, simply slips over the wire and goes around behind the post, and then the long side, gets twisted around the wire to hold it in place. It doesn’t take a lot of twisting. A little bit will getcha!

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And yet again, Siri was being belligerent. But you can get the idea. I’m simply going to twist the staple end under, then over the wire, and have it hold.

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I hope you enjoyed this little fence fixing tutorial. There’s plenty more where this came from!

Happy Trails and Happy Friday!

The Girls…

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I went to visit yesterday and snapped this photo with my iPhone. After a mile long fencing project yesterday, which only involved getting 250 posts pounded into the ground, I haven’t the energy to share more this morning. Plus, I’m in charge of the chores today so I have to head to the corrals!

Happy Trails!

A Day in my Life…

Well, folks, we like to say that everyday is like a holiday around here. And that’s true because we do get to do something we love everyday, even though sometimes the task may not be our favorite- like say fixing fence or even building fence. When it comes to those things, I’m not gonna lie- I’d rather be horseback. On days when there’s nothing pressing to do we basically do whatever we want (chores not withstanding), and of course, when I get a day like that I usually ride, or work on my book, or go take photos. But usually I like to ride.

Today was one of those days where I had something pressing to do. A couple weeks ago, as I was wrapping up my day, I got home, and was here just long enough to enjoy a big glass of water, and realized that I had mares spilling out on to the road through the neighbor’s pasture. So I put them up, but it was too late in the day to go fix the water gap, which was obviously out. If you’re wondering what a water gap is, never fear, the answer’s near.

The next day the neighbor comes over, bringing those same mares, down the road. So I put them in the “Middle Pasture” about three miles down the road. If they get out of that one, ether side is our place, so it’s a bit harder to “lose” them in the country.

Not all of the mares escaped that day, however. There were 5 still in the pasture where they belonged (up in a corner, far away from the water gap that was out), so I left them there.

And today, I needed to find them, get them moved, and pull hair on one of them so I can get a DNA test done for registration purposes.

So I set off for the pasture where I’d last seen them, the pasture we call the Parker Creek Pasture (probably because Parker Creek runs through it! Genius, I know!).

This is what I saw on the way out:

On the Way Out

And then I ran across this pretty thing:

Macro 1

Macro 2

I never did get photos of these last year, and now that I know where they’re hiding, I figure it’s time to break out the big guns!

I found more of them, as I searched for the mares:

Wild Flowers

And then there was this pretty view:

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Meanwhile, there’s still no horses in site. I mean, I realize I’m looking for 5 of them, and that’s not that many in a 900 acre pasture, but still!

I decide to finish up searching the East side of the Parker Creek Pasture, by checking the water gap that goes between Parker Creek Pasture and the “Bottom Half” of the Middle Pasture. They were sure original when they named stuff on this outfit!

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Notice the hoof prints in the gumbo? I did. And I had an inkling that they’d gotten through right there where the fence was down but I wasn’t sold on that idea, since they may have gone out and come back. After all, I hadn’t checked the West side of the pasture yet.

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You can see where I’ve pulled up the washed-out posts and wire because the dirt is dark and wet.

Water Gap

Now, if you’re still wondering what a water-gap is, I shall tell you. Basically it’s a fence that goes into the water. It “gaps” the distance between the shore and the water to keep the animals in their specified location. And they work great, when the river is as high as it has been the last few years. But now it’s down to what I think are normal levels, and the water gaps are mostly washed out due to all the extra water that Lake Ohae/The Missouri river have held the past few years.

I could have sworn I took an “after” photo, but I can’t find it now, so we’ll just have to call this project done. Except that it’s not really. See how there’s a little “lagoon” in front of the river? Well, I didn’t have enough extra wire or posts, or clips to reach that far, so I have to go back and finish the job. It’ll be my Tuesday project, unless something else comes up.

Water Gap

It’s now time to head over to the West side of the pasture, which means crossing Parker Creek. Not usually a big deal. Except that this time, someone failed to recall the week of rain we just had. My usual crossing spot (where I crossed two weeks ago when I put the escaped mares away) didn’t favor me as much this time:

My Predicament

And yes, I’m buried up to the axle.

Another view:

My Predicament Part Two

I should probably back up…

When I first realized I was stuck, my initial reaction wasn’t to take a picture. It was to start hoofing it to the highest hill so I had cell service and could text The Cowboy’s, brother, Bud, to see if he was available to come pull me out. If he wasn’t, I was prepared to walk however far away from home I was- I’m thinking it’s about 2 miles by the way the crow flies, but would have been more than that to walk it, of course.

So up the nearest hill I go- it was a good quarter mile hike at least. So I send this text: “Hey, um, I kinda got stuck in the bottom of Parker Creek, in Parker Creek. Can you help me?”

This was followed by an “I will be right down”, and then I added that I needed to be on the West Side, but that I was stuck in the middle. He asked for further locational directions (lucky for me, I was stuck smack between two old creep feeders and everyone on the ranch knows where they are) and then he suggested I take a photo, so he could determine if it was too wet to bring a pickup- in which case Big Green would have had to make an appearance. I replied that I would have to “go back down the hill”, to which he replied, “You can take a pic from there if you can see where you are stuck”. But of course I was too far away. So I ran back down the giant hill, took two photos and hoofed it up a hill on the West side, since I had a better view of the gravel road from there. Needless to say, I was a hot mess by this point. I had mud on my jeans, on my boots, and in my hair, on my shirt, and I was sweaty from a 75 degree day and a trek up a 65 degree hill or two. I’m not complainin’. I’m just sayin’.

While I was on top of the second hill, I took this photo:

A View From the Top

When I saw Bud heading toward me in the pickup, I hoofed it back down the hill and went to sit in the machine. I took this picture of the creek:

Parker Creek

Why I thought it was a good idea to cross right there, I’ll never know, save for that it’s worked for me before.

He gets me unstuck and I tell him I will just go around, to which he replies, “just pick a different spot, give ‘er hell, and try while I’m still down here”. So I did. And I made it. I checked the West side of the pasture and no horses. I visited the water gap over there, the one that I knew was out, and well, let’s just say, that one needs work. But there were no hoof prints going around it. I still figured I should cruise home through the neighbor’s pasture just to be sure, plus that way I didn’t have to cross the creek again! By this time it was about 3pm and I hadn’t had lunch yet, so I decide I’ll grab a bite before I check the pasture where the hoof-prints from the water gap led.

After a quick bite, I head down the road and go through the Middle Pasture, to the “Bottom Half”, or the “Sundance Pasture” (as it’s referred to) where I plan to search. There’s three gates from the “Middle Half” into the “Bottom Half” and I opted to cruise through the one in the middle. I search, and see no horses. I check the water gap on the East side, the one I’ve not yet checked this trip (I checked it and fixed it a couple weeks ago) and it’s still in. Then I start to see hoof-prints but I can’t find any horses. So I head West, to the third gate that I’ve not yet been through.

And what do you suppose I saw?

If you guessed a wrecked gate you’d be right!

A Broken Gate

It’s not supposed to look like that.

I’m not the best fence fixer in the world, but I’m determined to try. So I pull out my new BFF, also known as a Plammer.

My New BFF

They’re a combination fencing plier/hammer. Creative name, right? I was glad that I had those with me, as opposed to a simple pair of fencing pliers (which, by the way, I also had with me), because this gate was wrecked. There were staples on the ground, and I had to take a stay off to get it back to some semblance of straight-ness.

But, I overcame.

A Fixed Gate

This is what it SHOULD look like!

I think it’s appropriate at this time to say that I was praying that the missing mares were in the top-half of Middle Pasture where I’d set out to put them in the first place. I hadn’t seen hide nor hair of them all day!

As I drove away from my newly repaired gate, I spotted a mare that I thought was among those MIA. I carefully circled the wagons, and lo and behold, wouldn’t you know it, all the mares are in one pasture. It only took me 2/3rds of the day to figure that out!

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Wasn’t it a beautiful evening? It was about 5:30 by the time I found them.

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Wide open Spaces

When I got back to the corrals, I found our newest heifer’s, heifer calf sleeping quietly, so I took that chance to tag her:

Heifer #215

Isn’t she sweet?

Her mama and her were set up just right to let them out into the big trap now that they’re getting along well. Sometimes first time mamas need a bit of extra help, but she’s really trying hard and her baby loves her, so it was time. I hazed them into the big trap with our other pairs and headed to the house.

Then I sat on the deck and enjoyed a cocktail:

A Happy View

And watched the sun go down:

Sunset

And that, my friends, ends another day in my life.

Happy Trails!

Scatter Butte

I feel it is now worth mentioning (and I happen to have time right now) to share with you some good news. Some of you may remember my photo: Scatter Butte. Last fall I entered it into the Ex Arte Equinus International Art Horse competition. It was selected as as finalist. There were over a thousand entries from 40 countries, and I felt honored that the judges found it good enough to place in such high regard.

I’m offering it as a signed and numbered, limited edition, wrapped canvas in an 11×28 size.

I know you’ll love it as much as I do.

For those that don’t remember the photo, here you go:

Scatter Butte from The DX Ranch.

I’m offering you the chance to purchase this now- instead of simply locally- as it’s currently offered. Priced at $215 plus shipping and tax where applicable, I think you’ll find this is a great addition to any art collection. Please allow 4-6 weeks from the time of order to the time it is shipped.

Happy Trails!

A Little Pink and Purple…

I have about zero chance of getting to wear something like this- however I can see the heels with blue jeans, and the clutch with just about any outfit. But I put it together anyway, because, well, I like the way it looked. If I were on American Idol or something, I’d totally rock this outfit!

Pink and Purple, Please?


Dorothy Perkins dress
$44 - dorothyperkins.com

Steve Madden pumps
$99 - macys.com

Wallet
$17 - dsw.com

Crislu ring
$50 - lordandtaylor.com

Ring
$50 - jtv.com

Dorothy Perkins bracelet
$4 - dorothyperkins.com

Earrings
$11 - windsorstore.com

Christian Dior nail polish
$23 - nordstrom.com

Happy Friday!

A Girl and Her Horses

Last week I got the opportunity to photograph a gorgeous girl and two beautiful horses. I love doing senior photos. I mean I absolutely love them! They are even more fun when there’s horses and a cowgirl involved.

I shared a lot of them on Facebook, but for those of you who’re not on Facebook, and who may have missed them, I’m here to show you my favorites!

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Postcard

Happy Trails and Happy Wednesday!

Friday the 13th…In Photos

There were dogs:

Higgins!

And kids:

Gorgeous skies and Landscapes:

And what would a day on the ranch be without seeing the girls?

I think that heifer 007 would like to say Hi too!

Let’s not forget the wildflowers that are showing up!

And a Curlew!

Here’s wishing you a week full of blessings!