November 26, 2007 © Thomas J. Kollenborn. All Rights Reserved.
Many years
ago when I worked for the Barkley Cattle Company at the old Quarter
Circle U Ranch I became very well acquainted with some interesting and
provoking cow ponies. Many of these ponies were pleased to just dump
your carcass anywhere they could. Believe me, they tried it often, with
persistence and with some success.
I will never forget the time I was
riding a pony called Spook. Spook was a small bay gelding with white
socks and a blaze. He was appropriately named because this pony could
crow hop and complete a full 180 degrees before coming back to earth. He
would spook at the drop of a hat, the snap of a twig or the strike of a
match. My bruised and skinned body was a testament to this cow ponies
ability or to my lack skill at riding these rough cow ponies. I spent
considerable time on the backs of these broomtails searching the
Superstition Mountains for Barkley’s cattle, maintaining fence and
repairing water holes. When there was nothing else to do I was busy
packing salt to some isolated area. Ironically, I worked alone for the
most part.
I will never forget the time I left the
Quarter Circle U Ranch with two pack mules loaded with salt. The morning
was very cold and there were unusually dark low clouds. Rain or snow
was in my forecast. My destination was the salt grounds on Peter’s Mesa.
The ride required about four hours.
I knew before I left the ranch I
wouldn’t get back until after dark. When I arrived on Peter’s Mesa the
temperature had dropped and the dark clouds had moved in lower. Bad
weather was upon me. Blizzard conditions had moved in by the time I was ready to ride down off the Mesa.
As I descended the trail above Charlebois Spring it was snowing so hard I
had to depend on my horse to find the treacherous trail down off the
rugged escarpment. I turned off the trail and rode into Charlebois
Spring for a temporary shelter. It was here that my horse and two mules
got away from me and started running for home. I hiked all the way back
to the ranch some seven miles following the tracks of the mules and my
saddle horse. It was so cold I never stopped to rest. Not only was I
embarrassed I was also quite foot sore when I finally arrived at the
ranch. This will always be a day I will remember in my annuals at the
old Quarter Circle U Ranch.
During the 1950’s the Barkley Ranch
included some 117 sections of forest and state lease land. One hundred
seventeen sections of land is one hundred and seventeen square miles my
friends. Our range ran south of the ranch to Tule Canyon and north to
the shores of Canyon Lake. The western boundary was forest fence east of
Apache Junction. The eastern boundary sliced across Peter’s Mesa
through Peter’s Divide. All of Superstition Mountain was part of the
Barkley Ranch, a ranch that began operating around 1907.
I spent many sunny afternoons talking to
Gus prior to his death in 1955 at the old Three R’s Ranch in what is
now Gold Canyon. He was a great story teller, and he loved his cattle
and this mountain. I worked for his son William Thomas Barkley in the
mid 1950’s and in 1959.
Now back to those horses I have known. I
am a little older now and a bit wiser about horseflesh. I am not sure I
would have climbed on the back of any of the horses Barkley owned with
the knowledge I have today. However, in the 1950’s I was young and a
very inexperienced cowboy. A real greenhorn is the best way to describe
it.
Early one morning we rode out to Tule
Saddle to inspect some calves for screw worms when I met with disaster.
This particular morning I was riding Spook of course. As I rode through
the gate, Spook crow-hopped into the middle of a large Cholla patch. I
had Cholla balls from the brim of my hat to the heel of my boot. The
pain was excruciating. I couldn’t even get off the crow-hopping and
bucking horse.
Finally I just dove off and landed in a
pile of boulders, luckily not breaking my leg or arm. The last time I
saw Spook he was bucking and running back to the ranch a mile or two
away. You might say I was in a difficult situation. If you haven’t had a
chance to experience Cholla cactus in your flesh you haven’t really
experienced the Arizona desert.
I picked up a small piece of Mesquite
and began to knock the Cholla balls out of my hide. This was a long
painful process and to top it off I knew I had a long walk back to the
ranch. It was ten o’clock in the morning when this horse wreck occurred.
I limped into the ranch about 4 p.m. just in time to feed. Not one
animal in the corral could care about my painful situation. All they
wanted was to be fed on time.
Spook is a horse that is still at the
top of my memory list for U Ranch horses. That was just another incident
I had with Spook. Let me tell you about another. I was always trying to
impress Bill Barkley with my latest acquired knowledge. One day I put
on a pair of bat wing chaps, backwards that is. I climbed on Spook and
did I ever put on a ride for Barkley.
The bat wings spooked that horse like a
bolt of lightning. He literally exploded in the corral. The next thing I
knew the earth was coming up fast. My impact in the corral startled the
cattle nearby. I was extremely slow getting up, and Barkley looked at
me and said, “Slim you got your chaps on backwards no wonder the damn
horse spooked.” “Well, why didn’t you tell me that before I got back on
the horse?”
I continued to ride Spook or maybe he
rode me. Eventually I could stay in the saddle, but it wasn’t always
easy. Another horse Barkley had was named Scooter. He was also named
appropriately. He was never a problem to saddle or get on.
However, once you were on him he made an
effort to scrape you off under just about every Mesquite, Palo Verde,
Ironwood or Saguaro along the way. Any of the methods could be quite
painful.
One day I was running a mother cow
trying to get a rope on her and Scooter decided it was time to dump me.
He lined up on a big Saguaro with many arms and grabbed the bit in his
mouth. I lost my control and saw the Saguaro coming up fast. Believe me I
abandoned ship (horse) at the first opportunity. This particular
departure was quite rough on my hide and my shoulder. I again limped
around for several days before I recovered from this particular rapid
departure. Believe me I didn’t ride Scooter anymore than I absolutely
had to. He was a horse to reckon with. I finally started using a
mechanical hack with him and was able to break him of his nasty habit of
rubbing cowboys off his back.
Barkley had another horse named Sorrel.
This was a beautiful red gelding. He was gentle, but somewhat
inexperienced. One early cold morning I saddled the Sorrel for a quick
inspection of the fence in the east pasture. Several cows had slipped
out of the east pasture according to our neighbor Bill Martin. I rode
east from the ranch house to locate the break in the eastern fence line.
Barkley’s directions were often insufficient. I rode east until I
reached Reid’s Water then I started checking out the fence in several
areas where we had problems before.
Sorrel was walking along not paying a
lot of attention while I searched for a break in the fence line. All of a
sudden we went crashing to the ground. I was on bottom and the Sorrel
was on top. The only thing that saved my body from the weight of a one
thousand pound horse was two large boulders I fell between. I lay there
waiting for the sorrel horse to make his move. He just laid there and
nickered. He made no attempt to get up. I couldn’t get out from under
him because my foot was still wedge in the stirrup. This was a bad
situation to be in. If the horse jumped up to soon he could easily break
my leg. After about ten minutes of lying on two large boulders the
sorrel horse finally got up slowly allowing me time to extract my foot
from the stirrup. I looked myself over, then the horse and finally
remounted and continue on with my inspection of the fence line casually
as if nothing had happened.
Horses were my main tool for working
cattle, checking fence, packing salt and inspecting water holes. Working
cattle on the old Quarter Circle U Ranch was something I really enjoyed
even though it was sometimes very hazardous work. My work on the old U
Ranch was sporadic.
I worked off and on for almost five
years. The longest period I worked as a cowboy on the ranch was in the
winter and spring of 1959. The last day I worked on the Quarter Circle U
Ranch for the Barkley Cattle Company was May 8, 1959. My tenure as a
cowboy was ended by a thirteen hundred pound Black Brahma-Angus bull
named El Gaucho. After my encounter with El Gaucho I retired from being a
cowboy and choose another career.
After I retired from working cattle I
continued to ride horses in the Superstition Wilderness for the next
forty-five years. I have owned several horses over the years. They were
Grey Horse, Crow, and Chico. I rode Grey Horse for about eight years. I
rode Crow for twenty- one years in the Superstition Wilderness and I
have ridden Chico for the past twelve years.
I still
think about those wild and careless days as a young cowboy on the
Barkley Ranch in the middle of the Superstition Mountains. I was lucky
to live and survive the life many people only dream about. Those
wonderful, wild and sometimes dangerous experiences are memories I will
cherish for the rest of my life.