Thursday, July 25, 2013

Fair Time in Montana

It was fair time in Montana this past weekend and we went to cheer on Moo Moo’s FFA kids as they showed their heifers.  We had a late night Friday night with it finally ending around 2 AM (rebels…we know!) so Saturday morning we slept in a bit more than we wanted to but it was worth it.  We got up, got dressed, and headed to the Fair by 9 AM.  We got there in time to see her kids show their heifers, then for them to show their pen of 3.  Although they placed very well they didn’t win the class, and my husband was pretty vocal about his disgust with the judge – and he calls me a “fair mom”!  Anyway, the FFA kids did great and even more importantly they enjoyed showing their heifers and can’t wait to come back next year & do it again.  After we got done watching the shows we headed to the food pavilion to get us some breakfast.  The Search & Rescue team here puts on a breakfast fundraiser every year here at the fair and their breakfast was pretty tasty!  Then we headed to look at the exhibits where I got 2 beautiful handmade African woven baskets, and grabbed some other things for the house as well.  We stayed to have a nice fair hamburger with his parents & get us a signature 4H cup that everyone had to have, and then left that afternoon to go home & do things around the ranch.  While this fair is nothing compared to the Washington County Fair, it is the first Fair that Wesley and I have attended together so it was pretty darn special for us both.

When we got home that afternoon we headed out to wash the swather & put it away until next haying season, then washed the tractor as well.  The swather was really dirty, and took me about 2 hours to wash it alone.  While Wesley was finishing up the tractor I went & took the chickens for a walk (yes, we have chickens.  Yes, they come to their names.  Yes, they do love their walks), fed our little bum calf Sassy, and took care of David & Moo Moo’s dogs since they were spending the night in town that evening.  Wesley requested I made fried chicken that evening for supper, so of course I obliged his request even at 9 PM at night (he’s pretty spoiled but I wouldn’t have it any other way J)!  We enjoyed a delicious meal of fried chicken, pea salad, and potato salad…it was delicious! 

Sunday we had a roping at our friends Jay & Edyna’s house, so after breakfast we headed over to load up the horses & horse trailer & get ready for the roping.  I got to love on little Hayes again on Sunday as Sarah & Clint were at the roping.  He’s such a little chunk but a great baby!  They ended up having 2 different ropings, and David won 2nd place in both ropings!  He was pretty happy with himself.  We got home about 9 that evening from the roping in time to catch up on a few shows we had recorded and get things ready for the week ahead. 

This weekend we have a roping again on Saturday, but Friday Wesley and I are going on a date!  We have yet to decide where we’re going…but we are pretty excited about our date!  Sunday we are working around our house and doing what we love best – firing up the grill and BBQ’ing!  We are getting pretty serious with our grilling activities lately so we are always experimenting & trying new things.  We love to BBQ and have people over and we are looking forward to getting to BBQ for my parents when they are here!

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

A Working Weekend

We are full swing into the haying season & with that comes busy weekends for us.  Last weekend we worked all weekend, but managed to celebrate Moo Moo’s birthday last Saturday with a bar-b-que feast!  Last Friday was her actual birthday, and that evening we all roped at the ranch.  Saturday morning started out early with Wesley swathing hay while I stayed back at the house to clean, prepare the food, keep a close eye on our smoker, and get things ready for the birthday celebration that evening.  Wesley quit working about 6 Saturday evening so he could come help me continue to get things ready for supper. David and Jewel were coming over about 7:30 that evening so we wanted to have everything ready for them when they arrived.  However, apparently the electric company had other ideas because about 6:45 our power went out, and stayed off until about 9:00 that night!  That meant no mac-n-cheese, no mashed potatoes, no gravy…nothing!  Well, we made the most of it anyway.  We played cards with the windows open until the power came back on, and then quickly finished our mashed potatoes and gravy (we opted to not do the mac-n-cheese since we cook it over the fire in a Dutch oven & it takes a while) and finally got everything on the table about 9:45 that night.  We enjoyed delicious BBQ ribs, T-bone steaks cooked medium rare, mashed potatoes, gravy, a fresh garden salad, cucumber salad, and blackberry cobbler bars for dessert!  It was pretty tasty!

Sunday morning we needed to move our cows from one pasture to another, so it was another early start for us that day as well.  We got the cows moved in a couple hours, and had time that afternoon to go to our neighbors house for a little practice roping for a couple hours.  Clint & Sarah were there with their newest little guy, Hayes, and of course I had to hold him almost the entire time we were there.  He is such a snuggly little guy that it makes it hard to put him down!  He’s grown so much since the first day we saw him, and I can’t believe how much he looks like his older brother Jack.  Those two are some pretty adorable kiddos.

The Rosebud/Treasure County Fair is this weekend, and I think Wesley and I are going to go down to the fair Saturday morning & watch the steer and heifer shows, and enjoy some delicious fair food!  No county fair is like the Washington County Fair back home, but I guess in order to get my ‘county fair fix’ this one will just have to do.  Moo Moo has some kids in her FFA chapter that are showing heifers so I think we’ll go down & see if the kids need help getting their heifers ready Saturday morning before watching them show.  I hope they do well!  Sunday we plan to go to our friend’s Jay & Edyna’s house again to rope as one of the guys that ropes regularly with us at local ropings is moving back to North Dakota – so its like a ‘going away’ roping for him & his wife.  It should be a good time.  Hopefully Wesley will do well at the roping! 

Its about a month until my parents come up for their annual visit to the Big Sky State, and we are anxiously awaiting their arrival!  We have lots of fun things planned for their trip this time so we’re excited to have them back here visiting us again!  Not too much longer and the fun begins J 

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Opheim, Montana

Opheim, Montana – population 25.  Not hundred, not thousand. Just 25 people.  A quiet little town with no stop lights and no grocery store.  Just a filling station where you can get the basics, the local Co-Op, and a cafĂ©.  And, of course, a rodeo arena.  The nearest ‘big’ town (with a grocery store, doctor, etc.) is 50 miles away in Glasgow.  Opheim, Montana is where Wesley’s dad David was raised, and where Wesley spent the first 2 years of his life before his parents moved down to the ranch we are currently on.  Wesley’s parents have some land in Opheim that they purchased when they lived there, and we also have the ranch that David’s Mom & Dad ran when they were living.  Currently, the ranch in Opheim is home to our steers and spay heifers, and the house that Wesley’s grandparent’s once lived in.  It is a small, white, cozy home with a living room, kitchen, basement that has a bedroom & bathroom, and 3 bedrooms & 1 bathroom upstairs.  I was in love with the house when I laid eyes on it.  The swing set that Wesley played on as a child was still in the back yard, as was his tricycle.  Although the physical items were rusted over, the memories he made there with his grandparents are those he’ll never forget. 
 As soon as we arrived Wesley & his Dad began unloading the horses so they could stretch, get something to eat & drink, and relax before being loaded back in the trailer to head to the rodeo they were entered in later that day.  I grabbed our bags & headed inside to greet Moo Moo.  I walked up the concrete sidewalk to the white wooden door of the antiqued house and when I opened the door the smell of ‘the country’ greeted me (anyone in my family knows what the country house smells like – its not a bad odor at all…but smells can take you so far back…and that one brought back memories for me).  I rounded the corner and found Moo Moo standing in the kitchen and as she turned to look at me she started to cry.  I dropped everything to comfort her and she grabbed & hugged me tightly.  It was the first time she had been back to the house since Wesley’s grandmother - David’s Mom - passed away back in October of 2011.  It was hard for her to be there with all of Myrtle’s things as she had left them, and then she and I spent some time looking at old photos of Wesley when he was a baby & growing up, and of their family.  When the guys arrived inside, Wesley and I made our way to the room we were going to be staying in and unpacked a few things, then I headed to the kitchen to help Moo Moo make some lunch for all of us before we headed downtown to the rodeo parade that started at Noon. 
Some of Wesley’s family still lives in Opheim, like his godparents Bill & Gretchen (Bill and David’s Mom were brother & sister), and their son Todd and his wife Lori, and their 3 children Brooke, Blair, and Ty.  Brooke is 12, Blair is 9, and Ty is 7.  Those kids love Wesley and me, and we love them as well.  They were in the rodeo parade that day so we decided to surprise them & go to the parade and watch them ride their horses down Main Street.  We loaded the horses back up in the trailer, and headed down to Main Street to watch the parade roll thru town.  As we got there the flags were being carried thru town followed by a bunch of kids on their horses.  Brooke, Blair, and Ty were 3 of those kids.  They were so excited to see us, and waved & smiled so big as they passed our pickup.  Then we got to see a bunch of really nice old classic cars come thru, tractors new & old and big & small, and the famous mechanical bucking bronc.  For being a small town, Opheim knows how to do a parade.  Only in Opheim would you find youngsters on their horses, 4 wheelers, and parades of old and new tractors and cars.  And, where else can you find a mechanical bucking bronc rolling down Main Street?  Only in Opheim.  Since Opheim is so close to the Canadian border, they fly the Montana State Flag, the US Flag, and the Canadian flag, something that I hadn’t seen before until that weekend.  It was amazing to see a town of 25 multiply eight times its normal size as people from all around (including Canada) lined the streets in their cars & pickups to watch all people ride thru town in the parade from town to the rodeo arena that is about 1/8 of a mile from Main Street.  
After the parade we made our way over to the rodeo grounds so Wesley & David could pay for their rodeo entries, and we could watch the rodeo.  Moo Moo and I got our chairs out of the horse trailer, and found a good spot to set up at right next to the arena where we could see all the action.  The rodeo kicked off with the singing of our National Anthem as Old Glory was paraded around the rodeo arena.  Then the Canadian National Anthem was played as the Canadian flag flew over the rodeo grounds.  After paying tribute to our country, and Canada, the rodeo was underway.  As the rodeo announcer was introducing the contestants and the next event up, he was also asking for people to sign up to do the calf dressing contest.  There were 3 people to a calf dressing team.  Calf dressing – count me in!  Moo Moo and I were so in – now all we had to do was find one more person for our team.  LORI!  Jewel went to ask her & she agreed.  Of course the kids were thrilled we were entered in the contest & couldn’t wait to see us compete.  Originally we were told that the calf would be haltered with a lead rope & we would get to hold the rope as the calves were let out of the chute.  Then we were to put a t-shirt over the calf’s head & the t-shirt holes thru his front legs to ‘dress’ him.  Piece of cake for these girls!  We had it all figured out.  Jewel was going to hold the calf’s rope, Lori was going to hold it down, and I was going to dress it!  If only it had worked that easily.  As the calves were turned out into the arena we were told we do NOT get to hold the lead ropes…we have to chase the calves around to catch one!  WHAT?!  So off we went…we chased, and chased, and got sooo close, but we never caught one.  And after the first team caught & dressed a calf, we gave up.  But, we had a great time together & we laughed about that contest all evening.
Ty was entered in the mutton bustin’ contest next so I quickly got my camera together to snap a few pictures of him riding the sheep.  He did so good!  Even though he didn’t win he had a great time.  The next kid’s event was the pig catching contest.  Brooke, Blair, and Ty were all entered.  There were 4 pigs that were to be released in the arena and about 20 kids trying to catch one of them.  If they caught a pig, they got to keep the pig as well as $5 in cash (which is a pretty big deal if you’re a kid).  The pigs were released & the kids were off!  They ran and fell and got up and ran some more.  In the end, Brooke ended up catching a pig.  We were all pretty excited about it, but I’m not so sure that her parents were too excited about adding to their swine collection!  Wesley, David, and Todd were next up in the team roping competition.  None of the guys placed in the roping, but they all had a good time getting to rope together.  After the rodeo was over, we all headed over to the beer garden to have a cold one, then Wesley and I went with the kids & Lori back to their house so we could see all their fair projects since they have been begging us to see them, and we got to watch them do their chores & work with their animals.  First stop – the sheep barn.  Then it was on to the pigs, and we rounded out our animal tour with their steers.  While over at their ranch we were able to visit with Wesley’s godparents Bill & Gretchen.  Bill’s health isn’t the greatest so it was nice for us to be able to sit down & talk with them for a bit while we were in town. 
When Wesley and I got back to the ranch & house, I made us some sandwiches for supper, and shortly after his parents arrived home with the horses.  We helped them unload the horses, give them some water, and then we headed to Bruce & Sami’s house to visit with them (Bruce takes care of the ranch in Opheim for us, and Sami is his wife).  Sami was out of town that day, but we visited with Bruce for a few hours before calling it a night.  Upon returning back to the house, David & Moo Moo had called it a night, so Wesley & I crept to our room and did the same.  One of my favorite things about Opheim is being able to sleep with the windows open, and waking up to the horses outside our bedroom window the next morning.  Nothing beats having the crisp fresh air coming thru your window to cool the room while listing to the stillness of the calm winds and horses grazing outside your window.  It was so quiet and so peaceful.
Monday morning (July 1st) we woke up to the smell of sausage on the stove as David was cooking breakfast for the 4 of us.  We sat at the kitchen table that morning drinking coffee and I listened as the 3 of them shared stories of Wesley’s grandparents and about the ‘old timers’ of Opheim.  Monday was a day for business as we were meeting a potential cattle buyer at the ranch to look at our heifers & steers.  After videoing both our heifers and steers, the buyer left and Wesley and I loaded up to come home.  We said goodbye to Opheim at about 11:30 Monday morning as it was time for us to head back south to our home.
Upon arriving home, the dogs were SO excited to see us, and we were equally excited to see them.  We got the horses unloaded, fed the dogs, calf, and chickens, and said hello again to our home. 

The view looking out the kitchen window at the house

Reno and Blue grazing in the yard

The charming yard gate leading into the yard to get to the house

Back view of the house.  The first window is the window into our room.

The swing set Wesley played on as a child

His tricycle

Wooden door leading into the porch of the house

Parade grand entry flying the 3 flags

The kids - Brooke is the one in the green with her mouth wide open in surprise!  Blair is on the dun horse in the back.





Old tractor in the parade




HUGE tractor & sprayer rollin' thru main street



Blair


Brooke


Brooke, Ty, and Blair

Rolling 'bucking bronc'




Ty (the 3rd little guy in the pink long sleeve shirt) waiting in the mutton bustin' line


Ty riding his mutton


Our attempts at catching & dressing a calf!  Jewel is in the black shirt with gloves on chasing the calf.

Lori (in the blue) and me (in the white & black shirt) running after a calf. 

Lori was so close!  The 3 of us in one shot (surprisingly)!


Brooke all smiles before trying to catch a pig



Blair waiting patiently to catch a pig

Ty getting ready to catch a pig



The kids running to catch a pig!


Brooke got one!


David on Blue

Wesley and Reno

Todd getting ready to rope

Wesley and Todd roping together


One of the most beautiful sunsets I've seen since being in Montana was here in Opheim.
Another view of the sunset

Our steers - they're big boys :)

We love our cattle!


A storm coming over the horizon Monday morning