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Just over the hills
from the rush of Silicon Valley life the old ranch sits in a little
valley between three hills -- weather beaten, deserted, silent. The
long forgotten road to town divides the ranch yard and is still barely
discernable as it disappears into a hill slide to the north and into a
modern day fire road to the south. Lined with fieldstone fences, the
road once was saddle horse and buggy-width but over the last 100 years
the stones have fallen and cattle have broken the neatly stacked rock
fences into jumbled piles of jig-saw pieces.
On the west side of the
road, the old ranch house once snuggled against the hillside. Its
two-story wooden structure shaded by the three huge cottonwood trees.
The house windows once were softened by lace curtains and row upon row
of 'gingerbread' woodwork ornamented the front and sides of the huge
wrap-around porch which welcomed strangers and friends alike to the
coolness of lemonade and a warm chat. Today, only a few pieces of
charred wood and a broken foundation can be found under the towering
cottonwoods to attest to the once proud structure.
Across the road from
the house site and slightly to the south is the ranch barn. The huge
corrals around the barn are fenced and cross fenced into large and
small holding pens where thousands of head of cattle were branded,
wormed and dehorned in the life of the ranch. The barn boards are
chalk white with the wood grain raised where the softer parts of wood
have been worn away by time and weather. Rafters hold bird nests since
man has long departed. Giant barn doors, large enough to drive a
diesel truck through, swing on rusty, squeaking hinges. Only birds and
a few stray cattle wander in and out of the barn to find retreat in
the cool darkness on summer days or dryness from winter rains and
snow. The huge wall studs are worn round from the constant rubbing of
cattle. And a section of the north wall overlooking the loading chutes
is charred with dozens of brands placed there by ranchers over the
years while sorting and counting cattle.
Directly across from
the barn sits the storage shed -- open fronted with three closed
sides. An old wagon sits inside with its strange collection of baling
wire, broken iron pieces and rotten harness as if waiting for someone
to replace its one rimless wheel and once again be hitched behind a
team of horses. With the wagon sit other pieces of discarded and
forgotten ranch equipment around which ground squirrels scatter into
burrows under corner walls. Sparrows nest in the hooks and notches of
wooden wall pegs where bridles, lanterns, saddles and harness once
hung.
Up the road from the
storage shed and across a little creek is another smaller house. Its
four rooms contain a combined sitting, parlor and living room with an
old assortment of torn magazines, newspapers and furnishings dating
from the early 1900's. The kitchen has the remains of oil cloth on two
pantry shelves and the old iron wood burning stove has nests of mice
in its lower recesses. The one-legged table leans precariously against
the wall opposite the stove and the old wicker and 'barroom' chairs
groan as they are set upon their legs after so many years of lying in
a corner undisturbed.
The door to the bedroom
hangs on one hinge and the floor is missing -- vandals had long ago
removed it for their own use. The other bedroom contains a small
closet with a stack of burlap bags and their tags telling what was in
the sack and how much it sold for in 1930. An old bed frame and
springs lie like bare bones as rodents have long since stripped it of
its ticking and stuffing.
The ranch is quiet and
still as if guarding its memories and secrets of bygone days and life
accumulated over the years. The only sounds are the clip-clop of my
horse's hooves on the dirt and the sharp chirp of ground squirrels as
we plod down the almost-forgotten road we had discovered. The small
house seems to watch us through glassless window eyes as we intrude
upon its silent secrets and splash across the little stream into the
barnyard.
The gate to the main
corral stands open. And the green grass inside seems to invite Sig in
for a few minutes of grazing as if to once again feel the press of
horse hooves on its surface while listening to the gentle chewing of a
grazing horse.
I unsaddle Sig and turn
him loose into the main corral. I toss the saddle onto a fence rail,
worn round on the top from other saddles from other times as other
horses grazed where Sig now does.
Climbing onto the top
fence rail, I sit quietly. One can hear the sounds of the ranch slowly
begin to return. The leaves of the cottonwoods rustle in a light
breeze. Water drips from the oak storage tank into a moss-covered
wooden water trough. A bird darts out of one of the huge barn doors as
it swings partially open -- just far enough before the rust covered
hinge stops it.
And if one listens
carefully and breathes softly, you can also hear some of the sounds of
yesterday -- the jingle of harness and the clopping of an approaching
team coming up the road. The barking of the ranch dog as it races down
the road to greet team and wagon. The cackling of chickens around the
old wagon in the storage shed. The whinny of horses in their tie
stalls in the barn. The mooing of cows and calves in the corrals. And
the slamming of a screen door and footsteps along the wide porch from
the ghost of the white house snuggled under the cottonwood trees. |