tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-88370372007-04-17T11:06:15.610-07:00Cowboy John Nevada ToursCowboy John Tours Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05463148821826235252noreply@blogger.comBlogger40125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8837037.post-1142188986234348732006-03-12T10:36:00.000-08:002006-03-12T10:47:03.743-08:00Argentina, Canada, Ireland, Australia--Wild Night in Sarahs' living roomAccording to Ed Miller it was a Ceilidh (kay-lee).<br /><br />In the late 90s we brought Ed Miller to Sarah’s house at Cowboy Poetry Gathering time. He was part that year of the Gathering’s showcasing Scottish cowboys.<br /><br />John and I, throughout the week, invite out-of-towners to dinner at Sarah’s, and Ed agreed to come. That evening after the meal he played guitar while we sang, and told stories, and jokes. The house was crammed with food, drink, poetry, music, and laughter. <br /><br />Read about it:<br /><a href="http://www.cowboyjohntours.com/articles-main.htm">http://www.cowboy johntours.com/articles-main.htm</a><br /><br />PS: Cowboy Poetry offers these personal snapshots of real people. Let us put <br />together your tour for next year!Cowboy John Tours Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05463148821826235252noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8837037.post-1141759198623324672006-03-07T11:17:00.000-08:002006-03-07T11:32:26.006-08:00Argentine Pampas--Nevada high Desert. Not so different.I should have measured how many miniscule stitches to the inch. Today, a month from when I visited the exhibit, I can’t begin to describe the braiding. <br /><br /><br />Armando Deferrari and Pablo Lozano are Argentine master rawhide braiders. They and the Brazilians were guests of the National Cowboy Poetry Gathering this year, and some of their gear was on display as part of the “Cowboy of the Americas” exhibit in the Western Folklife Center.<br /><br />Armando, older of the two, is a big man, probably over six feet tall, bearded, strong face, direct gaze. Pablo is younger with classic, fine features. Both were eager to show us their work. Headstalls, bridles, whips, and refurbished classical artifacts. They both work in silver and rawhide, and Armando, retired from veterinary medicine, maintains a silversmithing workshop.<br /><br />They turn heads when they stride into a room with easy, welcoming smiles. Pablo wears a rakish beret, red dotted scarf, and short jacket; Armando, a black fedora hat, scarf, and brightly colored poncho with white geometric design. <br />Read more: <a href="http://www.cowboyjohntours.com/articles-main.htm">http://www.cowboyjohntours.com/articles-main.htm</a>Cowboy John Tours Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05463148821826235252noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8837037.post-1139945271504656532006-02-14T11:22:00.000-08:002006-02-15T14:58:24.150-08:00More on Wayne Dyer...Getting the hang of this writing on Blog thing.<br /><br />I could not get the link in the last post so finally<br />gave up. <br /><br />The story about Val's friends from Wisconsin who came to Cowboy Poetry. Val died, but before she died she told her friends she wanted to go to the National Cowboy Poetry Gathering in Elko!<br /><br />So, they brought her--in memory. They came on the train. Lost a purse. Found the purse. Heard Brazilian music, cowboy music, cowboy poetry, returned to Wisconsin (with the purse), and thought about Val the whole time. She was with them as they tramped through Elko, drove to Lamoille House every night (some nights on icey, dicey<br />frozen snow roads) to bed down before another day of poetry and music.<br /><br />The article is at <a href="http://www.cowboyjohntours.com/articles-main.htm">http://www.cowboyjohntours.com/articles-main.htm</a><br /><br />Janice<br /><br />PS. This computer is a machine. If we perserve we CAN make it<br />do what we want! Right? <br />Let's hope the link works.Cowboy John Tours Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05463148821826235252noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8837037.post-1138742978937329352006-01-31T13:14:00.000-08:002006-02-15T13:09:52.870-08:00Hang on, Wayne Dyer; we're goin' to Winnemucca!1/30: <br /><br />The lost purse story is circulating through Elko. O’Carrolls breakfast group in Lamoille heard it from Paula who got it from John. Susan passed it to a bridge group in town, and from there it hit the Western Folklife Center.<br /><br />Wisconsin Sue is the lady holding the bag in this tale, and she’s feeling guilt, <br />but at the same time, she's a <em>star</em> all over Elko.<br /><br />We met these ladies in 2004 when they came touring from Wisconsin. <br />Ringleader Val and teacher friends corralled Cowboy John. "We want a tour."<br />Val retired from teaching. Spent her time keeping her friends traveling. <br /><br />The story of these Wisconsin ladies is a story of rare friendship. <br /><br />They came to the Cowboy Poetry Gathering in Elko as a tribute to their<br />dear friend Val...<a href="http://www.cowboyjohntours.com/articles-main.htm"></a><br /><br /><a href="http://www.powells.com/partner/28913/biblio/1401902839" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.cowboyjohntours.com/images/WayneDyerCards.jpg"></a><br /><br />Janice<br />for Cowboy John<br /><br />PS. Every time I saw them during the Gathering it was a tribute to the<br />special bond they carried for each other and their absent friend Val.<br /><a href="http://www.cowboyjohntours.com/articles-main.htm"></a>Cowboy John Tours Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05463148821826235252noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8837037.post-1138400683775025072006-01-27T14:16:00.000-08:002006-02-15T14:56:19.723-08:00"Blood sister to these fields..."1/25:<br /><br />Janice here for Cowboy John:<br /><br />One of the fun parts of the Gathering each year is browsing new books. One I’m reading now, <strong>Sharing Fencelines </strong>is a journal of ranch life in the remote Nevada desert.<br /><br />Carolyn Dufurrena, Linda Hussa, and Sophie Sheppard, ranch in Nevada-California’s shared corner. Desert, many years dry, some years in flood, always open and lonely. I’ve just finished Dufurrena’s portion. <br /><br />These women live in a largely male world, yet their lives, and the lives of their men folk, too, are infused with intimacy of the earth that comes from years working the ground. <br /><br />The price is hours on horseback, following cattle, in all weather. Dufurrena’s husband’s directions:<br /><br /><blockquote>“Follow too close and she’ll turn around and fight you…If you’re riding flank, stay way away off to the side once they’re lined out…See where you’re going; figure out how to get there…Look. Think. Wait…” </blockquote><br />Driving cattle demands an intimate knowing of their ways, a closeness garnered through years of exposure. <br /><br />I felt Dufurrena’s embarrassment at being at the bottom of the learning curve, not having instinct infused when she was young, raised to horseback and empty horizons. She’s a “city” girl. <br /><br />As much as I love being close to the earth I’m afraid I don’t have this kind of intimacy. I’d be embarrassed seeing obvious evidence of my "green-hornedness."<br /><br />I envy this intimate knowing of the land. Riding its canyons and dusty valleys and turning the brown earth for seed, Hussa can say she’s a “Blood sister to these fields.” <br /><br />You’d better read the book. It’s a sensitive inside-look at life close to the land. I’m still trying to put my finger on why the Cowboy Poetry Gathering exerts such a pull on the psyche of modern folks. <br /><br /><a href="http://www.powells.com/partner/28913/biblio/0874807123" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.cowboyjohntours.com/images/SharingFenceline.jpg"></a><br /><br />There’s the start of an answer in this book, I think. <br /><br />Janice<br /><br />PS: We can show you open country like the country Dufurrena, Hussa, and Sheppard make their home. <br />Open vistas you can't see the end of.<br />Check out the web site: <a href="http://cowboyjohntours.com">cowboyjohntours.com</a>Cowboy John Tours Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05463148821826235252noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8837037.post-1138125018846502362006-01-24T09:44:00.000-08:002006-01-29T13:07:25.326-08:00I'm not excited about watching snow melt in the parking lot!1/23: <br />I remember the first time I heard of the Cowboy Poetry Gathering. We were living in Reno, Nevada, and John (“insurance man John” then) drove to Elko periodically to see clients.<br /><br />One trip he came home buzzing about this brand new festival in Elko—a group of cowboys reciting poetry and singing cowboy ballads (different from Nashville country music).<br /><br />My comment: “Wow! And you watched snow melt in the parking lot, too?”<br /><br />I was not excited about cowhands reciting sing-songy rhymes.<br /><br />John, however, was thrilled. He gets excited.<br /><br />The lifestyle. Memories of the remote cattle ranch where he was raised. Working as a boy with horses, riding all day on the isolated desert looking for cattle. The Cowboy Poetry Gathering (a <em>Gathering</em>, not a <em>contest</em>. We’ll talk about that later) celebrated more than anything a <em>lifestyle</em>. <br /><br />Since that first visit twenty years ago the Gathering today includes fantastic western artists, musicians, weavers of words, most of them philosophers. <br /><br />People come. Folks from Japan, Europe, and American cities are fascinated with this lifestyle. And they can see it still here in northeastern Nevada. <br /><br />We’re both excited about this year with the South Americans. John’s taking them on ranch tours this weekend. <br /><br />The same tours YOU can take. I’ll keep you updated.<br /><br />There’s a lot we learn from these guests who come here to share a lifestyle close to the land. Let me back up for a second and explain…<br /><br />Well, on second thought, it might be better to let my thoughts continue in the next article. <br /><br />So tune in tomorrow when I talk more about it.<br /><br />Truth is, I need to gather my thoughts about the real meaning of this Gathering.<br /><br />So check back here tomorrow.<br /><br />Ok?<br /><br /><blockquote><em>“Life is not a problem to be solved, but a mystery to be lived,” Thomas Merton</em></blockquote><br /><br />Janice<br /><a href="http://www.cowboyjohntours.com"></a><br /><br />PS-John’s taking the Argentinians and Brazilians Friday to ranches, Lamoille canyon, and other great places. One year we finished the tour in a ranch house with Mongolian music, and brownies! Another year a French cameraman visibly blanched when told what he was eating! (<em>Not</em> brownies!)Cowboy John Tours Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05463148821826235252noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8837037.post-1137969654345209472006-01-22T13:59:00.000-08:002006-01-22T14:57:04.726-08:00I'm back after two months buried in remodeling mess. I wrote this in November <br />when leaves were turning gold. It's still good even though the mountain is<br />white, not gold now. <br /><br />November 3, 2005:<br />I walked this morning at 7:30 with dog buddy Jazz. <br /><br />29 degrees under a gray sky. The mountains were dusted white about a week ago. <br />For a few days the contrast was beautiful with gold and green on the lower reaches and white on top. Today gold is gone. It's gray/black granite.<br /><br />Two weeks ago John and I hiked up the canyon behind Lamoille Camp and brought quaking aspen leaves back for the house. Fluorescent gold and yellow blindingly bright against dark green mahogany. We’ll go up again this weekend but into <br />another world as black curled leaves cover the ground in wet muskiness. <br />Trees stand naked against the hazy sky, black branches bare. The mountain closes down for a rest, although that will soon be interrupted by roaring snow mobile engines!<br /><br />Filigree edges of the creek encroach to imprison the creek in ice. <br /><br />In some ways it's my favorite time in the mountain, dormant, waiting for<br />the jump-start of spring.<br /><br />We’re going Saturday. You come too…<br /><br />We show folks outstanding country, beautiful in <em>any</em> season! <br /><br /><a href="http://www.cowboyjohntours.com/"></a><br /><br /><br />Janice<br /><br />PS See you here again in a couple days when I'll talk about the<br />Cowboy Poetry Gathering! <br />It's a <em>Gathering</em>, not a <em>contest</em><br />Why is it a <em>Gathering</em>, not a <em>Contest</em>? We'll talk<br />about that next.Cowboy John Tours Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05463148821826235252noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8837037.post-1129058638054296212005-10-11T12:20:00.000-07:002005-10-12T13:11:19.820-07:00Nevada, a Study in Contrast when You're from Oregon.Another post from Cowboy John!<br /><br />Two Portland sisters, wanted scenery. <br /><br />May and Darleen are used to Oregon beauty. <br />Roses, azaleas, rhododendron-bordered freeways, <br />shady paths in forested parks, moss-edged roofs. <br /><br />In Nevada? Nope. <br /><br />All of you who’ve come on a tour with us know <br />you won’t find moss in northeastern Nevada.<br />A study in contrast for our two friends!<br /><br /><a href="http://www.cowboyjohntours.com/articles-may-darlene.htm" target="_blank">To read the article and see pictures of May and Darleen!</a>Cowboy John Tours Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05463148821826235252noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8837037.post-1127858064645666362005-09-27T14:46:00.000-07:002005-09-28T09:32:47.283-07:00Wildflower/Rocks/Nature All in One Hike!Cowboy John again.<br /><br />New friends. Joann and Steve, hiked in the Ruby Mountains with us this summer. <br /><br />They stayed in JoeAnna Peak’s cozy Guest House in Lamoille (check “Links” on our web page for JoeAnna), and walked just down the street for dinner at the Pine Lodge and breakfast at O’Carrolls. Idyllic Lamoille: Tiffany windows in the vintage church, and deer in the meadow with a snow-capped Ruby Mountain backdrop. <br /><br /> <a href="http://www.cowboyjohntours.com/articles-ruby-mountain-hike.htm" target="_blank">See pictures! Read the story!</a>Cowboy John Tours Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05463148821826235252noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8837037.post-1127513093577129352005-09-23T15:01:00.000-07:002005-09-23T15:04:53.583-07:00Help Redirect Hurricane Rita!Dear Readers of Cowboy John's Blog,<br />Joe Vitale's newsletter seemed so timely so I'm<br />forwarding it in it's entirety. <br />It is a little long but worth reading enough<br />that I thought of you. <br />Instead of watching news, quaking in fear<br />here's an approach to counter the negativity.<br />Hope you enjoy.<br />Janice <br /><br /> Help Me Stop Rita<br /><br /> by Dr. Joe Vitale<br /><br />As I type these words, people in Houston<br />are scrambling to leave the city.<br /><br />The Mayor has urged many to evacuate.<br /><br />The next hurricane, Rita, is bigger and badder<br />than Katrina, and it's headed this way.<br /><br />Yes, our area is in the path of the hurricane,<br />too.<br /><br />With luck, by the time it hits mainland Texas,<br />it will have dropped from a category 5 to a<br />category 1 hurricane. We're stocking up on<br />supplies, like everyone else.<br /><br />While the world is still reeling from the effects<br />of Katrina, we're now bracing for something<br />that could be just as bad, or worse.<br /><br />As I listen to the news, and watch people, the<br />key word that everyone says or seems to<br />breathe is "victim."<br /><br />We're victims of storms.<br /><br />We're victims of chance.<br /><br />We're victims of a poorly run government.<br /><br />We're victims of gas prices, gas shortages,<br />inflation, recession, taxes, wars, and now --<br />the worst of all -- Mother Nature.<br /><br />I'm going to say something unusual. It may<br />upset some people. I'm hoping it will inspire<br />you. Here goes:<br /><br />You have more power than you think.<br /><br />While you may not want to stand in the path<br />of Rita, you don't have to cower under the bed.<br /><br />As odd as it may sound, I believe that if enough<br />of us think positive, we can create a counter<br />storm of sorts. We can protect ourselves and<br />our loved ones with our thoughts.<br /><br />I've described and proved this with the research<br />in the back of my book, "The Attractor Factor."<br />Nineteen studies *proved* that when a large<br />group of people hold positive intentions,<br />those intentions radiate out and become reality.<br /><br />No, I'm not saying ignore the storm warnings. I'm<br />saying don't get caught up in the fear that the<br />warnings often trigger.<br /><br />Look. If you think the storm will get you, then<br />it's already gotten you. You're living in fear.<br />Your life is dark, gloomy and in a cage. The<br />media is flawless at whipping us into fear.<br /><br />So I suggest ignoring the media. It's not<br />information, it's propaganda. It gets large<br />groups of people to think negative, which<br />of course then becomes reality.<br /><br />Why can't we do the opposite?<br /><br />Why can't we get large groups of people<br />to think positive?<br /><br />At this very moment, as I type this and you<br />read this, all is well.<br /><br />Isn't it?<br /><br />Aren't you ok?<br /><br />Aren't you feeling fine right now?<br /><br />Yes, be sure to have batteries and water<br />and supplies.<br /><br />But also check the storehouse in your mind.<br /><br />Are you living in fear, or living in trust?<br /><br />Are you focused on the negative, or are<br />you doing something to create a positive?<br /><br />We are all, always, at choice.<br /><br />My plea is that the readers of my ezine --<br />you -- will stop, breathe, and focus; pray,<br />or in some positive way send out an energy<br />that will help dissolve the fear in and around us.<br /><br />I'm asking you to do this on Saturday, the day<br />Rita is scheduled to visit Texas.<br /><br />As I was finishing this article, UPS delivered<br />two books to me. Both are timely and worth<br />mentioning.<br /><br />"Unconditional Bliss" says you can find<br />happiness in the face of hardship.<br /><br />I think this is relevant. While the media is<br />making us shake in our boots, we can<br />choose to take care of ourselves and<br />others *while* remaining happy.<br /><br />Happiness is a choice.<br /><br />The other book looks just as fascinating.<br />It's "Megatrends 2010" by Pat Aburdene.<br /><br />To my surpirse (and delight), the book<br />declares that the future will be more<br />focused on spirit.<br /><br />Well, let's create the future right now.<br /><br />Let's focus on spirit.<br /><br />What I'm asking you to do is be happy,<br />right now. Smile. Send that loving energy<br />out, in the direction of Texas. Intend for<br />all to be well, for, in reality, all is well.<br /><br />In fact, pretend you are the eye of the<br />hurricane. That's the center where all<br />is at peace. *Be* that peace and send<br />that peace from the eye to the hurricane<br />itself, imagining it dropping in intensity.<br /><br />We can make a difference.<br /><br />It begins with you.<br /><br />What will you choose to think?<br /><br />*********************************************************<br />Dr. Joe Vitale is the author of way too many books<br />to list here. His latest title is "The Attractor<br />Factor: 5 Easy Steps for Creating Wealth<br />(or anything else) From the Inside Out." It's in<br />all book stores and available from Amazon, too.<br />Register for Dr. Vitale's complimentary ezine<br />at http://www.mrfire.com See his Katrina drive<br />at http://www.OperationSuperHero.com<br /><br />*********************************************************<br />Copyright © 2005 by Joe Vitale. All rights<br />reserved. You may forward this in its entirety<br />to anyone you wish.<br /><br />**********************************************************<br />Hypnotic Marketing Inc.<br />121 Canyon Gap Rd<br />Wimberley TX 78676<br /><br />Member BBB Online 2005Cowboy John Tours Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05463148821826235252noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8837037.post-1127164147445216482005-09-19T13:57:00.000-07:002005-09-19T14:11:37.460-07:00Einstein Was Right!Hello again. More from Cowboy John Tours.<br /><br />Einstein was right. Time is relative. <br />Every adult knows time moves more rapidly for grown-ups <br />than for kids.<br /><br />Summer stretched forever when I was a kid. Biking to <br />the sandpit in Weiser with friends, sandwich in a bag, <br />crawling through sticky junipers in the hedge that ran <br />all the way around our house, running through the sprinkler <br />on hot Idaho days. Leaf houses in the fall under the Queen <br />Anne cherry tree. <br /><br />We planned nothing ahead of time, just plunged into the day. <br />All we cared about was what we were doing right then, in that moment.<br /><br />Today, my speed-bullet summer is used up before I get to it. <br />Mostly I live in the future, obsessing over grass-clogged <br />flowerbeds, neglected grapevines, the turbulent pile on my <br />desk, and a dusty living room.<br /><br />I recall walks in the mountains, though, when time was <br />irrelevant because I was occupied with flowers, fluffy <br />clouds, twisted mahogany trees, and moss embracing a wet <br />rock—details in the present.<br /><br />We hiked this summer a lot, just John and me and the dog, <br />but I remember a particular walk with Joann and Steve from Reno.<br /><br />The goal was Lamoille Lake. Our feet kept pace with our <br />talking, and before any of us knew we had passed the lake <br />and were standing at Liberty Pass, 10,540 feet above sea <br />level.<br />We celebrated at the Wilderness sign with a photo before <br />walking to the edge of the granite ledge to see Liberty <br />Lake in the hollow below, and tiny Castle Lake above <br />Liberty. From above, the lakes are circular, turquoise-blue <br />jewels bordered in green. (In some years the stream which <br />flows through that greenery into Liberty Lake is a mass of <br />blinding pink wild onions.) The sharp granite ridge behind <br />Castle Lake forms the southern edge of the Ruby Mts dropping <br />into Ruby Valley.<a href="http://www.cowboyjohntours.com/tour-ideas1.htm" target="_blank">Here's Castle Lake. scroll down past the<br />little church to see it</a><br /><br />More later this week!<br /><br />Thanks, and See you later.<br />JaniceCowboy John Tours Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05463148821826235252noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8837037.post-1126119722144570042005-09-07T12:00:00.000-07:002005-09-07T12:02:02.153-07:00Bird Watching for the elusive Himalayan Partridge!As I was saying last Blog....<br /><br />When we last talked Cowboy John and I had hiked up Thomas Creek and were resting at the top, sitting on a large granite boulder no doubt left by ancient glaciers in the middle of a wide valley bounded by a granite ridge. <br /><br />It’s been only the last few years that John and I have continued the hike past the waterfall through the canyon to the wide valley at the top. Tall rocky cliffs surround a valley at the top with Beaver ponds, Corn Lily and Potentilla, and scattered Whitebark Pine trees. Waterfalls tumble down sheer cliffs. This whole valley and canyon was carved out long ago by glaciers.<br /><br />We hiked over the rock wall one year, hiked all day, nearly killed me, and ended up at the Lamoille Lake trail. A kind soul gave us a ride around to our car in the campground.<br /><br />But this day we reached our resting rock in the top valley and settled down for a trail snack when we were startled out of our wits by a clamorous whirring explosion. A Ruffled Grouse erupted from the ground right at our feet and flew to a Whitebark. Talk about startled out of peaceful reverie. We were.<br /> <br />Ruffled Grouse are brownish birds of good size (normal chicken size, I guess). Bird hunters call them stupid because when they fly they don’t ever go far. <br /><br />This bird didn’t either. Landed in the tree next to us. If we’d been hunting we could have gotten off an easy shot.<br /><br />It’s always exciting to see wildlife, Mountain Goats, Rocky Mt. Sheep, Mule Deer, even turkeys. They're all here and pretty common. <br /><br />There's one bird, though, that's here but is extremely difficult to spot. The Himalayan Partridge, or Snowcock.<br /><br /><br /><a href=http://www.cowboyjohntours.com/tour-ideas3.htm target=”_blank”>Here’s a picture of this pretty bird!</a><br /><br />You can see it only here or in the Himalayas in India-Tibet. They were planted here years ago and now are permanent happy residents.<br /><br />These elusive, wary creatures perch on the tips of inaccessible peaks. From those inaccessible peaks they watch hikers struggling upward to catch a glimpse. <br /><br />To check off "Himalayan Partridge" on your Audubon Bird List is the ultimate, but this little bird isn't about to give that pleasure easily.<br /><br />For, just as soon as the exhausted hiker gets within reach, these clever birds fly from that peak to the next in the next valley. <br /><br />I'm sure it's a game they play. So far they're winning, although a few hardy persistent souls have seen them up close and personal.<br /><br />I didn't see a Snowcock that day, but the Ruffled Grouse landed so close John and I watched it in the tree for some time before hiking down the trail.<br /><br />Adios,<br />Janice<br /><br />You want to see a Snowcock? If you're serious, give us a call. We'll find someone to take you!Cowboy John Tours Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05463148821826235252noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8837037.post-1125189021151244272005-08-27T17:28:00.000-07:002005-08-27T17:30:21.156-07:00Nevada Adventure: More Than Driving Across the State on the Freeway!We hiked once again to the top of Thomas Creek above the campground in Lamoille Canyon. It's a tradition for families in the campground to take the 5-10 minute hike to the waterfall. It's steep but the waterfall is spectacular, well worth the effort. <br /><br />A rocky ledge supporting a twisted Mountain Mahogany tree overlooks the waterfall as Thomas Creek drops straight down rocky granite ledges from high above. It twists through thick vegetation and roars past the ledge where you're standing. It’s breathtakingly beautiful. <br /><br />The hike was always a Collett family tradition. Summer weekends John’s family, especially his Mother, brought dinner to the Canyon to cook. After hamburgers cooked on the grill and Mother's wonderful homemade cake everyone hiked to the waterfall.<br /><br />It’s been only the last few years that John and I have continued the hike past the waterfall up the canyon to the wide valley at the top. Tall rocky cliffs surround a valley at the top. Beaver ponds, Corn Lily and Potentilla, and a few Whitebark Pine trees.<br /><br />Waterfalls tumble down sheer cliffs. This whole valley and canyon was carved out long ago by glaciers. Usually there's noone hiking but us. Sometimes we meet a few people. Often we see deer high on the cliffs ahead.<br /><br />Right now, though, I’m tired from that five hour hike. I’ll continue with the next installment. <br /><br />So, bookmark this Blog and join me about Monday for the next installment!<br /><br />Janice<br />for Cowboy John tours.Cowboy John Tours Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05463148821826235252noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8837037.post-1124941511711935772005-08-24T20:42:00.000-07:002005-08-24T20:45:11.716-07:00Red Hat Society, Inspired by the Hummingbird?Scribbled notes, “red head, iridescent purple-blue back, Indian Paint Brush.”<br /><br />Translated: “Anna’s Hummingbird on an Indian Paintbrush!” <br /><br />Many folks come here for birds. They check off Audubon bird-counts, hoping to see the PRIZE, the rare and wily Himalayan Partridge. <a href=http://www.cowboyjohntours.com/tour-ideas3.htm target=”_blank”>Here’s a picture!</a><br />If they can mark that one they’ve made a <em>real</em> score.<br /><br />This hike we didn’t see the Partridge, but I did spot another bird, a beautiful jewel on an Indian Paintbrush.<br /><br />Hiking up the stock trail to Lamoille Lake at a particular switchback near a bubbling stream we leave the trail, and head up to a small valley. A glacier gouged out this depression eons ago leaving a lot of small ponds. The wet, mossy ground is carpeted with Elephanthead, Orchid, Shooting Star, Tiny Saxifrage, and Swamp Laurel. Little growing things edge small brooks and moss-covered rocks, everything in miniature. <br /><br />Reminds me of the delightful ride, “Story Book Land” that used to be in Disneyland. In a rowboat you’d wind in canals through a miniature countryside. Tiny boats tied to little docks, mossy rock cottages, landscaped with very small plants, peopled by characters from the “Mother West Wind Why Stories.” I loved that ride, but that was a few years ago. It’s a roller coaster of some sort now.<br /><br />This year the valley is wet everywhere. Charming ponds edged with plants that like wet, swampy spots. A few Whitebark Pines are home to Horned Larks and Robins.<br /><br />And, hummingbirds! <br /><br />While I’m sitting in the sun an Anna’s Hummingbird whistles by my ear headed for an Indian Paintbrush not far from where I’m sitting. <br /><br />Hummingbirds are difficult to identify. Every time I hike I hear that hummingbird whistle. When they whiz past your head they’re hard to see, but you can hear the characteristic whistle. And sometimes two males fight directly above you, whistling back and forth, bombing each other, defending a territory only they see.<br /><br />But this day the tiny bird, a quarter the size of a Robin, hovered with his needle bill in the Mountain Paintbrush not far from where I sat. With jerky movements and blurring wings he remained for a couple of minutes feeding, his <em>purple</em> back flashing in the sun. He’d picked a particularly tall and colorful Paintbrush with bright <em>red</em> bracts. <br /><br />“When I am an old woman I will wear <em>purple</em> with a <em>red</em> hat!” We’ve taken some of them on tour, too. The Red Hat ladies! Fun group!Cowboy John Tours Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05463148821826235252noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8837037.post-1124836546188950932005-08-23T15:31:00.000-07:002005-08-23T15:40:57.973-07:00Nevada Adventure Hikes Get You Red and Blue!Red and blue. My fingers, red and blue. <br /><br />Berry picking.<br /><br />We sampled as we hiked Sunday up Right Fork Creek above Lions camp. Thimble berries and Servis berries. <br /><br />The trail goes straight up the mountain. That is, when you finally find it. This year the trail is in the lake, a beaver lake. Beaver are clearing aspen for another dam, so now the little stream is a shallow lake. I shloshed through without getting <em>both</em> boots wet, just the left one. <br /><br />We hiked straight up through shrubs, Quaking Aspen, and Rose, the sun thankfully hidden behind clouds. A steep hike. Halfway up I remember why I don’t like this part of the hike.<br /><br />When we have a chance to breathe again I’m amazed at the vegetation. Lush and thick clear up the mountain to my left, perfect Mule Deer and Blue Grouse country. The trail ahead slopes down and we, like Alice, descend into the rabbit hole. <br /><br />Into a cool jungle of green and shadow. My favorite, Dogwood, is here, white berries catching the light, orange Rose hips, and gray-trunked Alder. There are the seductive red clusters of Baneberry, and Mountain Ash berry bunches turning autumn orange already. Purple gray berries lie against the deep green leaves of Elderberry. <br /><br />We walk through Aspen, Willow, and Thimbleberry and can’t resist the berries. Wide maple-shaped leaves form a thicket high as my shoulder. Spotted in the green mass are the bright red treats that stain our fingers. Tasty, they remind me of raspberries. <br /><br />Growing up we had raspberries. Dad and Mom had a very productive garden and the raspberries were one of the favorites. <br /><br />Later when John and I visited with our three boys Mom held out buckets which they grabbed on the way to the patch. Thimble Berries are much smaller, but they’re just as good, freshly tart. <br /><br />Even John eats, stopping at each patch. <br /><br />Our hike will be a long one. We’re not making much progress up the trail. John usually nags me to quit eating everything I see. “You gonna eat or hike?” But today he’s sampling just as I am.<br /><br />I stop at Servis Bushes to scoop blue-black, plump berries into my mouth. Servis berries aren’t quite as soft and juicy as Thimble berries. A Thimble berry in the mouth dissolves into sweetness the minute it touches your tongue. Tiny seeds with a delicious crunch are all that’s left behind. <br /><br />Except for red and blue fingers.<br /><br />This is what you really want to do! <br /><br />Hike with us in <em>barren</em> (let those who whizz by on the freeway think that!)Nevada!Cowboy John Tours Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05463148821826235252noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8837037.post-1123915884532170632005-08-12T23:50:00.000-07:002005-08-12T23:51:24.540-07:00You Can Wallk in Wagon Ruts of the old California TrailYou can stand in California Trail ruts a half-hour from town and look into the past. <br />Only ten to thirty minutes from Elko you can see where the wagons rolled over the sage brush in the mid-1800s. The ruts are still there.<br /><br />Nevada’s so wide open that history is still visible. We’re a high mountain desert, and much of our country is what most of America would call remote, open country, so the Trail itself is easy to see in quite a few places. Not only is it easy to see, but there are more miles of the California Trail in our state than in any other. <br /><br />From the I-80 freeway going to Reno you can see the cut in the hills where the Donner Party on the infamous Hastings Cutoff emerged from the Ruby Mountains to join the main trail to California. The Hastings Cutoff put them behind schedule, so they were stuck at the base of the Sierra Mt. at first snowfall, and it was too late to go on. <br /><br />This coming up year, 2006, just off I-80 with a view of the Donner Party’s Cutoff, we’re building a Center for travelers to experience the California Trail as it was in the mid-1800s. Follow the Trail with the Donner Party and others as they met the Indians, crossed the Platte River at flood stage, collected buffalo chips for cooking fuel, crossed the dreaded 40-mile desert, and buried their loved ones dead from cholera. At the California Trail Center you'll not only listen to diaries, walk through vegetative zones on the trail, smell the smells, touch, and live with the pioneers that rough journey, you'll also see the actual land they drove and walked across. It’s going to be spectacular center, well worth a visit.<br /><br />But you can come NOW. No need to wait for the Trail Center to be built. Cowboy John will show you robin-egg blue sky, that same sky at night filled with stars, and, oh, yes, the Hastings Cutoff and wagon ruts stretching into the sage.Cowboy John Tours Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05463148821826235252noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8837037.post-1123735751020998352005-08-10T21:47:00.000-07:002005-08-10T21:49:11.026-07:00Even Wildflower Hikes Are Not What They Seem!Things are not what they seem. <br /><br />Each time at this switchback, wet from springs, I look for them. Slender stems supporting a cluster of six-petaled creamy white stars. <br /><br />The soil will dry later and support only the low-growing juniper. <br /><br />Today it’s lush, a skillfully arranged Japanese garden with prostrate juniper, one or two purposefully positioned boulders, and striking white blossoms. <br /><br />The white clusters caught my eye a few years ago, and I didn’t know what they were. Six-petals and exquisite markings usually point to the Lily family. Petals of the stars are outlined in a fine green line with green dots in a circle around a center greenish-yellow, heart-shaped decoration. The blossoms, keep in mind, are tiny, less than an inch across, and yet their design is intricate. <br /><br />The sun was shining at my back and I could have taken a picture but didn’t have the camera. That means another hike in the morning. <br /><br />I’ve seen them other times in the Rubies. The small white clumps make them conspicuous. Beautiful and delicate, but they are not what they seem. <br /><br />They’re Death Camas. They’re poisonous. <br /><br />All parts are poisonous. My guidebook says very poisonous, especially the bulb.<br /><br />I hike and habitually sample berries along the trail: Servis berries, my favorite, Chokecherries, aptly named for their smoky “choking” taste, Currants, Rose hips, with their vitamin C, and prickly Gooseberries. I’m careful to sample only those I know well. <br /><br />Things on the trail and events in my life are not what they seem at first. Traumatic incidents are not what they appear when first you’re rudely slapped ‘longside the head. Often, like death camas, real growth and deep learning is hidden in what seems disastrous. <br /><br />Death Camas is not what it seems at first glance. Below its obvious beauty lies the sinister. <br /><br />If all opposites, good and evil, white and black, hot and cold, are no more than gradations on a sliding scale, then are both extremes essential for balance in our universe?<br /><br />Is Death Camas beautiful <em>because</em> is blended with beauty?Cowboy John Tours Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05463148821826235252noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8837037.post-1123622666807499432005-08-09T14:21:00.000-07:002005-08-09T21:37:30.726-07:00Nevada Adventure TourNevada Adventure Tour Saturday and I went with Cowboy John!<br /><br />I don’t usually take part in these Nevada adventure tours, but this one was to be a hike, and I couldn’t pass that up.<br /><br />We packed a light lunch into my backpack and John’s and picked our friends up at darling Lamoille Guest House at the base of the mountains.<br /><br />It was overcast and pleasantly cool, a great day for a hike. The flowers are abundant this year so Joann, a biology teacher, enjoyed checking out them and the geology. She’s a rock hound so stopped to admire striations and U-shaped valleys (geologically speaking, they’re glacier formed, as is most of Thomas Canyon).<br /><br />We stopped to admire Lamoille Lake, but decided we hadn’t gone far enough to be really tired, so continued on to Liberty Pass, 10,450 feet above sea level.<br /><br />The ecosystem changes to high alpine, which means, in the Rubies, large jagged granite rock. Tiny plants grow prostrate for protection from winter’s snow and wind. I saw Moss Campion, a mat of low growing green hugging the rock with small bright pink five-petaled flowers, yellow Stonecrop, Rose Root, and Mountain Sorrel. They have barely a month to grow, flower, set seed, and wither before early snow. The few pine trees are twisted, bent, hardy survivors.<br /><br />Joann asked if the pines were Bristlecone. Not here, although there are Bristlecone at the other end of the Rubies on the way to the Ruby Marshes.<br /><br />Bristlecone are extremely slow growers, especially when conditions are unusually harsh. In some years they may put on only an inch of new tissue. These sturdy specimens, though, live over 2000 years, the longer life span intimately related to the harshness of conditions.<br /><br />There’s a stand of them with inspiring Park Service signboards in Great Basin park near Eky, Nevada. Both those and the Bristlecones living in northern Nevada are very old. California Bristlecones don’t reach the great age of Nevada Bristlecones, because conditions are much more favorable in California. That’s right. Harsh conditions actually grow a tougher tree.<br /><br />Liberty Lake sits in a bowl below the trail, nestled above it is the blue jewel, Castle Lake. But, it’s a steady downhill to the Lake, and a steep climb back up, so I was relieved we decided Liberty Pass was far enough for our hike!<br /><br />The next Nevada Adventure Hike: Liberty Lake!Cowboy John Tours Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05463148821826235252noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8837037.post-1123527801266428562005-08-08T12:00:00.000-07:002005-08-08T12:03:23.876-07:00"Hiking on Mount Parnassus"We hiked most of the morning to the top of Thomas Creek, dawdling to take photos of us, Jazz our dog, the mountain, and wildflowers. <br /><br />It’s still that bright green of early June up high. The rivulet from a spring on the slope is running cheerily across the trail. We’ve come to the stream after a long and steep hike, just before breaking into the large valley and rocky cliffs at the top.<br /><br />The creek’s banks are verdant with spongy moss dotted pink and white, overhanging willow, and shooting stars, and a cluster of white Fringed Grass of Parnassus, that catches John’s eye,<br /><br />“Look at this!” <br /><br />A mossy shrine: five-petaled blossoms float above emerald, heart-shaped leaves forming a miniature holy place.<br /><br />“Parnassus,” a mountain in Greece, near the Gulf of Corinth, was sacred to Apollo and the Muses in ancient times. Today "Parnassus"is any center of poetic or artistic activity. <br /><br />The brooklet singing down the mountain is a "center of artistic activity." Do what you love. <br /><br />That’s the intention.<br /><a href="http://www.cowboyjohntours.com/tour-ideas3.htm" target="">To read more about day or half-hay wildflower hikes</a>Cowboy John Tours Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05463148821826235252noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8837037.post-1123286962497852232005-08-05T17:07:00.000-07:002005-08-08T10:31:09.820-07:00These birds are delightful. They come to our house every year in mid summer, never in spring. They flit around, chattering continually. There can’t be that much going on in their world.<br /><br />Cassin’s Kingbirds are a little smaller than Robins, and gray all over except for soft yellow on the belly. They sit intermittently on the electrical wire going to our house and chatter, sally forth to the TV antenna on the roof chattering and snapping up passing insects all the while, then back to the wire, jabbering the entire day.<br /><br />My friend Carole’s two little granddaughters play outside all morning at her ranch with a big lawn and huge cottonwood trees. The girls are busy riding scooters back and forth, baking and cooking in pretend kitchens, painting pictures. Chattering Kingbirds!<br /><br />I spotted two of these birds on my chokecherry bush outside the dining room window this afternoon. Perched on branches already loaded with purple-red cherries they sampled a few, one at a time. They chattered back and forth to each other before flying away.<br /><br />The chokecherries, I guess, aren’t quite ready yet. Still too bitter. They’ll be back.<br /><br />I will, too.<br /><br />JaniceCowboy John Tours Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05463148821826235252noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8837037.post-1123201690895566832005-08-04T17:27:00.000-07:002005-08-04T17:28:10.903-07:00Are You a Parry's Primrose or a Pasqueflower?I discovered it last year while hiking by myself. Just past “Willow Alley” on the Lamoille Lake trail I was stopped in my tracks by incandescent pink! A glance up the granite slope to the left drew my attention. Splashes of Parry’s Primrose bright pink everywhere on the mountainside. Fuschia against gray. Definitely a “Notice-me statement!”<br />Some people are like that. Showy, dramatic, they take up a lot of space, make a lot of noise. Parry’s Primrose folks.<br /><br />On both sides of the creek after the snow melts, a wide blanket of pink fills the gully and sweeps down with the rushing water. Parry’s Primrose. Dramatic, “Watch me!”<br />Other folks are quieter, take a little more time to be noticed. Their beauty appears only after patient time and diligent listening.<br /><br />I happened to catch a soft blue bud out of the corner of my eye in the shadow of the boulder below the trail. My mind quickly went through its files, came up with “no-match,” and alerted my conscious mind.<br /><br />I scrambled down with my faded copy of “A Field Guide to Rocky Mountain Wildflowers,” by John Craighead.<br /><br />I’ve hiked these mountains so much I’m familiar with the flowers at every switback. Special gardens have names. On the Island Lake trail there’s the English Garden, Death Switchback, the Rose Garden, and St John’s Pocket. Lamoille Lake trail has Willow Alley, and Primrose Grotto.<br /><br />But that day I saw a new face, Pasqueflower.<br /><br />The bud before blooming is a soft blue, which opens to a cup-shaped blossom with no true petals, just blue and violet sepals that look like petals. It blooms quite early—late this year because of all the snow we’ve had–and is usually gone by the time most people start hiking the mountains. I haven’t seen it anywhere else in the Rubies. Doesn’t mean it’s not here, probably means I just haven’t come on it. After blooming the flower surprises by turning to a wispy, feathery “Dr. Seuss” seed pod.<br /><br />Our world is richer for both Parry’s Primrose and Pasqueflower. We’re richer when we become aware enough to look for the quieter dispositions, too. Many things wait in quiet corners for discovery. It’s a fortunate day when we happen upon them…<br /><br />Come explore granite boulders, wildflowers, hummingbirds, and pastel-hued snow banks with us! (Why is that snow “pink?”)Cowboy John Tours Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05463148821826235252noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8837037.post-1123108537349302032005-08-03T15:33:00.000-07:002005-08-03T15:35:37.356-07:00I've Seen The Elephant!Saturday, we led a wildflower/birding hike in the Ruby Mountains with folks from Reno, Nevada. The sun was partially hidden behind low clouds so temperatures were pleasantly cool. Unusual for this time of year. At this altitude it’s usually harshly hot.<br /><br />Little streams tumbled down mountainsides, with flowers clustered on lushly green banks. That’s where we saw the ELEPHANT, on the creek bank! Not one, but lots of them!<br /><br />"Seeing the elephant" in the mid 1800s when people moved west on the California Trail came to mean surpassing anything done before, an experience on the trail that was traumatic, terrifying, and life-changing.<br /><br />The California Trail is fresh in my mind because friends and I presented a talk recently in the City Park, "Women on the California Trail." (Nevada has more miles of the California Trail than any other state.)<br /><br />So, when I saw the elephant beside the stream I thought of our talk and the California Trail.<br /><br />The "elephant" is, of course, a wildflower! Did you guess?<br /><br />Rising out of lush greenery around streams are bright pink flower stalks, 12-18 inches tall, covered in small reddish-purple blossoms. Each tiny blossom looks like an elephant’s head with even a trunk. That’s the real name of the flower, "Elephanthead."<br /><br />You hardly have to use your imagination. They look just like small heads with trunks! The spike is packed so tight with these little heads it looks like a pink pagoda.<br /><br />Like Dumbo, I’m seeing pink elephants.<br /><br />Years ago I remember I loved showing this flower to our boys when we hiked. "What are elephants doing in our mountains?" we’d say. When we got home we hauled out the LP to play Dumbo’s song.<br /><br />This elephant isn’t traumatic, or terrifying. Seeing these elephants could be life-changing, though; hiking in these mountains often is.<br /><br />"Pink elephants on parade. Here they come……"<br /><br />You know you can call for a family wildflower hike. We’ll find those pink elephants, along with birds, trout hiding in high mountain lakes, and lots of fresh air and blue sky.Cowboy John Tours Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05463148821826235252noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8837037.post-1122993898067124752005-08-02T07:43:00.000-07:002005-08-02T07:44:58.073-07:00I saw the Elephant!Seeing the elephant” was a phrase thrown about during the days of the California Trail migration.<br /><br />“Seeing the elephant” meant doing something surpassing anything you had done before, experiencing something on the trail that was so big, so terrifying, so huge that it was unheard of, beyond belief.<br /><br />Well, I saw the elephant!<br /><br />But it has nothing to do with the California Trail.<br /><br />By the way, you can still see wagon ruts of the Trail in Elko county, stand in the ruts and look into the past.<br /><br />But that has nothing to do with MY elephant! More later.<br />John and I are heading to a touring workshop in Battle Mountain this morning. Talk more later.<br /><br />JaniceCowboy John Tours Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05463148821826235252noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8837037.post-1122919030592922642005-08-01T10:43:00.000-07:002005-08-01T11:13:07.576-07:00Orchids for the Prom? Maybe a little small!Most folks don't expect orchids in Nevada. It's a sand-box desert. Right?<br /><br />Wrong. Not all of Nevada is Las Vegas style, dry and hot.<br /><br />We live in northern Nevada, over a mile high elevation and hike the Ruby<br />Mountains, a half hour from our house.<br /><br />Hiking in the Ruby Mountains in northern Nevada is like being in the Alps,<br />Tetons, or Rockies.<br /><br />John and I hiked this morning in July before work up the stock trail to<br />Lamoille Lake in the Rubies. The sky was gray and cloudy. I'd smelled<br />smoke the night before and wondered if lightening had started something.<br />We've had a wet spring, and its' prime fire season now. there could be rain<br />up high today, and lightening in the valley below.<br /><br />Grass and flowers are thick and high this year making our hike glorious.<br />Streams drop down the mountainside along the trail, some merely trickle<br />through granite crevices while others rush to meet the creek below.<br />It's a perfect day for a hike. Sometimes at this elevation the sun is relentless;<br />today the air is soft, temperature, cool.<br /><br />Along the rills are lush gardens of Ceanothus, Brook Saxifrage, and<br />Shooting Stars.<br /><br />Above all are small waxy towers, the Bog Orchid. Orchid bulbs are<br />eatable, but my Field Guide cautions against eating them because<br />American orchids are rare, although they seem to be common in our<br />Ruby Mountains. They're at home in high altitude, boggy situations<br />along streams.<br /><br />Creamy white blossoms, thirty or so, wee versions of the cultivated<br />orchid John gave me for a college dance over forty years ago, are clustered<br />on stalks rising 1-2 feet above green orchid-like leaves. The plants<br />resemble exotic "mosque" towers, stately, and elegant, and I can<br />imagine imams calling the faithful to prayer from "places of adoration."<br /><br />Appropriate that they be here. I can't walk by one of these brook<br />sanctuaries without stopping to adore.<br /><br /><br />Stopping is also an excuse for a drink and snack. Today it's chocolate<br />almond shortbread.Cowboy John Tours Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05463148821826235252noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8837037.post-1121387234168464572005-07-14T17:24:00.000-07:002005-07-14T17:27:14.176-07:00Cowboy John School!John's just taken two new people up for the school. We're really excited about it and we'll have more schools soon.<br /><a href="http://www.cowboyjohntours.com/cowboy-school.htm" target="_blank">See Cowboy John School Details by Clicking Here</a>Cowboy John Tours Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05463148821826235252noreply@blogger.com