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The other day I heard a newsman refer to these perilous times for business people. No kidding, I thought. The gloomy picture featured rising costs, increased property taxes, deepening recession, employee demands for more insurance and benefits, market risk the list went on.
I thought of the risks weve faced in ranching, with more to come. Big sigh. Suddenly, I laughed out loud. I remembered being 50 miles from home in 1979, at the Labor Day Horse Race in Tensleep, Wyo. We were in business for ourselves then, too, and our financial picture could charitably be described as bleak. Land-rich, cash poor, is the way the bankers put it. The livestock market was at rock bottom, and nobody was buying ranches, even if wed wanted to sell.
The races, though: Held on a dirt track at the edge of town, the annual races featured mostly ranch horses brought by people who just wanted to have some fun and see which horses could run. Despite the gloomy business setting we were in, we gathered up some friends and a couple of fast horses and rattled off to Tensleep in a beat-up old pickup and trailer, ready for the horserace.
The sunny autumn day attracted a jolly crowd from nearby towns and ranches. The entry fees were small; our horses won their races and we made a little money. We joked about being a small-time syndicate as we placed some bets, laughing and enjoying our good fortune. Fun is where you find it, especially during hard times.
In the late afternoon, wed gathered at the bar in town noisily celebrating our victories, when a local fellow started bragging that he had a horse back at his ranch that was faster than any of the others, and hed bet $1,000 cash to prove it. Somehow, we heard ourselves saying, Well, then. Go home and get him. Youre on.
When we pooled our money to cover the bet, our syndicate only had $300 of the $1,000 we needed, so somebody had to write a check for the remainder. There were no ATM machines back then, and cashing an out-of-town check on a holiday wasnt easy. Nobody had money to spare, and many of us ranchers were heavily in debt.
A thousand dollars was a lot of money 29 years ago, borrowing at 16 percent interest rates. But somehow, we got the money together and went back out to the track at dusk, each of us secretly wondering if that horse really could outrun ours, and what wed do if we lost. With a lump in my throat I stood thinking of groceries, school clothes for the kids and how wed pay the bills.
We waited nervously for the guy to show up. Our friend Delmer, who owned our horse, was sweating bullets. Howd we get into this? he asked. Ive never been much of a gambling man.
After a quiet minute, my husband roared and slapped him on the back. What? Delmer, youve gotta be kidding. Youve gambled more than this every day youve been in the ranching business. Youve been bucked off horses, run over by cows; youve walked home when your truck broke down, worked jobs, made a living against all odds. Youve gambled on cattle prices and the weather and the price of hay. This horserace is nothing at all compared to being in business for yourself. So if were all gambling anyhow, lets at least have a little fun at it!
We did. At the starting line, a cowboy had the cash money snapped in his polyester shirt pocket for safekeeping; winner would take all. When the flag dropped, the horses jumped out neck and neck, their hooves pounding in the dirt. The dust flew; we could barely see the finish line and we didnt know at first whod won or lost. We did win, though, and we gathered up our money and left town as quickly as we could, feeling more relief than triumph. We knew that $1,000 meant a lot to the loser, too.
Looking back at what we risked that day, I want to give heart to young friends who are struggling to succeed as ranchers, or in any business. Win some, lose some, I want to say. Of course its perilous. Of course theres risk, but theres also reward and sometimes profit, and certainly adventure, satisfaction, achievement.
Definitely its a gamble, but oh, the fun of the race.
Mary Flitner is a contributor to Writers on the Range, a service of High Country News (hcn.org). She ranches and writes in Greybull, Wyo.
I thought of the risks weve faced in ranching, with more to come. Big sigh. Suddenly, I laughed out loud. I remembered being 50 miles from home in 1979, at the Labor Day Horse Race in Tensleep, Wyo. We were in business for ourselves then, too, and our financial picture could charitably be described as bleak. Land-rich, cash poor, is the way the bankers put it. The livestock market was at rock bottom, and nobody was buying ranches, even if wed wanted to sell.
The races, though: Held on a dirt track at the edge of town, the annual races featured mostly ranch horses brought by people who just wanted to have some fun and see which horses could run. Despite the gloomy business setting we were in, we gathered up some friends and a couple of fast horses and rattled off to Tensleep in a beat-up old pickup and trailer, ready for the horserace.
The sunny autumn day attracted a jolly crowd from nearby towns and ranches. The entry fees were small; our horses won their races and we made a little money. We joked about being a small-time syndicate as we placed some bets, laughing and enjoying our good fortune. Fun is where you find it, especially during hard times.
In the late afternoon, wed gathered at the bar in town noisily celebrating our victories, when a local fellow started bragging that he had a horse back at his ranch that was faster than any of the others, and hed bet $1,000 cash to prove it. Somehow, we heard ourselves saying, Well, then. Go home and get him. Youre on.
When we pooled our money to cover the bet, our syndicate only had $300 of the $1,000 we needed, so somebody had to write a check for the remainder. There were no ATM machines back then, and cashing an out-of-town check on a holiday wasnt easy. Nobody had money to spare, and many of us ranchers were heavily in debt.
A thousand dollars was a lot of money 29 years ago, borrowing at 16 percent interest rates. But somehow, we got the money together and went back out to the track at dusk, each of us secretly wondering if that horse really could outrun ours, and what wed do if we lost. With a lump in my throat I stood thinking of groceries, school clothes for the kids and how wed pay the bills.
We waited nervously for the guy to show up. Our friend Delmer, who owned our horse, was sweating bullets. Howd we get into this? he asked. Ive never been much of a gambling man.
After a quiet minute, my husband roared and slapped him on the back. What? Delmer, youve gotta be kidding. Youve gambled more than this every day youve been in the ranching business. Youve been bucked off horses, run over by cows; youve walked home when your truck broke down, worked jobs, made a living against all odds. Youve gambled on cattle prices and the weather and the price of hay. This horserace is nothing at all compared to being in business for yourself. So if were all gambling anyhow, lets at least have a little fun at it!
We did. At the starting line, a cowboy had the cash money snapped in his polyester shirt pocket for safekeeping; winner would take all. When the flag dropped, the horses jumped out neck and neck, their hooves pounding in the dirt. The dust flew; we could barely see the finish line and we didnt know at first whod won or lost. We did win, though, and we gathered up our money and left town as quickly as we could, feeling more relief than triumph. We knew that $1,000 meant a lot to the loser, too.
Looking back at what we risked that day, I want to give heart to young friends who are struggling to succeed as ranchers, or in any business. Win some, lose some, I want to say. Of course its perilous. Of course theres risk, but theres also reward and sometimes profit, and certainly adventure, satisfaction, achievement.
Definitely its a gamble, but oh, the fun of the race.
Mary Flitner is a contributor to Writers on the Range, a service of High Country News (hcn.org). She ranches and writes in Greybull, Wyo.


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