Archive for the 'Colorado women' Category

Old Love

I was in Municipal Court this morning (Miss Leadfoot strikes again–I’ve kept a clean record for years by restricting my speeding to out-of-state driving, but had a momentary lapse).  There were a half dozen kids caught drinking, a bad boy in manacles, three Moms with driving violations, and a Navaho couple in their mid-seventies who had driven up from the reservation.  He was medium height and wiry, hair cut short by a barber, clean Wrangler jeans and a bowlegged stance from a lifetime of managing horses; she had long long hair clipped up in a bun, and was taking care of things like she always had but they were older now. 

When they came to town before Christmas, he ran a red light and didn’t use his turn signal, his truck had slick road tires when snow tires are necessary.  And he was very deaf.

She stood next to him, in front of the judge.  Through her, it was established that the old man has 20/20 vision, and they had ordered a hearing aid that should arrive soon.  He had passed the driving test and now had snow tires; he had driven them up this morning in a snow storm. Then the judge asked the required questions. 

“You have been charged with violation of …. Do you understand these charges?”  “Yes, Your Honor,” says the wife.  “No, he has to say it,” says the judge.  She nudges her husband.  “Say, Yes Your Honor,” she says.  And he does. 

“How do you plead to these charges?” “Guilty, Your Honor,” says the wife.  “He has to say it,” say the judge patiently.  And the old Navaho man does.  This goes on for three or four questions.  The judge is very patient. 

The prosecutor says to himself, ”You still love him, don’t you.” 

It gets picked up by a mike, so she hears it along with the judge and everyone else.   She’s still a beautiful woman, a little sassy, and she says to the room at large, “Oh, I have to be his ears and brain these days, but he’s a good man.” 

And we all laughed, and wished them a safer world. 

Yampa the Gander

Yampa the gander came to Suzy’s household through friends who took a raft trip down the Yampa River in Utah.  During the first days of the trip, a domesticated goose joined their party or, as it turned out, a gander.  He’s a gander with gusto.  He stood on the bow of their kayak through the rapids.  He bedded down on the beach near them every night and made friends with everyone.  By the time their 148 mile run was done, no one wanted to leave him at the take-out in the desert, so they put him in the car and drove him to Suzy’s. 

Suzy didn’t want Yampa to be lonely, so she got two goslings, Berna and Lillo from Bernalillo, New Mexico.  Berna died, but all summer Lillo and Yampa swam happily in the stream in front of Suzy’s house, and were carried upstairs to sleep on the deck every night, where it was safe. 

Everyone knew that winter would be a problem, so Christy built them a goose house.

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and that worked out fine until the stream froze. 

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There was a little patch of open water left, but that was not Yampa and Lillo’s idea of reasonable winter accommodations.  So they ran away down the road to the hot springs half a mile away. 

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And that’s where they’re spending the winter.

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The Kindness of Strangers

Suzy lives beside a stream at 8,200 feet, and the storm last week left her with piles of snow. 

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About a mile and a half upriver of her house there’s a mesa on Ute Mountain Ute land; the tribe kept a herd of horses up there last summer.  When the herd was moved last fall, one little yearling was left behind.  She has been toughing it out alone every since, and was doing OK until the deep snow came and she got stuck.  Since then, Suzy’s household has been taking the little horse hay every day.  She was getting terribly dehydrated without access to water, so Suzy’s renter skied out with a five gallon bucket of water that morning. 

I snowshoed and Suzy skied on a trail through deep snow–it looks reasonable except if you fall off this path you’re floundering around in three or four feet.  It’s a little sketchy for my old dog, who steps on the back of my snowshoes for an assist every chance she can.  We went over the river and through the woods,

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across the fields, we turned left and right and I’m thinking that if this little horse depended on me to carry her hay every day she’d be a goner.  

To get on top of the mesa is so steep and soft that the dog can’t make it, so Suzy keeps them down below while I snowshoe up  and look who’s here: 

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poor little guy can’t get anywhere, doesn’t have any food.  She’s totally wild, and would run away if she could (when there was no snow, there was no way to catch her, and now there’s no way to move her.) 

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And that strand of hay hanging from her mouth is from Suzy toting those bales by backpack.  Suzy said, we named her Thankful.  I think she really is.   

Miss Roberta’s sour cherries

 Miss Roberta, 94, lives alone in a house down the road.  She brought dessert when she came to dinner on Christmas Eve, thanks to a barter gone wrong.

Roberta and I often discuss how different things were back when she was growing up on a ranch.  These days, people prefer to buy their fruit in the supermarket.  There are apple trees all through town, but those apples are piled in the alleyways for the bears to eat while people buy apples in the grocery store shipped all the way from Washington State.  She just can’t understand it. 

As it happens, the local bakery Bread can use any amount of local fruit with no notice, but they don’t pay: they let you have lots of bread and pastries for free.  They’ll barter but they won’t buy.

When Roberta was 92, she got fixated on the dual ideas that her sour cherries were worth $40, and that the bakery would buy them.  There was nothing to say about it.  She paid her 65 year old handyman to strip the tree-he didn’t say a word–and I took them to the bakery.  I couldn’t give her cash because then she’d be wanting me to sell her cherries next summer too, so I gave the cherries to the bakery and bought Roberta a $40 gift certificate.  

Roberta is about 4′8″ and 95 pounds.  She’s not a big eater and doesn’t go to the bakery.  The gift certificate sat in her drawer for two years, and I remembered it after I invited her over for Christmas Eve dinner. 

I offered to pick up a fancy bakery dessert if she wanted to use the gift certificate, and she was tickled by the thought.  She ruffled through her desk looking for that two-year-old certificate, but it wasn’t there.  And then she opened the top drawer of her dresser, and pulled it right out.  At 94, she knew this day would come, and she was right. 

I picked her up a Linzertorte for 12 ($18), and the gift certificate went back in her dresser drawer for another year.  Miss Roberta is prepared for nearly all occasions.