Posts Tagged ‘Nature’

Dying Dreams

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010

Just under 10 years ago my wife and I spent an agonizing weekend. We made ourselves physically ill. We worried, we contemplated, we doubted, and we dreamed. We were deciding whether or not to take the plunge and buy a piece of property in the country. We knew there would have to be sacrifices made. Those sacrifices might cause us some hardship later. We wondered if we were committed enough to accept these unknown events and work through them.

That decision was as it should be; it was hard. Paying for this little piece of God’s earth would be even harder.  We weren’t afraid of hard work, nor were we afraid of giving up in order to get a payout at a later time. The instant gratification mentality exhibited by people who believe they are entitled to everything right now is not something we subscribe to.  Things that come easy never have as much value as those things that take investment and hard work. If you want a glaring example ask a car dealer about the shape most leased cars are in versus cars that are owned.

My wife and I have been blessed with courage. It’s not something a lot of people have. We aren’t timid people. Helen at the helmWe’ve moved halfway across the country leaving everything we knew, and all of our support systems, behind. We’ve sailed the open waters of the ocean in boats over a decade and a half old. We’ve launched businesses from an idea on a scrap of paper.

We couldn’t afford it, but we had a dream and the courage to pursue it.

I grew up in the Midwest and the Northeast. Texas; I never thought I’d say it, but I really love it here. I love the geographical variety of this state. You can have breakfast in the 4th largest city in the country and enjoy a picnic lunch in country so remote that large predatory cougars are the top of the food chain.

The Stacy Ranch is an odd shaped piece of property 125 miles from Dallas, 125 miles from Houston, and yes, 125+ miles from Austin.Stacy Ranch from air It’s easy to dive right in and start changing a piece of land to suit your needs but we spent a bit of time thinking about our long term dreams and visions. We’ve drawn an imaginary line across the property where it makes the turn. The “Front 40” is ours. We’ve domesticated some portions of it. We mow parts of it. There are benches in a variety of places, a barn, and a home site. We’ve run water lines totaling over a mile in length. The vineyard was planted 9 years ago. If a tree comes down most of the time it ends up as firewood. There are gates and fences, faucets and fixtures, along with cultured stone and roads. The Front 40 belongs to man.

The Back 40 is a different story. No electricity, no graveled roads, no structures. When the earth shook from the oak tree with an 8 foot diameter trunk crashing to the ground 5 years ago it stayed right there. No firewood pile for this fallen giant, now it is a refuge for the snakes, rodents, and rabbits that call its cover home. It’s a good feeling when you’re walking through a nicely manicured city park with the sun on your shoulders. The claustrophobic feelings of office buildings disappear and you can enjoy some time outside. It’s nice. Our ranch is far enough out that the Back 40 is still a wild place. When the sun is on your shoulders and you’re strolling through the meadow, or walking the path wandering across the back forest, you know you’re out. Not outside; out. Out of the circle of man’s touch. I like it there but I’m never in my element. The back half of the ranch is not for man, it is God’s, it is wild.

I don’t hear very well any longer but I still have a pretty good nose. There is a smell at the ranch. It is slightly musty, organic, and perhaps dusty. There is sweetness to it not unlike the smell of new mown hay. Unfamiliar to those accustomed to the city. Pleasant? Yes. EMF 357 and wine barrelIt reminds me of my younger days. Days filled with the smells of horses, the scents of leather bridles and gloves, and the aromas of distant farmer’s fields brought in by the summer breezes. I think smell has always been a powerful sense for me. I drive my wife crazy, although she loves me too much to say anything about it, with my passion for leather. I must have 10 pairs of leather gloves, 3 or 4 leather briefcases, jackets and sweaters with leather patches, all because I love the smell. Her perfume and skin is an intoxicating aroma that has stirred me from my sleep more times than I care to admit. All of my sportscars are set to run just a little rich. Why? Well first it’s better to run rich than lean, but also because I love the pungent, carbon rich, smell of unburned fuel emitting from the tailpipes.

In the past I’ve gone a year or two without feeling any passion for the ranch but it always comes back. It comes back in memories, dreams, and hopes. She’s always there in all of them.

My memories remind me of her strength and toughness when longhornthe vision of her raising the walls of our barn return. How can she be so pretty and elegant yet be so tough? I laugh when I remember the time she jumped out of the truck, no fear, ready to take on a 1 ton Texas Longhorn bull and the bull, figuring he’d been bested, ran from the fury. I sigh and smile when I remember the day she curled up next to me and took a nap under the big tree which overhangs the pond, its big limbs providing cooling shade on a warm summer’s day.

In those dreams she’s always there. Her femininity shines as I see her in a pretty sundress and hat going for a walk with me. Her delicate hand tucked safely in mine. I bask in the boundless expanse of her love as I envision her watchin2-5-10 sunset at ranchg over her grandchildren as they romp across her land playing some made up game on a future afternoon. The dreams are so real I can actually hear the crickets over by the pond, I feel the warm summer evening breeze across my face, and I can see the firelight glinting from her eyes as I sit across the table from her enjoying a dinner under the vast expanse of the Milky Way.

My hopes are that I can somehow be anywhere close to the man she sees me as. That I can manage and maintain the ranch in a way that God will smile upon. That I’ll have the opportunity to live these dreams with her for many years to come. 

The values for ranch property in Texas have changed in ways that most Wall Street brokers could only hope to match. If we couldn’t afford it back then we definitely couldn’t afford it now. We had the courage. It was hard at times and we doubted ourselves. We did it together, the two of us as one united front.

We had a dream.

But some dreams must die.

Our dream is about to go away.

In 5 months, 2 weeks, and 6 days the mortgage on the Stacy Ranch will be paid in full. We will close the back cover and dream the dream of buying a ranch no more for as Mother promised you as she tucked you into bed……some dreams do come true. 

The Hunter and The Hunted

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009

 

Ever since I was a young man I’ve enjoyed going for drives out in the country. Driving top down in a convertible, or at least with the windows down in a sedan, is the only way to go. You can hear bird songs, insects chirping, and the melancholy sounds from the cattle. The smells of new mown hay, the freshness of a stand of pine trees, and the delicate aroma of life come wafting in. These are the moments when I feel part of the earth, not merely a spectator just watching it go by. This is the time my head clears and my shoulders suddenly lose the burden they have been carrying.

I love this time.

 

Rain came to south and central Texas during the night. The parched soil eagerly absorbed the life giving moisture. It came in quantities that created small areas of run-off; pockets of water collecting in depressions. Early in the morning rodents, snakes, insects, deer, and all matter of wildlife emerged to quench their thirst. It was a celebration. Life would go on. Rain has come!

 

Then the hunters arrived.

 

Central and south Texas play host to the largest hawk migration in North America. Kettles of hawks numbering in the hundreds can be seen riding the thermals in the Texas sky. North of Corpus each year the count exceeds three quarters of a million birds of prey soaring through the area. Mid September is the peak time of this migration with over 30 different species of migrating raptors calling the state of Texas their temporary residence.

 

The year long drought in Texas, the migration, and the rain falling during the night and thus the clearing at sunrise created the perfect storm for the hunters. Usually Texas Hawkseen soaring high in the sky hawks and eagles were abundant at eye level. With every turn I saw the flash of feathers. Great wings stretched out, their spans riding the ground effect cushion of air just over the tops of the wild grasses. From all points they came; across the valleys, down the hillsides, from the tree tops, and through the fields. Big birds so close I looked them in the eye. Talons held at the ready. To be small, on the ground, and to move meant sure death.

 

In addition to the nutrients the rain washed into the rivers it also awakened the insects creating a smorgasbord for largemouth bass. As I took a break from my drive and gazed into a river I could see swarms of insects hovering at the surface. The smooth plane of the fast moving water was broken by a large black shadow emerging from the depths. It happened so fast all I saw clearly was the large tail of a 20+ inch largemouth flick slowly sending it back down into the murky waters as it took one of the flying bugs with it.

 

The hunters did not arrive only from the sky or sea, they waited in the wood. The forests helped to conceal their intent. Pine needles carpet the ground; dropped from the trees above who, due to a lack of rain, could no longer spare the water to keep them green. These same needles muffle the sounds of padding paws as they slink through the shadows in search of prey.

 

As I crest a hill out of the corner of my eye I see a deer dart across the road to the cover of the other side. As I feather the brakes to bleed off some speed I smile and think to myself, “where there is one deer a second will surely follow.” True to form moments later a second smaller doe bounds from the woods on the left and crosses at full speed to the right.

I have seen much. While not in the winter of my life I’m also no longer called a young man. In all my years I have never witnessed the scene that was about to unwind in the next few seconds. I don’t believe I would be disappointed if I never saw it again

 

Racing at full speed, low to the ground just prior to the leap onto the back of its prey coyotea coyote came crashing through the brush to the left. Razor sharp teeth bared, its tail fully extended acting as a rudder in midair to help with sudden turns, the adrenalin in its system would naturally dilate its pupils so it could gain the upmost advantage of sight; singularly focused on one thing, the running deer. The time span of a heartbeat, not seconds but tenths of seconds, separated it from victory.

 

Then it all changed.

 While I don’t know the thought process, instinct, or all the details, I do know what happened.

 

Those ears that can hear a leaf rustle hundreds of yards away heard a sound foreign to it. A sound of danger. The sound of its only predator; man. No mufflers, no catalytic converters, just straight stainless steel pipes leading to two small baffles. Those ears heard the scream of an Italian V12 engine down shifting.

 

 “STOP!” “TURN!” “RUN!”

 And in the blink of an eye the chase was over. 

 

I know it was how God intended it. I know there was no malice, no evil thoughts. I know it was as it should be.

 

I know all that.

 

I don’t know why, but I also know I’m glad he turned around and the doe lived to see another day.

 

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