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E-grāmata: Cowboy is a Verb: Notes from a Modern-day Rancher

  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 06-Nov-2019
  • Izdevniecība: University of Nevada Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781948908245
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  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 06-Nov-2019
  • Izdevniecība: University of Nevada Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781948908245

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In this descriptive narrative for general readers and students, author Richard Collins describes day-to-day life on a cattle ranch in southeastern Arizona and gives insight into the history and geology of the region and the relationships between land, water, animals, and people. The memoir features an emphasis on issues of conservation and range management. Collins explains how to graze cattle with the least damage to the environment and details how he and other ranchers cooperated with scientists and conservationists to save an endangered minnow and improve the health of the Redrock Canyon watershed. B&w photos are included. Annotation ©2020 Ringgold, Inc., Portland, OR (protoview.com)

Richard Collins seamlessly weaves a memoir about how he learned to ranch in southwestern Arizona with astute commentaries about the challenges of doing so in a land where most of his neighbors were exurbanites and a small endangered minnow caused more problems than the drug runners trekking through his mountain pastures. Along the way, Collins paints a portrait of rural West struggling to survive the onslaught of relentless urbanization, suburbanization, and exurbanization. He poses one of the most consequential questions facing environmentalists today: Do we attempt to preserve every vanishing species regardless of habitat constraints, or should we manage the land for overall ecological health?
 


From the big picture to the smallest detail, Richard Collins fashions a rousing memoir about the modern-day lives of cowboys and ranchers. However, Cowboy is a Verb is much more than wild horse rides and cattle chases. While Collins recounts stories of quirky ranch horses, cranky cow critters, cow dogs, and the people who use and care for them, he also paints a rural West struggling to survive the onslaught of relentless suburbanization.

A born storyteller with a flair for words, Collins breathes life into the geology, history, and interdependency of land, water, and native and introduced plants and animals. He conjures indelible portraits of the hardworking, dedicated people he comes to know. With both humor and humility, he recounts the day-to-day challenges of ranch life such as how to build a productive herd, distribute your cattle evenly across a rough and rocky landscape, and establish a grazing system that allows pastures enough time to recover. He also intimately recounts a battle over the endangered Gila topminnow and how he and his neighbors worked with university range scientists, forest service conservationists, and funding agencies to improve their ranches as well as the ecological health of the Redrock Canyon watershed.

Ranchers who want to stay in the game don&;t dominate the landscape; instead, they have to continually study the land and the animals it supports. Collins is a keen observer of both. He demonstrates that patience, resilience, and a common-sense approach to conservation and range management are what counts, combined with an enduring affection for nature, its animals, and the land. Cowboy is a Verb is not a romanticized story of cowboy life on the range, rather it is a complex story of the complicated work involved with being a rancher in the twenty-first-century West.

Recenzijas

Collins seamlessly weaves a memoir about how he learned to ranch in southeastern Arizona with astute commentaries about the challenges of doing so in a land where most of his neighbors were exurbanites and a small endangered minnow caused more problems than the drug runners trekking through his mountain pastures. Tom Sheridan, Professor of Anthropology, University of Arizona and author of Stitching the West Back Together I do think this book may become a classic and sit alongside other memorable books on ranching culture. Richard L. Knight, retired professor of wildlife conservation, Colorado State University There is something special about being able to live and work in a landscape over many years. Each year offers a greater understanding of place and your place in it. Richard Collins shines when he is describing his beloved high desert grasslands and the people and creatures who occupy it. Ross Humphreys, San Rafael Ranch Collins is not only a fine storyteller, but there is generosity and exuberance in his writing and thinking that I hope will spread like wildfire to renew the many landscapes and cultures of the American West. Gary Paul Nabhan, author of Food from the Radical Center: Healing Our Lands and Communities Collins' descriptions of abundant wildlife, expansive scenic views and especially the watershed that divides his ranch from north to south, all attest to his deep connection to the property that he has explored, inch by inch, on horseback The efforts of a hands-on working rancher to sustain the viability of the land he so loves makes it likely that cowboy truly is a verb. Betty Barr, historian and author of Hidden Treasures of Santa Cruz County The best description of ranching in southeast Arizona that I have yet run across.   Bill McDonald, Co-founder of the Radical Center and Past President of the Malpai Borderlands Group and fifth generation rancher Cowboy is a Verb should be read by every rancher, agency member, or any folks that just love open spaces. Using local examples to illustrate his points, Richard shows the need to add a powerful; fourth "C" to the three Cs of successful ranching. Cowboys, Cattle, and Cow Dogsmake room for Cooperation.  Anyone with feelings about the west will find things they like and things they wish Richard hadn't brought up in this book. That is the surest way to know he has written the truth about a subject that he knows and cares deeply about." Jim Koweek, Author, Grassland Plant ID for Everyone: Except Folks that That Take Boring Technical Stuff Too Seriously One of the few books available that gives a well-rounded description of modern-day ranching in the southwest A very balanced picture of the challenges facing ranchers today.  Thanks for writing such an enlightening book and giving me the opportunity to read it. Walter Lane, Co-Owner Headquarters West, Ltd. and fourth generation rancher Richard Collins was a leader in the vitally important task of building a radical center among ranchers, conservationists, and federal agencies in southern Arizona. Today, as the West and the nation continues to harden into opposing factions we need the work of radical centrists more than ever. In this thoughtful, humorous, and heartfelt memoir, Collins captures the spirit of those heady years, sharing lessons learned for all of us along the way. Courtney White, author of Grass, Soil, Hope and co-founder of the Quivira Coalition As a lifelong rancher and cowboy, I was mesmerized by Richard Collins' beautifully crafted stories. What I particularly relished was Collins' deep love of the land. His passion for conserving and improving grasslands, water, wildlifethe very environment that sustains usshines through his articulate and moving prose. He is a down-to-earth rancher and cowboy who finds great joy in his daily tasks while never losing sight of his role as steward of the land. H. Alan Day, author of The Horse Lover and Cowboy Up!

Foreword xi
George B. Ruyle
Introduction 1(4)
Chapter 1 Alamo Spring
5(22)
Chapter 2 Fine Feathers
27(20)
Chapter 3 Tar Paper and Tin Shacks
47(26)
Chapter 4 What Goes Around
73(15)
Chapter 5 Living Close to Predicament
88(11)
Chapter 6 Rainfall, Cow Counts, and Climate Change
99(9)
Chapter 7 The Seibold Ranch
108(19)
Chapter 8 Fences, Fires, and Drug Mules
127(15)
Chapter 9 More Horses and a Dog
142(7)
Chapter 10 Canelo Hills Coalition
149(13)
Chapter 11 Toward a Practice of Limits
162(26)
Chapter 12 Taking Better Care
188(13)
Chapter 13 Habitat or Species?
201(17)
Chapter 14 Why in Hell?
218(14)
Chapter 15 Cowboy Is a Verb
232(7)
Selected Sources 239(6)
Acknowledgments 245(2)
About the Author 247
Richard C. Collins is a rancher, writer, horseman, conservationist, and scholar who has owned and operated farms and ranches on the borderlands in Southern Arizona since 1983. His essays have appeared in numerous publications, including National Geographic Traveler, Science & Spirit, and SNReview magazines.