THE BLACK COWS arrived as only these cows could, stepping timidly
out of the trailer and putting their heads down to the fresh grass. The
weathered rancher told me he had kept them penned overnight before
delivering them so they would not hit the ground running when we turned
them out.
A few days before, I had written the biggest check I've ever signed
to Virgil Lawson for nine Maine-Anjou/Angus cows, five with calves -- a
total of 14 head. It should be explained that the draft for $11,400 was
not out of my own personal account but rather the account for the ranch
I manage. Nearly everything I knew about cattle was written on that
check.
The cattle grazed calmly in their new surroundings. We watched them
for some time and talked. The day was sunny and a few small puffy
clouds drifted by. Finally he said with a twinge of sadness, "I
suppose they look better up here than they did on my place."I
almost felt guilty for buying them.
He was born in a cabin in Babcock Hole near Wetmore. His parents,
Clyde and Mary, operated a sawmill there and the lumber was hauled out
on a wagon over the back roads to Pueblo. By the time the doctor
arrived from Florence by horse and buggy on Sept. 29, 1926, Virgil had
been born and all there was to do was fill out the birth
certificate.