• If you are having problems logging in please use the Contact Us in the lower right hand corner of the forum page for assistance.

A good cinch

I have a friend who years ago was working for an outfitter in the River of No Return wilderness. He was crossing the Salmon River with a pack string. Something happened and the entire string went down in the river. He went to cutting cinches and latigoes to get them back on their feet. Got the horses and mules out of the river and back on dry ground. Drug the pack saddles out of the river. And then had to figure out how to lash thing back on while in the middle of no where with the only help was a couple hunters who knew nothing about horses.
 
I don't think a person would/could pack enough extra gear to prepare yourself for something like that.
No doubt a memorable trip.
 
We were riding across the Powder River, those crossings changed from day to day and you had to be careful. It was like rubber on top and boggy underneath. You could jiggle it and make a wave going away from you. You sure didn't want to break through that rubber crust. In order to keep from breaking through, we always spread out and didn't follow another rider; except we had a kid with us this particular day that was pretty unconscious. He didn't pay attention and he followed another rider. He broke through the crust and
bogged his horse down really good. He managed to get off and the owner of the ranch (a really salty cowboy) told him to get the saddle off the horse. He couldn't seem to do that so the owner waded in and got the saddle off the horse. The horse was panicky and lunged to get out of the bog, and was really close to stepping on the owners spurs on the way out. I saw the whole thing and held my breath that everything would turn out okay.
So they got the horse out and put the saddle back on. The owner told the kid that there was a stock tank not far away and when we got there he was to clean the mud off the saddle. That kid unsaddled the horse and THREW the saddle into the stock tank!! The owner was so HOT, he told the kid, "when we get back to the house, you are going to take that saddle apart and find out what it's made from and CLEAN IT UP. "
----------------------
So when I saw this clip of the horse bogged down so bad, my first thought was "why don't they get the saddle off?" I suppose maybe they couldn't get to the cinches...he was in pretty deep. Sure glad he made it out.
 
We were riding across the Powder River, those crossings changed from day to day and you had to be careful. It was like rubber on top and boggy underneath. You could jiggle it and make a wave going away from you. You sure didn't want to break through that rubber crust. In order to keep from breaking through, we always spread out and didn't follow another rider; except we had a kid with us this particular day that was pretty unconscious. He didn't pay attention and he followed another rider. He broke through the crust and
bogged his horse down really good. He managed to get off and the owner of the ranch (a really salty cowboy) told him to get the saddle off the horse. He couldn't seem to do that so the owner waded in and got the saddle off the horse. The horse was panicky and lunged to get out of the bog, and was really close to stepping on the owners spurs on the way out. I saw the whole thing and held my breath that everything would turn out okay.
So they got the horse out and put the saddle back on. The owner told the kid that there was a stock tank not far away and when we got there he was to clean the mud off the saddle. That kid unsaddled the horse and THREW the saddle into the stock tank!! The owner was so HOT, he told the kid, "when we get back to the house, you are going to take that saddle apart and find out what it's made from and CLEAN IT UP. "
----------------------
So when I saw this clip of the horse bogged down so bad, my first thought was "why don't they get the saddle off?" I suppose maybe they couldn't get to the cinches...he was in pretty deep. Sure glad he made it out.
That kid was living on borrowed time.
One of the comments I read made it sound like it was a 6' foot hole with an underground pipe feeding into it. Hard to say exactly why, Sounded like something that should be fenced off.. It read like the guy riding the horse was by himself, and was hanging onto the horses head to keep the horse from drowning when they found him.
When I first watched it seemed like it was an hour from start to finish, but the video was only about 15 minutes long. They did a good job of lifting him out.
 
Had a cow that went down on some soft wet ground like this last year. It's like she just sunk in place since the hole wasn't any longer or wider than she was. The ground is near a spring and a pond but it was the first time it got that soft enough for something to actually get bogged in. She was in up over her backbone before we found her, like this horse, nothin but her head still sticking up. Didn't even have a tractor yet, Guy using it was a mile away called him to get over there fast. Nothing but a rope to work with I managed to get it under one front leg and around her neck laying on top of her. I very briefly considered shooting her if her head sunk under but the tractor showed up in time and we managed to pull her out. I know pulling on her neck wasn't the greatest thing to do but in that situation you have no options other than let her go, A person do's not dare get in with her to put a rope in a better place or you will wind up under her, That's out, She drowns first, not a person. Makes a guy feel pretty damn helpless but it ended well with no permanent damage to the cow. Later had a couple dump trucks of rock dumped there so that could sink in and displace that bottomless ground
 

Latest posts

Back
Top