• Combo Subscription
  • Contact Us
  • Login
  • Register
  • 90 ITEMS
     
      • Chickens Health A-Z Guide

      • $9.99
      • Hobby Farms Jan/Feb 2025

      • $6.99
      • Hobby Farms Nov/Dec 2024

      • $6.99
      • Hobby Farms Sep/Oct 2024

      • $6.99
      • Hobby Farms Jul/Aug 2024

      • $6.99
      • Hobby Farms May/June 2024

      • $6.99
      • Hobby Farms Mar/Apr 2024

      • $6.99
      • Hobby Farms Jan/Feb 2024

      • $6.99
      • Hobby Farms Nov/Dec 2023

      • $6.99
      • Hobby Farms Sept/Oct 2023

      • $6.99
      • Hobby Farms Jan/Feb 2025 Digital

      • $4.99
      • Hobby Farms Nov/Dec 2024 Digital

      • $4.99
      • The 2025 Healing Herbs Digital annual is now available

      • $7.99
      • The all-new 2025 Hobby Farm Home Annual Digital is now available!

      • $7.99
      • Hobby Farms Sep/Oct 2024 Digital

      • $4.99
      • Hobby Farms Jul/Aug 2024 Digital

      • $4.99
      • The 2024 Goats 101 Digital annual is now available!

      • $7.99
      • 2024 Best of Hobby Farms Digital is now available!

      • $9.99
      • Hobby Farms May/June 2024 Digital

      • $4.99
      • Chickens- Jan/Feb 2025

      • $6.99
      • Chickens- Nov/Dec 2024

      • $6.99
      • Chickens- Sep/Oct 2024

      • $6.99
      • Chickens- Jul/Aug 2024

      • $6.99
      • Chickens- May/June 2024

      • $6.99
      • Chickens- Mar/Apr 2024

      • $6.99
      • Chickens- Jan/Feb 2024

      • $6.99
      • Chickens- Nov/Dec 2023

      • $6.99
      • 2025 Best of Chickens Digital

      • $7.99
      • The 2025 Backyard Chickens Digital

      • $7.99
      • 2025 Ducks 101 Digital

      • $7.99
      • 2025 Chickens 101 Digital

      • $7.99
      • Chickens- Mar/Apr 2025 Digital

      • $4.99
      • Chickens- Jan/Feb 2025 Digital

      • $4.99
      • Chickens- Nov/Dec 2024 Digital

      • $4.99
      • Chickens- Sep/Oct 2024 Digital

      • $4.99
      • Chicks Combo Offer 5-in-1: Chicken Coops and Playgrounds, Chickens 101, Ducks 101, Backyard Chickens and Urban Farm.

      • $29.95
      • Special Edition Combo: Best of Hobby Farms Home 2024, Healing Herbs, Goats 101 and Best of HF SIP

      • $29.95
      • The 2025 Healing Herbs annual is now available

      • $10.99
      • The all-new 2025 Hobby Farm Home annual is now available!

      • $10.99
      • The 2024 Goats 101 annual is now available!

      • $10.99
      • The 2024 Beekeeping 101 annual is now available

      • $10.99
      • The 2024 Urban Farm annual is now available

      • $10.99
      • Order The 2024 Backyard Chickens annual today

      • $10.99
      • order the 2022 chickens 101 annual today
      • Order the 2022 Chickens 101 annual today

      • $49.95
      • The 2021 Beekeeping 101 annual is now available

      • $19.98
      • Living off the Grid 2021

      • $19.98
      • The 2022 Goats 101 annual is now available!

      • $39.96
      • The 2021 Goats 101 annual is now available!

      • $19.98
      • Living Off the Grid 2020

      • $29.97
      • 2021 Best of Hobby Farms: 20th Anniversary Special

      • $29.98
      • The 2021 Healing Herbs annual is now available

      • $39.96
      • Order the 2021 Urban Chickens annual today

      • $29.97
      • The 2022 Urban Farm annual is now available

      • $19.98
      • Get all four Chick Days publications today

      • $59.90
      • The 2022 Beekeeping 101 annual is now available

      • $19.98
      • Order 2024 Ducks 101 annual today

      • $10.99
      • Order the 2024 Chicken Coops & Playgrounds
      • Order the 2024 Chickens 101 annual today

      • $10.99
      • Order the 2024 Chicken Coops & Playgrounds

      • $10.99
      • The all-new 2024 Hobby Farm Home annual is now available!

      • $11.99
      • The 2023 Healing Herbs annual is now available

      • $10.99
      • 2023 Best of Hobby Farms is now available and Goat 101 Digital absolutely FREE.

      • $14.95
      • 2023 Best of Hobby Farms is now available!

      • $14.99
      • The 2023 Urban Farm annual is now available

      • $10.99
      • Get all four Chick Days publications

      • $39.95
      • Order the 2023 Chicken Coops & Playgrounds

      • $10.99
      • Order the 2023 Chickens 101 annual today

      • $10.99
      • Purchase the 2023 Ducks 101 annual today

      • $10.99
      • Order the 2023 Backyard Chickens annual today

      • $10.99
      • The 2022 Healing Herbs annual is now available

      • $9.99
  • facebook
  • twitter
  • instagram
  • youtube

Chasing Cows

When Red first came to live with us, we viewed him as just a mellow older Quarter Horse, the kind you could put little kids and adult beginners on without a worry. The friend we got him from told me that he had royal cutting horse bloodlines, but I figured he probably just didn’t have what it took to be a cutting horse.

article-post
by Audrey Pavia
Chasing cattle on horse

Courtesy Audrey Pavia

Red and I tried our hand at ranch sorting.

When Red first came to live with us, we viewed him as just a mellow, older Quarter Horse, the kind you could put little kids and adult beginners on without a worry. The friend we got him from told me that he had royal cutting horse bloodlines (his paternal grandsire is Freckles Playboy, a world champion, and his maternal grandsire is Nu Bar, who sold for $1.1 million at auction), but I figured he probably just didn’t have what it took to be a cutting horse and so ended up as a trail mount.

One of the first things I did when we got Red was join the American Quarter Horse Association so I could look up Red’s owner history. It’s cool being able to put your horse’s name in the AQHA website search engine and see all the people who owned your horse before you. 

Subscribe now

The Internet being what it is, I started Googling the names on Red’s past-owner list. I managed to find an email address for a woman two owners ago, and I sent her a note telling her that Red was now living with me. 

I was beyond excited when I got her reply. She told me that Red had lived for 12 years on a working cattle ranch in central California, and was an amazing cattle horse. His career there ended when the ranch was sold, and he ended up passed around to several owners before he landed with me.

So when my friend and riding instructor Lisa suggested we sign up for a local ranch sorting competition in town, I jumped at the chance. I would ride Red and see what he could do with those cows.

Ranch sorting is a lot like shooting pool with cattle. The cows are numbered, and you and your horse have to get a designated cow from the herd into an adjoining pen with the help of a buddy on horseback. Cows like to stick together, so getting the right cow out of the group and into a pen by itself is no easy task. You need a good horse to pull it off.

When it was Lisa’s and my turn to go in there and sort some cows, I felt an adrenaline rush. Lisa was going to “work the gate,” meaning she would stand guard between the two pens to make sure the cow that was captured stayed put while more where gathered in numerical order. 

When the buzzer sounded, I asked Red to push into the herd of numbered steers and he didn’t even hesitate. My normally mellow-to-the-point-of-lazy old horse suddenly came to life. He seemed to read my mind about which cow I wanted and help me drive the critter away from the group and toward the other pen. When we isolated the cow from the group and tried to push it forward, it tried to arch around to rejoin the herd. But Red was all over it. He dashed forward to form a blockade before the cow could get too far from the gate. 

After several runs, we managed to get enough cows in the pen to warrant a third place ribbon. Not bad for a couple of novices. Oh, except for Red, who was clearly a ringer.

Read more of City Stock »

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

CAPTCHA Image