I AM ADDING NEW PIECES ALL THE TIME, SO BE SURE TO GRAB SOME "KICK-BACK" TIME, AND A COLD BEVERAGE...
YOU CAN SHOP RIGHT FROM THE SADDLE!
HOLL'R AT YOUR FRIENDS TOO...
GO TO:
YEE-HAW! ENJOY YOUR RIDE!
JEWELS FOR COWGIRLS- www.turquoisecowgirl.etsy.com and Facebook: Turquoise Cowgirl
CHRISTMAS LETTER FROM ARROWHEAD HILL FARM...2007
Dyke and the boys ran a full trap-line, mainly for bobcats, as their over-population was causing a habitat imbalance. With the help of 2 other wardens, they successfully trapped, skinned, and fleshed 35 cats, selling the dried/salted hides to a tannery in Idaho. The cotton harvest was chalked up as a complete loss—only producing 1 small bale for which we bestowed deep thanks for our crop insurance. 
Willy, an orphaned raccoon, with his eyes still closed and a voracious appetite, came to live with us in early April. Also both Penny and Cash became pregnant by error. The felon, being a Mexican pit-bull-cross, belonging to a farmhand to the south. Collectively they had 18 pups. Willy quickly learned where to find some real milk, but you could tell that Penny knew something just wasn’t right; she endured it anyway and allowed Willy a few meals. As always, Willy quickly captured our hearts, but then shattered them when he was accidentally run over in the driveway…Zack’s world crumbled before him, as we buried him in our ever expanding pet cemetery. Life and death on the farm visit frequently and the boys have certainly learned how fragile life can be. 
Dyke’s brother rescued 3 young pigeons from his barn—his dogs had already eaten the others that fell from the rafters. By feeding them wet oatmeal every few hours, they grew stronger each day. Without the flight lessons fully mastered, our 3 cats systematically apprehended two of them, with the third narrowly escaping by his tail feathers and has become a hilarious addition to the menagerie! Whenever I head out to feed the chickens, or work in the yard, he swoops down and lands on my head to go along for the ride. He loves to sit on my shoulder and pick at my earlobes as I try to enjoy my morning coffee on the porch.
We now average about a baker’s dozen of chickens too—give or take 3 or 4 according to hatchings and catchings. The prime “layers” yield an average of 8-10 fresh eggs daily! There’s nothing like watching the sunrise over the farm with a hot mug o’ java and the smell of sowbelly and fresh eggs in the air!
This spring, four new calves shadowed their mamas as they made the rounds in the pasture, coming up to the barn each day to drink and relax in the shade of the barns.
Half of the calf population were bulls, so of course, we made the castrations a family affair. It was much better this year, as they were a lot smaller than last year’s lot! On the Mother’s Day, Zack set his alarm for 4am, got up, grabbed his spotlight and headed to the lower pasture to pick a huge Mason jar full of wildflowers for me. He hiked back to the house, put them on the kitchen counter and then went back to bed! What a romantic he is going to be!
Jake had a terrific Freshman year; doing well in school and in athletics. He was invited to go to the Candlelight Ball—an elite dinner & dance. He and his date sure looked awesome! Everything seemed to be going the best ever until the first day of Spring Break, when he broke his right tibia while pole vaulting at a track meet. He can now say that he has broken his leg more times than he has legs (his left tibia was broken twice when we lived on the coast!) He now has 3 screws surgically implanted where the tibia connects to the
patella-right below the growth plate. He has recovered miraculously, but is not able to participate in athletics this school year. He is in 10th grade now. It has been extremely difficult to not be able to play—especially the football season, but he’s still attending practice and working out with the team. He and Zack continue to ramble across the prairie, catching snakes,
hunting,exploring and
working on the farm. Jake has a great core group of friends & although it is difficult to imagine, he is...DRIVING (permit only)!!! YIPES! He’ll get his license at the end of April… Although he has been driving around the farm doing chores etc… since he was 11, there’s just something about driving on the “real” roads that just doesn’t seem possible! The school years are zipping by and Dyke and I marvel at how quickly the boys will be out of the nest. 
Zack had a wonderful 4th grade year, and is now in 5th grade: doing very well in academics as well as football. His team made it into the playoffs but lost by one game to play in the Toy Bowl. In the fall, he had to make a trip to the ER after his eyeball was punctured with a pencil at school. Thank God all was well! His love for animals, being outside, reading, rugged surviv
al techniques (as learned on the show Man vs. Wild) sure is apparent in the lifestyle he has begun to carve out. The winter trap line was right up his alley! During one frosty February, while checking traps, he came across a skull of a horse head and immediately thought of his mama and her skull collection. He decided to pack it out and give it to me as a Valentine’s Day gift! He sure knows what his mama likes! Then, when the spring floods hit north Texas, Dyke was called out to duty. (Things always seem to break loose when he’s gone.) While making a fort down at the pond one Sunday, Zack found that Penny, who was nearby, had been rattlesnake bit in the muzzle. Her mouth and nose instantly swelled up to over 3 times the normal size and was having trouble breathing! She was foaming at the mouth and had panic in her eyes. Zack ran all the way home and we immediately loaded her up, and rushed into town, where the vet met us and gave her an anti-venom injection. Within hours, the swelling subsided and things started back to normal….sort of. I guess it just wasn’t Penny’s week, as she was kicked in the head by Hershey (horse) the next day, as she tried to herd him back to the pasture. Then, as if that wasn’t enough, the following day, on another one of Zack’s explorations, he found her with a mouthful of porcupine quills, with which I had to remove with pliers. They had embedded in her gums and tongue! Luckily, there weren’t any in her throat like there were one other time. She was miserable! That poor dog! That last episode ended her bad luck streak and life went on… Both boys continue to enjoy hunting and even helped their friends trap some wild hogs. They provided us with wild turke
y and venison for the winter! About the time when the yearly cricket infestation hit, two other raccoons came to live with us...Bonnie and Clyde: brother and sister. They were a riot...until they started feasting nightly on my fattest hens! The chickens no longer trusted life in the henhouse, so they roosted everywhere else on the farm—including on the truck axles, which became a deathtrap to a few. By the end of October, Bonnie and Clyde’s hormones kicked in and they were off on their own, searching for suitable mates.
Also, nine of the 2nd grade teachers went on a Carnival Cruise to Mexico last June! It was too much fun: unleashed and crazy! When I got home, I had to have a few days to sleep and wind down from all of the excitement and lack of sleep! I just can’t seem to dance ‘til sunrise anymore! Imagine that?! Sadly, though, as you may have heard, we were on the same cruise that the guy jumped from and was killed...very sad!
The winter brought a severe ice storm. The cattle were very hungry... all the time!
Dyke is doing great and loves his job like it was his first! He has even been known to come to my classroom to show the kids a snake or two that he found! Some days, for him, it’s pretty low key, but at other times, we’re like ships passing in the night and the boys and I don’t see him for a couple of days it seems! During turkey season, Dyke’s partner, Matt, was attacked for the 2nd time by a large bobcat, while he was calling up turkeys. Last year, the cat pounced on his head, cut his chin open and bit his head, but this year, it just sliced his camo clothing to ribbons! This fall when the winds shifted, the bull was on the loose, and headed north. Luckily, Dyke found him 4 miles from the house headed to the Red River and Oklahoma beyond that. 
Changing the pace...
and on the Connecticut/Rhode Island
coast. Our odysseys continue out here amidst the incessant, restless winds, howling coyotes and wild & wooliness of the prairie. Keep your infinite moments close and feed your spirit each day with the things you love. Give thanks in all situations. We love you and wish you the greatest blessings each and every day. Merry Christmas Y’all! Dyke, Su, Jake & Zack
CHRISTMAS LETTER FROM ARROWHEAD HILL FARM...2006
March also breathed life back into the ol’ henhouse. I didn’t want to deal with baby chicks, and try to outsmart the bobcats and snakes until the fowl were of laying age, so I asked a friend if she needed her flock culled. One night, we all went over to her farm and while shining a flashlight in their eyes on the roost, we were able to easily select the hens that we wanted and pluck them from the roost with little or no struggle. My antique chicken boxes, which have retired as porch end-tables sure did come in handy for the transport! So, as of this day, we have 6 laying hens and 1 rooster. Nothing beats farm fresh eggs! Other animal escapades… Somehow, Hershey, my colt, impaled himself on a steel fencepost in the pasture. I thought it odd that he didn’t come up to eat with the others one evening, but dismissed it to the sweet grasses in the pasture. It was the same story the 2nd evening. Upon searching for him, I discovered that he had spent the night and perhaps a good part of the previous day—in one spot, down at the pond, only able to pivot on his good foot—with a huge puncture wound to the chest (in the shape of a T post), as deep as my longest finger. I still don’t know how he managed that, but after several weeks of flushing it and doctoring it with injections and salve, he healed nicely.
It’s not a herd to call home about yet, but maybe someday. Penny and Cash are as exuberant as ever, but on a sad note, Bud, the young, down-on-his-luck bird dog, (from the last chronicle) took his last breath during this season. Dyke was trying to get the cows in with the use of the pick-up and Bud somehow slipped under the wheels and was killed. Zack’s world came crashing down around him. 
Zack will also be playing football (4th grade) for the first time and is so excited that he has been sleeping with his football EVERY night since the sign-up! He is still passionate about Indians and even made his own leather loincloth! 
June: For me, summer always brings the time to sit back and drop the reins a bit. The cool mornings and evenings are catalysts to relax, ruminate and reflect on the blessed life that God has placed before us. Following the morning chores, while the rest of the household snoozes, a good cup of coffee on the porch has become quite a pensive, spiritual experience for me. Gazing across the parched, flat, dusty fields, hearing the echoes of the coal trains traversing the vast expanse of the land and watching the earth awaken, there is such a powerful and almost tactile connection to life around me. As the day gets underway, we are blasted with 105+ degree temps with furnace-like winds that consumingly suck all moisture from everything that it breathes on. The tornadic storms that usually sweep through here at this time of year, have split around us every time, leaving us with only a spitting of rainfall; however, we did find ourselves in the cellar a couple of times as funnel clouds swirled only a few miles away. While the east coast is flooding, we are more than 10 inches behind. We really haven’t had any rain to speak of for 8 months! My best hen hatched 3 babies, but within 3 weeks, they had disappeared, along with the daily 3-4 eggs that I had been collecting. Dyke said it was due to a snake, so at various times of night and day, I crept out there to apprehend the criminal –but to no avail. When I noticed that the coon was not utilizing the hollow tree at the end of the porch, I peered down into the cavernous trunk and a very healthy coiled chicken snake glared back at me. No wonder! With the trunk being hollow, it took 3 days to finally catch it. As Zack flashed a light into the dark recesses of the trunk, Jake stuck his hand in and was able to grab its tail. Instantly it headed down a hole into the root system and although Jake pulled with everything he had, he could not pull the snake out. Finally, the 8 minute battle exhausted the snake and a 5 foot snake was extracted! The boys put it in a Wal-Mart sack, hopped on the 4 wheeler and relocated it down the road. As I later learned, the snake had somehow escaped from the sack as they drove and upon stopping to recapture it, it hurriedly slithered up into the engine! By the time the sun sank into the western sky, it once again occupied the Wal-Mart sack and the mission was underway! Since the apprehension of the offender, I am able to now collect eggs daily, until the next one makes its presence known. The boys continue to perfect their snake catching talents. With it being so dry, we are anticipating more and more of them coming around the house to find water. Our pond is completely dry now, so the cows have to come clear up to the barn to drink. Our neighbor to the north has to haul water in big tanks from town, since their well went completely dry at the beginning of the summer. I have heard that some wells are actually pumping sand because there is just no water! I thank God daily that we are not on a well. The courthouse steps have witnessed many prayer rallies for rain and it is a daily reminder in news- paper columns. As heard across the nation, the scorched expanse of land that we exist upon out here has been enslaved by the raging wildfires that have claimed life and property. With the extreme temperatures and shortage of rainfall, incredibly, the earth continues its long-suffering trauma. The farm is now home to 9 baby kitties!
Dyke’s threats to use them as catfish bait don’t fall on deaf ears, that’s for sure. (I guess you can catch some whoppers on rat-sized cats!) The five that were born in the hay barn turned up MIA just a couple of days after they were born. We never found them, but assume that the large rat snake that we put in the trash compartment of the barn (to eat the rats), must have also snacked on the kitties. The 4 that were born on the porch survived and were donated to a friend. 
July found us in the 122 degree Phoenix heat picking up a 4wd Toyota truck that we were the highest Ebay bidders on! We drove out to Arizona, picked up the truck and spent the next 3 days making our way back to Texas by way of the Grand Canyon, Four Corners, Mesa Verde Cliff Dwellings, Durango and finally Vernon. It was fantastic and WHAT A BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY WE LIVE IN! WOW! Fall: Cooler temperatures weren’t felt until the last days of September. This is also when Budreaux, the Coon began his weekly sabbaticals from the farm. Just as the others have done, the drop of the mercury and their hormonal changes, bring about more independence, which IS the whole idea behind rehabbing them, but it’s certainly difficult after they have become an integral part of the family. Within the space of 2 weeks, The crop’s lifeblood rains came and the gauge was filled to the 7 inch mark! The watering hole filled up, and the cotton bathed in the blessing! Both boys earned starting quarterback positions on their teams with successful seasons! We are so proud of them! My class is quite possibly the most challenging class in 15 years. Fantasies of being a stay-at-home mom/artist/B & B owner have begun to occupy my spirit more and more these days! When the time is right, Hershey will be sold along with the longhorns. We will add some heavy bred Angus cows and a bull to the herd—leasing the adjacent 40 acres, to try to make a go with a modest cattle operation. Fences/pens will be built, and the addition of “The Bunkhouse” for guests/horse hotel occupants will soon start—as soon as Dyke finishes with his rental property renovation. It’s slow, but steady in that department! With deer/duck season well underway at this point, Dyke’s “home time” is spread thin, like mid- spring ice. Looks like the cotton will be a total loss. The wheat has been slow in maturing, and is now yellowing due to the snows that have immobilized the plains. Many of the coyotes have disbanded in search of food and sieges of cranes and skeins of geese now cloud the airspace as they make the journey to better feeding grounds. 
