The Sheep Everyone Mocked Saved Her Ranch When The Drought Came-nga9999 - Chainityai

The Sheep Everyone Mocked Saved Her Ranch When The Drought Came-nga9999

After my father died, the men in Jordan treated my cattle ranch like a mistake waiting for weather.

They did not say it to my face at first.

They said it over coffee, at the feed store, near the sale barn, in the low voice men use when they want a woman to hear without having to answer for it.

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Matthew Crane had left his ranch to his daughter.

That bothered them more than any drought ever had.

I was forty-one when Henry Voss died and left behind a problem nobody wanted to inherit.

The problem had wool on it.

Henry’s nephew came from Billings to settle the estate and found forty-seven Rambouillet ewes eating hay he did not want to buy.

Wool prices were poor.

The sale barn would take the sheep, but the hauling might cost more than the animals brought.

In cattle country, old ewes were not livestock.

They were a punch line with hooves.

I heard about them from Hollis Reed, my foreman, who had heard it from a man at the feed store, who had heard it from the neighbor watering Henry’s sheep out of respect for a dead man.

I drove to the Voss place the next morning.

The nephew came out in dress shoes, relieved to talk about anything except the piles inside his uncle’s kitchen.

I told him I wanted to see the sheep.

For two hours, I moved through that lot with dust on my skirt and wool grease on my palms.

I checked teeth.

I checked feet.

I watched the ewes walk.

Four were too old for much of anything, but most were sound enough for what I had in mind.

The nephew did not know what they were worth.

I did.

I offered him a small price for the sound ones and told him I would take the old four too, just so he would never have to feed them again.

He shook my hand in the yard before I finished the sentence.

By Wednesday evening, the sheep were on my ranch.

Hollis stood at the back of the trailer and watched the last ewe step into the holding pen.

He had worked for my father for decades.

He had the kind of loyalty that did not make noise unless it had to.

That evening, it had to.

He asked me what I planned to do with sheep.

I told him I planned to run them with cattle.

He took off his hat, then put it back on.

In Hollis Reed’s world, cattle and sheep did not share pasture.

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