not meant to be political - pic heavy

cross_7

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 5, 2008
Messages
3,855
City & State/Province
NE Oklahoma
things that are near and dear to me and worth fighting for.
i didn't tag these so i'm not sure where i took some of them but they are all west tx and western ok

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you can't see it in the pick but there is a big 300hp tractor there
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dill city, ok - still using trailers but did get a module feeder this year
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brock #1 grandson
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Really nice photos! What/where is the place that had the 2 flags, and the metal sculptures of the horse, buffalo etc?

Do you (or anyone else here) know if the Pitchfork Ranch ever branded their horses on the neck/shoulder area with a pitchfork brand? I ask this for a reason.

Katherine
 
My wife sees those pics she'll strangle me in my sleep. Might even strangle myself. Lord how we miss W. Texas. :(

Great pics--so much history there!!
 
Great pics, haven't made to Texas yet. Would you mind giving me some info on the first 6 pics. Location and a little history.

Thanks,
Alan
 
What/where is the place that had the 2 flags, and the metal sculptures of the horse, buffalo etc?

that is dickens tx - dickens county
dickens county springs 1891
all that country is big ranch country(100000-500000acres) that sets between lubbock and ft worth
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Do you (or anyone else here) know if the Pitchfork Ranch ever branded their horses on the neck/shoulder area with a pitchfork brand? I ask this for a reason.

i can't say for sure there are several "pitchfork ranches"
a little history

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JTUqbudYe1I


Pitchfork
Land & Cattle
Company
Established 1883
From all accounts, the Pitchfork Land & Cattle Company would not exist were it not for the life-long friendship of two men–Daniel Baldwin Gardner and Eugene Flewellyn Williams. Both men were born in the South in 1851 to plantation-owning families.
In 1871, tales of abundant opportunity in Texas lured Gardner to Fort Griffin, located near present-day Albany. In February of 1877, Gardner was one of 17 men who drafted plans for what was to become one of the most powerful and prestigious livestock organizations in the world, which is known today as the Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association.
In the summer of 1881, Gardner learned that Jerry Savage, who had been running cattle on the South Wichita River under a Pitchfork brand, was interested in selling land, equipment and stock. Needing capital, Gardner thought of his boyhood friend, Eugene Williams.
In 1881, Williams journeyed to Fort Worth and after a dinner meeting announced he was ready to close the deal, without seeing either the land or the cattle. Williams said he was investing in the venture solely because he had the highest regard for his friend, Dan Gardner. Williams wrote a check and took the night train back to St. Louis.
The property Gardner and Williams purchased included 2,600 longhorn cattle, 70 horses, wagons and camp equipment, but little land. They did obtain rights to the ranch that bordered the South Wichita River in eastern Dickens and western King counties.
Wishing to expand, but lacking capital, the two men found two willing investors from Texas, A.P. Bush Jr. and Samuel Lazarus and two from St. Louis, A.D. Brown and W. H. Carroll.
In St. Louis on December 29, 1883, the partners gathered to adopt the by-laws and elect officers of the newly formed corporation known as the Pitchfork Land & Cattle Company. Gardner was chosen to be general manager, a position he held until his death in June of 1928.
Only seven managers have filled the vacancy left by Gardner. These included Rudolph Swenson, Virgil Parr, D. Burns, Jim Humphreys and Bob Moorhouse. Today, the ranch is managed by Brooks Hodges. The Pitchfork Land & Cattle Company stretches some 181,000 acres in three west Texas counties and newly acquired acreage in Waurika, Oklahoma known as the Pitchfork OK Ranch. The descendants of Eugene Williams continue to operate the 128-year-old ranch in the same conservative manner as did the ranch’s founders.
 
Alan":2r9e07vc said:
Great pics, haven't made to Texas yet. Would you mind giving me some info on the first 6 pics. Location and a little history.

Thanks,
Alan

the dickens county tx court house.
on the edge of the dickens tx sign says dickens springs 1891
monument says state of tx 1936
city of dickens old town buildings
 
Workinonit Farm":3wsu9prw said:
Really nice photos! What/where is the place that had the 2 flags, and the metal sculptures of the horse, buffalo etc?

Do you (or anyone else here) know if the Pitchfork Ranch ever branded their horses on the neck/shoulder area with a pitchfork brand? I ask this for a reason.

Katherine

Katherine, I have been there where the two flags and the horse sculpture is and I still cant tell you where it is. Sure are some great pictures though.
 
if you do not see the whole pic or half is cut off you can use ctrl - (control minus) to make them small so you can see all of them
 
kenny thomas":2oe73ss4 said:
Workinonit Farm":2oe73ss4 said:
Really nice photos! What/where is the place that had the 2 flags, and the metal sculptures of the horse, buffalo etc?

Do you (or anyone else here) know if the Pitchfork Ranch ever branded their horses on the neck/shoulder area with a pitchfork brand? I ask this for a reason.

Katherine

Katherine, I have been there where the two flags and the horse sculpture is and I still cant tell you where it is. Sure are some great pictures though.

Maybe this will help:
http://www.texasescapes.com/TOWNS/Dicke ... g-Park.htm
 
I think west Texas is a great place. My wife thinks it is the end of the world. Sure are some nice cattle there for the amount of forage that seems to grow there.

Greybeard, that sure is a different TX than where you and CB live. Like a totally different world.
 
kenny thomas":126vfllw said:
I think west Texas is a great place. My wife thinks it is the end of the world. Sure are some nice cattle there for the amount of forage that seems to grow there.

it takes 20-40 acres for a cow on most native pastures.
some improved you can get 15 or so to a cow
but when it gets dry there are not enough acres for any.
6666 moved every cow they own up north, nearly 250000 acres and not a cow left on it.
 
I have never been to west TX anytime that it wasnt dry. Would like to see it green sometime.
Have only worked in east TX when it was wet so again a different world.
 
cross_7":qawrig7y said:
kenny thomas":qawrig7y said:
I think west Texas is a great place. My wife thinks it is the end of the world. Sure are some nice cattle there for the amount of forage that seems to grow there.

it takes 20-40 acres for a cow on most native pastures.
some improved you can get 15 or so to a cow
but when it gets dry there are not enough acres for any.
6666 moved every cow they own up north, nearly 250000 acres and not a cow left on it.
I see 2 cows here on this ad for 498 ac bordering the Pitchfork.

(I never realized you could reserve rights to future wind energy same as you can reserve mineral rights)

http://www.streetsrealestate.com/Dicken ... efault.htm
 
greybeard":26omihtd said:
cross_7":26omihtd said:
kenny thomas":26omihtd said:
I think west Texas is a great place. My wife thinks it is the end of the world. Sure are some nice cattle there for the amount of forage that seems to grow there.

it takes 20-40 acres for a cow on most native pastures.
some improved you can get 15 or so to a cow
but when it gets dry there are not enough acres for any.
6666 moved every cow they own up north, nearly 250000 acres and not a cow left on it.
I see 2 cows here on this ad for 498 ac bordering the Pitchfork.

(I never realized you could reserve rights to future wind energy same as you can reserve mineral rights)

http://www.streetsrealestate.com/Dicken ... efault.htm

my place is not too far from that place

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And your place looks way way better than that place. That 498 ac looks like a place for a young man in good health or a man with 3-4 young sons and a good bit of capital.
 
:lol: I love Texas! Those pics almost make me want to move. My cousin lived in Alpine, Texas for a few years. That was some beautiful country with some big muley bucks roaming around. You don't know where a guy could pick up 5 or 6,000 acres for under 100k do ya?
 
So much history in Texas, a trip there is in my top two or three place to go next.
 

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