When I first got Star as a yearling about 11 years ago she didn't have any spots except the star between her eyes. Each year when she gets her summer coat she has more and more of the tiny appaloosa spots on her face, neck, chest, and belly but very few of the spots on her back and butt where an appy normally has them. In the winter time in her heavy coat she doesn't have the little spots and looks like a normal sorrel horse. To get the photos I had to tie her to a post in her pen that is on the east side of our small place and has a good view of the Sandia Mountains. Albuquerque and Rio Rancho are between us and the mountains but can't be seen, thank goodness, for the hill between us and them.
Tumbleweed Crossing is about living on the desert west of Albuquerque, New Mexico.
Saturday, August 28, 2010
Friday, August 27, 2010
The Devils Claw Seed Pod
Devils Claw Wild Flower
Succulent Blossom
Wednesday, August 25, 2010
Catch the Feather
New Painting
New Bowl
On the Vine
Tuesday, August 24, 2010
Sunday, August 08, 2010
Buttercup
Skyrocket Flower
In The Rain
This is how it looked when we parked to let the rain let up as it was raining extreamly hard. This is the Jemez Pueblo Visitors Center where we buy fry bread to eat. You can just barely see one of the remadas on the right edge of the photo where they put out their food items and cook the fry bread in big pans of hot greese over wood fires.
Saturday, August 07, 2010
The Creek
ATV Time
Rains and Dirt Roads
This is what happens when we get our rains in New Mexico on our dirt roads. The water flooding down the roads causes lots of erousion and make ruts and ditches in the road and sometimes washs them out to where they are completely impassable until the wind comes, drys out the sand and blows sand back into the damage that was done. Or else man and heavy equipment repair it so it can happen again during the next rain storm.