When Buffalo Cry

Guest Editors Kathleen O’Neal Gear and W. Michael GearBison, better known as buffalo, played a vital role in the history of the West. The native peoples considered them to be sacred and magical animals. Some early explorers and ranchers felt the same way.  Since we’ve been living with bison for the past 25 years, we wanted to share a few of our experiences with you. Those experiences have informed our writing, but they’ve also helped us to understand bison’s iconic status in the early West.  It’s 7 on a cold May morning in 2002, and we’re out checking the buffalo when we notice a cow lying alone by the electric fence.  We pull out the binoculars to see the cow’s number. It’s #411, a cow named Little Mother. She was in labor last night, but we do not see a calf beside her. We drive forward slowly, looking for that telltale glimpse of orange fur in the tall grass.  As we get closer, we see the newborn bull calf stretched over the bottom wire of the fence. The hot wire. He’s clearly...

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Buttes, Badlands & Buffalo Ranges

Buffalo Stories on La Rivierre GrandeRecently we gathered a small group around my kitchen table—a few people interested in what we can do with all our buffalo information. Informally we call ourselves Brainstormers. We had just finished a successful tour of our historic buffalo sites here at home that we had arranged with the BSC Bison Symposium. When Bismarck State College decided to put on a Bison Symposium led by their retiring director Dr. Larry Skogen, we got involved. In fact we may have helped inspire the whole thing. After all, Larry grew up in Hettinger, where his parents ran a hardware store. He knew something of our buffalo history. By this time we had uncovered several even more interesting facts about buffalo living on these lands. It wasn’t just the 3 last great buffalo hunts that happened here. There were more stories. One by one, they began revealing themselves. Marvelous stories. Word of mouth heroics, problems and successes. Survival stories. It was like peeling an...

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Buttes, Badlands and Buffalo Ranges

My interest in buffalo began when I rode the buttes and badlands of our ranch east of Miles City, MT as a kid.  One time my younger sister Anne and I found a buffalo skull. The snow melted early that spring, sending rushing waters to flush out dry creek beds. Riding the higher reaches of our range we were looking for a lost heifer. In a glint of bright sunlight we saw something peeking out from under a sagebrush that had been partly torn loose from a sandy bank.  “What’s that?” Anne circled her horse across the gravel creek bed.  “Looks like a bone—a horn.” Sliding off our horses we scrambled up the bank for a closer look.  Yes! Not just a horn—but a horn solidly attached to the rest of the head. As we freed it from the scraggly sagebrush tangle, out came a nearly perfect skull with stout curved horns—gleaming white in the sun. We hefted the weight of it, bigger and bulkier than any skull we had ever seen.  A relic of long ago—a buffalo skull. The black horn caps had loosened...

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Hi Everyone

Welcome to each of YOU who joins us on this incredible journey!! Together, we’ll share history and the wonderful buffalo stories that never grow old, that are told over and over, around campfires, in classrooms and at family gatherings!

Our Mission is to change the buffalo story to include the full heroic narrative of the magnificent buffalo, ordinary people Native and non-Native, saving them from extinction, caring for them and now all of us enjoying our amazing National Mammal on ranches, parks and tribal lands.

Our FREE Blog arrives every other Tuesday with a new Blog, News, Upcoming Events and Photos, it is written by Francie M. Berg, teacher and author of Buffalo Heartbeats, winner of 3 national awards. If you live on far distant shores—we bring you virtual buffalo tours to enlighten and delight from your armchair! We love having YOU aboard!! Subscriptions are FREE.

Let’s celebrate all things buffalo!

NEWS ARTICLE
Carie Starr realizes her dream at Cherokee Valley Bison Ranch

Carie Starr realizes her dream at Cherokee Valley Bison Ranch

Farm and Dairy, by Sarah Donaldson -September 1, 2022 In 2005, Carie Starr had a life-changing meal. At that time, she was living on 25 acres of her family’s land, in Thornville, Ohio. Her grandparents originally owned that land as part of their 160-acre farm. They enjoyed harness racing and had most of the farm in hay production. They also kept a few other animals, like goats and cattle, over the years. Starr grew up around the farm and her grandparents, but never had any plans to be a...

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UPCOMING EVENTS

Feb 11, 2023. Dakota Dynamite Buffalo Sale Simulcast Auction. South Dakota.

Feb 24, 2023. Beltway Bison Consignment Auction. Pennsylvania. 

Feb 25, 2023. Manitoba Bison Assocation Great Spirit Sale. Brandon, Manitoba, Canada.

Mar 9, 2023. Eastern Bison Association Winter Conference. Check for conference updates at the following link: https://www.ebabison.org/

Mar 10, 2023. Alberta Bison Assoication Wildrose Auction. Camrose, Alberta, Canada.

Mar 11, 2023. Missouri Bison Association & Oklahoma Bison Association Show & Sale. Missouri.

Mar 11, 2023. Irish Creek Bull Sale. Camrose, Alberta, Canada.

Mar 25, 2023. Saskatchewan Bison Association Cream of the Crop Sale. Yorkton, Saskatchewan, Canada.

Mar 30, 2023. Jack Auction Group Video Auction. Online.

Apr 27, 2023. Jack Auction Group Video Auction. Online.


Author
Francie Berg


Assistant
Ronda Fink

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