I didn't know what a dogie calf was so I had to look it up. I was interested to find that, "In the language of the American West, a stray or motherless calf is known as a dogie. The origin of this word remains uncertain, but Ramon F. Adams, the author of numerous works on western Americana and a cowboy himself, offered one possible etymology for dogie in his book Western Words. During the 1880s, when a series of harsh winters left large numbers of orphaned calves, the little calves, weaned too early, were unable to digest coarse range grass, and their swollen bellies "very much resembled a batch of sourdough carried in a sack." Such a calf was referred to as dough-guts. The term, altered to dogie according to Adams, "has been used ever since throughout cattleland to refer to a pot-gutted orphan calf." Interesting etymology.
"Perhaps he had in mind an evening tamale....A dozen times during the night the men on guard had to drive him back....When the herd started on next morning, Sancho was at the tail end of it, often stopping and looking back. It took constant attention from one of the drag drivers to keep him moving. By the time the second night arrived, every hand in the outfit knew Sancho, by name and sight, as being the stubbornest and gentlest steer of the lot" (382-383).
I really like this characterization of Sancho. It makes him sound like a goofy, cute, curious longhorn. I've always imagined Bevo being the same way.
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| Stubborn and gentle |
Stories like this melt my heart. I love it when humans or other animals become incredibly attached to other atypical animals (i.e. anything besides a normal "pet"). I'm also curious to see if longhorns really do like tamales.
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| On second thought, I don't know how any kind of animal, human or otherwise, would be able to resist one of these. |
It's sad to think that this way of herding has given way to the corporate-esque mass production of cattle in factory farms. Unfortunately, I don't see any way of food production reverting back to this old school style.
"For subsistence farmers, working animals were social instruments as well as companions, friends about whom one had no illusions. They became crucial links between generations, between the living and revered ancestors, intimate symbols of sustenance and interconnections between people" (415).
I the characterization of working animals as "crucial links between generations." It gives them an almost immortal, reverent vibe.
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| Sadly, the concept of the sacred ox doesn't exist anymore; cattle deserve more respect than we presently show them in this day and age. |
It makes sense that our tribal totem is the longhorn in our world literature class, especially considering the respect that so many different cultures hold for it.



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