I hope to add photos soon, but for now, here is a mini novella. Sit back with a cup of tea, relax, and read about life in the countryside.
Four feet for Christmas
Little Feet is lonely. 
Horses are herd animals, and this poor boy is living herdless.  Unless you count myself and my stable hand,
Manny.  Or the two small dogs and ten
cats, who casually stroll through his stable and mingle their manure with
his.  I think it is time to find him a more
suitable companion.  
Horses, like golf, is a rich man’s hobby.  Or so I have always thought.  Little Feet came to me through a friend, who
then abandoned us.  In discussing the
subject of the price of horseflesh here in an impoverished part of Durango,
Mexico, I came to decide that buying a horse was actually affordable.  A luxury, yes, but taking a very small bite
out of my savings, my ‘emergency medical fund’. 
I am a senior citizen retired on a small social security
pension in a tiny village six thousand feet up in the Sierra Madres.  My hectare sits in a small valley, with hills
to the east and hills to the west.  What
I am learning is that the price of a young colt is about the same price as a
new saddle, a few hundred dollars. 
That’s from Manny’s dad, a retired horseman himself.  We decided to go on a search, and see for
ourselves what is out there.   Manny’s
dad noted a few horses for sale in their village, worth checking out.  But first I wanted to go back to the place
where Little Feet was born.  I was hoping
for a birthdate for him, although we know he is about three years old. 
The village as recorded in the title certificate for my
horse as his birthplace is about 12 miles north of us.  Yesterday we drove up the two-lane highway to
see if we could actually locate the ranch in this tiny village, with the little
information that we had.  We reached the
sign that identified the village, Arnulfo R. Gomez.  This follows the custom of naming villages
after Mexican historical heroes.  We saw
a handful of stores, long stretches of adobe wall, and a church steeple.  Fortunately, we saw a man on horseback
heading towards us on a dirt side road. 
We pulled alongside and rolled down the window.  The brand on my horse’s flank is an M inside
a circle.  This is the mark of Martin
Ortiz.  With the help of this local
cowpoke we located him, finding ourselves in a cluster of men dressed in plaid
shirts, dusty jeans, boots and cowboy hats. 
We mentioned that we were from Pozole, and one man smiles broadly and
identifies me as the person who has Little Feet, Isabel’s horse.  And so it is in the countryside, the
grapevine phone network.
We chatted for a bit. 
I praised the quality of Little Feet, his calm and easy temperament, for
which I presumed to credit good blood lines. 
He regretted having to tell me that he sold the sire.  I assured him that was no problem.  I wasn’t looking for a race horse or
anything, just a simple companion to make my boy comfortable.  In my mind, I thought that asking for a
yearling or two-year old would bring me into an affordable negotiation.  We arranged to meet the next day, and he
would show me what was available.
At the dawn of a new day, during Christmas week, I arose to
a very chilly morning.  I hadn’t bothered
to set a fire in the cast-iron stove, since we would be leaving out early and
why waste the wood.
We stopped in Canatlan at the Oxxo convenient store for a cappuccino
fix, turned the car heater up to Blast, and we were on our way.  
We arrived at the designated spot a little past ten, driving
slowly on the dusty road.  We stopped and
got out, and then noticed a parked pickup about 50 meters back.  It fired up and came towards us.   Actually, we weren’t sure at all that we had
found the agreed upon meeting place. 
This typical village was a unmarked maze of adobe and stucco, the color
of the road merging with the color of the walls.  Whirls of dust marked our slow progress.  We had exchanged phone numbers the day
before, so we did connect.  The guy who
had been sitting in the parked pickup was indeed our contact Rudolfo.  We parked beneath a dusty tall juniper tree,
and waited.  First one, then another of
yesterdays gang showed up.  
I tuned out while Manny fulfilled the social pleasantries
and learned what the next step would be. 
We got back into my car, and followed the pickup truck with its two guys
and one 8-year-old grandson.
We went back to the two-lane highway and drove another five
minutes north.  We pulled off and waited
while the guys opened the barbed wired fence that led us into a large
pasture.  Ahead of us to the west the vast
sweep of valley ended in hills.  As we
followed the pickup meandering through the fields, down a narrow ravine and up
again, we saw a stream of cows moving from our right to the left, towards the
hills.  We looked right towards the
highway and realized there was a tunnel under the road, a black hole through
which the herd was streaming.  We drove
on, passing through one field after another, until from our vantage on a
hillock we saw a large lake.  We parked
at an iron orange pen with gates and walkways, whose paint had faded and was
overgrown with dried weeds.  We
waited.  The view was enthralling. Time
ticked by.  The old guys started telling
us stories.  These distant hills contain
a vibrant ecosystem, with wild cats, coyotes, wild boar and deer.  The hundreds of cows, plus whatever horses as
needed for work, roamed freely here.  The
barbed wire fencing hardly held out the many predators.  The dogs kept guard.  Every being in this wild place served a
purpose.
Manny was just as taken as I.  He was filling up gigabytes of his phone
camera with videotaping of the herds, the lake and the wilderness.  I saw a few riders off in the distance, on
the far bank of the lake.  
When I glanced closer at the far bank, I realized there were
a cluster of objects, indistinguishable in the distance.  I saw a pickup truck, a small flatbed behind
it, and a cluster of men. Their saddled horses waited quietly nearby.  On the ground just beyond the flatbed there
was an odd-shaped lump.  Nothing much
seemed to be happening, and my gaze drifted. 
When I looked back they all had gone. 
The lump, which I never saw moving, was gone as well.
Suddenly a pack of white horse came thundering up the hill
from lakeside, followed by two or three mounted herders.  These were the wild horses rounded up for my
purview. 
They were herded into the pen, and into a narrow walkway
where they stood single file.  One of the
three whites was albino with pink eyes. 
There was the brown two-year old whose picture I had seen the day
before, an unremarkable horse.  Then I
saw the palomino.  She was still nursing
at her mother, who was a white mare with blue eyes.  The tiny colt might have been six months old,
the smallest in the pack.  She has
gorgeous upturned eyes, with a soft and tender look about her.  She has a long winter coat.  She is not completely golden, but is dappled
with color.  Unfortunately, the owner of
this one was not in our little group.  My
heart was quickly grabbed by this tender babe. 
The brown horse, my intended, spooked while in this narrow walkway.  She panicked and tried to back out, pushing
the other two horses behind her.  I
thought this was not an auspicious sign.  
And then it was over. 
The cowboys left with the herd, back down towards the lake.  We got back in my car and followed the blue
pickup through the fields.  At the raven
Manny was driving too slowly, and we were smelling burning rubber.  The guys got out of the pickup thinking we
needed help.  Manny backed up far enough
to get a running start, and made it up the steep bank.
We got back to Arnulfo R. Gomez.  We shook hands and gave our hearty thanks,
and left our friendly hosts. It was noon by now.  Manny called his dad and we arranged to meet
at his village to look at more horses. 
We drove south again, passing through Canatlan where we stopped to use the
WalMart toilet and grab a bite to eat to-go. 
During the drive I asked Manny if he had noticed the pickup
and activity on the far bank of the lake. 
He had not. I described the scene to him.  Slowly it dawned on us that this may well
have been prey killed by the wild animals; a calf, or a colt.
We drove east and then north again, until we reached
Nogales.  We parked under another dusty
cedar, and waited.  Throw away your
watches when you are moving in these circles. 
Eventually Manny’s dad and a friend arrived, and drove us to another
large warren of fields.  We waited until
the two horses for sale could be rounded up and driven towards us.  We couldn’t get too close; they stopped at
the corner fencing in the middle of the fields. 
If we pressed them, they would bolt over the fence.  
We saw three horses moving towards us.  One was a small white pony, which was just
along for the ride.  The two I was
looking at were a brown and a gray.  The
brown has a narrow white streak down his face, but is other wise unremarkable.
She seemed bored. After checking us out she was not at all interested in us,
showing us her back.  The gray, however,
was curious.   She would walk in a circle
and then look back at us.  She has a
broad white face, outlined in gray.  Her
coat is a mottled gray, not solid.  Her
ears seemed smaller and rounder than the others.  As we got bolder and tried to approach, they
ran away.  But the gray stopped at a
distance, turned, and continued to watch us with ears forward.
We trudged back along the fields to the car.  Manny’s dad talked about other horses he
could round up for the following day, but I felt that I had seen enough for
now.  My mind was still on the baby palomino.  I needed to know if she was for sale, and for
how much.
We passed through Canatlan on our way home, but it was still
Siesta time. I had hoped to buy alfalfa seeds, and to pick up an Amazon package
that was waiting for me.  Everything was
closed, and I had no patience to wait twenty more minutes.  The clock was ticking again, and I wanted to
get back to the comfort of my home.  
On the following day I went into town to buy alfalfa
seed.  The first shop I tried had
none.  I went to a larger seed warehouse,
where I was already known by the owner. 
No, he did not have any alfalfa seed. 
We stood and chatted for a while, when he told me that normally they
would have received the seasonal supply of alfalfa seed.  The agent usually delivered twice a year.  This year the agent had ghosted
Canatlan.  He encouraged me to go to
Nueva Ideal, I would find seed there for sure.
I left Canatlan heading north, passed El Pozole.  I stopped at Luz de Compasion long enough to
pick up Manny, and we continued on together to Nuevo Ideal.  As we were passing through Arnulfo R Gomez
again, I asked Manny to call our friend Martin and ask if he had spoken to the
owner of the palomino colt.  He had, and
the colt was for sale.  The quoted price
was just a tad above the conservative amount I had offered.  I said I was definitely interested, and would
get back to them.  
One question Manny and I had been discussing was the right
age to wean a colt.  I was remembering
the years I spent in East Tibet around yak herds.  The yak calves were about the relative size
as the palomino when they were forcibly weaned. 
Their method was a device that was like a wooden crown of thorns
attached to the yak calf’s muzzle, to prevent access to the teat.  Manny called his uncle, who was well-versed
in horse rearing.  Manny thought that as
soon as the colt was eating on his own, alfalfa and grass, he would be
weaned.  But his uncle told him that it
was best to let the colt stay with his mother until he was a full year old, to
ensure good growth.
We asked Martin when the Palomino would be ready to be sold
off.  He said right away, no, he did not
need to stay with his mom.  
I want a third opinion. 
Anyway, I thought I would pay half the price now, assuring
my ownership of the colt, but leave him with his mother for another couple of
months at which time I would pay the remainder and take possession.  Or perhaps pay the whole amount, but take the
mother with us until the colt was old enough to be separated from  her.  And
then, how would we get the horse?  Surely
it was too young and wild to enter a trailer. 
So many questions!  I am entering
a new world, with much to learn.
We arrived at Nuevo Ideal, turned left at the main
intersection towards the commercial district, and looked around for a seed
store.  After a few enquiries, we were
sent back down the highway a short stretch to the John Deere dealership.  Yes they have alfalfa seed, we could buy a
bag of 20  kg for 3,000 pesos.  Uh, was there an option B?
We went back up that stretch of highway and took a right
towards the Mennonite settlements.  We
found another seed store, and they were willing to open the 20 kg bag and sell
us just a few kilos.  We are one step
closer to finally growing our own horse feed. 
My neighbor Julian had already done a beautiful job on our little field,
plowing it smooth with his tractor.  We
have begun our collecting of natural fertilizing, packing four bags with it,
free for the taking, at the cattle auction pens.  We dumped these onto the alfalfa plot, though
it looked like a paltry amount.  Many
more bags would need to be collected, if we were to fertilize the feel evenly.
Our main mission accomplished, we went back to the
commercial district of NI and I showed Manny the great grocery store that is
there.  We bought the fixings for the
Christmas turkey dinner, and finally made it back home.  
The following day would be December 23, and I had bravely
offered to fix a ‘traditional’ turkey dinner for as many of my English-speaking
Mexican friends as wanted to come.
I awoke early, with a list of tasks focused on receiving and
dining guests.  As I worked my way
through the monotonise chores of cleaning and cooking, I mulled over what had
transpired the day before.  Since the
young age of the paolomino was a stumbling block, I focused on the gray in
Nogales.  I had invited Manny’s father to
come and spend the night of Christmas Eve with us.  These two are very close, the son being like
a physical clone of the father.  
The dinner went well. 
Only two friends showed up, and with Manny, there were four of us at the
dinner table.  The meal was simple,
basic, and all from scratch.  I baked a
turkey without stuffing, mashed potatoes with carmelized onions, giblet gravy
and cole slaw.  It feels good to
occasionally verify to myself that I am a competent cook.  Joel brought a lovely bottle of Merlot.  He and Lupita discussed the possibility of
her locating her planned luxury hair styling salon and spa at his second floor
hall, in the center of Canatlan.  He is
planning to move to El Paso, Texas in January. 
Once again he asked if I would manage the place for him while he was
gone.  This time, with my friend Lupita
involved, I said yes.
The next day, Saturday, Manny and I went to San Jose de
Gracias to pick up Manny Senior.  I had
hopes of duplicating the previous night’s meal, with the abundant
leftovers.  However, the power went out
in the afternoon, and we were all left in the dark.  We did not have nearly enough candles.  They stayed the night in the guest cottage,
and I took a long nap in my place with the dog and a handful of cats.  I had fond hopes that I had hear Father
correctly at the previous Sunday’s Mass, saying that there would be Mass on
Christmas Eve.  I awoke from my nap, got
in the car and drove to Canatlan at midnight. Sadly, all was dark and nearly
deserted.  I turned around and came home.
Morning dawned without electricity.  I invited the two Manny’s over for
breakfast.  I added some flour and eggs
to the mashed potatoes and made my version of potato pancakes, served with
bacon.  Senior and I had a long
discussion during that morning.  In the
end, I made up my mind to collect the gray horse on Tuesday, the 27th.  
We were in a cold spell, nighttime temperatures hovering
around 32 degrees F.  The sun came up on
time, however, and it wasn’t long before the thermometer had climbed into the
60s, and landing eventually in the 70s. 
We drove out to Nogales again, and met with Senior and his cronies.  Junior had asked them to round the horse up
for us, to save time.  However, nothing
happened before our ten o’clock arrival. 
We drove out to the fields, and parked the car.  We walked through a herd of cows and bulls
who were waiting to be fed.  There was
lots of milling and mooing.  Among them
was a gorgeous black gelding, about seven years old.  Apparently he hung with the cattle, and when
they needed rounding up a saddle was put on him and he worked.  That’s how retirement looks when you’re a
horse.
We waited among the curious bulls for a long time.  Then we saw the same three horses being
herded towards us.  I stayed well away as
the cluster of men herded the three of them into a roofless adobe room. To me
it looked like an old abandoned home. 
There was the pretty brown babe with the white streak on her nose, the
tiny companion white pony, and the gray that I wanted.  The pony was a sad sight.  She is the beloved pet of the owner’s
once-young son, kept around for sentimental reasons.  It lives out in the fields with the wild
ones.  Its mane and tail were loaded
thick with burs.  I just wanted to spend
hours with the thing taking all these thorny things off.  The two horses, being slightly taller, had
less of tangled messes, mostly just on the tails.
Now the gray was up close, and we waited once more.  Now we were waiting for the trailer that
would take our lovely girl home.  Manny
went off to get it.  His dad was owed
favors, and so a neighbor had agreed to let us use his horse trailer.  After what felt like a half hour, he returned
without a trailer.  The neighbor had
responded to Manny by saying, in effect, who the hell are you I promised the
trailer to the father not the son.  So
then the two Manny’s went back into town and got the trailer, as we waited
again.  
Meanwhile, the men clustered outside the adobe walls
chatting.  I hung at the edge of the
doorway, looking over someone’s shoulder. 
Slowly I drew closer.  I had no
intention of approaching the colt, but I did want to calm and reassure
her.  I stood just inside the wall, and
spoke softly to her.  She and the brown
had retreated to a corner when they were first driven into the space.  As I talked to her she did indeed begin to
calm down, to the point where she left the corner and took a more relaxed
stance away from the walls.  I stayed
with her, while the guys were freaking out at my taking the risk of being in
there with the wild ones.  Soon the soft
sounds washed over her, and she was licking and chewing in contentment, or at
least relaxed.
The trailer arrived at last, and I cleared out.  I left the six or seven men plenty of space
while they maneuvered the trailer into the doorway.  It pained me to see the terror and panic that
resulted, first from the owner trying and failing many times to lasso her.  When he finally succeeded the crew cheered.  Then forcing her into the trailer.  Its capacity was four horses; the front half
had a roof, the back half open.  She was
rearing up, trying to jump out, before they finally got her into the covered
area.  They closed that gate and, keeping
the rope tied to her, she was secured for the ride.  
That is when the owner and I discussed the price of the
horse.  I thought I had been told one
price, he was expecting one hundred dollars more.  We compromised, and money changed hands.  As we drove away I was filled with eagerness
to get this little lady home, where I could finally get a good look at her.  Instead of heading out of that village, Manny
drove us off to a little corner of it where a lady was sitting at a table under
a canvas roof.  This was where they would
create the document that recorded me as the owner, and Rudolfo as the breeder.  The latter is misleading.  The horses lived in the wild, there was
little control over what sire covered what mare.
This step was time consuming as well.  There was discussion back and forth about the
breeder’s documentation.  It seemed as if
the lady at the desk was consulting an older gentleman who passed back and
forth from the covered area to the attached house.  There was also a teenage boy hanging around;
I had no idea his identity or function.  Manny
Went off in my car, to coordinate with the guys in the
trailer presumably.  He came back with a
tamale; we were both starving, as it was now mid afternoon and there was no
meal in sight.  Lupita had invited me to
her house for dinner, another complication that had to be sorted out.  Deliver the horse to Patas Blancas and then
return to Canatlan for Lupita’s dinner? Have Manny drop me off, then, and pick
me up after dark?  
I was eagerly anticipating watching the first meeting
between the little filly and our young stallion.  
Leaving Nogales we had tried to keep the trailer in front of
us.  Once in Canatlan, it made a
premature right turn.  We had finally
decided that I would forego witnessing Patas Blancas receiving his new
companion, in order to fulfill my promise to Lupita.  She was expecting another guest around 4:30;
it was now around 4:00.  Manny drove me
to Lupita’s house and left me there, figuring he could catch up to the
slow-moving trailer.  His father was in
the trailer, and we presumed he would be able to navigate the way to Luz de
Compasion.  Wrong.  Manny got a frantic call from his dad in the
trailer.
“Where are you?  Hurry
up, we need you.  A cop has stopped us
and is asking for the papers for the horse.”
Which goes to show you that this is indeed horse country;
the police are vigilant for horse thieves.
They had missed the turn off the highway and gone the seven
miles further down the road to the more familiar hamlet called Rancho Seco.
Manny got there in short order and produced the newly inked
ownership documents.
I had a nice dinner with Lupita.  As she had previously clarified for me,
Mexican meal times were 2 pm and 7 pm. 
Apparently the timing of this meal, which she called ‘meat cake’, was
driven by Benjamin’s schedule.  Benjamin
is a young man who is very fond of Lupita.  He recently opened an electronics store in
Canatlan, and has a busy schedule.  I had
met him through Lupita, and we had made an arrangement for lessons in English.  These lessons were often canceled because of
his busy schedule.  I was looking forward
to seeing him.  I had called him earlier
to see if he could drive me home, so that Manny would not have to drive in the
dark.  I won’t go into Manny’s driving
history here.  
The meat cake turned out to be a variation on meat loaf,
wrapped in bacon.  She made mashed
potatoes and gravy, too, as I had shown her how a few days earlier.  The meal was righteous, and hit the
spot.  Manny is the elephant in the room.  He is an employee, not a partner.  I did not bother to clarify with Lupita
whether or not the invitation included Manny. 
He was the driver, no more.  He
wound up picking me up anyway, in the end. 
Benjamin received a phone call during the meal, and arranged to meet
someone right away at the Oxxo store.  I
called Manny, letting Benjamin off the hook. 
Lupita offered the plastic containers I had sent her home with, earlier
filled with turkey and fixings for her partner Luis.  She now filled them with a good meal for
Manny, who showed up straight away.
Although the sun had slid behind the western hills, it was
not yet dark when I got home.  There was
ample time for me to stand and gaze at our new addition, and watch the
interplay between the two horses.  It was
lovely to behold.  Manny joined me to
watch television before bed time, and we talked about a name for her.  The name Lucy popped into my head; I had
heard it spoken that day in relation to Manny’s family members.  A shot of tequila for him, the last glass of
Merlot for me, and we seaparately retired for the night.
At dawn, on a freezing morning, before the sun poked up
above the eastern hills, I had my winter coat on and was outside.  There they were, side by side, Cinderella and
her prince charming, Patas Blancas.  Now
I see that she is a little smaller than he. 
I was worried that she would be taller, she looked big next to the
miniature pony in Nogales.  Now I am
hoping that she does not grow any more, but it is still possible.  Saying a horse is two-years old is an inexact
statement, when it is born in the wild. 
I have heard that all horses increase their age on January 1, even a
horse born in December suddenly becomes a year old.  I am enchanted with her.  She looks like she sat down in an ash pot.  She goes with Patas as if joined by the
hip.  That is not to say that the usual
gender play is not happening.  If he gets
too close to her, she kicks him away.
The sun was already above the hills and warming up the air
when Manny came walking up to us.  We
discussed the day’s chores.  At least he
has one less; no need to muck out the stall. The two horses had passed the
night in the corral.  When he took Patas
to the lunge area for his groundwork, Cinderella was a little dismayed.  She tried to follow him out of the corral.  Then, as he began his work trotting online in
a circle, she ran first one way then, as he rounded the circle, the reverse,
along the barbed wire fence that separated them.  Her eyes never left him.
For the past week I’ve started a training regimen for him,
walking him on a lead inside the corral. 
It is a brief exercise, developing focus and communication between
us.  I wondered if Cinderella would be
nervous with me in the corral, too.  One
day she will let me touch her, but not yet. 
As I walked Patas and put him through his paces, she was right beside
him all the way.  She was not paying any
attention to me, even when I was within inches of her face, but only on him.
Though this tale is coming to a close, it is only just the
beginning of my life with Cinderella.  My
plan is to spend time in and around the corral each day, getting her used to my
presence.  She is learning from Patas, as
well, to accept these humans.  I will not
chase after her; one day she will come to me, and then her training will begin
in earnest.
I look to the future, when Luz de Compasion will offer a
western experience to AirBnB customers who enjoy trail riding in the Old West,
where John Wayne cranked out classic western movies during the sixties.  Until that day, I live the joy of sharing my
life with two of God’s beautiful creatures. 
Ahem.  Not to be overlooked,
sharing the joy with us are the two dogs and the myriads of cats.

Such a lovely read! Thank you for posting!
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