Writin' for the Brand

Tales of the Ranch

  • Articles
  • 2025 Induction North Dakota Cowboy Hall of Fame June 13-14, 2025
  • North Dakota Cowboy Hall of Fame Inductee 2019
  • Photo Gallery
  • About
  • Articles
  • 2025 Induction North Dakota Cowboy Hall of Fame June 13-14, 2025
  • North Dakota Cowboy Hall of Fame Inductee 2019
  • Photo Gallery
  • About
  • Horses,  The Cowboy Chronicle,  Western History

    Just a Bit About the Bit

    June 14, 2020 /

    A good relationship between the horse and his rider is all about communication.  A horse can sense fear, anger and competence, and will react accordingly. However, a good ride whether for work or pleasure, requires effective communication between the horse and rider.  Since ancient times the bit, in one form or another, has been the instrument to help send these messages.   The horse is the only animal we control by putting something inside their mouth. The ancient man’s experience of controlling a pack or riding animal before the domestication of the horse, was by various forms of nose pressure. This method would not work for the equine as its…

    read more
    Mary Patricia Martell Jones 0 Comments

    You May Also Like

    The Wild Horses of Roosevelt’s Badlands for The Cowboy Chronicle

    November 10, 2017

    The Wild Horses of Roosevelt’s Badlands

    February 24, 2018

    The Legacy of the Horse in the Lives of the Great Plains People

    August 25, 2016
  • North Dakota History,  North Dakota Horizons magazine,  North Dakota Today

    North Dakota Cowboy Hall of Fame Celebrates Twenty-five Years

    June 13, 2020 /

    The North Dakota Horizons magazine published a shorter version of “Sentinel on the Prairie” in their Summer 2020 edition and online. https://www.ndhorizons.com/articles/86/north-dakota-cowboy-hall-of-fame-celebrates-25-years.aspx The North Dakota Cowboy Hall of fame is celebrating its 25th anniversary. One man’s dream of preserving the stories and character of the state’s forebears has become a renowned center of western culture. Phil Baird thought about this for a long time. So many stories and moments were passing through time, drifting like the wind across the prairies. Countless hours were spent embracing all the memories and history he could. He hated the thought these stories would be lost to time. Those moments wove together the fabric of…

    read more
    Mary Patricia Martell Jones 0 Comments

    You May Also Like

    Booming Settlement to Ghost Town: Whispers of the Living History of Charbonneau

    January 29, 2015

    “Come and Get It”

    May 30, 2018

    Biography of Charles Franklin Martell

    February 28, 2015
  • North Dakota Today,  The Cowboy Chronicle

    Sentinel on the Prairie: Celebrating Twenty-five Years of the Preservation and Protection of North Dakota History

    May 28, 2020 /

    He had been thinking about this for a while now.  So many stories and moments, friendships and connections were passing through time. They drifted like the wind across the prairies, and he hated the thought they could all be lost. Countless hours were spent visiting with folks and embracing all the memories and history he could. The stories they told may not have been notable markers in history, but they embodied the character and the essence of the generations.  These moments in time woven together were the fabric of America’s western history and an important part of a great national epic. Those who built North Dakota, who dreamed, sacrificed and…

    read more
    Mary Patricia Martell Jones 0 Comments

    You May Also Like

    The Wild Horses of Roosevelt’s Badlands for The Cowboy Chronicle

    November 10, 2017

    National Day of the Cowboy: Preserving Pioneer Heritage and Cowboy Culture

    May 29, 2017

    The Wild Horses of Roosevelt’s Badlands

    February 24, 2018
  • Dakota Horse Magazine,  Horses,  Tales of the Ranch

    Rex

    April 21, 2020 /

    https://dakotahorsemagazine.com/articles/rex/ This story was published in the online edition of Dakota Horse Magazine, April 12, 2023 and in the Fall 2023 hard copy edition. Rex: Latin for “king” Where in this wide world can man find nobility without pride, friendship without envy or beauty without vanity? Here, where grace is laced with muscle and strength by gentleness confined. He serves without servility; he has fought without enmity. There is nothing so powerful, nothing less violent, there is nothing so quick, nothing more patient. England’s past has been borne on his back. All history is his industry; we are his heirs, he our inheritance. The Horse, poem by Ronald Duncan Rex…

    read more
    Mary Patricia Martell Jones 0 Comments
  • The Cowboy Chronicle,  Western History

    Branding Across Time

    November 4, 2019 /

    When thinking of the American West the image of a laconic individual with the requisite boots, chaps, and hat comes to mind. We envision him on long cattle drives, riding along miles and miles of fences or on a great roundup. In our minds we can see the cowboy chasing down a hapless calf, roping and wrestling it to the ground by a campfire with branding irons in the flames. Another cowboy grabs it and burns the owners mark on its hip. It’s all part of the mystique of the cowboy, some of it romanticized in art and the movies; all of it based on reality and much of it…

    read more
    Mary Patricia Martell Jones 0 Comments

    You May Also Like

    The Goose and Laddie

    February 10, 2016

    “It’s a hard way to make an easy living” : Wayne Herman to be Inducted into the Pro Rodeo Hall of Fame

    February 10, 2015

    Booming Settlement to Ghost Town: Whispers of the Living History of Charbonneau

    January 29, 2015
  • Biographies,  North Dakota Horizons magazine

    A Wandering Man: Louis L’Amour

    September 28, 2019 /

    It was a love affair that ran the course of a lifetime. Whether it was consuming, creating, or collecting, the written word permeated every aspect of his life. He spent hours in the library. As a young man traveling and working all over the world, he would find time to read multiple books per week, boasting that between 1928 and 1942 he read more than 150 books a year. It was said, as a reader, his only match may have been Theodore Roosevelt who would often read up to three books a day. He attained a personal library of well over 10,000 books, journals, periodicals and maps, a vast and…

    read more
    Mary Patricia Martell Jones 3 Comments

    You May Also Like

    Harold Schafer, Mr. Bubble and the Legacy of Medora

    April 9, 2015

    The Wandering Man

    June 4, 2019

    Lydia Langer: The Unexpected Candidate Amid 1930’s Political Scandal and Intrigue

    October 27, 2016
  • History,  Native Americans,  The Cowboy Chronicle

    Necessities for a Nomadic Life

    August 18, 2019 /

    It was time to move. The young woman took down their tepee and secured the poles to the horses, building the travois’ that would carry the rest of their home and other worldly possessions.

    read more
    Mary Patricia Martell Jones 0 Comments

    You May Also Like

    A Century Since the Great War; Family Ties

    November 12, 2018

    Just One More Ride

    December 9, 2018

    The Railroad and Settlement in Early North Dakota

    April 9, 2015
  • Biographies,  North Dakota History,  Western History

    The Wandering Man

    June 4, 2019 /

    This love affair lasted a lifetime; whether consuming, creating, or collecting, the written word permeated his life. He bragged that between 1928 and 1942 he read more than 150 books a year. He built a personal library of over 10,000 books, journals, and periodicals; a varied collection that surprised and delighted visitors. He was one of the world’s most prolific authors writing poetry, over 400 short stories, screenplays and more than 100 books. Sitting in his sick bed, Louis L’Amour was editing his final book the day he died in 1988. Some discounted his writing as just simple westerns, but his stories perfectly expressed the romance and authenticities of Western…

    read more
    Mary Patricia Martell Jones 0 Comments

    You May Also Like

    Biography of George W. Nohle

    March 1, 2015

    The Cowboy Doctor

    December 22, 2020

    Biography of Charles Franklin Martell

    February 28, 2015
  • History,  Tales of the Ranch

    The Battle at Guilford Courthouse

    May 1, 2019 /

    On a recent trip to North Carolina I visited the Guilford Courthouse National Military Park with my sister and niece. There is a great deal I don’t know about this time in our nation’s history! So much of our revolutionary war education centers on the north, yet the battles in the south were of tremendous importance. Somewhere in the fight for Independence two centuries ago are two ancestors of mine, Moses Hill and John Gould who was an ancestor of my Grandmother Martell (Lila Vanderhoof). There is also a Morgan on Don’s side who may very well have been in one of these battles since the Morgan’s at that time…

    read more
    Mary Patricia Martell Jones 0 Comments

    You May Also Like

    Straight to the Horse’s Mouth

    April 30, 2019

    A Century Since the Great War; Family Ties

    November 12, 2018

    Necessities for a Nomadic Life

    August 18, 2019
  • History,  Horses,  The Cowboy Chronicle,  Western History

    Straight to the Horse’s Mouth

    April 30, 2019 /

    At first glance, especially to those unfamiliar with all that is involved in horse care, the new exhibit at the North Dakota Cowboy Hall of Fame might look like medieval tools of torture.  No need to worry, these old malicious looking implements are just a set of equine dentistry tools from 1904, donated to the hall by the Theodore Roosevelt Medora Foundation. It is believed that equine dentistry practices began about 2000 years ago on the steppes of northeastern Asia and Mongolia by ancient nomads. The horse has the distinction of being the most significant domesticated animal of the past 5000 years, playing a critical role in the development, growth…

    read more
    Mary Patricia Martell Jones 0 Comments

    You May Also Like

    Just One More Ride

    December 9, 2018

    A Century Since the Great War; Family Ties

    November 12, 2018

    The Railroad and Settlement in Early North Dakota

    April 9, 2015
 Older Posts
Newer Posts 

Categories

  • Biographies (20)
  • Dakota Horse Magazine (2)
  • Frontier Lawman Series (1)
  • Ghost Towns (3)
  • History (18)
  • Horses (12)
  • Minot Daily News (2)
  • Native Americans (9)
  • North Dakota History (27)
  • North Dakota Horizons magazine (7)
  • North Dakota Today (11)
  • Rodeo (3)
  • Tales of the Ranch (19)
  • The Cowboy Chronicle (43)
  • Western History (19)
Ashe Theme by WP Royal.