Weather in nearby Clifton, AZ
(Our weather is ~7° cooler)
Fair, 42 °F

UPCOMING EVENTS

Ranch Photography Workshop
April 17-20, 2012
Tom Whetten will teach a photography class where we will use cowboys, horses, steers, etc. as models. Here is your chance to photograph the American West! Herds of Texas Longhorns, working cowboys, and wide open western skies are the setting for great pictures on the historic Double Circle Ranch.

Erosion Control Workshop #6
April 20-22, 2012
We have openings for 30 people at the Spring AWPF Commission-funded Erosion Control Workshop at Double Circle Ranch.

Spring 5-Day Cattle Drive Vacation
April 30 - May 5, 2012
Limited to 6 participants - Make your reservations now!

End of Summer 5-Day Cattle Drive Vacation
September 15-20, 2012
Limited to 6 participants - Make your reservations now!

Women Only Ranch Vacation
September 24-30, 2012
Come join two to eight like-minded women for a ranch vacation to remember. Limited to 8 participants - Make your reservations now!

Erosion Control Workshop #7
October 12-14, 2012
We have openings for 30 people at the Fall AWPF Commission-funded Erosion Control Workshop at Double Circle Ranch.

2012 Workshops
Double Circle Longhorns, LLC is currently setting dates for our 2012 classes. Keep checking for more info on upcoming birding, photography, art, and wilderness survival classes

Cochise the Texas Longhorn Calf

Here is the newest member of our Texas Longhorn herd. This is Cochise

Cochise the Texas Longhorn

Cochise the Texas Longhorn

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He came from some of our old breeding stock that we sold to friends of ours. We switched to all steers instead of cow/calf pairs because of all the predators. With lion, wolves, coyotes, and bears all here, a new calf has a good chance of not surviving. In keeping with our conservation goals, we opted to change our herd rather than try and eliminate the predators who live on Double Circle Ranch.

Cochise was delivered and put in the pens at our barn – and he got pretty aggressive. You couldn’t walk into the pens without the danger of being charged. Grant and I cut 2 gentle steers out of the herd and drove them about 5 miles on horseback back to the barn to keep Cochise company. It worked, he gentled right down. The steer had never been alone and was just scared.

We do cull any steers that are mean. We do team building exercises and cattle drives where guests gather and move the steers- cannot have a chargey steer – especially one with horns! Besides, I am out riding until dark usually 5-6 days a week. No one would miss me until after sunset and then it would be too dark to find me till daybreak. No mean animals here—steers, dogs, horses, or husbands.

Cochise is available in our Sponsor-a-Steer program.

Related posts:

  1. Cattle Ranching – Texas Longhorn Herd
  2. Texas Longhorns
  3. Donate-a-Steer
  4. Are We a Dude Ranch?
  5. Mountain Lions and other Predators

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