WAITING FOR A CHINOOK
--OOO0OO-
The winter of ’86 all cattlemen will remember!
There was a bunch of cowpunchers on the O.H. Ranch
in Pigs’ Eye Basin in the Judith Country. It was a long, hard
winter. The snow came early and, in places, did not go off
until May. Even the stage lines had to place willow twigs
along some their roads to show where the road ran.
Louie Kauffman,of[sic] the Kauffman & Stadler Outfit, owners
of the “Bar R” Brand, living in Helena, Montana, wrote to
Jessie Phelps, owner of the “O.H.” ranch, asking how things
were going.
Jessie said, “I’ve got to write the old man and tell
him how bad things are.”
He dreaded telling the real condition.
Charlie was sitting at the table where jess was writing
and, with his watercolors, made a small drawing of a Bar-R steer
standing humped in the snow and with the wolves waiting around
him. He was nothing but skin and bones and there was no sign
of food anywhere and Charlie simply wrote under the picture,
“Waiting for a Chinook.”
He tossed it off to Phelps and said, “Send that, too.”
When Jess Phelps saw the sketch he exclaimed, “Hell!
I don’t need to write a letter with that!” He then enclosed
it in an envelope to Kauffman.
It told the exact stoyy[sic] of the condition of every cattle
man that winter. Charlie did not realize what a powerful thing
he had really sent out and that sketch made him better known in a
few weeks than anything he had ever done and is still thought of
as a real inspiration.
Kauffman always joshed Charlie, saying, “young fellow,
you come near breaking me the winter of ’86!”
(The original is owned by Wallace Huidekoper of the American
Ranch, Montana. )
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