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4/4 Time

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Photo by Robin Boies

The sun paints a porcelain colored sky over Middlestack Mountain to the northeast, as a luminous rotund pumpkin moon slips behind Cold Spring Mountain to the southwest in a silent cosmic language of watchfulness, a passing of the guard at dawn.

The near stillness of morning, a kildees call on the lawn, the invisible whir and chirp of hummingbirds a guarantee of their sweet tooth feeding frenzy to come with the sun. The rustle of leaves as the morning breeze picks up for a last little "HOORAH " of night chill before the sun starts it's daily job of warming the earth.

I love to walk around at this time of day and let the slow progress of the sun set the pace. There will be plenty of time after breakfast to feel the 2/4 tempo of life.

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The opinions expressed in the Western Folklife Center's Deep West online journals are those of the online journal participants and not the Western Folklife Center. The Western Folklife Center does not moderate these journals and as such does not guarantee the veracity, reliability or completeness of any information provided in the journals or in any hyperlink appearing within them.

About Robin Boies

Robin Boies
Robin Boies is the product of a northern Texas cattleman and a city-bred girl from Boulder, Colorado. As a child Boies remembers Sunday's marked by church school and the weekly sermon, followed by an afternoon of Pitch or Twenty-one with red, white, and blue poker chips stacked neatly in front of her. When it came to culture it was sublime opera in the house and Hank Williams in the green Chevy pick-up truck. Boies found herself in Steptoe Valley north of Ely, Nevada, at age seventeen. For the past 28 years Boies has lived 45 miles north of Wells, Nevada, at the Vineyard Unit of Boies Ranches with her husband Steve. There they raised three children, Teema, Nathan, and Samuel. Teema enters Gonzaga University this fall to pursue a graduate degree. Nathan is back in college when not at the ranch after a service engagement in the 101st Airborne, and Samuel graduated from high school last year and has been in New Zealand since September 2005. While tending to the needs of the ranch Boise works to understand and tell the stories of contemporary ranching culture through writing and videography.
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