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Choosing the stud bucks

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Bucks with fall colors
Home Ranch, Battle Mountain

We have tons of fall work, as the cows and sheep come off of their National Forest permits, and we prepare for fall trailing and the coming (rapidly I fear!) winter. Last week, Dr. Kimberling and his crew from Fort Collins came to test the rams, then we sorted them and put the stud rams in for the March lambing. Early lambing always seems like a good idea during the Indian Summer. We actually haven’t seen too much Indian Summer, as an unseasonably cool fall has followed an unseasonably cool summer. Here are some photos of working the bucks.

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Bruiser stalking
Home Ranch, corral

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Richar and the one that almost got away
Home Ranch, corral

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Maeve and Sharon supervising
Near the chute

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Meghan, with Maeve still supervising
Chute
photo by Meghan Lally

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Rambouillet
photos by Sharon O'Toole

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About Pat & Sharon O'Toole

Sharon O'Toole
Pat and Sharon O’Toole are ranchers in the Little Snake River Valley near Savery, Wyoming, right on the Colorado-Wyoming border. They raise cattle, sheep, horses, dogs and children. Pat “immigrated” from Florida in 1970. He attended Colorado State University, where he met Sharon when both worked for the campus newspaper. Sharon grew up on their ranch, where they live and work with her father, their daughter, son and granddaughter (soon to be grandchildren!). Pat is a “water buffalo” and has served in the Wyoming House of Representatives (1986-1992), on the President’s Western Water Policy Review Advisory Commission, and is the current President of the Family Farm Alliance, which advocates for farmers, ranchers and irrigators. Sharon is an author, poet and journalist. She writes extensively on Western issues and is a columnist for “The Shepherd” magazine. Pat and Sharon are the parents of three children: Meghan, 27; Bridget, 26; and Eamon, 20.
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