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Paperback A Collection of Cowboy Logic: A Look at the Lighter Side of Going Broke, Raising Cattle, and Living on the Prairie Book

ISBN: 0966775600

ISBN13: 9780966775600

A Collection of Cowboy Logic: A Look at the Lighter Side of Going Broke, Raising Cattle, and Living on the Prairie

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

Some may consider pairing the words "cowboy" and "logic" as oxymoronic as putting together terms like "jumbo shrimp," a "plastic glass" or "deafening silence." The logic of living with a bunch of... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Ag humor with a cowboy hat. . .

Ryan Taylor is a fourth generation rancher near the small town of Towner (pop. 867) in north-central North Dakota. In his 20s and unmarried, when the material in this book was written, Taylor is a columnist for Ag Week, commenting with tongue in cheek on the ironies and oddities of modern-day ranching. The 190+ short columns collected between these covers reflect on nearly any subject likely to cross the mind of a thoughtful rancher or farmer while cutting hay, fixing fence, or mucking out the barn. A frequent theme is the negative economics of balancing the costs of operation against invariably falling farm prices. And he frequently considers alternative forms of income, weighing in, for instance, on the subject of Rocky Mountain oysters, which if marketed as a high-priced gourmet food, like caviar, could make up for what little the rest of the calf is worth on the market. We accompany him on trips to farm auctions in hopes of finding an old tractor or hay baler with some life left in it. We consider with him the many uses for vice grip wrenches (which also make great wedding gifts, he argues). There's a discussion of the effect of rainy weather on the many shapes that a hayfield can take as he dodges around the wet spots. There's a rumination on the difficulty of wiping out the evil weed, spurge. And so on. Readers familiar with the trials and tribulations of making a living from ranching or farming will find the author wryly entertaining. For other readers, his book also offers an insight into a rural frame of mind in the late 20th century, its values, beliefs, and concerns, not to mention its politics and somewhat jaundiced view of government, bureaucracy, and city folk. In that regard, Taylor is a direct descendant of Will Rogers. In his public speaking engagements (he studied mass communications in college), he even does rope tricks.
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