What was it like for cowboys back in the western times?
Facebook: www.facebook.com/rhondaleecarver.author/
Instagram: www.instagram.com/rhondaleecarver/
BookBub: www.bookbub.com/profile/rhonda-lee-carver
Facebook: www.facebook.com/rhondaleecarver.author/
Instagram: www.instagram.com/rhondaleecarver/
BookBub: www.bookbub.com/profile/rhonda-lee-carver
Post (C) Doris McCraw
aka Angela Raines
![]() |
| Image (C) Doris McCraw |
April is National Poetry Month. In honor of this, it seemed appropriate to share some of the more popular poems from the 1800s.
Christina Rossetti is a favorite of mine. Here is her poem 'Echo'
Echo
Sometimes with the Heart
Seldom with the Soul
Scarcer once with the Might
Few - love at all.
Anytime you speak about poets of the 1800s, you usually include Tennyson. Here is a poem some of you may recognize:
Lullaby - Poem by Alfred Lord Tennyson
I will leave you with a favorite of mine from Helen Hunt Jackson:
Last Words
Dear hearts, whose love has been so sweet to know,
That I am looking backward as I go,
Am lingering while I haste, and in this rain
Of tears of joy am mingling tears of pain;
Do not adorn with costly shrub, or tree,
Or flower, the little grave which shelters me.
Let the wild wind-sown seeds grow up unharmed,
And back and forth all summer, unalarmed,
Let all the tiny, busy creatures creep;
Let the sweet grass its last year's tangles keep;
And when, remembering me, you come some day
And stand there, speak no praise, but only say,
" How she loved us'! 'Twas that which made her dear! "
Those are the words that I shall joy to hear.
Here's to the beauty of poetry. When you get a moment, stop by and read some of the other poets who were creating pictures and emotions with words. Poetry was enjoyed by many, and you might be surprised by who was writing and what they wrote about.
Until next time.
Doris Gardner-McCraw
Author, Speaker, Historian
Specializing in Colorado and Women's History
Due to work issues, Amanda A Brooks is taking a leave of absence. She will return to blogging June 8th. Should something change, I will let you know.
Thank you,
Julie
A pan of biscuit dough rests inside a small tin oven, propped carefully in front of the flames. There is no stove, no kitchen—only ingenuity and necessity. For many early settlers, this simple device, known as a reflector oven, made baking on the frontier possible.
While browsing the Internet for information about cooking tools
early settlers used, I happened upon the reflector oven. Curious, I had to
learn more.
The portable tin reflector oven appeared in America during
the second half of the 1700s. Also known as a “tin kitchen” or “tin oven,” it was
likely adapted from European open-hearth cooking. These ovens were typically
made of tinplate or sheet iron and had three enclosed sides, with the fourth
side left open to face the fire. They came in various sizes, depending on what the
user wants to cook.
During Westward Expansion, the reflector oven was ideal for settlers, traders, and soldiers because it only required a campfire. With it, the cook could bake breads and cakes on the trail.
By the mid-1800s, reflector ovens were a standard part of
rural American homes, and their design became more refined. Innovations included
folding sides, multiple racks, and polished interiors to improve heat
reflection and usability.
The tin kitchen represents the resourcefulness of early
American settlers. This oven was especially popular in Appalachia, the
Midwest frontier, and logging and mining camps.
In the late 1800s and early 1900s, as cast-iron stoves became more widely available, reflector ovens fell out of everyday household use. However, they never fully disappeared. Today, their continued use by campers and backpackers connects modern outdoor enthusiasts with early American traditions.
Based on historical sources about early American cooking
tools.
https://americanhistory.si.edu/collections/object/nmah_309723
On this day in 1805, the Lewis and Clark expedition left its camp among the Mandan tribe and resumed the journey West.



By Kristy McCaffrey
Prairie falcons are medium-sized falcons similar to peregrines located in Western North America. They might be better called desert falcons from their need for open space and arid dry habitats.
They’re scrappy survivalists, with females much larger than
males. They don’t like human interaction much but are considered an entry level
bird for falconry. They're smart but don’t catch on to routine well if
training has been lacking. But when trained well, they’re incredible hunters—aggressive,
agile, and determined.
![]() |
| Prairie Falcon (courtesy of Deposit Photos) |
Proper training includes providing abundant food (to avoid developing the habit of screaming for food) and extensive "manning" (close contact and handling). Unlike the peregrine, they do not respond well to training with the swung lure, as missing the lure brings out their impatience. Teaching prairie falcons to climb and "wait on" to stoop on game is best accomplished by a reward system of flushing game or serving live birds such as pigeons for the falcon to chase when the falcon has assumed the proper position several hundred feet or more above the falconer.
The prairie falcon's eagerness to hunt and chase requires it
to be patiently taught that when it assumes the proper waiting on position the
falconer can be trusted to reliably flush game. As the falcon comes to
understand this, it learns to hunt as an effective team with the falconer.
* * * * *
In my upcoming book, The Falcon, the heroine is trying to raise a prairie falcon she found as a fledgling.
Josie Ryan’s connection to Texas runs deep, from the land to an almost preternatural kinship with the animals in the wild. This bond has led her to the edge of life and death, from saving a boy caught in a fire when she was eleven years old to being struck by lightning to a mountain lion attack that almost ended her life. The discovery of an abandoned falcon chick leads to a fierce attachment, but with only intuition to guide her, Josie struggles to train the wildest creature she’s ever encountered. When she learns of a man who could help, she’s determined to gain an introduction.
Mateo Almirón, El Halconero—The Falconer—and Argentine gaucho, is tasked with delivering two prized purebred Criollo mares to Matt Ryan, a man whose reputation casts a long shadow. Years ago, Ryan saved the life of Mateo’s father, and the horses will settle the longstanding debt, but when the exchange goes wrong, Mateo is entrusted with protecting Ryan’s daughter, Josie. Now Mateo and Josie must hide in the mountains of Northern Mexico where stories abound of Josie’s mother, a woman who lived among the Comanche and rose from the dead.
But in a place alive with superstition, Josie and her untamed falcon will give rise to a new legend …
Josie is the youngest child of Matt and Molly from THE WREN.
* * * * *
(It will also be available at Kobo, Google Play Books, and in paperback on release day.)
Website | Facebook | Instagram | TikTok | Newsletter
Every time travel romance needs a catalyst:
a magical, mystical, or completely unexplained force that rips the characters
out of their timeline and drops them into another.
Why did I decide to write time travel?
Because Time for
Love by Constance O’Day
Flannery kept me up all night reading. A woman gets dental work done inside
what used to be a train depot. A mysterious force ignites, and suddenly she’s
in 1876 and mistaken for a mail-order bride.
I was hooked.
Years later, after plenty of research, I wrote Time to Save a Cowboy.
My heroine travels back to 1890, triggered by two things: an antique garnet ring and an old
locomotive.
Outlander by Diana Gabaldon
While wearing an antique jeweled watch, the humming stones of a Scotland ruins
pull Claire back to 1743.
A Highlander for Hannah by Mary Warren
A love spell meant to find “the one” accidentally summons an 18th-century
Scottish Highlander.
The Seven Year Slip by Ashley Poston
A hidden compartment in inherited furniture transports the heroine to seven
years in the past.
A Love Song for Ricki Wilde by Tia Williams
A magical Harlem garden and a haunted piano bring a handsome Renaissance man
across time.
My favorite part—the history.
For Time
to Save a Cowboy, I chose 1890 Hesperia, California and went deep. I discovered that the hotel had running
water, rare for the time, and learned about the Los Flores Ranch. I even
visited the land while it was still a working ranch.
In the past few years, that property had been
replaced with houses.
Time may move on … but in stories, love always
finds a way back. 💕