For the past few months, I've been busy working on a series with a good friend about the pony express. This month saw the release of my first book in the series. The express lasted an extremely short time, only 19 months of operation. Yet, it captured the hearts and minds of the people then and today.
Who were the men of the express? To be honest, most were mere boys. Young, lanky, kids would have been lighter weight for their horses to carry. The trip of 1,900 miles done is shifts of around changing horses every 10 miles or so.
One of the most famous riders was no other than William F. Cody who rode for the express when he was ony 15 years of age. On one trip, he crossed the territory between Red Buttes Station to Rocky Ridge Station and back, a distance of 322 miles, when his relief rider was found dead. This was one of the most dangerous sections of the entire trail and was completed in 21 hours and 40 minutes. Twenty-one horses were required to complete his ride.
Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=6937430
Be sure to check out Always, Clay on Amazon and ride along with author Reina Torres and myself as we bring adventure and romance to the riders of Three Rivers Station.
amazon.com/dp/B0731ZDNC7/
Until next time.... Nan
Tuesday, June 27, 2017
Friday, June 23, 2017
SILVER MINING TERMS-Part 1
My
first novella in the new Sweethearts of Jubilee Springs series was
recently published. The setting for this novel takes place high in the Colorado
mountains and involves a silver mining town.
Silver
mining?
For
my Eastern Sierra Brides 1884
series, I have been writing about gold mining. That is what I have researched.
Although I know often gold and silver were (and still are) found in the same
localities—often the same mines, I didn’t know much about silver mining.
For
starters, I thought I would gather a few mining terms. Some pertain to silver
mining specifically, others are for mining in general. Silver mining in our
hypothetical town of Jubilee Springs was hard rock mining and hard rock mining
of any ore often involved the same or similar processes. So, here we go with A
through L for your reading education, if not enjoyment.
Adit at Nevada's Lucky Tiger Mine |
Adit - An entrance to a mine,
generally a horizontal tunnel.
Amalgam - Gold or silver combined with
quicksilver
Arastra - A mill, consisting of one or
more large stones dragged around on a circular bed, used to grind ore. A horse,
mule or humans provided the power.
Arastra |
Argentiferous - Bearing or producing silver.
Assaying - Finding the percentage of a
given metal in ore or bullion.
Base
Bullion -
Precious metals contained in lead.
Breasting
Ore - Taking
ore from the face, breast or end of a tunnel. Bullion. - Precious metals, gold
and silver, etc., not coined.
Carbonate - A geological
formation which carries silver ore, and from 5 to 70 per cent. of lead.
Chlorides - A compound of
chlorine and silver.
Crosscut - A horizontal tunnel driven
perpendicular to the main direction of a vein.
Diluvium - A deposit of superficial sand,
loam, gravel, pebbles, etc.
Drift - A horizontal passage
underground that is .excavated along a rich vein of ore. Used in hard rock
mining.
Dump, or mine tailings |
Dump - The pile of ore or debris
taken from mines, or tailings from sluicing.
Face - End of level or tunnel against
the ore or rock.
Gangue - The worthless rock in a vein
which holds valuable metals.
Gash Vein - A vein wide above and narrow
below.
Hanging
Wall - The
layer of rock or wall over a lode.
Miner and ore cart - hard rock mining |
Hard Rock
Mine - A
tunnel that is dug into solid rock for the sole purpose of finding valuable or
precious rocks, minerals, or metals.
High
Grade Ore - Ore
which runs more silver than twenty ounces to the ton, with 50 or more per cent
of lead.
Hill
Claims -
Minerals found in or under a hill.
Horse - A mass of rock matter
occurring in or between the branches of a vein.
Kibble |
Kibble - Iron Cornish bucket used to
hoist ore and miners to the surface.
Level - A tunnel cut on the vein from
the main tunnel. A drift.
Ledge - A vein or lode.
Lode - gold vein in Blue Ribbon Mine, AK |
Lode - A metallic vein.
Low Grade
Ore - Ore
which runs below twenty ounces of silver to the ton, fifty per cent of the ton
being lead.
Here is
the book description for my first novella in the Sweethearts of Jubilee Springs
series,
Aaron Brinks, son of the Jubilee Springs
mercantile owners, has been living in a small room above his parents’ store
even though he is employed at the Prosperity Mine. When the mine owners
announce they have contacted a mail order bride agency, and will allot company
houses to the first ten miners who choose a bride and pay her way, he decides
it is time for a house of his own.
Shy Andrea Draper must escape her father’s
ranch. Her father has discouraged all potential suitors because he does not want
to lose his unpaid housekeeper, laundress, and the cook for him and his men.
Then there is the problem of Lloyd McCreary, her father’s foreman.
Learning her friend intends to go to
Jubilee Springs as a mail order bride, going with her seems Andrea’s only
option for escape. She agrees to marry Aaron even though she knows she is not
worthy to be any man’s wife. While trying to convince him to be married in name
only until he gains title to his house, at which time they can annul the
marriage, Andrea’s father shows up to drag her home against her will.
Learning what he
is up against, Aaron must decide if it is just the house he wants, or if he
wants Andrea.
Also,
please follow Sweethearts of Jubilee Springs on Amazon to find all the books in the series,
including my second book, Cat’s Meow, which is now on preorder and due
to be published July 4th.
Source: Legends of America, Glossary of Mining Terms
Wednesday, June 21, 2017
Let's Have a Ball!
The kind of ball I’m talking about are Rocky
Mountain Oysters, also known as Prairie Oysters, Cowboy Caviar, dusted nuts or just
plain ol’ calf fries. For most people
(let’s call ’em non-westerners perhaps?) the thought of eating calf testes does
not sit well, but neither, for some, does eating sweetbreads, liver, venison
or—banish the thought!—horsemeat as in France.
Cowboys out on the range were not quite so picky; they knew that every
edible part of the calf was not to be wasted as a food source. And what does one do with buckets upon
buckets of the by-product of castration?
For baby bulls to become meaty, hefty steers, manageable and likely to
bring in a good price, well, castration was a necessity. And we’re not going to
just throw away those meaty little…er…balls,
now are we?
But
these tasty testes are not just a food source. They’ve become a cause for
celebration, literally a Ball about balls.
Several festivals now take place throughout the west celebrating this
delicacy. Down in Nevada where round-up
might come earlier, due to the comparatively milder weather, than further north
in the Rockys, a festival is combined with a St. Patrick’s Day Parade in March
in Virginia City. Aspen, CO, leaves
their Rocky Mt. Oyster Festival and BBQ for September, while the most famous of
them all, the Testicle Festival or TestyFesty, in Clinton, MT, takes place
during August.
While
I’ve never personally attended any of the above, I understand that the
TestyFesty is something of a bikers’ bash. It includes a woman’s hot oil
wrestling competition, a wet T-shirt clash, a man’s ‘biggest balls’ contest
(in wet underwear—the mind truly boggles) and, most naturally, an eating
competition of this famous food. Since
I’ve seen on the local news in NY people choking down hot dogs in a competition
at Coney Island, I can only imagine what takes place in Clinton—a frat party on
steroids.
I haven’t attended any of the above but I have eaten Rocky Mt.
Oysters. The taste has been compared to
many things but my first impression was chicken nuggets. The ‘oyster’ name comes from their sliminess
prior to cooking, not their taste. The crop is gathered at branding time, when
vaccinating, ear marking and castrating are done. Then hand that bucket over to your chef. He or
she, like a fine surgeon, has to make an incision to separate the first
membrane or outer skin away, afterwards soaking the balls in water for an
hour. Some cooks use warm water, some
cold. At this stage, he or she will make
a second incision and remove the last membrane, popping the oyster into waiting
batter.
At
the Cottonwood Ranch in Wells, NV, where I had my first taste of Rocky Mt.
Oysters, Chef Amber’s recipe included 1 Cup of flour, 2 tsps of garlic powder, tsp.
salt, tsp. pepper, and tsp. of seasoning salt; she fries in peanut oil for 8
minutes and serves with ketchup and other condiments. I should think a nice combination of flour
and cornmeal might make for a crisper outside, and fresh garlic would be a
bonus along with spicy cocktail sauce, Sirracha, Tabasco or similar because,
basically, these balls are pretty dang bland.
Enjoy!
And I hope you may
also enjoy my latest story contained in the boxed set, A Cowboy to Keep…
Catch a cowboy …
Keep a cowboy …
Don’t miss this
great collection from USA Today, Amazon
Bestselling, and Award-Winning authors!! Available at https://www.amazon.com/Cowboy-Keep-Contemporary-Western-Collection-ebook/dp/B072869SGV/
THE LEGEND OF BAD
MOON RISING by Carra Copelin
Sheriff Ben
Hammond is finally over the woman who shattered his heart, but when Dinah Horne
suddenly returns, can he ignore the passion still burning bright between them?
CITY BOY, COUNTRY
HEART by Andrea Downing
Trading horses for
subways for two years seemed like a good idea to cowboy Chay Ridgway, but can
city girl K.C. Daniels keep a rein on his country heart?
BLUE SAGE by
Kristy McCaffrey
Archaeologist
Audrey Driggs rolls off a mountain and lands at the feet of rugged cowboy
Braden Delaney. Together, they’ll uncover a long-lost secret.
THE DRIFTER’S KISS
by Devon McKay
Determined to take
back what belongs to her, Addison Reed will do anything. Even trust a complete
stranger.
HER MAN by Hildie
McQueen
Deputy Mark Hunter
falls for Eliza Brock during a murder investigation. Is it fate or bad luck,
especially when she may be involved?
BORDER ROMANCE by
Hebby Roman
Widow Leticia
Villarreal wants to establish a horse-racing stable and old acquaintance John
Clay Laidlaw offers to help. But can she trust him with her business and her
heart?
PHOENIX HEAT by
Patti Sherry-Crews
After losing her
fiancé and her New York City business, Harper Donovan returns to Arizona and
meets cowboy Frank Flynn. Will his past and their differences extinguish the
heat between them?
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