Cowboy &
Cowgirl - Irons
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Branding livestock is an essential
piece of work performed by ranchers and buckaroos. A brand is
the special mark or identifying design owned by a rancher and
used in registering and identifying his cattle and horses. A
branding iron is the handmade iron or steel tool that applies
the mark to the beast. The end with the owner's brand is pressed
against the side of the animal after being heated to red hot
in a fire in the corral. The earliest "irons," as
they are called in Nevada, were simple initials, figures, or
numbers, but the designs grew intricate and ingenious as generations
passed and conflicts arose over duplications of simple figures.
The iron designs are recorded in a statewide brand book published
by the Nevada Department of Agriculture, which often provides
the ultimate evidence of ownership in disputes. The brands are
illustrated, previous owners are listed, and the location of
the mark on the animal is given. Brand books also indicate other
ownership marks--wattles and ear notches. "Irons"
are serious business. |
Each community has its own state-operated and employed brand inspector,
often a rancher who inspects cattle on a part-time basis. The inspector
is charged with overseeing the shipment of certified cattle by ensuring
proper ownership; he sometimes arbitrates in brand identification
problems. Identification of brands on cattle is usually simple,
but it can be difficult if the irons were applied carelessly or
improperly. When the same brand is held by different ranchers, for
various reasons, it must be applied on specific sides or parts of
the cattle to keep things straight.
Cattle branding is done mainly at two times of the year, in the
spring after calving and in the fall after the roundup and driving
the herd back to the home ranch for winter. The fall branding serves
to locate and mark any calves born in the summer range or yearlings
missed in the spring work. The work is traditionally done "outside"
by roping the cows from horseback, throwing them, and slapping the
hot iron on. It is a chore relished by many buckaroos.
Branding at Grayson Ranch, Quinn River Line Camp, 1978
Some ranchers now use "squeeze chutes" (metal contraptions
that are placed at a corner of a corral or pen to trap and hold
the cow firmly while the iron is applied) and the latest electric
branders. Other important tasks are performed at the same time as
branding: castration, ear marking, wattling, dehorning, and the
administration of vaccinations, medicine, or vitamin serums with
modern injection guns. All six pieces of work can be done in quick
succession by several men working as a team. One person ropes and
throws the cow and holds the rope taut. A second person lops a piece
of ear off with a pocket knife while holding the cow's head down
with one knee. That "knife man" (man or women) can then
move around to accomplish castration (if necessary) and also cut
the wattle mark. In ear marking, a crop, slit, split, or bob of
the cow's ear is made with the penknife blade, and portions of the
ear are removed or cut according to the established precedent in
the brand book. The wattle is a special knife cut on the fatty portion
of the cow's neck, jaw, or brisket area; the cut hide heals and
hangs down in a certain position. Like the iron itself, ear mark
styles and wattles are considered a rancher's property and can be
used by other ranchers only if purchased and duly recorded with
the state brand inspector's office. Ear marks and wattles are efficient
identification methods in foul weather, under dusty conditions,
or when cows are bunched up together. The law requires marking cattle
with branding irons, and the customary legal system based on traditional
usage since the middle of the nineteenth century calls for ear notching
and wattling. Some ranchers use modern plastic tags secured to the
cow's ear instead of the knife cut; the tags come in different colors
and carry numbers and identification codes. All ranchers brand cattle,
and most ranchers brand their horses too. Some ranchers also ear
mark and wattle their cattle.
There are conventions in brand choice and design based on practicality
and economy. A design should not blotch, so the iron or steel that
will touch the cow's hide has to be a certain thickness, about one-eighth
to one-quarter inch. Thinner irons would slice through the hide
and injure the animal, and wider irons would dull the design. A
plain design further reduces the blotching problem. The best iron
designs are simply but ingeniously created to represent the owner's
ranch or name. Good brands are also simple enough to discourage
thieves and rustlers from being tempted to change the mark with
"running irons." Running irons are kept by ranchers and
used to mark strays when necessary, or to put a neighbor's brand
on his strays that drift into the wrong herd. In addition, some
now use "year irons," which apply a single digit brand
indicating the year; far example, "4" indicates 1974,
"9" indicates 1979.
Irons are read from top to bottom, left to right, and from outside
in. Many irons are easy to read, like the Stewarts' 96 iron, a pioneer
brand Mr. Stewart's grandfather bought from Aaron Denio when they
took over the Denio ranch adjoining on the south. "The 96"
is a major family ranch in Paradise, and the iron is well known
throughout the Great Basin. Increasing in complexity are irons that
have a "bar," "slash," "bench," "rocker,"
"circle," "three-quarter circle," "quarter
circle," "wings," "box," "diamond,"
"rafter," and other conventional symbols that are attached
in various ways to the core of the brand--an initial, a number,
a figure.
In a hypothetical case of iron design, the first pioneer who stakes
out the land and starts building the ranch might simply use his
last initial--say, M. He finds that something more is necessary,
since a new ranch over the mountain has the same iron, and furthermore
a ranch in the next county has the W iron. Careless or inexperienced
hands have been known inadvertently to apply his M iron upside down
in the flurry and confusion of the branding activities. So he adds
a rafter over the initial, creating the Rafter M Iron: Later, one
of his sons decides to go into the cattle business and wants to
register his own brand but stay on the home ranch with the family
elders and eventually take over the operation when the old man retires.
So, the young man registers his own iron, which he calls the Diamond
M: made by welding another piece of iron onto the rafter. One or
two additions are usually the limit before completely new irons
are concocted. Ranchers may own several irons at once, since neighbors
and other herds are occasionally bought out and added.
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Branding livestock is an essential
piece of work performed by ranchers and buckaroos. A brand is
the special mark or identifying design owned by a rancher and
used in registering and identifying his cattle and horses. A
branding iron is the handmade iron or steel tool that applies
the mark to the beast. The end with the owner's brand is pressed
against the side of the animal after being heated to red hot
in a fire in the corral. The earliest "irons," as
they are called in Nevada, were simple initials, figures, or
numbers, but the designs grew intricate and ingenious as generations
passed and conflicts arose over duplications of simple figures.
The iron designs are recorded in a statewide brand book published
by the Nevada Department of Agriculture, which often provides
the ultimate evidence of ownership in disputes. The brands are
illustrated, previous owners are listed, and the location of
the mark on the animal is given. Brand books also indicate other
ownership marks--wattles and ear notches. "Irons"
are serious business. |
Now owned by the Nevada First Corporation, this iron is called
the "Circle A" locally and was registered by an early
cattle corporation, Abel and Curtner. Its full name is "Quarter
Circle A." It is thought that the brand was originally called
Compass, but there was some conflict with local Masons over its
use, so it began to be called "Circle A." It is one of
those irons with a common name that does not quite match the symbol
itself.
The 7 U P iron is well-known as the Boggio brand, and Joe Boggio's
son Harold now owns it. Even when an iron passes down within the
same family, the symbol is re-registered with the state.
Seven H L Combined, an original 1864 iron of the Lye brothers,
is now owned by Keith and Jean Thomas who operate the venerable
pioneer Lye ranch at the head of Indian Creek.
C Bar, the iron owned by Bob Cassinelli and his sons, Bob, Pete,
Dan, and Don.
Loui Cerri's Inverted T N T Combined.
Stan and Janice M. Klaumann's Four R Combined.
Quartercircle Hanging H, owned by Elizabeth Miller.
The 101, a pioneer brand invented by the patriarch of a German
family, Gerhard Miller, Sr. The 101 is a popular iron in the West,
but there is no connection between this one and the 101 Ranch in
Oklahoma, founded in the 1890s by Col. George Miller. The Paradise
Valley 101 was recently sold by Alvin E. and Anesita E. Miller to
a young rancher from Turlock, California, Steve Lucas.
Carlo A. Recanzone of the pioneer Home Ranch, begun in 1864, has
the Open A 9, which he registered in 1939 when he took principal
leadership of the family operation.
Carlo's son, Carlo J. (Butch) Recanzone registered his iron with
a symbol that cleverly coincides with his father's brand, to make
the band closer and make identification of Recanzone stock simple.
He calls it the 6 V.
Keystone, owned by Lyman W. Schwartz, grandson of pioneer businessman
and rancher Robert Schwartz, a German immigrant.
The 96 iron used by the Stewart family on 96 Ranch cattle.
Several of the irons can be read correctly upside down, making
the concentrated work of cattle branding a bit less troublesome:
the 101, the 96, the Inverted T N T Combined, the Seven H L Combined,
Fred and Robert Buckingham's Reverse B B Combined (left), and Jose
Gastañaga's Seven X L (right).
A surprisingly ancient custom (performed by Egyptians four thousand
years ago and spread throughout the globe), branding cattle and
horses is of extreme importance in the range cattle industry. It
is not required on ranches and farms where the herd is kept inside
fenced lots and controlled pastures, but the use of the iron is
mandatory in the West where cattle graze out on the range. It is
a rigidly enforced custom that answers both official legal orders
and the unofficial, traditional legal system within the community.
The official code combined with the unwritten laws of custom help
keep life peaceful and orderly. It is hard to imagine the buckaroo
life and work without the branding scene. |