Cassetta Critter Care Horse Motel

Cassetta Critter Care Horse Motel http://www.horsemotel.com/NewMexico.html

to make a reservation , call 6037314956 Hi :) happy to help you on your journey.

Harry Cassetta is the owner/operator. He doesn’t do internet, so your best bet is to call him directly � (603) 731-4956

Our box stalls are a roomy 12'x12', with bedding and water for $25 per night. The turn out pens will comfortably hold several horses or just one for $20 each per night. our electric service is $15 per night, with four 30 amp, one 50 amp, and two 110 amp plugs. Our driveway is

not huge, but will accomodate 5 to 7 long trailers with careful driving. Long term and Lay-up board is $75 per week, rough care (you clean).

Isn’t this a great photo?
09/08/2023

Isn’t this a great photo?

Dolly Roberts sent this to me from last weeks super moon. What a cool shot! Classic Oklahoma!

Ridge Carpenter with an amazing pic!

08/06/2023

I cant do this at all, but i can back my truck through an obstacle course lol

07/09/2023

This is amazing

Have a great day, folks. Remember to call Harry to make your reservation
06/27/2023

Have a great day, folks. Remember to call Harry to make your reservation

This is cool
04/29/2022

This is cool

When this picture was taken, likely in early September of 1873, these three men were the most famous westerners alive. Seated on the right is Buffalo Bill Cody, who earned his name as the greatest buffalo hunter alive before rising to fame as a scout for the United States Army. Across the table sits Wild Bill Hickok, the deadliest gunslinger of his day and perhaps the most fabled lawman in American history. And behind these two men, with his right hand resting familiarly on Wild Bill's shoulder, stands Texas Jack Omohundro.

Omohundro hadn't been a buffalo hunter or a lawman in Kansas cow towns. Texas Jack was a cowboy. The Earl of Dunraven, who hunted with both Texas Jack and Buffalo Bill, wrote:

"Buffalo Bill had always been in Government employ as a scout, but Texas Jack had been a cowboy, one of the old-time breed of men who drove herds of cattle from way down South to Northern markets for weeks and months, through a country infested by Indians and white cattle thieves."

When these three men toured as The Scouts of the Plains, audiences who rushed to their local theaters to catch a glimpse of their heroes were gladly spending their hard-earned money to see the West's most famous scout, its most famous lawman, and its most famous cowboy together on stage. They were so famous that nearly 150 years after they posed for this picture they still shape our stories of the American West. Buffalo Bill became the most famous American, and perhaps the most famous person full stop, during his own lifetime. His Wild West show performed before thousands on both sides of the Atlantic, shaping forever the public perception of the West in his own image. Wild Bill was struck down by an assassin's bullet, but his name lives on, inspiring countless books, movies, television shows, and trips to the small South Dakota town of Deadwood where Hickok was killed and is buried.

Texas Jack didn't live long enough to ensure his name would be remembered forever and he didn't "die with his boots on" to go down in history. But his life and his legacy as America's first famous cowboy, the man who introduced the lasso act to the stage and rode with Pawnee warriors across the western prairie, has influenced every cowboy story that followed. From Owen Wister's The Virginian to Louis L'amour's Hondo, from Tom Mix to Cary Grant, from Clint Eastwood's Man With No Name to John Wayne's Ethan Edwards—every cowboy has been cast in the mold of Texas Jack.

______________________________

Texas Jack's story has never been fully told. Until now. Texas Jack: America's First Cowboy Star by Matthew Kerns tells the true story of the Virginia boy who became a Texas cattleman, of the Confederate spy who scouted for the US Army, of the cowboy who became a star. Julia Bricklin, author of The Notorious Life of Ned Buntline, calls it a "groundbreaking work [that] brings to light a lesser-known but vitally important figure in any history of American pop culture...Kerns meticulously reconstructs the fascinating—if sadly shortened—life of Texas Jack Omohundro. What emerges is the story of the man who actually was the driving force behind Buffalo Bill's decision to go into show business, and perhaps was too authentic to shine as brightly as Cody through the ages. Until now."

Texas Jack: America's First Cowboy Star by Matthew Kerns, available at:

Amazon - https://amzn.to/33ep4KI
Barnes & Noble - https://bit.ly/3h1s9ps
Bookshop - https://bit.ly/3gZg701

Signed and inscribed first edition copies of the book, as well as the Wild West magazine with my Texas Jack cover story, are available at no additional charge at:

https://www.dimelibrary.com/shop

12/24/2019

Even Santa needs a plan "B"

Address

1400 E Main Street
Tucumcari, NM
88401

Telephone

+16037314956

Website

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