Bill
Kane- A Cowboy’s Cowboy
It was still dark outside. Inside the Spanish Ranch
cookhouse, the cowboys lingered silently over their last cup
of coffee and listened to the sounds of the horse wrangler
and the saddle horse cavvy coming to the “ropes.” The door
opened and in stepped Bill Kane, Cowboss. He called out,
“Come on, Cowboys! I’m going to rope you a horse.” The
cowboys followed him outside, some dry-mouthed with
anticipation of their morning’s mount, most with muscles
aching from yesterday’s work. Kane was an imposing figure in
the faint dawn light as he stood inside the “ropes”
un-coiling his horse rope.
So began many mornings on the Spanish Ranch for twenty-eight
years while Kane was the cowboss. Bill Kane has been gone
from Northeastern Nevada for a number of years, but, his
reputation lives on. Even today, if you say, “Kane” around
most working cowboys in Elko County, they know and respect
the name.
The early years
Bill Kane was born in Elko, Nevada in 1942. His early
childhood was spent horseback around cows and cowboys. When
Bill was in the sixth grade, he “rep’d” for his Dad during
the summer on the Moffat Wagon in Northern Elko County. Kane
moved with his family and their cattle around southern
Idaho, and finally to the Doheny Ranch in the North Fork
area in Northern Elko County.
Bill attended high school in Elko. During three summers
while he was in school, he took in outside colts to ride and
cowboyed for the Marvel’s 25 Ranch Wagon, out of Battle
Mountain. After high school, he went to cowboy for Willis
Packer’s Ranch near Tuscarora.
In 1961, Bill hired on “riding broncos” for the historic
Spanish Ranch that belonged to the Ellison Ranching Company,
headquartered in Independence Valley. The horses on this
ranch were halter broke after they were weaned, castrated
and branded as yearlings, then turned out, and many of these
ranch geldings were not started under saddle until they were
5 or 6 years old. Riding this age-class of horse for the
first time was not for the faint of heart and Kane was good
at it.
The Spanish Ranch, located in Elko and Lander counties, was
one of the largest ranches in the Great Basin at that time,
covering over 300 square miles. The ranch ran many thousands
of cattle and sheep over a huge, remote country that went
from the salt-sage alkali flats to alpine mountain meadows.
Spanish
Ranch Cowboss
When Bill was 20 years old, General Manager Stanley Ellison
gave him the job of Spanish Ranch Cowboss. Mr. Ellison could
see that there was something special about Bill Kane around
men, horses, and cattle. Stanley Ellison’s hunch proved
correct and Kane proved to be the right choice for Cowboss.
He could get the cattle work done even though he was
constantly dealing with an inexperienced, ever-changing
cowboy crew and he also excelled at a number of other duties
that were needed around the ranch, proving himself a
valuable employee.
In 1966, Bill married Marie Ellison, the boss’s daughter,
and they raised four children.
Bill says about his early years, “I have cowboyed as long as
I can remember and was lucky enough to be around some great
cowboys when I was growing up. My Dad was my first teacher
and a good cowboy, as was my grandfather. I learned the ways
of cattle, horses and ropes on the ‘Big Wagon Outfits’ from
men such as Tom and John Marvel, Charlie Chapin, Tom and Jim
Dorrance, Ray Hunt, Charley Van Norman, Stanley Ellison and
many others. I had a great desire to succeed in the cowboy
world, so I tried to watch and learn as I rode with these
great stockman and horse hands.”
Bill said, “I was around a lot of cowboys in my 28 years of
being cowboss on this ranch and working on other ranches.
The best all-around cowboy that I ever saw was Tom Marvel,
he taught me a lot.”
When asked about Kane, Tom Marvel, well-respected Nevada
horseman and cattleman, said, “Bill Kane came to cowboy for
us on the 25 Wagon out of Battle Mountain when he was 16
years old. He had already developed many cowboy skills with
horses and ropes before he came to work. He was wild in his
younger days, but was wild in a good way. He wanted to learn
the cowboy game and he did.”
When Kane took over the cowboss job on the Spanish Ranch,
they ran two wagons during branding in the early summer
months. One wagon started out of Squaw Valley on the west
end and Kane ran the other wagon out of the Spanish Ranch
Headquarters over 60 miles to the east. These wagons would
be out for several months, but they seldom mixed cowboys and
cattle. There were cowboys working on one wagon that never
saw who was working on the other wagon.
The
Horses
The ranch kept around 500 head of horses and started around
30 colts each year for replacements. For the most part,
these Pitchfork-branded horses were not registered. They
were a Thoroughbred-type grade horse with some draft blood.
They were a Spanish Ranch-bred big-circle horse that could
make the miles in this vast country and still have enough
left to get you back to camp that night. The ranch had
several outside stud bands from which they selected
replacement saddle and draft horses. In those days, they
were feeding livestock with teams in the winter months, so
they also had a number of draft horses, starting several new
feed teams each winter.
The Wagon
Kane said, “The wagons would pull out in mid-May and we
would stay out until around July 4. Then we would come in to
the headquarters and cowboy out of there. One year I ran the
entire Spanish Ranch with one wagon because the cowboss at
Squaw Valley quit in the middle of branding season. I would
usually keep 8 to 10 cowboys and a cook on the wagon. All
the cowboys slept in tepee tents. Fresh horses for the day
were roped at the ‘ropes’ each morning after the horse
wrangler brought the cavey in. I assigned each cowboy 8 to
12 horses for his string. There were about 125 horses in the
wagon cavey to make up the cowboys’ saddle horse strings.”
In those days, the ranch hired a number of Indian cowboys
from The Paiute/Shoshone Reservation near Owyhee, Nevada.
Bill said, “These Indian boys could sure rope. We would work
a country, brand up, and then move the wagon to a new camp
location that had water for our horse cavey and plenty of
sagebrush for a branding fire. We usually worked a country
branding calves for 4 or 5 days and then moved on.”
There were very few branding traps (corrals) to use on the
Spanish Ranch. Bill said, “We branded most calves in an
“open rodear” where the herd was held by the cowboys,
horseback, and the calves were roped by the back legs and
drug to the fire. We used a couple of men on the ground to
flank, vaccinate, earmark, castrate, and brand. We did not
head, and heel our smaller calves. Wasting two men roping
the same calf was too slow. We were there to get the
branding job completed in the shortest length of time and we
stayed with it until we were finished.”
The Cattle
The Spanish Ranch scattered out around 400 head of bulls
with their cows and calves. They would trail the bulls out
from the bull pasture near headquarters and place them with
groups of cows and calves after they had branded.
The Cowboys
At that time, there were no gooseneck horse trailers on the
ranch. Bill laughed, “Just as well, because these big-circle
horses probably wouldn’t have liked loading in a horse
trailer.” Kane and his crew rode their horses wherever they
went. The country was open with very few fences. Bill
continued, “We rode our horses on cows. That was the way it
had always been done on the Spanish Ranch – The Old Way.
Some of these young cowboys that stayed with me through
branding season never set their feet in anything but a
saddle stirrup during the time the wagon was out. The
advantages for the use of the wagon were that you camped
near your cattle and were ready to go in early morning when
it was cool and cattle worked better. There was no driving
miles in a pickup with a horse trailer to get to cattle.
Cowboys living on the wagon were around cattle and horses 24
hours a day and you made good cowboys and good horses that
way. There were few outside distractions cowboying on the
wagon. These men began to look and see what needed to be
done.”
In the fall, Bill and his cowboys would gather, work cows
and ship calves, cut out replacement heifers, gather bulls
and ride for remnant cattle. When winter approached, Bill
and his cowboys would get the feed teams trimmed up and fit
with their collars and harness getting ready for
winter-feeding. There was never much slack time on this big
outfit.
Today
Bill Kane, no doubt, handled more cows, horses and cowboys
than most people could ever imagine as cowboss on this
historic Nevada “big wagon” outfit. Kane is a true Nevada
cowboy legend.
Bill and his wife Marie left the Spanish Ranch after his
being the Cowboss for 28 years and moved to Eagle Point,
Oregon where they bought their own ranch. Today, Bill enjoys
his family, rides outside horses, helps his neighbors work
their cattle, makes McCarty ropes out of horse mane hair,
and raises and sells registered quarter horses. Bill said,
“I wanted to live where it never snows, and I found that
place.”
Mike Beck, noted horse clinician,
singer, and songwriter, says about Bill Kane:
“Sometimes you're lucky enough to be in the right place and
the right time, and you don't realize it till later in your
life because often you're too young and dumb when it's all
going down, but when I worked for Bill Kane at The Spanish
Ranch I did have a feeling that I was in a special place
working for a special man. No matter how hard the snow was
flyin' or how hot it was, or how big our circle was or how
many calves we had to brand, whatever, I never heard him
complain.
I was just barely licked off when I landed there and it's a
miracle I survived, but I did my best to please this man and
I think that's what got me through.
The Spanish Ranch wagon was my "Two Years Before The
Mast"..and Bill Kane was captain Ahab. I got alota songs out
of that experience and I wouldn't trade those times for
nothin'. In my minds eye I can still see him throwin' those
beautiful loops catchin' horses outta the cavey.....Poetry
in motion......”
Mike Beck
www.mikebeck.com
Famous Western and International
Photographer Kurt Markus recalls his days on the Spanish
Ranch Wagon:
“When
I started going to Elko and the ranches surrounding that
once buckaroo town in the early 80s, someone ought to have
warned me the land and its people were deeply addictive.
Elko felt like someplace else, a place not reflective of
America. Or, should I say, a place America bypassed sometime
early in the twentieth century.
It was no trick at all to connect with the ranch community
and get a feel who the players were. Anyone with any
interest at all could spend a few days tavern hopping,
making the circle between the Commercial, Stockman and Tiki
Lounge, and learn the names: The YP, the IL, the T Lazy S,
the Winecup, the Spanish Ranch. Of course there were
others--many fine, smaller family-run outfits--but if you
were a buckaroo with a bedroll and not afraid to roll
it--these were the ones you knew.
I had the privilege of spending a few days with the Spanish
Ranch's remarkable Bill Kane in the spring of 1983 while
their wagon was out, and for a day or two in the winter when
the sun was shining but the world and everything in it was
frozen solid. I'd been bouncing around the Great Basin a bit
by this time and I'd heard a few Bill Kane stories. Stories
you always hear about anyone who has spent enough time in
that cruel but beautiful country. Serious stories of
enduring great pain. Funny stories, sometimes with injury
involved, sometimes with a cook in the mix, sometimes for
reasons that were totally unexpected. Factual stories, even.
I'd noticed that the tone of the stories almost always
changed when the topic moved to Bill Kane. A certain reserve
took over. Less laughter I think. Bill Kane seemed a man
somewhat apart. Unfortunately for Bill, many of us thought,
he was not a drinker. Whatever might be said of Bill and the
Spanish Ranch, he, and the ranch, were not where you went
first if you were new to the area. No, you saved up your
courage before you asked Kane for a job. Or, you were a guy
who just didn't know any better, hadn't a clue as to who
Bill Kane was and what a typical day on a typical Spanish
Ranch horse might get you. As much as anything, you heard
about the Spanish Ranch horses. Big, snorty, tough, horses.
And the country. Probably the largest of the area ranches,
with not much in the way of fencing. A man could get dropped
off on a circle and think he'd been lost at sea.
Armed with all the stories I could handle, and not a little
of my own fear, I approached Bill for the opportunity to tag
along as he worked. He agreed. Come on out.
The rest of what I might say is likely to be anti climatic.
But instructive. For my short time with Bill was decidedly
relaxed, and, dare I say, fun. Fritz Merrick was Bill’s
“jigger” on the wagon then, both literally and figuratively,
and Fritz was everything Bill was not: relaxed and funny.
They were a nice combination. I got the chance to see Bill
Kane the legend and Bill Kane the man.
The legend was on view, twenty-four seven. He could ride
anything, and make it look easy. He could take a crew of
relatively green hands and get a day's work done in
conditions that would stupefy almost anyone else. If he ever
raised his voice, or gave evidence of a temper, I never saw
it. Lord knows, surely his patience was tested.
I'm not even tempted to explain my view of Bill Kane the
man. I'm not sure I could. Or that I know enough to do any
justice to what is certainly a story worth telling. May I
offer that Bill Kane is someone who was charitable enough to
treat me with kindness, offer me good, gentle horses to
ride, feed me, tolerate my cameras, and answer my persistent
and generally knuckle-headed questions. I suspect that Bill
Kane offered much the same, in other ways, to anyone who put
their trust in him. He was, and no doubt is, a man of
trust.”
Kurt Markus
www.kurtmarkus.com
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