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travel / travel magazine / sep08

Horse Country



Herdin’ slowpokes
By Danielle Egan with photography by Patrice Halley

All my life I’ve dreamed of riding the open range, the wind in my hair. A visit to British Columbia’s Big Bar Ranch is my chance. Hi-yo Silver — er, Misty — away!

A DOZEN GINGER COWS lunching on golden pastures pause to eyeball our posse on horseback moseying up the well-worn trail of Big Bar Mountain. Aside from the chaps and Stetsons, it’s easy to tell the two cowboys from the three city slickers: the cowboys have straight spines and squared shoulders; the rest of us look as if we’re perpetually slumped over computers.

When we reach the mountaintop, the deep, chiselled canyon of the Fraser River comes into view, with the snow-sugared peaks of Black Dome and Red Mountain to the west. We stop to take in the awesome setting, but the meditative spell is abruptly broken by a rapid-fire round of farts.



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MAP: STEVEN FICK/CANADIAN GEOGRAPHIC
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“Please excuse my horse,” says Jill van der Slagt, a retired nurse from Vancouver.

“We’ve been excusing your horse for the past hour and a half,” quips her husband Hans.

The lure of the Wild West continues to attract settlers and tourists to this area, and while British Columbia is best known for its lush green forests, this slice of arid grassland and sagebrush hills, from Clinton to Williams Lake, remains a pioneer paradise. Ranching is still the primary industry here, and the South Cariboo, 400 kilometres northeast of Vancouver, has become known as the province’s guest-ranch capital. I’ve come to help bring the cattle home during the fall roundup and live out my cowgirl dreams.

MY FAVOURITE TOY, as a suburban kid raised on TV shows such as “Bonanza” and “Little House on the Prairie,” was a set of plastic horses with saddles, bridles and lassos. My Barbies preferred riding the open range to driving to the mall in hot-pink sports cars. Of course, there are no rangelands in Oakville, Ont., where I grew up. And with parents who liked to joke that roughing it meant staying at a Holiday Inn, the closest I got to the dream was one blissful day trotting around an indoor arena on horseback.

Now, on my second day riding a 16-year-old chestnut quarter horse named Misty, my body is smarting, and the view of Big Bar Guest Ranch is a welcome sight. The spread, perched above Big Bar Creek, west of Marble Range, features a stately log cabin built in 1932, a barn that houses the ranch’s 23 horses, a modern motel-style guest building with attached dining room, five small guest cabins and three tipis.


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