This woman is a treasure. I came here after Googling mecate, and ended up also learning a lot about a lost past and a different way of life. She's one of the precious few threads left holding on what was once a rope tying the past to the present. I wish her and her family the best of health.
I’m allergic to horses but I love them. So I visit them briefly, when I have a chance. Make friends, bring them a treat, pay my respects and move on. Not by choice, but have to. Thank you for this wonderful video. Best to all who happily stumbled here like I did. Blessings.
I grew up on the slightly more modern side of this county, but we would visit these wilder areas regularly. Such a neat lady, and what I wouldn’t give for one of her hackamores.
The vaqueros trailed cattle from california to Oregon in the mid 1800’s and brought their skills and ways with them and passed them on to others . It’s funny because the most remote pockets of Oregon nevada Idaho and parts of california still hold these traditions as seen in this video . This lady is a treasure and amazing much respect to her and her beautiful craft.
My late father had a horsehair rope. It was a cheaper one. It was what he could afford. It was like handling a cactus. I always wanted a nice one, but never had a reason for one.
They all start out that way, and they soften with time and use. The prickly ones work well for teaching a horse to neck rein because they feel even it's lightest touch.
Nice way of life!! Also, mecate is a spanish word for rope. I imaging that the word comes all the way from the mexicans vaqueros from the 19 century, also corral, riata and others that modern cowboys use.
No disrespect to the woman's knowledge, but a "hackamore" is a term used to describe the whole system. The nose band is a bosal, the head gear is called "the hanger", and then the mecate reins and lead rope. All of this together make "a hackamore"
Terms can differ depending on what part of the country your standing in. At 98 I spect she has seen more and forgot more about the subject than you or I will ever know.
@bradmetcalf7832 like I said, no disrespect to the womans vast knowledge, but just bc you're old, dosent make you right. My moms ancestors have been making mecates and braiding rawhide since before America was born. A bosal is a bosal, unless it's a bosalito. Hackamore should never be used to refer to only the nose band. These things are rooted in Spanish tradition, matters not where you use them. The bastardization of Spanish words like vaquero to "buckaroo" and mecate to "McCarty" has come to be accepted, but to grab a bosal noseband and tell someone that alone is a hackamore is just incorrect.
Oh my land. What a treasure! I have 2 horsehair macartes. My good ol horse's favorite hackamore till he passed at 28.
This woman is a treasure. I came here after Googling mecate, and ended up also learning a lot about a lost past and a different way of life. She's one of the precious few threads left holding on what was once a rope tying the past to the present. I wish her and her family the best of health.
I’m allergic to horses but I love them. So I visit them briefly, when I have a chance. Make friends, bring them a treat, pay my respects and move on. Not by choice, but have to.
Thank you for this wonderful video.
Best to all who happily stumbled here like I did.
Blessings.
Thanks for interviewing her, what a great story and a great life to have lived
I grew up on the slightly more modern side of this county, but we would visit these wilder areas regularly. Such a neat lady, and what I wouldn’t give for one of her hackamores.
Really great story. I think it’s awesome she was so cool about sharing her story on UA-cam and for OPB
I loved this story. Thank you for sharing it.
Love this story.
Such beautiful useful art.
I grew up watching opb never stopped
Loved of grid life would go back in heartbeat.
Shes amazing & awesome
Beautiful lady. So. Talented!!!!
The vaqueros trailed cattle from california to Oregon in the mid 1800’s and brought their skills and ways with them and passed them on to others . It’s funny because the most remote pockets of Oregon nevada Idaho and parts of california still hold these traditions as seen in this video . This lady is a treasure and amazing much respect to her and her beautiful craft.
Que mecates tan bonitos 🇺🇸🇲🇽❤️ I hope she lives many many more years
Beautiful Work👍🤍
Amazing!
My late father had a horsehair rope. It was a cheaper one.
It was what he could afford.
It was like handling a cactus.
I always wanted a nice one, but never had a reason for one.
They all start out that way, and they soften with time and use. The prickly ones work well for teaching a horse to neck rein because they feel even it's lightest touch.
I wish there was someone teaching this skill, twisting mecates. Slowly the old techniques are being lost.
Nice way of life!! Also, mecate is a spanish word for rope. I imaging that the word comes all the way from the mexicans vaqueros from the 19 century, also corral, riata and others that modern cowboys use.
rest in peace . slilent key.
I want one !
The “mecates” come from the Mexican Cowboys “vaqueros” from the Southwestern Spanish speaking of These United States of America 🇺🇸 🇲🇽 🇺🇸
* sees spurs *
* dies *
Nobody cares of 8
No disrespect to the woman's knowledge, but a "hackamore" is a term used to describe the whole system. The nose band is a bosal, the head gear is called "the hanger", and then the mecate reins and lead rope. All of this together make "a hackamore"
Terms can differ depending on what part of the country your standing in. At 98 I spect she has seen more and forgot more about the subject than you or I will ever know.
@bradmetcalf7832 like I said, no disrespect to the womans vast knowledge, but just bc you're old, dosent make you right. My moms ancestors have been making mecates and braiding rawhide since before America was born. A bosal is a bosal, unless it's a bosalito. Hackamore should never be used to refer to only the nose band. These things are rooted in Spanish tradition, matters not where you use them. The bastardization of Spanish words like vaquero to "buckaroo" and mecate to "McCarty" has come to be accepted, but to grab a bosal noseband and tell someone that alone is a hackamore is just incorrect.
Not MACARTY. . . MECATE (meh-kah-teh) is a Spanish ranching word. Maybe research THAT.