Keeping You In The Loop — MHCP Newsletter January 2026 Edition

Howdy !!!

Everyone has a story! The songwriting workshop got me thinking how storytelling is very much central to what I think Cowboy Poetry is about. On cattle drives, cowboys took their stories and put them into poems and songs. That fulfilled some of their immediate needs: used up time during the boring days, entertained each other around the campfire after chuck, and it kept them awake and the cattle calm when they were on night watch. An important part was connecting with the other wranglers on the drive. Just as it had social and emotional benefits then, with modern technology, it is even more necessary.

Stories, at first, are simply a means of telling someone about an experience or incident. It can then can be transformed into a poem, or the rhyming lines put to music. There is something in storytelling that is cathartic for the author as well as the listener. When author’s ideas are ones the listening folks can identify with, that’s when there’s that sense of human connection.

Between the lines of poems there are often other more subtle themes. In this newsletter, it helps us remember (or has us realize) the responsibilities that were given to young children. There is the reality of having to adjust activities to accommodate life’s circumstances. We’ve all experienced the strong bond to a horse or pet and having to let go of them. The need to work as a team is another imbedded concept. The list could go on.

Let stories be part of your new year, as we tell them and as we serve as active listeners. The connections made are bound to enrich Cowboy Poetry enthusiasts and other folks too.

Jen

MHCP AGM

Friday, February 13th, 2026
Western Music and Cowboy Poetry

From 10:00 to 12:00 in the Honor Currie Room
For Steerheads, Oxtails and Prairie Oysters, too

And with any luck, we might have a book launch!

We’ll again be joining with the Library’s Community Coffee

The AGM meeting starts at 12:30pm. Everyone welcome to that as well.

Free Songwriting Workshop

by John Wort Hannam
January 27 & 28, 2026
at Medalta Potteries
From 5:00-9:00 pm

John invites you to join him for his travelling songwriting project. It’s okay if you’ve never written songs, don’t play an instrument or don’t sing. The focus will be on the creation of lyrics based on stories in your life. Through discussion, examples and writing exercises, he’ll guide you to express yourself and tell your story through song craft. These workshops provide a respectful and safe space to share personal narratives and collaboratively shape original music. John aims to bring out that creative side you thought you didn’t have. Click Here to Register.

Granny Poet Program Goes Over Well

The entertainment was different from what is usually ‘on stage’ on the third Thursday in Victory Church’s Fellowship Hall. On December 18th, about 25 folks gathered much like the cowboys after their evening chuck of bacon, beans and biscuits. It was a little old granny (Jen) in a rocking chair that recited poems (some she wrote and some she didn’t) and did songs, some acapella like the cowboys did. The preambles gave the reason each piece was written, often including some reference to the times when Cowboy Poetry started. It was evident from the chuckles that many folks remembered bathing in a galvanized washtub and ordering from the Eaton’s catalog. One of the poems was about the value of community to Norman Fedrau who is blind; they learned how to ‘read’ paper money with Braille markings and by how it’s folded). “Twas the Night Before Christmas When Out on the Ranch” included harmonica which was the most common musical instrument on the cattle drives. The afternoon program ended with Alan Jackson’s “Let it Be Christmas” and coffee. The take-home was an M&M Christmas card/poem and treat.

Not every audience can relate to horses and cattle, or want to have everything be about cowboys. In order to keep Cowboy Poetry alive, the topics include ones the audience can relate to; they enjoy the surprise endings of some and the humor in other poems. It’s equally important to help folks imagine what times were like on the trail drives where this unique genre took root.

Little old granny (Jen Zollner) recited poems and did songs, some acapella like the cowboys did at the Victory Church’s Fellowship Hall. Dec 18, 2025.

Local Poet Noel Burles Nominated

MHCP was excited to learn that our friend and board member, Noel Burles has been nominated for The International Red Carpet Award Show in Europe. The competition has a limited number of nominations from all over the world and from a wide variety of genres. Participants will present their performance to a professional jury consisting of people with different focus in the music industry and a dedicated team of judges just for Cowboy Poetry. Best of luck Noel!

A Boy and his Appaloosa by Jim Burk

Jim Burk was raised on a small mixed farm near Sundre, Alberta. His dad, Delos Burk, always said they were horse-poor with lots of horses providing little income. When Jim’s dad came in contact with Jim Wyatt, a rancher near High River who had begun breeding Appaloosas, he arranged to have a strawberry roan mare bred to one of Wyatt’s stallions. The result was a G1, a Generation One Appaloosa.

Learning about Appaloosas and their near extinction was food for Jim’s imagination. Still recovering from rheumatic fever, and a little weak for normal farm chores, he was given the task of exercising horses being made ready for sale. His father presented Gypsy to Jim as a two-year old. At the age of twelve Jim was an experienced rider. He rode two and a half miles to school beginning with grade one and rode unsupervised when he felt like exploring. And this being bush country gave much to explore.

As a result of having riding as his main contribution to the farm, Jim had a lot of time to work with Gypsy. Also, good advice from his father, an excellent horseman and horse trainer whose mantra was: “If you’re training a horse and it bucks, that’s your fault.”

Gymkhanas were popular at the time with a variety of races involved. Gypsy was particularly good at barrel racing and pole bending.

When Jim Wyatt had the first National Appaloosa Gymkhana event at his ranch, Jim’s Dad urged him to enter. So he did.

The horse was ready. Jim wasn’t and did what most novices do. He ran Gypsy through all the motions necessary for each event over and over again. As a result Gypsy had worked up a sweat and a load of confusion before the first race, which was barrel racing. She swapped ends in the middle of the first dash and still placed third.

At the end of the day Gypsy was the third high point Appaloosa Gymkhana Horse in Canada. She worked against horses from as far away as Ontario. However, while some of Gypsy’s opposition had prosperous owners, most of the other riders were not necessarily good horsemen. In any case, Gypsy earned Jim some bragging rights.

Jim was fourteen at the time and just finished grade eight. With no high school in the vicinity, that summer spelled the end of his time with a horse that had almost become part of him. Not to mention the fact that she was sold. In the end Jim’s dad had to ask for his gift back. If sold, the money gained would pay for an electric pump that would bring cold running water into his mother’s kitchen. Sad, but gladly given. Best part. Jim was away when Gypsy left the farm.

(This is an example of a story that could easily be written in poetry form, with a preamble to
introduce it.)

An Author Among Us

It’s been exciting to get to know someone in our midst (at Victory Church) and learn of his
accomplishments. His bio is the story of something unfortunate turning into blessings that
continue to the present day. His life story is also an example of not letting obstacles get in
your way, not letting others define what you can and can’t do. He has written a number of
books to date and currently has two goals: to finish his last book(s) and to go horseback
riding. On “Amazon.Jim Burk” you’ll find summaries of each of his books and excerpts that
have you wanting to keep reading. Orders can be made in Book or Kindle format.

Read more about Jim Burk in our upcoming “Homegrown Tributes” series

The Appaloosa Story

The breed is known for its spots over standard horse colors. In addition are the straited
hooves, strips of black and light gray. The hooves have a hard and a soft structure able to
stand up in both rocky and sandy terrain.

The Appaloosa is a breed propagated by Nez Perce aboriginals of Oregon, Washington and
Idaho. The breed was almost erased when the American cavalry destroyed most of the
Appaloosa stock held by the Nez Perce.

The horses used by Native Americans in the West largely came from the Spanish horses brought into Mexico with partial lineages going back to Arabia. In the mid-17th century, large Spanish herds were used around Santa Fe and Taos. The Spaniards attempted to keep the horses from the Native Americans, but escaped Indian slaves and stolen horses resulted in Apache and Navajo acquiring horses, rapidly putting their new equestrian skills to masterful use. The 1670 Pueblo Revolt resulted in thousands of horses being left behind by the fleeing Spaniards. As Spain continued to lose control over Northern Mexico, even more horses found their way into Native herds.

By 1700 the Shoshone tribes of the Great Basin had acquired horses from their southern cousins. Around 1730, the Nez Perce also had horses giving the Shoshone and Nez Perce a strategic military and hunting advantage over the plains tribes (the Crow and Blackfeet did not have the horse until c.1740 and the Sioux not until c.1770). The Spanish stock was ideal for the harsh environment of the Western U.S.and the Nez Perce recognized early on the benefits of selectively breeding the best horses for their particular environment and needs. Though the Appaloosa was not the only type of horse owned by the Nez Perce, it was easily the most identifiable.

In the mid 19th century, the U.S. Army often found their cavalry horses unable to compete with the horses of the Western tribes. The Army horses had been raised on grain, were used to abundant water, and often bred from racing stock, but the superior Native horses were grass fed and had far better endurance. Army officers often complained that their horses were not up to the task of chasing down the steeds of the Native Americans.

In many cases the Army, knowing the advantage the horses gave the Indians, destroyed their herds to remove the military power of the tribes and locked them into areas that could only be travelled by foot. So, after the Nez Perce War, the US Army tried to destroy the Appaloosa breed through the slaughter and breeding with draft horses. However, Chief White Bird had slipped across the Canadian border with women, children and some of their prize spotted horses. In Canada, he and his refugees kept the breed alive.

Revival & Modern Breed

Rediscovery: An article in Western Horseman in 1937 sparked interest, leading to the formation of the Appaloosa Horse Club (ApHC) in 1938 to preserve the breed.

Modern Type: The ApHC introduce Arabian, Quarter Horse and Thoroughbred bloodlines to develop the modern Appaloosa, creating versatile horses we know today.

Jim Wyatt, a rancher near High River brought the breed to Alberta. Delos Burk, my father, met Jim Wyatt at my uncle’s ranch in Simon’s Valley, west of Calgary, and decided to have one of his mares, a strawberry roan, breed to one of Wyatt’s stallions. The result was Gypsy, grey, with spots spreading from hip to mid-body. This was 1952.

In the fall of 1956, Jim Wyatt held the first ever Appaloosa Gymkhana Event at his ranch. Jim, Delos son, entered Gypsy. She was ready. Jim wasn’t. In spite of that, Gypsy earned the title of third-best Gymkhana horse in Canada. Had Jim kept his cool, he firmly believes she would have been first. It sounds good, but in spite of there being a competition from different parts of Canada by individuals who had taken to this new breed as an expensive hobby, there were few well-trained horses at the meet.

Sources: PowWows.com: appaloosa museum.com:

Western Music and Cowboy Poetry

-entertainment all afternoon. Mark your calendar!

Western Advice

  • cherish horses, women, water and grass
  • when in doubt, let your horse do the thinking
  • take as good a care of your horse as you do yourself
  • don’t approach a bull from the front or horse from behind
  • a clean saddle blanket is more important than clean sheets
  • don’t talk down to anyone even it if means gettin’ off your horse

Cowboy Lingo

  • fan tail – wild horse
  • plug – run-of-the-mill work horse
  • hack/nag – old and overworked horse
  • rat tail – appaloosa with a thin mane and tail
  • lunkhead – horse of inferior breed or appearance
  • bell mare – lead mare which the herd willingly follows
  • crow or buzzard bait – worn-out emaciated horse that will soon
  • become carrion and therefore attracted to crows or buzzards

Western Movies

There’s something about winter that makes one look for a good movie, best watched with a warm drink nearby. Westerns tend to tap into something deeper -family, resilience, tradition and doing what needs to be done even when it’s hard.

True Grit (2010)

Cold landscapes, quiet determination, and a story driven by grit and justice make this one feel tailor-made for winter watching. Hailee Steinfeld’s breakout role, paired with the Coen Brothers’ sharp storytelling, makes it an easy seasonal rewatch.

The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (1962)

More reflective than action-packed, this classic explores legacy, truth, and the stories we choose to remember

The Searchers (1956)

A sweeping Western with emotional depth and stark scenery. It’s not light viewing, but it’s one of those films that lingers long after the credits roll — perfect for a quiet winter night.

Open Range (2003)

Slow-burning and atmospheric, this one leans into loyalty, moral code, and wide-open country. The pacing makes it ideal for settling in and actually watching, not just having something on in the background.

Legends of the Fall (1994)

Snowy Montana landscapes, family drama, and a powerful score give this film a wintertime feel. Emotional, cinematic, and timeless.

The Cowboys (1972)

John Wayne leading a group of boys across the West with its themes of mentorship, responsibility, and growing up.

The Homesman (2014)

Bleak, honest, and beautifully shot, this is a winter Western for viewers who appreciate quieter storytelling and strong performance, deeply human.

-from Cowgirl magazine

Molly and Mike, poem of the month

Harvey Beck spoke fondly of this team. He was but a boy about 8 years old when he was harrowing a freshly seeded field one spring with them. When he turned the corner too short, the pole with the harrows stuck upright in the ground and he landed in the soft dirt. He admired how Molly and Mike worked together as swing horses on the header at harvest time. At the corners, it took precise coordination to keep the header straight; at the same time as one went forward, the other had to back up. There wasn’t a team that could do it better. It reminded him of a couple that had danced together for years. (Harv, his brother and his dad played at dances.) He had spent many-an-hour driving this team. When he grew up and left home, Molly and Mike stayed ‘at home’, and that’s where they had a content retirement.

I can still see them, Molly and Mike,
Better partners there never will be,
If man and wife could just spend their life
Together in such harmony.

Even their steps were in perfect time,
Moved proudly as together they'd run,
Though no wedding vows, you'd see that somehow
The two of them worked as if one.

Molly and Mike were somewhat like twins,
Same size, black tail and black mane,
Dad of course, more than any other horse,
Said this team was so easy to train.

No secret that they were a favourite of Dad's,
They're the ones that took him to town
To get the mail, and he'd never fail,
When back home they'd get their rub down.

Can you imagine how the others would feel?
The six other nags that he had?
They lugged the plow, did the work but somehow
These two got to show off a tad.

Sunday's they pulled the democrat to church,
In winter, a closed-in sleigh,
My, did they prance taking us to the dance,
In the livery barn they got to stay.

We played for a dance in town one night,
Came a snowstorm, worst we had known,
Getting home, no use, but we let the reins loose,
That team got us safely back home.

I'll always remember Molly and Mike,
As close as two lovers could be,
Side by side as a team, almost clones it would seem,
They were one, a he and a she.

From “Stories from Seniors” by J. Zollner. It is one of the books MHCP published, a fund-raiser with Hale Hearing as the print sponsor.

Wishing you a Happy and Healthy 2026.
Be ready for the ride and thankful for the journey,


Jen

Keeping You In The Loop — MHCP June Newsletter

Howdy!

Recently I’ve come to appreciate memoirs more that ever before, people writing down their stories or story. I’ve always liked reading biographies and better yet their autobiography because the information comes first hand. I’ve encouraged folks to do that: edited their writing, helped them organize their writings into heading and I’ve recorded their stories over the telephone and transcribed them. Sharing stories has become a big part of what we do at MHCP when we post stories on our website. It may just encourage us to write our own. (Note to self, I need to start doing that!) It’s the perfect means to learn about old-times — the hardships faced, the games played, activities engaged in and the list goes on.

The best surprise for me has been Fred Kennedy’s memoir. What a lesson in history it has been to have a ‘first hand’ chance to ‘meet’ folks and ‘hear’ about events I’ve known about or want to know about! Though he has long passed, I’d love to thank him for writing it all down, especially for as rare a find as his story about the famous horse, Midnight. That’s the beauty of putting it on paper (or on video) as MHCP has done and continues to do. How about putting it into rhyme and rhyme to music. That is the means by which stories live on. Here’s hoping you enjoy those we’ve added to our website this month.

Rodeo ***New Series!***

Medicine Hat Cowboy Poetry is excited to present a new feature series that is all about rodeo. Cowpunchers and such, the rodeo hall-of-fame and everything in between. Jen and Cheryl recently attended the Pioneer of Rodeo Award to barrel racing legend, Monica Wilson. Tune in to the MHCP July newsletter for more about this Canadian Professional Rodeo Association inductee.

In this month’s newsletter, the first Rodeo legend to be featured is bucking horse named Midnight.

Photo Credit to Stockmen’s Memorial Foundation

Midnight is a legend for being the greatest bucking horse in North American rodeo history. He was born at Fort MacLeod and Alberta is where he spent the first 10 years of his life, and it’s where he won his first championships. It is said he’d never been ridden (full regulation time was 10 seconds at the time), not even by world champion bronc rider, Pete Knight. There is only one place I’ve ever found information to the contrary. Pete Bruisehead from Standoff did make “a clean competitive ride” according to Terri Mason, editor of Canadian Cowboy Country. Midnight was the first animal to be inducted into the Canadian Rodeo Hall of Fame.

  • Midnight – Biography
  • The Day Midnight Was Bought: The story was a treasure to discover, it’s first-hand from Fred Kennedy who was there and knew the people in Midnight’s world. It’s also the story of him helping a friend fulfill his dream. It’s about how the worst of broncs was also one with an even temperament. He was incredibly big, and being halter-broke, kids would lead him into the bucking chute. It is said he showed pride when he bucked off his riders but was also careful not to step on them. In the book the story was all but hidden, not a headline, just a set of paragraphs sandwiched between the rest of the experiences and those he encountered in his life.
  • Letter from Jim McNabb

Very special thank you to the Stockmen’s Memorial Foundation for their generous contribution of photos and the Jim McNabb letter. The Stockmen’s Memorial Foundation is a non-profit registered charity that relies largely on donations to stay financially viable and to continue to commemorate the Canadian livestock industry.

New on the Website

New Newsletter Logo

You may have noticed our new ‘Keeping You In The Loop’ logo! Special thanks to Cheryl Dust and the Toastmasters club for their creative efforts!

Harry Forbes Remembers:

I recently received, from Harry’s daughter (Helen Carrierre), the manuscript for Harry’s latest book which he completed in August, 2022 (he died in September, 2022 at the age of 104). In it, some stories are repeated and there are new ones. Folks have requested access to his stories, so it was decided MHCP would continue to post his stories, which was what Harry had wanted us to do. We start from the beginning of his last book, including interesting and related parts from his former writings.

This month, we’ve added one story to our “Harry Forbes Remembers” series:

Yarns by Ol’ Ugly

Once again this month, we are privileged to have this well-known storyteller inventing interesting characters that live around here and has them getting into unusual situations in places you can almost recognize. Ol’ Ugly has shared two new stories with us this month:

Penned by Bev Biggeman ***New Series!***

Rosalie Reinbolt (nee Beaudry)

We are excited to introduce a new series of stories penned by a good friend of Medicine Hat Cowboy Poetry, Bev Biggeman!

You may remember her from her interview with Emily Mastel Schmaltz.

This month she brings us another story from Rosalie Reinbolt (nee Beaudry).

Library Corner

What I’m reading is available at the Medicine Hat Public Library:

Alberta Was My Beat: Memoirs of a Western Newspaperman

by Fred Kennedy

Produced by The Albertan, 1975

971.23 KEN

In telling his life’s story, the author has the reader learning about the times he lived in as he meets influential people and tells intimate details about events as he experienced them. He visited every small town in southern Alberta as part of his work, so he knew about and often did articles on anything noteworthy. He toured much of the U.S. as he publicized and directed rodeos all over North America. His writing is chock-full of interesting tidbits.

For instance, he was twelve when he left his home in Ireland and came to Calgary with his parents. The day before their reservations to cross the Atlantic were confirmed, they got the news that the Titanic had sunk. Two months later, upon nearing Newfoundland, they saw the huge iceberg that the Titanic hit and pieces of debris floating on the water as well as boats hunting for bodies.

He describes how in New York he accidentally met Al Capone, the famous Chicago gangster. I didn’t know Al Capone had cauliflower ears, a flattened nose and a “long ugly scar which extended just above one ear and down to his chin.”

Cowboy Lingo

Cowboy Vernacular for Old:

  • crony – an old time friend
  • buzzard bait – an old, worn out, emanciated horse
  • darn old bathersmith/scallawag/hen cranny – a woman referring to a man she doesn’t like or heard derogatory stories about
  • donkey years – a long time
  • fogy – someone old and maybe not smart in modern things (He’s an old fogy.”)
  • hack – an old overworked horse
  • old duck/ strange duck – an unusual or peculiar person
  • Old Country – term used to refer to natives of a country in Europe who had immigrated to the U.S. or Canada.
  • Old Dan – a trustworthy mule
  • oldermost – the oldest
  • old pod – an old man 
  • Old States – back east folks, people from the eastern part of the U.S.
  • old woman – the cowboy cook. Though the cook was usually a man and often the most popular man on the cattle drive, cooking was still considered to be a ‘woman’s work’.

‘Old’ Idioms:

  • go the way of the horse and carriage/go the way of the dodo – to become outdated or obsolete (“The cell phones have caused landlines to go the way of the dodo.”) A dodo is an extinct bird.
  • money for old rope – money very easily obtained (“They pay me highly just to give advice. It’s money for old rope.”).
  • no spring chicken – no longer young
  • put out to pasture – to force someone to leave a job because of old age
  • old gray mare – old fashioned something or someone that is aged, obsolite or outdated (allusion to the folk song’s opening line, “the old gray mare she ain’t what she used to be”.) It’s somewhat derogatory.
  • old war horse – a slave, a plodder, a machine you can depend on for heavy and prolonged use
  • tune the old cow died of – advice or complaints instead of actual help (refers to an old song about a farmer who serenaded his cow about the lack of grass instead of feeding her).

Poem of the Month:

Velma Pancoast is a MHCP member. We’re glad to be helping her organize her stories as she writes her memoir. She suggested our newsletter include the poem by Glenn MacKenzie. (He was the Medicine Hat cowboy poet.) The Pancoast family knew Glenn well. Velma’s daughter-in-law does it all (like most ranch wives): drives the tractor and machinery, she looks after the cows, the husband and the kids (in that order), she filled in at Velma’s office when needed, she is a marvelous cook … We all love her, including her school bus kids. That’s who Glenn MacKenzie had in mind when he wrote:


The Rancher's Wife
by Glenn MacKenzie

She comes in assorted sizes—
Short medium and tall,
She can ride a horse or drive a tractor
And still be belle of the ball!
At brandin' time she feeds the cowboys
And mostly does it all....
....she is a Rancher's wife!

In blue jeans she is right in style
With that fresh rose in her hair,
Her day begins at dawn and ends
With that moon high in the air,
She's a mother, and a sweetheart
And her heart is filled with care.....
....she is a Rancher's wife!

She's a-waving hand as her children's
school bus goes on down the road,
She's a bowl of hot soup to an ailing
neighour that she has know'd,
She looks 'rite pretty in the
fine garden that she grow'd....
....she is a Rancher's wife!

She gives the nation self-reliant daughters
and good honest sons,
She is strong and willing to help any
or all the unfortunate ones.
She feeds the men who feed the world
that quality beef by the tons....
....she is a Rancher's wife!

Even dressed up in Fifth Avenue fashion
She can bake a batch of bread,
And she comes in different hair colours
Blonde, brunette or red.
She's as modern as tomorrow and old-fashioned
As yesterday, it's said....
....she is a Rancher's wife!

MHCP welcomes poem suggestions to be featured in a newsletter. Please contact our president, Jen with your suggestions by email MHCPPresident@gmail.com or by phone (403-529-6384).

Some Parting Wisdom

“The mud will fall off but the memories last forever.” — E.E. Cummings

Happy Trails,

Jen for short