I'm sure there are many people who drive east on highway 120 toward Yosemite, Sonora, Twain Harte, Mi Wuk Village and beyond who remember Cricket the swaybacked horse who stood sentinel along his fence to add a smile to our drive.
I found this article today; it's from July 20, 2010. This morning we were explaining to our 5 and 7 years old grandchildren about the roadside tribute and why we always tooted our horn when we passed "Cricket's Corner" and memorial. So, when we got home I 'googled' it!
The paragraph breaks are mine to make it easier to read.
A lone horse stands by the fence watching traffic. This
was a common scene for many eastbound travelers on Highway 108 as they
traveled between Oakdale and Knights Ferry on their way through the
foothills. Many did not know her name or her circumstances, yet they
adopted her in their heart just the same. ‘Cricket’
was a buckskin mare that belonged to the late Walt Taylor. A horse,
like its owner, that has become a legend in her own right.
At the age of
36 years, Cricket passed away in 1993. An exhibit paying tribute to the buckskin mare will open on the evening of Thursday, July 22 ([2010] at the Oakdale Cowboy Museum. According
to Museum Director Christie Camarillo, the exhibit “Remembering
Cricket” is the first of its kind for the museum.
Camarillo shared that
for many years the museum has displayed a few photos and a T-shirt
donated by the Taylor family memorializing the well-known mare. “So
many people have come by the museum and shared their memories of
Cricket as they travel up the hill,” Camarillo said. “Now, what we are
seeing is the passing down of (the story to) the generations. People
come to visit the museum and their children know the story of Cricket
and how their parents would look for her on their travels as children.”
Just
prior to the 2010 new year, Taylor, a local rancher and cowman, went to
meet his horse at the age of 81. Taylor had lived in the Oakdale area
all his life and, being in the cow business, he had many good horses and
dogs. However, he was also known as the owner of Cricket, the notorious
buckskin mare that stood along the fence on Highway 120/108 just east
of Oakdale.
After Taylor’s funeral services, the flowers and wreaths
were gathered and placed along a familiar setting where, many years
earlier, flowers and wreaths had been placed in memory of Cricket. It
seemed life had gone full circle with Taylor and his buckskin mare.
Camarillo
wrote an extensive piece about Cricket in an issue of the museum’s
newsletter earlier this year, outlining details of the ‘life and times’
of the mare. “It
was late 1959, at a Sales Yard in Nevada that Walt Taylor, purchased a
two year old buckskin mare. What would transpire over the next 51 years
is a story that continues to be carried down through the generations.
Cricket came to the Taylor ranch where she was trained to be an
all-around ranch horse. She was a smart horse and was known for sizing
up her mounts pretty well. If she carried an experienced rider she would
perk up and perform as good as any good horse would. However, if she
thought she could get away with something she would take advantage of
the opportunity; dropping her head to graze and pulling the reins from
the rider.
Walt’s son Pat Taylor, recalled a time when they were
gathering cattle in Merced and his younger brother was riding her. “When
we arrived at the corrals, Cricket and my brother were no where to be
seen. We went looking for them and found my brother had fallen asleep
atop Cricket and she was just standing there eating grass.” Cricket
helped raise Walt’s kids, the neighbor kids and later his grandkids. “I
won my first buckle on her at the Angels Camp Jr. Rodeo,” recalled Pat.
“As
Cricket matured and got up in age, Walt retired her to a 320 acre
pasture between Oakdale and Knights Ferry where she had plenty of feed,
water and oak trees for shade. No one really knew why she decided to
spend most of her day along the fence …” Camarillo wrote. To
the novice, she appeared lonely, seeking companionship. To a cowboy,
she appeared to be catching the breeze as it came off the hillside. The
breeze not only kept her cool, but kept the flies at bay as well.
“She
was just a ranch horse,” Pat said. “She just did anything. She was a
good cuttin’ horse and babysitter to all the grandkids. “She
was a horse that had worked hard all her life,” he added. “When she was
retired she was free to roam 320 acres of pasture land with shade from
oak trees and peacefulness. She had the life.
”In
1993, Cricket passed away and the family made the decision to bury her
near “her” spot along the highway where she enjoyed standing for so many
years.
Camarillo’s
article continues: “The Taylor family began to receive many inquires
about what happened to Cricket so they asked the local newspaper to run a
story and Walt erected a cross where Cricket stood. The word was out;
the friendly buckskin mare was gone. Then by the dozens, flowers,
wreaths, cards and letters were being placed on the fence in her
memory. ”The sentiments, Taylor’s companion Virginia Gibson told Camarillo, were “overwhelming. ”But
it didn’t stop at just expressions of loss and sympathy. As Camarillo
noted in her article: “Over $1200 in contributions were received and
donated to help children learn to ride through the Faire Breeze Youth
Ranch and the CARE-ousel Therapeutic Riding Program. “Since
Cricket had helped so many children learn to ride, it felt
appropriate,” Virginia said.
A memorial Cricket T-Shirt was also created
to raise funds for the two organizations. ”According
to Camarillo, she approached Walt Taylor with the idea of an expanded
tribute to Cricket in late fall of 2009. By mid-December he stopped in
to see Camarillo at the museum to follow up. “He got this huge grin on his face and said, ‘Okay let’s do it’, ” Camarillo shared.
When
Taylor passed later that month, Camarillo along with museum volunteers
Twainhart Hill and Sharon Getchel, decided they would see the project
through. A tribute, to not just a horse, but also to a cowboy and a
community of people who had embraced the unassuming mare for many years.
As
the story goes, many passersby never actually knew Cricket’s name until
the cross was placed by her standing post. Travelers would assign her
their own special name and watch for her as a marker as they would make
their travels through the area. “She was there every time people drove by,” Taylor said in a 1995 Oakdale Leader article. “She
was a character,” son Pat recalled of the sway backed beauty. “She did
not like to be tied up. If you tied her up she would pull out of the
hitching post and break the halter. But if you placed her next to the
post and left her untied, she’d stand there for hours.
”Hill
and Getchel have been the primary coordinators in compiling the
memorable exhibit. The two women shared that while they were not in the
area during Cricket’s tenure, they have been amazed by her following. “Reading
through all the letters,” Hill said, “and the Face Book posts, there is
such a following for so many different reasons.” “The excitement people would get when seeing Cricket,” Getchel added, “it’s really special.”
“What the story of Cricket shows is how everybody is connected,” Taylor’s younger son David said. He
shared the story of how he left the area for college and was stopped
one day on campus while wearing the infamous Cricket commemorative
T-shirt. “The person asked me how I knew Cricket,” David said through a smile. “I told them, well it’s my dad’s horse. ”Of
the many items that will be on display during the exhibit, one includes
a quote from Walt Taylor, “She’s not a fancy horse, but she’s a durable
old gal.”
And
so … a horse, a cowboy and a legacy continue through the walls of the
museum and the minds of many who were fortunate enough to know — or know
of — Cricket and her owner.
For
additional information on the exhibit, Camarillo may be contacted at
(209) 847-5163. Memories of the mare can be posted on her Face Book
page.
Now doesn't that just make you smile~
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