No Name City Winter Camp – Feb 14-17, 2019

Just got some updated details on the No Name City Winter Camp happening next weekend.


No Name City Winter Camp

February 14-17, 2019
5994 FM 2088
Winnsboro, TX 75494
32°50’00.4″N 95°15’32.3″W
Entrance to site directly next to power substation, can’t miss it.
903-440-0375 Jingles
903-440-0524 Beaver
Booshway: Sadler Swan
Entrance to property will be marked with signs at highway. Please keep gate closed.
Water on site
Some wood available
Cozy campsite surrounded by trees, water and goats (please keep this in mind if you plan to bring a dog)
Competitions at the leisure of Booshway on Saturday.
Hawk blocks in camp.
One large hooter.
Come early and stay late if you would like.
No vehicles in camp after 10 AM Saturday.

A flier and map are on the Events Page.

TFT Rendezvous postponed to February 21-24th

I’m glad we aren’t in a drought in South Texas, but the rain got the best of us again for the TFT Rendezvous.  Almost the same conditions as last fall.  The TFT Rendezvous is being moved to February 21-24th.  As before, please RSVP.  We appreciate all those that replied and gave us their cell numbers.  Get the word out!

Jack Simons

TFT Rendezvous, Feb 8-10, 2019

Sorry for the extremely late notice.  We are having a TFT rendezvous February 8-10, in Shiner.  Attached are the flyer and map.  Take note that we are asking for an RSVP to either the Booshway or Segundo or you can email me and I’ll pass it along.

Because of gate security on the ranch and the ever potential for a downpour, an RSVP will ensure folks can get in the gate or we can pass along news of a cancellation.  Upon arrival at the site, call the numbers on the flyer and someone will come down to open the gate.  We apologize to those that were notified too late last fall when we got rained out.  The ranch land just won’t support vehicles and we don’t want to go “mudding” through private property. 

Hope to see you there, Jack Simons

A few thoughts on The Way West

A few years back, I read A.B. Guthrie, Jr’s incredible mountain man novel, The Big Sky.  An adequate description of that novel deserves more than a passing mention, but suffice to say, it truly stands as one of the best of the best in mountain man literature.  The language is just fantastic, and having been written in the late 1940s, I can only imagine the author wasn’t too far removed from some folks who may have been kin to the original source material.

After having found out there was a sequel, I hemmed and hawed on it a bit, slightly less interested in the story of a mountain man leading a pioneer train down the Oregon Trail vs. a more period novel.    However, I recently took the plunge and was really glad I did.

As I learned in reading the memoir, Sixty Years on the Plains, though the “age of the mountain man” was short lived (generally recognized as 1800-1840, or thereabouts), the mountain men themselves didn’t just head back into civilization once the fallen price of beaver pelts killed the rendezvous system.

In The Way West, we get a glimpse of mountain man Dick Summers, a character from The Big Sky.    Whereas The Big Sky shows him as a much younger trapper, in The Way West, he’s now the “old hand,” brought out of an agricultural semi-retirement to lead a wagon train of pioneers from Missouri and points east to what’s thought of as the Oregonian Promised Land.

In one scene, the author is contrasting mountain man Dick Summer’s slim equipage vs that of the other members of the wagon train:

Evans was looking at Summers’ little pile of plunder.   There wasn’t much there, not near enough by the rules – a blanket and an old buffalo robe that covered just a teensy keg of whisky, a little bit of meal, about a shirttail full of it, and salt meat and coffee and tobacco and a kettle and a couple of knives and two rifles, his Hawken ad an over-and-under double barrel with one bore big enough for bird shot.   He had a little of Indian goods, too, blue and white beads and fishhooks and tobacco and a roll of scarlet strouding and some vermilion. All of his plunder put together wasn’t’ more than a couple of pack horses could carry easy. Even so, it was more than he needed. He could travel from hell to breakfast with no more than a gun and a horse, and would get there in time for dinner without the horse.

Makes me think that a pretty good challenge would be to approach an event with a similar outfit of gear, minus the trade goods of course.    (Though, it may be good to trade for better vittles instead of camp dogging).

There is a cool scene where the erstwhile mountain man reminisces about his time with his former colleagues, the author noting the change in Summers’ language as he interacts with his fellows:

“How be you?  Fat, I’m thinkin’.”  Voices calling across the years, mouths laughing, hands slapping him on the back.   “Worth a pack of beaver to see you, you ol’ bastard, and if you got a dry, here’s whisky.”

The deeper the wagon train pushes into the flat wilderness of the plains and western deserts, the more we get a sense of Summers’ sense of loss and reminiscing about the shinin’ times gone by.

Though not strictly a “mountain man” novel per se, The Way West presents an interesting look at the trials and travails which faced these travelers – both nature and man – and the hardship of the journey is adequately summed in one of the closing passages of the book:

How much would he like Oregon except for sweat and grief along the way?   Grief bowed the heart, but made it richer, so that joy was rich.

AB Guthrie, Jr’s fantastic writing sure holds up after more than 60 years, and The Way West holds up as does The Big Sky as some of the more fantastic literature of the early days of the American West.

Central Texas Knife and Hawk Throw this weekend – Sept 15-16, 2018

Here are the details from the Facebook event page:

Central Texas Knife and Hawk Club throw will be weekend of September 15th and 16th!

We had such a good time last year I decided to do it again.

10 games, in the spirit of American fur trade era mountain man rendezvous, plus novelty “trail walk” game for blanket prize on Sunday.

Mountain man era clothing required only for Pro level throwers, Youth and Amateur throwers encouraged but not mandatory. We want people to join us in having a good time.

Entry fees:
Pro men and women $50
Amateur $40
Youth (11-17) $25
Kids under 10 free

!!Amateur and youth get $5 discount if you wear period correct (or close to) clothing!!

Primitive archery on Saturday evening one hour after completion of throwing.
All natural material bows only. Wood, cane or bamboo arows. Practice or trade points only, plastic nocks allowed.

Texas Association of Buckskinners – 40th annual Fall Rendezvous – October 26th-28th, 2018

The big one is finally here folks!! TAB is hosting our 40th annual Fall Rendezvous October 26th-28th, 2018. Come join us in camp near North Zulch, Texas for Shinin’ Times and lots of fun!

Events include rifle & pistol, knife & hawk, primitive fire starting, primitive archery and a few other shenanigans thrown in for good fun for everyone.

Firewood is available on site, BRING YOUR OWN WATER! There is no potable water source on site.

Please share this event with other buckskinners/reenactors who would be interested, but make sure they know this a time period correct encampment that requires pre-1840’s dress and camp gear. This event is not open to the general public or anyone in street clothes.

Please see the attached flier for further details.

The TAB Board of Directors is serving as Booshway for this event. Please contact one of the club officers with any questions.

President: John Donahoo (817) 507-6303
Vice President: Jim Branson (361) 935-8372
Secretary/Treasurer: Josh Kuntz ((512) 619-9216
Advisor: Robert Garcia ((512) 296-9951
Advisor: Scott York (979255-8324

TAB Fall 2018 - Location

Thoughts on The Revenant – The Book

It’s a cheap cliché to say that the book is always better than the movie.

With few exceptions (notably The Count of Monte Cristo, The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy, Peter Jackson’s The Lord of the Rings trilogy, and The Watchmen), most movies are lackluster adaptions of the books.    Of course this has to do with the way your mind imagines characters and scenarios in the book.   Often you’ll have a different idea for how someone would look or be, and the vision of the director is jarring enough to make it not work.

Or the screenwriter/direction misses a favorite scene.

Or leaves out a favorite character.

Or in the case of Michael Punke’s The Revenant – A Novel of Revenge . . . maybe they never actually read the book?

Admittedly, I was so put off by the beautifully filmed but ridiculously plotted movie that I decided to skip the book for a long time.   I recently finished the book and was – without hyperbole – blown away.

In a life dominated by four kids, a burgeoning farmstead, and a demanding job, I managed to read the book in 5 days – no small feat – and one I haven’t been able to accomplish since my hazy pre-kid days.

With no silly half-Indian kid subplot, the book was based purely on the concept of Hugh Glass wanting revenge on the two people in his crew that took his rifle and gear and left him for dead after being mauled by a bear.    The book is filled with ample historical details and musings about the day-to-day activities of keeping yourself alive in the vast western wilderness of early 1800s America.   Which, by the way, didn’t include hiding yourself in an animal carcass Tauntaun-style to avoid freezing to death.

But what really made the book shine was all of the details speculated on and provided about Glass.   For all of the infamy gained by his tussle with a bear, there was really not a lot I knew about him.   He was really a character who suddenly appeared in Ashley and Henry’s famous 1822 expedition, and then sort of dropped out of the narratives.

The book speculates on Glass’s early life, time as a mariner and pirate – and how he gets his famous rifle.    All of this fantastic narrative was sadly omitted from the movie.    Can you imagine a pirate mountain man movie?  That would have been incredible!

As a historical weapons enthusiast, there’s one scene I really dig on, where Hugh Glass is resupplying at a frontier trading post, after his recovering from the famous bear mauling and crawling his way back to the fringes of civilization.

After choosing between the limited arms available, and the only two rifles – a .32 caliber Kentucky rifle, and a beat-up Model 1803 U.S. Harper’s Ferry rifle, Glass:

 . . . picked up the Model 1803, the same gun carried by many of the soldiers in Lewis and Clarks’ Corps of Discovery.

After choosing the “Harper’s Ferry” Rifle in .53 caliber, Glass gets the rest of his kit.    Punke continues:

They returned to the cabin and Glass picked out the rest of his supplies.   He chose a .53 pistol to complement the rifle.    A ball mold, lead, powder, and flints.     A tomahawk and a large skinning knife.   A thick leather belt to hold his weapons.   Two red cotton shirts to wear beneath the doeskin tunic.   A large Hudson’s Bay capote.   A wool cap and mittens.   Five pounds of salt and three pigtails of tobacco.  Needle and thread.   Cordage.   To carry his newfound bounty, he picked a fringed leather possibles bag with intricate quill beading.    He noticed that the voyageurs all wore small sacks at the waist for their pipe and tobacco.   He took one of those too, a handy spot for his new flint and steel.

Sounds like a pretty good load-out for an AMM event, eh?

Is the book 100% historical accurate?   Of course not, and it doesn’t purport to be.  It’s a just a very well-written, exciting story about how things may have gone down.

I definitely recommend any mountain man or history enthusiasts check this one out.

TFT RENDEZVOUS POSTPONED!!!

From Iron Burner:

Because three of our event leaders (workers) cannot be at the Texas Free Trappers Rendezvous this weekend because of urgent family emergencies, and with the hope for better weather, the rendezvous has been rescheduled for February 15 – 18, 2018.
We hope this change does not prevent you from attending.
Updated on the Events update