“Taylor and I would go to the White Ranch and spend the night with Cap Thibodeaux, who lived there. We would go duck hunting sometimes; we’d buy about 100 yards of baling twine and tie our shotguns on our bicycles. We’d find a water hole and sit and wait for ducks. One day we were riding down the road and came upon a white cow along side of the road. She acted upset and started at us, we quickly turned around and Taylor was gone! He hit a big rut in the road and fell, so I scared the cow and she went to her baby calf lying in the grass,” Buck said, revealing the source of the cow’s anger, she was protecting her baby.
“Dad would pay us to kill rats and opossums, 10 cents per rat and 25 cents for opossums. Daddy had some old muskrat traps in the barn and we set the traps to catch them. One day we were under the cattle barn killing rats by throwing firecrackers in the holes to run the rats out. Taylor was chasing one and I threw a firecracker. It landed in his rubber boot, it exploded and blew his boot up like a balloon,” said Buck becoming lost in laughter. “He kicked off the boot and jumped around for a while and finally got all right.”
“One day, we were going to work cattle at Seabreeze. Dad and Jamie had some partnership cows. They would get horses from Ken Roberts, a rodeo world champion from Kansas. When he had some bucking horses that wouldn’t buck, he would trade them to daddy for bulls. We had a big crew: Dad, Jamie, Jake, J.P., Elton, Vic, and about six more cowboys. Taylor was riding a new one from him. He and I were riding along the canal and like always, Taylor was about half asleep. I crossed a lateral that had water running through it and the horse Taylor was riding had never seen that before. He got scared on one side, jumped off on the other side of the canal and the water got really smooth and calm, only Taylor’s hat was floating. Then Taylor’s head came up and the horse’s head and they were paddling around out there in the water. That was pretty funny,” exclaimed Buck with a chuckle.
“Taylor caught a baby raccoon and tied a rope around his neck and placed him in a tree, he was just a little bitty coon. He played around there and finally we built a platform and a cage for him about four foot off the ground until he got too big for the cage. We took him out of the cage and put tin on the tree trunk underneath so he couldn’t reach under there and get down and he just stayed there. He’d go up in the tree and come down to see you. If you put your hand up there, he would reach out and touch you but he wouldn’t let you touch him. Taylor used to give him some of his snuff and the coon would grab the can out of Taylor’s pocket and go up in the tree with it. We never tied him up there, he just stayed. He got down one time when the platform broke and we used a trap to catch him, but the trap was too small and he would go in and keep his butt out to hold the door open. He’d eat the food and back out once he was finished eating. We got a bigger trap and finally caught him and put him back in the tree. Billy York helped us with him,” added Buck.
“Robert Abshier was the neighbor boy down the road and his mother was scared to death of water. She wouldn’t hardly let Robert get around a bathtub. We always played down at Spindletop Bayou and she told us not to play down there because Robert couldn’t swim, but we did it all the time. One day we decided to cross the bayou at Spindletop and play around in the woods on the other side and we were going to take Robert with us. It wasn’t deep enough to swim, we were just going to wade across it, so we got some apple crate lids and tied Robert’s feet to the lids to make them like snowshoes. He went out there about four or five steps and bogged down and fell and he couldn’t get back up, cause it was deeper than his arms were long. We went over and picked him up and got him out of there and carried him across after that. We took him back to the wash house and Claire, she was a black lady who worked for us, was washing clothes. We asked her if she would wash his clothes. We sent him home that day cleaner than when he came, and we didn’t say a thing about it to his mom,” said Buck with a smile.
“We would go camping on Spindletop Gulley Bayou. We had a pretty nice camp set up there, we had a tarp and tied it down on all sides. We’d get underneath it with our cots and mosquito bars and it would work pretty good, we’d camp out for a good while. There was Taylor and Nelson Mennard and Don Parnell, Bo and me, there were several of us out there. At first we would be in by 10 or 11, but as we got bigger we would stay for a week. Most of the time, we would go in at dark for supper with mom and dad, but otherwise, ranch style beans and spam were good,” he remarked.