My Flint Hills
Between the Nebraska border and Osage County, Oklahoma, are the Flint Hills if Kansas, and growing on those hills the last of the tallgrass prairie that once ranged from Canada to Texas, and on those fields of bluestem, cattle graze — and tending the cattle, someone like Jim Hoy, whose people have ranched there from well, not quite immemorial, but pretty darn close. Hoy has always called the Flint Hills home and over the decades he has made a study of them — their tough terrain and quiet beauty, their distinctive folk life and cattle culture — and marshaled his observations to bring the Flint Hills home to readers in a singular way. These essays are Hoy’s Flint Hills, combining family lore and anecdotes of ranching life with reflections on the region’s rich history and nature. Whether it’s weaning calves, shoeing horses, checking in on a local legend or a night of high school basketball in nearby Cassody, encountering a coyote or a badger or surveying what’s happened to the tallgrass prairie over time, summoning cowboy traditions or parsing the place’s plant life or rock formations, he has something to say — and you can bet it’s well worth hearing. With his keen eye, understated wit, and store of knowledge, Hoy makes his Flint Hills come alive, and in the telling, live on.
Between the Nebraska border and Osage County, Oklahoma, are the Flint Hills if Kansas, and growing on those hills the last of the tallgrass prairie that once ranged from Canada to Texas, and on those fields of bluestem, cattle graze — and tending the cattle, someone like Jim Hoy, whose people have ranched there from well, not quite immemorial, but pretty darn close. Hoy has always called the Flint Hills home and over the decades he has made a study of them — their tough terrain and quiet beauty, their distinctive folk life and cattle culture — and marshaled his observations to bring the Flint Hills home to readers in a singular way. These essays are Hoy’s Flint Hills, combining family lore and anecdotes of ranching life with reflections on the region’s rich history and nature. Whether it’s weaning calves, shoeing horses, checking in on a local legend or a night of high school basketball in nearby Cassody, encountering a coyote or a badger or surveying what’s happened to the tallgrass prairie over time, summoning cowboy traditions or parsing the place’s plant life or rock formations, he has something to say — and you can bet it’s well worth hearing. With his keen eye, understated wit, and store of knowledge, Hoy makes his Flint Hills come alive, and in the telling, live on.
Between the Nebraska border and Osage County, Oklahoma, are the Flint Hills if Kansas, and growing on those hills the last of the tallgrass prairie that once ranged from Canada to Texas, and on those fields of bluestem, cattle graze — and tending the cattle, someone like Jim Hoy, whose people have ranched there from well, not quite immemorial, but pretty darn close. Hoy has always called the Flint Hills home and over the decades he has made a study of them — their tough terrain and quiet beauty, their distinctive folk life and cattle culture — and marshaled his observations to bring the Flint Hills home to readers in a singular way. These essays are Hoy’s Flint Hills, combining family lore and anecdotes of ranching life with reflections on the region’s rich history and nature. Whether it’s weaning calves, shoeing horses, checking in on a local legend or a night of high school basketball in nearby Cassody, encountering a coyote or a badger or surveying what’s happened to the tallgrass prairie over time, summoning cowboy traditions or parsing the place’s plant life or rock formations, he has something to say — and you can bet it’s well worth hearing. With his keen eye, understated wit, and store of knowledge, Hoy makes his Flint Hills come alive, and in the telling, live on.