Standing around while an animal grazes may have its pleasures, but it’s far from intellectually engaging. So while Gus grazes, I make it my business to shoo away the biting flies by swinging the lead rope against his legs, gently scraping my boot along his shins, and chasing them off his belly and back. I also make myself useful with brushless pre-grooming: running my hands all over him to scrub off dead hair and wipe away any clinging mud or shavings or other debris.
Today the winds are gusty. That helps keep the flies off him, but I quickly realize it also reveals just how filthy he is. In the past couple of days, he’s rolled repeatedly in a dust-bath wallow that he and his pasturemate Henry have excavated in their sandy-soiled paddock. Now each time I rub Gus’s fur or pat his back, a visible puff of superfine dust erupts into the air and blows away. I rub and pat and rub and pat, and the puffs just keep rising and blowing. Trapped between his skin and his coat is what must be a wheelbarrowful of powdered dirt.
Absorbed in his grassy feast, Gus is oblivious, but I’m having a high old time watching the billows burst from under my hand. I begin thumping him in syncopated rhythms, emitting complex smoke signals. As I pat his back and neck and rump like a beatnik on bongos, he just grazes on, smoldering nonchalantly in the breeze. Summertime, and the living is hazy.
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