Posted by
David C. Arbour on Sunday, November 23, 2008 2:35:05 AM
More than halfway through his 2,000-mile horseback journey
across the West, Mark Ryan stopped at Zeb Bell's ranch outside a tiny
town in southern Idaho.
"He just showed up at my back
door, all of the sudden there he was," recalled Bell, a pro rodeo
announcer. "He introduced himself, and asked to just stay here for the
night. It's not the first time we've had someone like
him."
Bell, 61, described Ryan as a long rider -
someone who rides horseback for hundreds or thousands of miles, echoes
an era long gone.
For Ryan, riding across the West on
his horse - Mister Doodles - to visit a friend was a chance to see the
country in a way not many other people do.
"It's part
of life, you just kind of get an urge to do something before you get
too old," said Ryan, 46. "There's nothing like traveling 2 miles an
hour."
He also left an impression on the people he
met as he rode through seven states, from Oklahoma to
Washington.
Ryan reckons he camped at dozens of
different places, stayed with more than 60 people, and his horse and
mule wore down almost 10 sets of shoes. He took with him only maps, no
Global Positioning System or even a cell phone.
At
some places, Ryan said, he rode on highways where cars were an
arm-length away from his horse. His border collie, Halfway, accompanied
him to Kansas, where she blistered her feet on hot pavement and had to
be picked up by Ryan's wife, Eva.
In Wyoming, the
prairie was full of rattlesnakes. At one point in the Idaho
backcountry, Ryan got lost for a full day.
"It didn't
seem like a big of a deal at first, but it was a lot of work," Ryan
said. "Some of them mountains, boy, it got cold. Frost on the tent,
rainy days and a lot of hot days. All we carried was 60 pounds of gear,
at times 50 pounds of feed."
He left his hometown of
Kingfisher, Okla. on June 2 and didn't reach Ferndale, Wash., a small
town about 20 miles south of the Canadian border, until mid-October,
almost five months on the road.
"You can't believe he
actually did it," said April Smith, one of the friends Ryan was
visiting. "It's kind of a John Wayne story."
She and
her husband didn't believe Ryan when he said he would ride his horse to
Washington.
While the Smiths waited for him, Ryan was
meeting different all sorts of people. There was a county sheriff and
the rodeo announcer in Idaho, a widow in Kansas, and many others. He
kept the names and addresses of all of them.
In
Laramie, Wyo., residents called animal control after seeing Mister
Doodles and the mule - named Festus - resting at a park in town. Animal
control worker Terese Bingham found Ryan reading his Bible and the
animals were fine.
"It takes a lot to pull off a trip
like that, not many people call pull off being alone like that,"
Bingham said.
Outside Brush, Colo., Floyd Pickett
helped Ryan get new shoes for Mister Doodles and
Festus.
"I had a lot of admiration because he had the
guts to go do it," said Pickett, a retired ranch foreman. "I'm 67 years
old, and I always wanted to do it."
Ryan stayed with
the Smiths for a few weeks, but because the weather was getting cold he
decided not to ride his horse back to Oklahoma. He looked for rides,
but ended up buying an old truck, with a horse trailer for Mister
Doodles and Festus, his wife said.