selewis wrote:I like this last photo. The tight working area is a little surprising but it appears to be a spot they used regularly. Does anyone have any guess as to what the device with the coils, on the off side of the horse, might be?
Something that I can't put my finger on in this shot strikes me that it is semi posed. Maybe it's that none of the action is blurred, everyone seems frozen in their task. Dunno, just an impression.
BTW so many good and really interesting photos have been posted recently. So many that I haven't had the time to devote the attention to each one that they all deserve. Thanks all: Pat, John, and of course Sam.
Sandy
I'd agree that this photo looks like something out of the "Twilight Zone", rather than a real working picture.
The working area is beyond tight(five guy and a horse?), if that horse backed up a step, he'd get a horseshoe brand on his butt from a guy who's not paying attention.
I have never seen anyone work an anvil like that, it's completely backwards.
The guy watching the shoe being nailed on has his face pretty close to a guy who is swinging a hammer.
Maybe it's the first day on the job, with the clean, unmarked chaps, shiny boots, and spurs.
My chaps are covered with patches, holes, scars, cuts, burn marks, and blood stains.