Прочитайте текст и заполните пропуски 13−18 словами, напечатанными в правой колонке под цифрами 1−8. Каждое из этих слов может быть использовано только один раз. В ответе укажите цифры, под которыми значатся выбранные Вами слова. Два слова в этом списке 1−8 лишние.
Twenty-first century cowboys
What do you know about twenty-first century cowboys? Cowboys have always had a 13 ______ image.
1. hard
2. hobby
3. job
4. interesting
5. modern
6. romantic
7. symbol
8. traditional
1
Прочитайте текст и заполните пропуски 13−18 словами, напечатанными в правой колонке под цифрами 1−8. Каждое из этих слов может быть использовано только один раз. В ответе укажите цифры, под которыми значатся выбранные Вами слова. Два слова в этом списке 1−8 лишние.
When people first watched Hollywood films, being a cowboy wasn’t a 14 ______.
1. hard
2. hobby
3. job
4. interesting
5. modern
6. romantic
7. symbol
8. traditional
Источник: ВПР по английскому языку 11 класс 2019 год. Вариант 5.
2
Прочитайте текст и заполните пропуски 13−18 словами, напечатанными в правой колонке под цифрами 1−8. Каждое из этих слов может быть использовано только один раз. В ответе укажите цифры, под которыми значатся выбранные Вами слова. Два слова в этом списке 1−8 лишние.
It was a life of adventure, freedom, horses. It was a classic 15 ______ of the United States of America. In reality, American cowboys have lived and worked here in the west and south-west of the United States for over three centuries, long before Hollywood.
1. hard
2. hobby
3. job
4. interesting
5. modern
6. romantic
7. symbol
8. traditional
Источник: ВПР по английскому языку 11 класс 2019 год. Вариант 5.
3
Прочитайте текст и заполните пропуски 13−18 словами, напечатанными в правой колонке под цифрами 1−8. Каждое из этих слов может быть использовано только один раз. В ответе укажите цифры, под которыми значатся выбранные Вами слова. Два слова в этом списке 1−8 лишние.
The adventure and romance have disappeared but the 16 ______ work and long hours are the same as they’ve always been.
1. hard
2. hobby
3. job
4. interesting
5. modern
6. romantic
7. symbol
8. traditional
Источник: ВПР по английскому языку 11 класс 2019 год. Вариант 5.
4
Прочитайте текст и заполните пропуски 13−18 словами, напечатанными в правой колонке под цифрами 1−8. Каждое из этих слов может быть использовано только один раз. В ответе укажите цифры, под которыми значатся выбранные Вами слова. Два слова в этом списке 1−8 лишние.
It’s also difficult to define a twenty-first century cowboy. Surely it can’t be the big cattle owners who do business with a seventy-billion dollar beef industry? These 17 ______ ranches use the latest technology and employ accountants.
1. hard
2. hobby
3. job
4. interesting
5. modern
6. romantic
7. symbol
8. traditional
Источник: ВПР по английскому языку 11 класс 2019 год. Вариант 5.
5
Прочитайте текст и заполните пропуски 13−18 словами, напечатанными в правой колонке под цифрами 1−8. Каждое из этих слов может быть использовано только один раз. В ответе укажите цифры, под которыми значатся выбранные Вами слова. Два слова в этом списке 1−8 лишние.
But even some of the old 18 ______ cattle ranches make more money nowadays by offering holidays to tourists.
1. hard
2. hobby
3. job
4. interesting
5. modern
6. romantic
7. symbol
8. traditional
Источник: ВПР по английскому языку 11 класс 2019 год. Вариант 5.
Пояснение.
Из подходящих синтаксически вариантов 4, 5, 6 и 8 по смыслу подходит только вариант 6. A romantic image — романтический образ.
Ответ: 6.
Источник: ВПР по английскому языку 11 класс 2019 год. Вариант 5.
Упражнение 41 для подготовки к ЕГЭ по английскому языку.
Определите, в какие пропуски подходят данные под текстом фразы. Одна фраза лишняя.
текстответ
21st Century Inventions
The 20th century was one of the most remarkable centuries because of the technological, medical and international innovations. Known as the Information Age, it could also be called the Consumer Age or the Communications Age. By the end of 1999, ___1___ from the birth and death rates to the way we live and work from day to day. And the reasons for this revolution are as follows: science, engineering and technology.
In 1900, the pace of life was significantly slower. Society was powered by steam and coal, electricity was just starting to arrive in a few homes, and radio, television, computers and other electronic devices were unheard of. People mainly stayed in the communities where they were born and even thinking of going to space was ridiculous. By the end of the century, man had walked on the moon, sheep were being cloned, nuclear energy was powering our lives, the aeroplane had made the world accessible and ___2___ .
Even on a domestic front, technology had changed our lives. In the early part of the century, gas and then electricity offered the opportunity to cook more quickly and efficiently. Technology sped through everyday living, eating became ‘on the run’. The introduction of microwave cooking has been at the forefront of this change in lifestyle. Cooking by microwave energy happened in the 1950’s but only became of real interest in the 1970’s when people wanted food to be fast, efficient and convenient. Food companies took this trend on board and produced complete meals suitable for people who had decided they would prefer to spend their time out of the kitchen. ___3___ . The fact that microwave cooking is the most economical cooking method on the market is superfluous, but the fact remains, if everyone in the country cooked a jacket potato in a microwave instead of a standard oven, in just one day one entire power station could be closed down. Cooking by microwave has been described as the 21st century cooking revolution. It perhaps should also be described as the appliance of freedom that ___4 ___ .
So which inventions from the 20th century will impact on developments in the 21st century? The general consensus is that space travel, genetic engineering and wireless communications will see the biggest developments. What railroads were to the 19th century and airplanes were to the 20th century, e-mail is to the 21st. E-mail is the single reason for the widest reaching, most impactful communications revolution in history. It has redefined the term ‘global village’ by easing ___5___ .
Every minute millions of Yahoo! Mails are sent and received. It has been estimated that eight billion e-mails are exchanged every day and this figure will increase. E-mail is without doubt one of the great inventions of our lifetime, as it affects every aspect of human communication from dating to business, from war to peace.
The inventions of the 21st century mainly revolve around things ___6___ . These things will continue to be developed and improved upon throughout the coming century.
A. communication between millions of people worldwide
B. variety, safety and convenience were the key factors
C. the 21st century is facing new technological challenges
D. technology turned us into a global community
E. such as the personal computer and the Internet
F. virtually every aspect of our lives had changed
G. meets the demands of 21st century living
1 – F; 2 – D; 3 – B; 4 – G; 5 – A; 6 – E
21st Century Inventions
The 20th century was one of the most remarkable centuries because of the technological, medical and international innovations. Known as the Information Age, it could also be called the Consumer Age or the Communications Age. By the end of 1999, virtually every aspect of our lives had changed from the birth and death rates to the way we live and work from day to day. And the reasons for this revolution are as follows: science, engineering and technology.
In 1900, the pace of life was significantly slower. Society was powered by steam and coal, electricity was just starting to arrive in a few homes, and radio, television, computers and other electronic devices were unheard of. People mainly stayed in the communities where they were born and even thinking of going to space was ridiculous. By the end of the century, man had walked on the moon, sheep were being cloned, nuclear energy was powering our lives, the aeroplane had made the world accessible and technology turned us into a global community.
Even on a domestic front, technology had changed our lives. In the early part of the century, gas and then electricity offered the opportunity to cook more quickly and efficiently. Technology sped through everyday living, eating became ‘on the run’. The introduction of microwave cooking has been at the forefront of this change in lifestyle. Cooking by microwave energy happened in the 1950’s but only became of real interest in the 1970’s when people wanted food to be fast, efficient and convenient. Food companies took this trend on board and produced complete meals suitable for people who had decided they would prefer to spend their time out of the kitchen. variety, safety and convenience were the key factors . The fact that microwave cooking is the most economical cooking method on the market is superfluous, but the fact remains, if everyone in the country cooked a jacket potato in a microwave instead of a standard oven, in just one day one entire power station could be closed down. Cooking by microwave has been described as the 21st century cooking revolution. It perhaps should also be described as the appliance of freedom that meets the demands of 21st century living.
So which inventions from the 20th century will impact on developments in the 21st century? The general consensus is that space travel, genetic engineering and wireless communications will see the biggest developments. What railroads were to the 19th century and airplanes were to the 20th century, e-mail is to the 21st. E-mail is the single reason for the widest reaching, most impactful communications revolution in history. It has redefined the term ‘global village’ by easing communication between millions of people worldwide.
Every minute millions of Yahoo! Mails are sent and received. It has been estimated that eight billion e-mails are exchanged every day and this figure will increase. E-mail is without doubt one of the great inventions of our lifetime, as it affects every aspect of human communication from dating to business, from war to peace.
The inventions of the 21st century mainly revolve around things such as the personal computer and the Internet. These things will continue to be developed and improved upon throughout the coming century.
(Supplemental Materials for Specific Textbooks—Life Pre-Intermediate)
Match headings to paragraphs: docs, pub
Back to the Board Doraemon Game for the first paragraph of p.87 (drive, slides, pub)
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The Romantic Image of Cowboys |
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The Cowboy Industry Nowadays |
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The Hard Work of Being a Cowboy |
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Why did Pat Crisswell decide to become a cowboy? |
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The Life of Two Cowboy Brothers |
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Cowboy Fashion |
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Cowboys have always had a romantic image. When people first watched Hollywood films, being a cowboy wasn’t a job. It was a life of adventure, freedom, horses. It was a classic symbol of the United States of America. In reality, the real American cowboys have lived and worked here in the west and south-west of the United States for over three centuries, long before Hollywood. The adventure and romance have disappeared but the hard work and long hours are the same as they’ve always been. |
|
No one knows how many cowboys are still working. Maybe between ten and fifty thousand. It’s also difficult to define a twenty-first century cowboy. Surely it can’t be the big cattle owners who do business with a seventy-billion dollar beef industry? These modern ranches use the latest technology and employ accountants. But even some of the old traditional cattle ranches make more money nowadays by offering holidays to tourists; people come and stay for a holiday and live in the cowboy’s life (or a Hollywood version of it.). |
|
But even with technology and Hollywood romance, real cowboys still do the same job they have done for years. The cattle still need to walk across huge plains and eat grass many miles from the ranch. And so cowboys ride on horses to bring them home. Cowboys work in the middle of nowhere, in a place where you can’t make a phone call because mobile phones don’t work. Like the cowboys of the past, twenty-first century cowboys still get up early on freezing cold mornings and make breakfast over an open fire. There is no Monday to Friday, weekends off or paid holidays. |
|
So why do men—because it is usually men—choose this life? Pat Crisswell had a good job with the government. He made good money but he didn’t like the city. He wanted to do something different. So one day, he gave up his job and moved to a ranch in Texas, earning much less as a cowboy. He remembers his work colleagues in the city on the day he left. They all thought Pat was crazy. But he wanted job satisfaction more than money. |
|
Two brothers—Tyrel and Blaine Tucker—have lived on ranches and worked with cows since they were children. Their mother had a ranch in Wyoming. Last winter, they looked after 2,300 cows. Every day from December until April, they rode across nearly 100,000 acres of land with only the cattle, the horses, and each other for company. Eighteen-year-old Tyrel Tucker says, “It was fun. You get to be by yourself.” |
|
Blaine has a large moustache and Tyrel is growing his. They wear traditional cowboy clothes with the famous hat and boots. You could do the same job in a baseball cap and a truck but Tyrel and Blaine prefer the traditional cowboy culture: “It’s a real life about you, your horse and the open country.” |
TEST 1
Задание 1
Установите соответствие между заголовками 1–8 и текстами A–G. Запишите свои ответы в таблицу. Используйте каждую цифру только один раз. В задании есть один лишний заголовок.
1. Education: the Way to the Top
2. From Agony to Love
3. Teaching to Learn
4. Learning That Never Stops
5. Things Worth Learning
6. The Right Word Can Bring Changes
7. What My Father Taught Me
8. The Power of Numbers
A. Education has the power to transform a person’s life. I am the living example of this. When I was on the streets, I thought I was not good at anything but I wrote a poem, and it got published. I went back to school to learn. I have learned the benefit of research and reading, of debate and listening. One day soon a group of fresh-faced college students will call me professor.
B. Language has the capacity to change the world and the way we live in it. People are often afraid to call things by their direct names, use taboos not to notice dangerous tendencies. Freedom begins with naming things. This has to happen in spite of political climates, careers being won or lost, and the fear of being criticized. After Helen Caldicott used the word ‘nuclear arms race’ an anti-nuclear movement appeared.
C. I never wanted to be a teacher. Yet years later, I find myself teaching high school English. I consider my job to be one of the most important aspects of my life, still I do not teach for the love of teaching. I am a teacher because I love to learn, and I have come to realize that the best way to learn is to teach.
D. One day my sister and I got one and the same homework. My sister finished the task in 2 minutes and went off to play. But I could not do it, so I went into my sister’s room and quickly copied her work. But there was one small problem: my father caught me. He didn’t punish me, but explained that cheating makes people feel helpless. And then I was left feeling guilty for cheating.
E. Lifelong learning does not mean spending all my time reading. It is equally important to get the habit of asking such questions as ‘what don’t I know about this topic, or subject?’, ‘what can I learn from this moment or person?’, and ‘what more do I need to learn?’ regardless of where I am, who I am talking to, or what I am doing.
F. Math has always been something that I am good at. Mathematics attracts me because of its stability. It has logic; it is dependable and never changes. There might be some additions to the area of mathematics, but once mathematics is created, it is set in stone. We would not be able to check emails or play videogames without the computer solving complex algorithms.
G. When my high school English teacher asked us to read Shakespeare, I thought it was boring and too difficult. I agonized over the syntax — I had never read anything like this. But now I am a Shakespeare professor, arid enjoy teaching Hamlet every semester. Each time I re-read the play, I find and learn something new for myself.
|
Текст |
A |
B |
C |
D |
E |
F |
G |
|
Заголовок |
Задание 2
Преобразуйте, если это необходимо, слово так, чтобы оно грамматически соответствовало содержанию текста.
BIG
If you love stories by Jules Verne and have always dreamt of going for a ride in a hot air balloon, England is the country for you. Every August England celebrates the __________________ hot air balloon festival in Europe.
THEY
Most historians credit the origins of the game to 11th or 12th century French monks, who began playing a ball against __________________ monastery walls.
CHOOSE
The Swedish __________________ a very good place for the castle.
NOT MEAN
Before a rugby match, the “All Blacks” dance a special Maori war dance. The Maories are the New Zealand aborigines. It ______ that all the players in the team are Maori but they all perform the dance.
GOOD
Next morning the music critic of ‘Le Figaro’ wrote, «The __________________ violinist played the piano. The greatest pianist turned the pages. But the man who should have turned the pages played the violin.»
Задание 3
Прочитайте текст и заполните пропуски словами, напечатанными в колонке под цифрами 1—8. Каждое из этих слов может быть использовано только один раз. В ответе укажите цифры, под которыми значатся выбранные Вами слова. Два слова в этом списке 1—8 лишние.
1) attraction
2) chapter
3) character
4) discussed
5) enjoyed
6) romantic
7) took

The Summer Garden in St. Petersburg was personally designed by Peter the Great in 1704. It is home to marble statues acquired from Europe especially for Russia’s new capital. It was a 1 ______ place for courtly life outside the palace, and balls were held here by the nobility.
Russian aristocrats also 2 ______ simply walking in the Garden.
The surviving statues were moved indoors, while modern replicas 3______ their place in the park.
A major park 4______ was the fountains, the oldest in Russia.
The park was chosen by Alexander Pushkin as a setting for childhood walks of the fictional 5 ______ Eugene Onegin.
The Summer Garden Park remains one of the most 6 ______ places in St Petersburg.
_________________________________________________________________________________
KEYS
- 1637482
- biggest
their
had chosen
does not mean
best
- 857136
TEST 2
Задание 1
Установите соответствие между текстами A—E и рубриками 1—6. Занесите свои ответы в таблицу. Используйте каждую цифру только один раз. В задании одна рубрика лишняя.
1. Literature
2. Sports
3. Events
4. Places to visit
5. History
6. Transport
A. Lake Seliger is a famous Russian landmark. Located in the center of Valdai, it is quite far from the noise of civilization and at the same time only seven hours of going by car from Moscow. The ideal geographical location made it a very popular place for tourism. The special atmosphere of Seliger provides leisurely, comfortable rest, long and interesting conversations.
B. The annual show “Scarlet Sails” in St. Petersburg is the main graduation ceremony of Russia, a holiday dedicated to all school graduates. For the first time “Scarlet Sails” was held in Leningrad in 1968. In that year, 25 thousand school graduates gathered for the holiday. In 2018, this celebration turned 50, there were about 80 thousand graduates on the streets and embankments of the city.
C. Sailing needs a good, consistent, constant focus; it demands your attention. The wind and water are dynamic, and understanding any changes that you need to make, especially if you are sailing competitively, is vital to doing well. If you’re racing, you also learn to improve techniques very quickly, whether that’s boat positioning or trimming the sails.
D. Crimson Sails is a classic adventure tale of love and hope in the beauty of one’s dreams. Written by Russia’s Alexander Grin in 1923, this short fantasy novel introduces readers to Soll, a hopeful young girl who has been ostracized in her village. Grin is known for his amazing use of metaphor, and the present translation preserves and highlights this device.
E. Delicate and pure sound of Valdai bells has been pleasant to human hearing more than 500 years already. According to a beautiful legend, Valdai bells first appeared in 1478. In the beginning of the 19th century special bell workshops and plants appeared. In spite of the fact that they cost much money the value of Valdai bells was in their high quality and beautiful sound.
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Текст |
A |
B |
C |
D |
E |
|
Рубрика |
Задание 2
Преобразуйте, если это необходимо, слово так, чтобы оно грамматически соответствовало содержанию текста.
KNOW
Spaghetti, pasta, noodles, macaroni… It __________________ by different names in different countries, but it is equally popular all over the world.
PAY
This is the day to congratulate our veterans many of whom __________________ for victory with their lives.
LEAVE
To test his ideas, Heyerdal decided to build a copy of an ancient Egyptian boat. On May 25, 1969 the boat called Ra ______ a port in Morocco.
BEGIN
It __________________ in 1978 when Don Cameron decided to create an event that would help balloonists from all over the world to get together. It was a great idea.
NOT SINK
In May the temperature begins to rise. The gloomy night is succeeded by continuous daylight, when the sun ______ below the horizon for several months.
ONE
When you look at Kizhi, the __________________ thing that you see is the beautiful main building with dozens of teardrop-shaped roofs. There are two smaller buildings with a similar design nearby, which are also very impressive.
Задание 3
Прочитайте текст и заполните пропуски 1—6 словами, напечатанными в правой колонке под цифрами 1—8. Каждое из этих слов может быть использовано только один раз. В ответе укажите цифры, под которыми значатся выбранные Вами слова. Два слова в этом списке 1—8 лишние.
1. hard
2. hobby
3. job
4. interesting
5. modern
6. romantic
7. symbol
8. traditional
Twenty-first century cowboys
What do you know about twenty-first century cowboys? Cowboys have always had a 1 ______ image.
When people first watched Hollywood films, being a cowboy wasn’t a 2 ______.
It was a life of adventure, freedom, horses. It was a classic 3 ______ of the United States of America. In reality, American cowboys have lived and worked here in the west and south-west of the United States for over three centuries, long before Hollywood.
The adventure and romance have disappeared but the 4______ work and long hours are the same as they’ve always been.
It’s also difficult to define a twenty-first century cowboy. Surely it can’t be the big cattle owners who do business with a seventy-billion dollar beef industry? These 5______ ranches use the latest technology and employ accountants.
But even some of the old 6 ______ cattle ranches make more money nowadays by offering holidays to tourists.
KEYS
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43215 |
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2 |
is known |
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have paid |
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|
left |
|
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began |
|
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doesnotsink |
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|
first |
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|
3 |
6 |
|
3 |
|
|
7 |
|
|
1 |
|
|
5 |
|
|
8 |
Прочитайте тексты и установите соответствие между текстами А–G и заголовками 1–8. В ответ запишите цифры, в порядке, соответствующем буквам. Используйте каждую цифру только один раз. В задании есть один лишний заголовок.
1. Good for everyone
2. Easy to care for
3. Part of culture
4. Screen fashion
5. An innovative idea
6. Working clothes
7. Jeans’ labels
8. Clothes to protest
A. Jeans are one of fashion’s most long enduring trends. Cowboys wear them but so do supermodels, farmers, presidents and housewives. Ask any group of people why they wear jeans and you will get a range of answers. For some they’re comfortable and easy — for others they’re trendy and cool. Jeans mean different things to different people but they are popular everywhere.
B. Americans do not have a national folk dress with a long tradition. Blue jeans are probably the most recognisable article of American clothing. They have been part of American life for over 125 years. Blue denim jeans became not only an expression of American fashion but also an element of American identity known around the world.
C. Jeans were first designed as trousers for farmers and miners in the states of the American West. They quickly grew popular with common people, including cowboys, factory employees and railroad builders. The new trousers were made from a very strong material which did not wear out easily. However, at the same time jeans were very practical and comfortable to wear.
D. Pockets were the weak point of the miners’ clothes — they easily tore away from the jeans. A man called Jacob Davis had the idea of using metal rivets (fasteners) to hold the pockets and the jeans together so that they wouldn’t tear. Davis wanted to patent his idea, but he didn’t have enough money, so he offered Levi Strauss a deal if Strauss paid for the patent. Strauss accepted and started making jeans.
E. By the middle of the twentieth century, these heavy cotton trousers were a symbol of opposition for young artists and writers. College students started to wear them to show they were against the Vietnam War. The new trousers were banned in American schools from coast to coast and sometimes in theatres and cinemas.
F. Jeans are good because they don’t show the dirt. You can easily go a month without washing them and they don’t look shocking. They don’t need to be washed as often as other trousers and you don’t need to iron them. What’s more, because of the strong material you can wear your favorite jeans for years. Even the occasional hole or spot doesn’t spoil them at all.
G. In the 30s and 40s many people began to spend their spare time watching movies where adventurous cowboys rode horses, fought bad guys and wore blue jeans. The actors made jeans popular in movies and everyone wanted to wear them. Young people wished to imitate the casual “cowboyish” look they saw in films, and they began to wear jeans as casual wear.
| Текст | A | B | C | D | E | F | G |
| Заголовок |
Внимание! Не стесняйтесь оставлять отзывы.
Jul 24th 2014
(Updated Oct 22nd 2015)
By Ariel Ramchandani
The San Luis Valley is called “the valley” by its residents, as if it were the only place on Earth. It’s a narrow gash of land in southern Colorado, about 50 miles across and 100 miles long, depending on where you measure. The soft San Juan range rises to the west; to the east, the spine of the Sangre de Christo mountains, with the low curves of the Great Sand Dunes National Park in front like a ghostly shadow. At 7,700ft, the valley floor feels like a hammock, strung up halfway to the peaks and then snapped straight across. There are very few trees, which gives the impression you could see straight across the whole thing. Around 50,000 people live in a place where you know if the police are at your neighbour’s house, or if someone has been poaching elk on your property. Your pickup is probably the only pickup sputtering down the track, but if it isn’t you probably know the other driver, and will roll down your window to chat.
On the November night I enter the valley, ours is the only car on the road. We’ve shaken off skiers, tourists and cops on their way from Albuquerque to Santa Fe. Drew, the apprentice manager at George and Julie Whitten’s Blue Range Ranch, is driving. The snowstorm we saw coming from hundreds of miles away in the flat western sky is upon us, falling in fat, dry cottonball flakes.
Drew is 24, a California boy from the Bay Area. He scans the road for the turn on the county line. We’ve both been at a conference in Albuquerque for Quivira, an organisation that promotes land stewardship in the west. When we met, on the last night, he was hoping to find a job for after, but all anyone was peddling was internships. That, plus sitting still for three days, and this restless cowboy is thirsty for a beer.
Drew is handsome, almost ostentatiously so, with bright blue eyes and thick lashes. Within 30 seconds of meeting him I had somehow given him a dollar to help pay for his drink. He has that slow, California way of talking, where the words come in languid, cresting waves. He writes stories but finds them hard to finish.
We pass glistening irrigation sprinklers, great metal things on wheels, spanning the alfalfa fields like birds, wings spread, legs thin. The green circles of irrigated land, Drew tells me, are visible from space.
George and Julie have beaten us to the ranch. They rarely leave home because of the 230 or so cattle in their care, needing food and water, always needing something. The same goes for their dogs, Zeke and Hope. Zeke is a dignified border collie, Hope a less dignified collie-mix. As Drew says, “she always looks like she’s done something wrong.”
George fills the cast-iron stove with wood. It heats the house, keeping costs down. George built the house himself, putting the windows low enough to capture all the sun in winter and none in summer. A package has arrived for Drew: a pair of White’s ranching boots, custom-made, so stiff they’re nearly impossible to lace.
Julie makes us herbal tea. She is a petite woman, 57 years old, with delicate features and fairy prettiness. Her straw-blonde hair hangs straight down in the dry air. “I like it when Julie gets off the plane from California [where she’s from] and her hair is all soft and curly,” George says. He is 60 and solidly built, with a flat face and a child’s stare, steady and curious. They dress alike: flannels, work boots, straight-brim hats, bandanas around their necks.
“By the way,” Julie says, as Puta the cat slinks behind the stove, “we’re not like most ranchers: we believe in climate change.”
In this isolated alpine desert, water is all-important. And George and Julie will tell you that climate change is taking it away from them.
When white settlers began making permanent homes in the San Luis Valley in the mid-19th century, they found a miracle. Water, flowing abundantly in the desert, pouring through the creeks, streams and rivers, bubbling out of the ground. This is where the Rio Grande river is born, gathering melted snowfall from the Rockies and feeding three states on its way to Mexico. And in addition to the river and streams, the settlers discovered an aquifer under the valley, a huge lake of groundwater, 300ft deep in places.
The first individual surface-water rights in Colorado were filed in the valley in the late 1800s, on a first-come, first-served basis. Free-flowing artesian wells were tapped into the aquifer in 1887, and for decades residents used these, combined with surface water, to flood their crops on farms that perhaps should never have been. In the 1960s they switched to centre-pivot irrigation, which uses sprinklers to deliver water more efficiently to plants and allows for intensive production on otherwise arid land. It’s this that paints those Seurat patterns on the landscape. It also means that less water returns to the aquifer beneath.
From the 1930s to the 1970s, encouraged by the state, a boom in farming and relatively high levels of precipitation, valley farmers and ranchers drilled almost 6,000 wells into the aquifer. For a long time, it was easy enough to replace what they took with water from the melting snowpack. But, from 2002, drought made it impossible to refill the aquifer. Groundwater levels have plummeted. Most troublingly, the confined aquifer—trapped by layers of clay and silt underneath the free-flowing aquifer—began to fall. Droughts came again in 2010, 2011 and 2012.
“Mother Nature just didn’t send it,” says George, who has been president of the Rio Grande Water Conservation District since 2010, when the previous president died in a snowstorm. “We built this whole civilisation on something not real.”
The issue of water rights in a time of drought has created tension (and not just in the valley: in California, there has been a series of legal and political battles over water ownership). Last year, the Conservation District ruled that its members should stop pumping and return almost 8,400 acres of land to fallow, and the water division passed a law decreeing that the water in the confined aquifer needs to be restored to 1978-2000 levels within the next 20 years—or the pumps and wells will be turned off.
The problem “makes you realise” something, says Kent Price, a second-generation potato farmer from the middle of the valley. “We’re all in a big pool, the people who have water and people who don’t. The haves get mad at the have-nots when everybody’s wells are going down. You get a lot of grumbling.”
On Price’s farm, the drought has spurred innovations such as new seeds and more efficient wells. But it’s still hell for his bottom line. “Even if you make your irrigator more effective, ground that once was being farmed is not farmed any more.” He does some maths. “If 40,000 acres are taken out of the valley, each with a $1,500-an-acre return on cash crops, that’s $60m lost to the local economy.”
In the morning, the world is white. Through the eight-foot panoramic windows of the Whitten ranchhouse, the mountain peaks appear hazy. A bull has hopped the electric fence, and Drew and George are trying to urge him back. I watch the two men and the furry black bull, baby-faced and steady as a boulder. When they’re done, the men shuffle back in.
In the valley, the sun shines hard for around 320 days a year. In the spring, an unrelenting wind pulls the loose dry soil off the potato fields, coating faces and windshields. The temperature swings to desert extremes, with winter nights down to -34°C (-29°F). There’s little precipitation: after averaging eight inches a year from 1948 to 2011, it’s been far less lately. And when it comes, it’s apt to come all at once.
The weather leeches the colour out of everything, buffing the paint off doors and fences, bleaching the reds and blues of Julie’s Buddhist prayer flags to pink and watery aqua.
George and Julie show me the valley. It has both softened them and roughed them up. “Everything about the valley is intense,” George says. “The weather, the landscape, the people.”
To top up their income from the cattle, George and Julie have started growing food. What they don’t sell, they eat. We drive to the farm, to check on the herd, and to see the crops they have planted.
On the way, with Hope the dog slobbering and flirting with Drew in the back seat, George and Julie tell me how they met. In 2000, Julie was teaching environmental studies at a university in the north-east. The class travelled around the country in a school bus, looking for interesting environmental practices. One of the students wrote to George and arranged a visit. At the end of it, Julie says, “George and I both felt, we don’t want to walk away from this.” They kissed. George had been married before, and already had three kids. His best friend, Everett, kept trying to get him to go out to meet women, saying, “it’s not like one is going to drive in off the highway.” But Julie had.
Three weeks later, she came back to the ranch. They spent three days in bed talking about why they shouldn’t get married. They were completely different. Julie was from southern California, a vegetarian, a Buddhist. She had protested against the Vietnam war. George is a third-generation rancher. His grandfather, a schoolteacher, came to the valley from Iowa. His father was a John Birch Republican, burying his guns in the yard; he fought at the battle of Midway, and then at Iwo Jima, one of only four or five men in his company who survived. “The war marked him,” George says. “He was not an easy person.”
When the Whittens stopped ranching sheep and switched to cows, his father’s heart went out of the ranch. He called George back from college. “He said I was wasting my time in school and to get my ass home. I have been here ever since.”
Somewhere during those three days in bed, among the conversations about gun control and abortion, George asked Julie to marry him. The wedding took place in a cottonwood grove in the mountains. George wore a cowboy tuxedo: black Wranglers, black tails, tall hat and shoestring tie. Julie wore a princess dress she had bought on sale at home in San Diego. They posed for pictures with George’s collie, Chico.
They are happily married. Except, “once you fall in love with a hippie,” George says, “you can’t get drunk and shoot prairie dogs any more.”
“Especially,” Julie adds, “when your wife tells you that prairie dogs kiss each other indiscriminately.”
After her arrival, things changed. They switched to producing grass-fed organic beef. The cattle spend their whole lives on pasture and are killed humanely at a tiny local place, Mel’s Custom Meat Processor, open only on Mondays and Fridays. This makes them rare beasts. According to the Department of Agriculture, in 2004 40% of all the livestock in America was raised on 2% of the farms; and according to Eric Schlosser, author of “Fast Food Nation”, in 2006 the great majority of America’s beef emerged from 13 slaughterhouses.
When we get to the farm, we check the finish herd—the cattle that will soon be on their way to Mel’s. The two-year-olds have filled-out rumps. Creating tender grass-fed beef is an art: George and Julie do ultrasound scans to make sure the meat is well marbled.
The cattle, mostly Black Angus, with silky coats and sweet eyes, ignore the humans. Right now the finish herd is grazing on a cover crop—planted to help the soil—of collards, winter rye and sweet clover. When I take a bite, the collards are still sweet, flash-frozen in last night’s snow. The land looks green and fresh.
Moving herds and planting cover-crops are part of a land-management strategy developed towards the end of the 20th century and trademarked under the name Holistic Management. Its aim is twofold: to help the ranchers manage their land more efficiently, and to restore the world’s grasslands.
The system has its critics. A 2002 review of initial trials in Africa found issues such as lack of improvement in grass cover and the need for supplemental feed. The methods are unproven on a large scale and run counterintuitive to the idea that overgrazing, deforestation and farming led to desertification in the first place. Methane emitted from the digestive processes of ruminant animals is a greenhouse gas. But George has been practising the system for many years and he believes it helps to deal with drought.
“Weather tends to keep doing what it’s doing,” says Peter Blanken, a geography professor at the University of Colorado, “and superimposed on that are these longer-term trends. Droughts are sneaky. They sneak up on you; you realise it’s been dry for four years, and then it’s been dry for ten.”
In an area dependent on mountain-snow run-off, Blanken says, the prognosis is bleak. “There should be a decrease in snow cover as it gets warmer. The snowmelt will happen earlier. Snow is the big factor.”
David Gochis, a hydro-meteorologist at the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research in Colorado, echoes Blanken’s point. “Uncharacteristic dryness could become more common. Even if there are not appreciable changes in rainfall, the increased heat could drive the south-western American climate to become like northern Mexico: extremely dry, very hot and even more water-limited.”
When I ask Gochis how easy it will be for the valley residents to refill their aquifer, he replies with a question of his own. “How do you save every month when your paycheck is already spent?”
But to many Valley ranchers, the drought doesn’t mean the world is getting warmer; it’s just a bad cycle.
“You see times where there’s drought and times where we have water,” Kent Price says. “Right now we’re in the cycle of a drought. If we had heavy snowpack, that would fix everything. The true answer is Mother Nature has got to start bringing us water.”
Just after the water stopped coming was when George and Julie took on their first apprentice. Their apprentices are strong young people, often from non-ranching backgrounds. Instead they have studied environmental science and tend to be excited about ecology and holistic management, and have fresh insights. “Someone who didn’t grow up in [ranching] asks the ‘stupid’ questions, because they don’t know what’s possible or impossible,” George says. “If you grew up in it, you don’t always question the ideas.”
None of George’s children has gone into the ranch business. This is common among the children of farmers. It is hard work, even without a drought. George and Julie think Joseba, George’s grandson, a six-year-old who loves tractors, and one of Julie’s nephews, who goes to cowboy camp, might continue their legacy. “Sometimes,” George says, “it skips a generation.”
After visiting the finish herd, we head to Saguache, a town that rose at the turn of the 20th century, nudged into growth by the narrow-gauge railroad, and fell with the Depression. Victorian houses sit empty, paint licked clean by the valley wind. The streets are still, as if waiting for a gunfight. We go to the Fourth Street Diner and pay a two-dollar premium to eat burgers made with meat from George’s herd.
Over lunch George reveals he’s going to retire from the water board. After the decision to refill the aquifer, someone shot out the windows of his truck. His opinions created too many conversations that ended with people looking at their shoes or George hanging up the phone. There are too many folks he can’t have a beer with any more.
He tells a story about going into Alamosa, and seeing two queues. “There was a long line at the food bank, people who work in agriculture and were starving. And the other line, five deep, at the gun store.”
But “they are really good people,” George says of his community, when we get home that night. Drew cooks dinner, a minestrone he learned while working on a farm in Italy. Julie makes herbal tea.
“It’s easy to call someone a redneck, but [the way they act is] out of desperation,” George says. “It’s like a religious belief. The ranches, the water laws, everything we have been brought up to believe in has no value. In the end there will be no water and we’ll be metering it out to the last drop to those who can afford to buy it. The south-west has cancer.”
In the morning, the winter sun is shining brightly through George’s windows. He looks at the mountains. “A great place to starve to death.”
Today they will be weighing the animals and parcelling out those which will go to the slaughterhouse tomorrow. There’s paperwork to be done, and the butcher’s cutting instructions to fill out.
“We usually cry,” Julie warns me.
It’s decided that Drew is going to deliver the animals to Mel’s. People will finally take Drew seriously, George says with a glint, because of his new White’s boots. I go over to the farm with Drew to check the tyres on the truck that will take the cattle. He leads me out to see the finish herd again. One of them, a tiny one, Abby, lets you get close if you’re patient. The cows come towards us, mooing as if they need food.
“Lying bastards,” Drew says. “Stinkers.”
The others arrive to weigh the cows. George, Drew, Julie and the dogs start moving them towards interlocking corrals. The dogs work accurately, responding to the humans’ gentle demands. We move the cows by working behind them. It’s subtle, and careful. Twice the cows almost enter the chute and then make a break for it, galloping away.
The sun begins to set. All the cattle are released except the final three—a blonde that incited some of the trouble earlier, and two black ones. One of these had his back bruised during branding and was nursed back to health by Julie. They will eat him themselves.
After the cattle are herded up, Zeke refuses to take himself off the job, and keeps his nose pressed up to the fence. Drew gets the cows some hay. Julie finally leaves, to check on the other dog. The setting sun is cooling the air, turning the valley a cold purplish blue. George waits a long time before walking away.
On his potato farm, Kent Price needs a good year to survive. “I just don’t know. Another bad year, another hard drought and that’s it.”
It might snow next year. It might not. George will have stepped down from the water board. Drew will be gone. Maybe Joseba will take over the family farm one day. Maybe Holistic Management will save the grasslands. It’s hard to know what will happen in this economy of sunlight, soil and water.
The last night I’m there, the night before the cows go to Mel’s, we talk about all the places to be born, all the lives that exist. George says he’s thankful to have been born right here. “When we’re out with the dogs and the cows and the horses, that’s a good day.” He leans against his woodstove to warm his hands and then turns back to the centre of his house. ■
Photographs Marlon Krieger
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100
In Hollywood cowboys movies, you see a job.
TRUE — FALSE
FALSE
100
Cowboys get a good salary. TRUE – FALSE
FALSE
100
Cowboys’ life hasn’t changed much since early days.
TRUE — FALSE
TRUE
100
Modern cowboys, still get up very early. TRUE — FALSE
TRUE
200
Cowboys are a symbol of _______
U.S.A
200
Do they have weekends off?
No, they don’t
200
All of them are born into that life. TRUE — FALSE
FALSE
200
What’s the relationship between Blaine and Tyrel?
They are brothers.
300
How long have cowboys existed?
over three centuries.
300
What’s wrong with their cellphone when they are far away?
They don’t work.
300
Since when have Blaine and Tyrel worked as cowboys?
Since they were children.
300
When did they look after 2.300 cows?
Last winter.
400
How do cowboys make breakfast?
over a fire
400
How do Blaine and Tyrel dress?
traditional cowboys clothes, famous boots and hat
400
Why did Pat’s colleagues think he was crazy?
Coz’ he moved to a job with less salary.
500
Why do Blaine and Tyrel Tucker prefer traditional cowboy culture?
Because it’s a real life for you, your horse and the open country.
500
What job did Pat Crisswell have before?
an office job with the U.S goverment.
500
Why did Pat Crisswell gave up his previuos job?
He didn’t like the city and being indoors.
500
For Pat Crisswell, what satisfation means?
being free, wake up under the sky and being his own boss.
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