Storytelling is tradition—a way to honor land, legacy, and life. Texans on the Range is an ongoing video series giving you a front-row seat to the accounts of real people working, living, and playing across Texas. From seasoned ranchers to small-town entrepreneurs, these videos honor the voices, trades, and traditions that shape rural Texas.
Nature
A Comprehensive Guide to Agriculture InsuranceIn the dynamic world of agriculture, producers face a multitude of risks that can significantly impact their livelihoods. The backbone of America relies on hardworking farmers and ranchers who understand the inherent uncertainties in their business.
History
Goodbye to a RiverAt Texas Ranches, we celebrate Texas stories and voices—old and new, established and challenging. One of our favorites is that of John Graves, a true Texan whose love of the land and reverence for its natural rhythms echo through every page of his classic Goodbye to a River. Part memoir, part history, part quiet meditation, the book recounts a solo canoe trip down the Brazos River as Graves reflects on vanishing wild places, fading traditions, and what it means to be shaped by the land you love. It’s a timeless reminder that in Texas, the story of the river is the story of us. That afternoon I got only to Eagle Creek, still probing courageously against weather’s ire. Rounded gray stone cliffs stand beside the creek mouth; in the river itself massive, split-away, rhombic blocks twist and slow the green current of a long pool.
Texans on the Range
Mason's StoryStorytelling is tradition—a way to honor land, legacy, and life. Texans on the Range is an ongoing video series giving you a front-row seat to the accounts of real people working, living, and playing across Texas. From seasoned ranchers to small-town entrepreneurs, these videos honor the voices, trades, and traditions that shape rural Texas.
Nature
Ode to a MuleSome people have asked, “What is the most important equipment to have on a farm?” On our farm it is not the big enclosed, air-conditioned tractor, the big non-enclosed, non-air-conditioned tractor, the backhoe, the combine, the plow, the sprayer, the over-seeder, the cutter, the rake, or the baler. Nope. It’s not any of these things. I think I just lost some of the big farmers.
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