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A “stick to it and work hard” way of life


 Kedric “Ked” Somerville and Boden “Bode” Carpenter (Photos: Brooke Pehrson, Brooke Pehrson Photography)
  • From photographer Brooke Pehrson: I took these this past June. They were taken out on Ked's property by his barns in Monticello, but they cowboy all over the place.  My own thoughts and feeling behind them? I value the old cowboys. They know how to work.  They know what real struggle is. They’ve stuck to something hard and tiring. These traits are things this generation is losing. Look at the old cowboys' hands, the life they’ve led, the hard work they’ve seen. Not everyone can do this kind of work. I love that Ked is passing these things onto Boden. If we had more "Keds" in this world to patiently teach and show their way of life. The '"stick to it and work hard" type of life, how much better off would we be?
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EXCERPTS from "The Horseman's Protege" by Marjorie Haun. Published in the fall 2019 edition of Range magazine, out of Carson City, Nevada.

While a tender adolescent, Ked struck up a friendship with Zina “Marleen” Rasmussen, a girl also born in 1936. Her family were wheat farmers and owned a place near Peter’s Point, north of Monticello. Although his home was some 10 miles away, Ked would look out toward the Rasmussen farm and think of that sweet Marleen. Whenever he could find a suitable excuse, he would ride the 10 miles to drop in on her and her family. ...

In April of 2011 Marleen was diagnosed with lung cancer. “The doctor gave her all the alternatives for treatment,” Ked says, “but she just didn’t want to go through all that.” After five months, Marleen passed away. With the loss of Marleen, Ked sold his cows to a family in Spanish Fork who had been building their herd from his own Simmental stock. He describes the transaction: “They came down to get some heifers and when they got here they looked over the fence and said, ‘How about your herd?’ and I said,‘Okay, let’s make a deal over this gate right here, right now, ’fore I change my mind.’

It was a provident moment for Ked.“These folks loved my cows and, in fact, now they have one of the best Simmental bull sales in the state.” And as providence would have it, before Marleen left his side, Ked met Boden Carpenter, who was just five at the time. Boden would come, not to fill a void, but to create a new space in Ked’s heart, and bring a different kind of love into his life. ...

Boden “Bode” Carpenter was born in 2006 and as a newborn was adopted in Detroit and taken by his new parents to their home in Kearns, Utah. The story goes that his parents thought they would be adopting a girl, but what they got was a boy with unbounded giddy-up and enormous nerve. ...

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