1970 Roy Montana - North of Roy at my grandfathers ranch that was right where the Missouri Breaks country started. I would go stay with LeRoy for a month every summer for about a months time and would "help him" around the ranch. I absolutely loved it.
We saddled up one morning and trailed cows on horseback from his ranch back to another piece of property he owned in the Breaks. I don't recall the distance but it was several miles away. On the way we came upon a herd of 10 or so antelope that let us ride right up to them which was pretty cool. Farther along on the trail LeRoy rode over a rattlesnake on his horse. We were fortunate the horse didn't buck and that the horse wasn't bitten. My grandpa killed the snake and cut the rattles off of it.
A couple miles further on we were in some rugged country that did have lots of Junipers and some large Pine Trees. As we were herding the cows we spotted a complete mule deer buck skeleton hanging from a branch in a pine tree with a rope. The buck was a very large 5x5 mule deer and all we could figure was that a couple guys (Would have had to take a couple guys to do this, or one with a horse.) had shot this buck and had used a rope to pull it up off of the ground to keep coyotes, mountain lions, bears from getting to it. We figured that they had left the buck to get help in recovering it but in this rugged landscape they could not find the location where the buck was hanging when they came back to recover it. It sat there for years and years.
The skeleton was complete with lower legs on all four legs still attached. The skeleton was completely clean of any hide or anything else and had been exposed to the elements so long that the bones, skull, and horns were all white as snow. What birds and insects had not been able to clean off the skeleton, time and weather did the rest. It was just so neat to come upon this and to try and speculate how long the deer skeleton had been hanging in this tree. I remember that the buck was at least 7 feet off of the ground at it's lowest point. Of course in 1970 there was no cell phones or compact cameras, so we did not have any pictures of this but man it would have been neat to have a few really sharp photographs to keep. This is one of my favorite memories with my grandfather of many that he left me with.
David