
This 78-Year-Old Artist and Rancher Has Spent His Life Chasing a Pure and Wide-open Space
Mike Capron never felt comfortable until he settled west of the Pecos River.
Mike Capron never felt comfortable until he settled west of the Pecos River.
The author of Goodbye to a River and two-time National Book Award finalist helped create the magazine’s Country Notes column.
Small-town locker plants, lifelines for rural Texans for generations, have vanished from parts of the state. Christy Miller’s company is an exception.
A small group fights to save a cemetery and what remains of a Lipan Apache existence in the Big Bend.
During the past few years, a small group of girls in Marfa has used the simple wooden stool to create a business that has, well, legs.
Social distancing on a ranch in South Texas, one writer finds a diversion—and a sort of community—in studying the fragments of English dinnerware her predecessors left behind.
Some were written long ago. Some appeared this year. But whether it’s a sign about snakes or a sign about diesel fried chicken, a simple message seems to mean the most.
Some forty years ago, a desk was dragged to the top of a hill in Alpine that overlooks the Big Bend. The notebooks stashed inside continue to capture big thoughts from the people who travel there.
Lelton Morse races homing pigeons in Central Texas. He sends his birds hundreds of miles away, waits and watches, and knows they’re flying home.
Not many people will drive the mail to places the U.S. Postal Service won’t. Seventy-one-year-old Gilbert Lujan is one of them.
Small-town papers often serve as bearers of civic pride. But the former owners of Marfa’s Big Bend Sentinel and Presidio’s International learned long ago that writing the news meant looking out for their neighbors.
Healing a spooked horse takes time, patience, and skill. And maybe a little help from beyond.
The railway and Marfa are forever intertwined.
Without a good shoeing, a horse can indeed be lost. Enter the farrier.
Ninety-three-year-old Armando Vasquez tells of a place that used to be.
My cat was a fearless hunter who stalked the countryside—until she squared off with a rattlesnake.
The West Texan has sold more art than Picasso.
Outsiders remain fascinated with unraveling the secrets of this place. But locals can explain, one story at a time.
For these young boxers in West Texas, learning to fight means more than throwing a punch.
Pronghorn were almost perfectly fitted to the West Texas landscape. And then people started building fences.
Twenty years ago, a brown-skinned boy was shot to death near the Rio Grande. What fate awaits my own son?
In West Texas, we've learned to live with our slithery neighbors. Not that we have a choice.
The skies of West Texas are so grand that it’s easy to forget how much is going on under our feet.
When the chute opens and the steer charges, there’s no place Jimmy Steve Martinez would rather be than on his horse, with a rope in his hand.
In Marfa, there’s one place where everybody knows your name.
A day in the life of a mobile large-animal veterinarian.
For a few months every year, life in West Texas is defined by the wind.
The only thing that’s smaller about six-man football is the field.
A taxonomy of West Texas waves.
This year’s heavy rains have brought countless blessings to West Texas—and one very nasty weed.
In Marfa, a big night out means one thing above all: the cumbia.
The competition at the Big Bend Livestock Show is fierce. But treat your animal right and you might get to be number four with a pullet.
Why we will always worship the ground we walk on.
The year we gave thanks—at least at first—for the turkeys in our town.
When you live in the desert, waiting for rain requires almost irrational optimism. And maybe a curse word or two.
It’s only a humble weed, but just try to imagine West Texas without it.
Trash collectors are not necessarily garbage men.
When another farmer goes broke his neighbors thank God it wasn’t them; then they wonder when their turn is coming.
A good country dog is loyal, obedient, and knows the difference between a chicken and a possum.
Try the house wine; I made it with my own feet.