a woman who is looking for a hard
working old cowboy, who still believes in the old ways.
Not exact matches
Jest an
old cowboy that loves to ride
work cattle ride on trail rides if i have a good looking lady to ride with.
I am a very loving and caring man, and very passionate, and intimate
cowboy, I live in the country on 80 acres, have horses, and still
work part time at a university, like to hold hands, hugs and kisses, I am active and do to many things to list, love to dance C&W,
old enough to know how to...
«The Grand
Old Man of Westerns,» as film historian William K. Everson called him, retired in the early»40s after more than three decades of yeoman
work opposite every
cowboy hero on the Hollywood range, from Franklyn Farnum to Gary Cooper.
Here we have a tough - but - tender cowgirl
working her dead father's ranch with only a lovable grizzled
old coot for a ranchhand; a somber villain moving through his dark house like Dracula in his castle, hatching designs on the heroine's land as well as her body; a land - grabbing industrialist conspiring with the local banker to turn rangeland into oil wells; a tall, quiet wrangler winning the girl's heart and saving her land to boot; singing
cowboys, fireside heart - to - hearts, a crisis with hero and heroine trapped by villain in a burning building, a climactic shootout, and boy - gets - girl.
During this recent exclusive interview with Collider, the undeniably charming James Badge Dale (who plays the Lone Ranger's
older brother, Texas Ranger Dan Reid) talked about how cool it is to be in three of the biggest blockbusters of the summer (Iron Man 3, World War Z and The Lone Ranger), how The Lone Ranger was the most physically demanding, finding a treehouse out in Canyon de Chelly where he could grab a nap between takes, the process of finding the perfect
cowboy hat for his character,
working with a horse that was scared of gunfire, and the experience of
cowboy boot camp.
As a young boy I loved watching the
old westerns on TV, and my dad was a
working cowboy in his younger days, so I've always had a heart for the west.
Come join us and experience first hand, the magic and beauty of the «
old Costa Rica» through a
working coastal ranch, accompanied by an authentic sabanero (traditional
cowboy), a bilingual guide and your trustworthy and happy horse.
Although part of his motivation for the donation was to make stewardship of their art collection easier on his wife, who is almost two decades his junior, Edlis and Neeson have been busily buying new
works, and displaying and rediscovering
old ones, he says: «On the 10th is when I'm getting a brand new sculpture from Richard Prince, a 4 - foot
cowboy in cast bronze.