Distinctly Montana Magazine

Distinctly Montana Gal Fall 2014

Distinctly Montana Magazine

Issue link: https://digital.distinctlymontana.com/i/379720

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 19 of 31

D I S T I N C T L Y M O N T A N A F A L L | 2 0 1 4 1 8 Gal Back in 1945, when Gwen Petersen stepped off the train in Livingston, Montana, the first thing that struck her was that the West wasn't as "wild and woolly" as much as it was just uncrowded. The second thought: "This is home." Petersen had longed to come West, she said, after listen- ing to episodes of The Lone Ranger radio show as a child. It fueled her imagination during summers working on her grandparents' farm outside her hometown of Peoria, Illinois. At 17, when she finally arrived by train, these wide open spaces left an impression so large, it beckoned her back to Big Sky country again and again. Bouncing back and forth between Bozeman and Taco- ma, Washington, Petersen earned a degree in occupational therapy from the College of Puget Sound. She immediate- ly returned to work a 10-year a stint at the Montana State Hospital in Warm Springs, a place she affectionately calls "The Home of the Bothered and Bewildered." It was there that she discovered a knack for writing, by scribing plays and skits for patients to routinely perform as part of therapy. During that time she met and married rancher Martin Petersen, and began to assemble a series of observations and musings on life as a rancher's wife, and her often arduous, but always magical, 69-year love affair with the Treasure State. "I'd always wanted to write, but I never really knew you could get paid for it," she said. She penned a piece called "Instant Hired Hand" about the overnight trials of becoming a rancher's wife, and was published in the The Denver Post. With a few books and a mountain of poems under her belt buckle, in the mid-1980s Petersen was chosen as one of the first four poets from Montana to perform at Nevada's first cowboy poetry gathering in Elko. "It was just 11 of us cowgirl poets (amid a sea of rhym- ing cowboys) to be invited to perform," she said. "I came home from that event and thought, 'We could do that in Montana' so I ramrodded our first show in Big Timber." As a result, she received an invitation to appear as a guest on "The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson" in 1986. There, she performed her poem "Hats for All Seasons" — which required literal changes of hats, including an old tattered 10-gallon hat. Comedian Don Rickles hijacked the hat from Petersen's hands for his own standup routine. Sitting next to Johnny Carson upon the stage is some- thing she says she'll never forget. Petersen's plate is still brimming, though now on just 40 acres of a non-working ranch. In the days since she lost her husband in 2000, she has raised miniature horses and continues to fill the weeks and months with writing, and producing her annual comedy show in Big Timber called "Toot, Snoot, and Hoot." Since 2000, she stays active by taking fiddle and guitar lessons, stays social at the local senior center and contin- ues to run Poetry Wintercamp — an event she founded to encourage and develop budding poets, and folklore in the spoken word. "I live life like a man," she said. Furthermore, her love of Montana, and of writing, run neck-and-neck. Gwen Petersen: coWgirl poeT, rancher, & all-around clever WriTer Call Gwen Petersen an "old-timer" and she'll likely throw her head back and cackle — not because she disagrees, but because she finds ironies in the human condition amusing. As author of How to Be Elderly: A User's Guide, The Ranch Woman's Manual and at least nine other books that chronicle the humorous struggles of life on a ranch, this 86-year-young spitfire has turned a lifetime of experience into a bounty of words. This offhanded comedian, published author, longtime columnist, whimsical poet, and founder of the Montana Cowboy Poetry Gathering in Big Timber, is a Montana trea- sure who only grows richer by the decade. By lori grannis

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of Distinctly Montana Magazine - Distinctly Montana Gal Fall 2014