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The Sheepherder's
Ball: Hidden Basque Kitchens |
Davia Nelson of the
The Kitchen Sisters
wrote a
good story about Basques in general and sheepherding in particular.
It originally aired on NPR's "Morning Edition" on May 29, 2008.
The accompanying website is reproduced here in case it is moved.
Morning Edition, May 29, 2008 ·
Maybe you've been to Sparks, Nev., to John Ascuaga's Nugget Casino. He's
been there for nearly 50 years. We were interviewing Mr. Ascuaga for our
story
"Liberace and The Trinidad Tripoli Steelband" for our
Lost & Found
Sound series. He began to tell us about his Basque heritage and what
led him to Nevada. The "Hidden Kitchens" series was not on the horizon
then, but like we always do, we began asking him about the food of home.
Ascuaga's
family is Basque, from the village of Orozco in the Pyrenees.
"My
father came in 1900," he said. "All kinds of men came to Idaho, Montana,
Nevada, California and New Mexico to become sheepherders. I still keep a
flock of sheep to remember my heritage. I have a Basque restaurant in
the casino, Orozco. It's the name of my grandfather's village."

A herder holds freshly baked bread outside his wagon. The sheepwagon
is a camp on wheels with beds, a table, and a wood stove. It was pulled
in the early days by a team of horses and later by a pickup.
Courtesy Basque Library at the University of
Nevada, Reno
The Lasarte Brothers
Many
years later I was visiting my Nelson Sister, Jessie, about our upcoming
story about the hidden kitchen traditions of the Basque and she said,
"Oh, the men out in front, doing landscaping on our house, are two
Basque brothers, the Lasartes."
I grabbed
the tape recorder, she introduced us, and out of the blue we did an
interview that is the center of this story. They spoke, they sang, they
whistled. I heard all the calls they have for the sheep dogs that
traveled with them over the long treks across the American West.
Francisco
and Joaquin Lasarte came to America in 1964 from Basque country in
northern Spain. Francisco Franco, the Spanish dictator who repressively
ruled the country for nearly 40 years, made life miserable for the
Basque people, suppressing their language, culture and possibilities.
The
result was a massive exodus, and the only way to come to the United
States for many Basque was to contract as sheepherders. There was a
shortage of shepherds in the American West, and Sen. Patrick McCarren of
Nevada helped craft legislation in 1950 that allowed Basque men to take
up this lonely and difficult job.
Neither
Lasarte brother had any sheepherding experience when they arrived in
America.
"You
lonely, you by yourself," Francisco Lasarte said. "My God, you with
2,000 sheep and two dogs and you don't know what to do, where to go."
The brothers were contracted for five years to this life. It was a
sentence.
Each
brother had his own flock, and they rarely saw each other or anyone else
for months on end. Mostly they ate lamb and bread cooked in a Dutch oven
in a hole they dug in the ground. You can still find these holes up in
the mountains of Idaho, Montana, Nevada and California.
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Original links to the NPR
story
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A
Solitary Life
"You say
Basque to a Westerner and you think sheepherder," said Mark Kurlansky,
author of The Basque History of the World. "In Basque country
very few people were shepherds. The seven provinces of Basque country
are about the size of New Hampshire. No one has huge expanses of land
there."
William Douglass, former director of the
Center for Basque Studies at the University of Nevada, Reno,
describes this solitary life.
"Teenagers were ripped up out of their communities back home, brought to
a foreign land, with a foreign language, put up on top of a mountain ...
crying themselves to sleep at night during the first year on the range."
The
Basques have a family-oriented, communal culture, gathering around big
tables to eat, drink and sing. This solitary life in remote mountains
ran against the grain.
"Sprinkled throughout the rural newspapers of the American West in the
early 20th century," Douglass said, "you get these reports of the mad
Basco sheepherder, talking to themselves. Amongst Basques there's this
whole vocabulary of madness: the sheepherder who goes over the edge, who
becomes sagebrushed or sheeped."
"They had
to have a sponsor to come over," Linda Elizalde McCoy said. Her family
has run the Noriega Hotel in Bakersfield, Calif., for more than 75
years. It has been the way station to countless Basque shepherds.

The annual Sheepherders Ball. Gingham house dresses and overalls
were the required attire in the early days.
Roland Studio, 1948. Courtesy John Odiaga.
Basque Museum & Cultural Center
A Home Away from Home
Hotels
like the Noriega were home in the winter months for these isolated men.
They piled into these Basque boarding houses that sprung up in Elko and
Winnemucca, Nev., and Boise, Idaho. The men ate family style — big
bottles of red wine, accordion music, conversation and card games.
Bernadette Hirigoyen was a cook at the Noriega Hotel. The dishes
included soup, stew, flan, hard chorizo, chicken and paella.
"All the
shepherds came there, lots of Bascos," Hirigoyen said. "Just guys, not
women. Bascos knew this place; they would help each other find jobs. My
grandmother was like a mother to the men in their teens. It was a lively
community."

The Basque boarding house was a meeting and resting place for herders
who had no other home. Meals were served family style and the owners
often would do what they could to help the young men adapt to life in
the United States. Courtesy Rosita Ast
The Voice of the Basque
For 25
years, the voice of the Basque was Espe Alegria. Every Sunday night,
sheepherders across the mountains of the American West would tune in to
listen to her radio show on KBOI in Boise. Alegria's daughter, Rosita
Artis, sent us some old recordings of her mother's show. Dedications,
birthday greetings, suggestions of where to find good pasture, the
soccer scores that her husband got off the shortwave from Spain, and the
hit tunes from Spain and the Basque region. She would help the
sheepherders with immigration issues, with buying plane tickets home,
with doctor's appointments. She did her show for free, but once or twice
a year the owners of the sheep camps would give her a lamb. The family
would take it home, throw it on the kitchen table, cut it up and put in
the freezer.
While
working on this story we had the pleasure of working with people at the
Center for Basque Studies and the Basque Library at the University of
Nevada, Reno. We went to Basque festivals in San Francisco and
Bakersfield, to the lively Gernika Bar inside Boise's Basque Center, and
the Basque Museum
and Cultural Center in Boise, one of the most inspiring places we've
been on the "Hidden Kitchens" trail. There we found artifacts, the aspen
trees with Basque carvings known as Arborglyphs and the Basque Oral
History Collection,
Oroitzapenak Memories: Voices from Basque America, which contains
dozens of oral histories, many available online.
The
Sheepherder's Ball was the highlight of the year in Boise, Rosita Artis
tells us. The men wore denim, the women wore simple house dresses.
"You
know, you wear gowns and tiaras to a ball. We wore house dresses. That's
what we had," she said.
Lambs
were auctioned off and proceeds given to a charity. Huge platters of
chorizo and stew and pork sandwiches were served. Jimmy Jausoro's band
played long sets deep into the night, and the community drank wine and
danced. The ball continues to this day every December at the
Euzkaldunak
Club's Basque Center.
—Davia Nelson
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