Guardians Of The Herd marks a return by Dave McGary to a theme that he holds dear to his heart. His love for children is obvious in this charming bronze.
Two young Lakota boys are depicted on a horse fulfilling the job of watching the horse herd. The warm afternoon sun has taken its toll and both of them have fallen asleep.
Life in a Lakota village was much different than today, and the popular saying that It takes a village to raise a child was particularly true on the plains. The very name Lakota can be translated as family. Their village was a large extended family tied through complicated kinships. Remote degrees of kinship were recognized and first cousins were known as brothers and sisters. The basic household consisted of a man, his wife and their children, all dwelling under one roof.
Children were cherished above all else and were trained by everyone in the clan. Grandparents took special roles in the training of youngsters. Life on the plains was often difficult. There could be times of hunger and danger for everyone. Children had to take positions of responsibility early in life. Every member of the village had many jobs so that all could survive. The tasks were very gender defined to train the children for their later roles in the life of the village. Girls learned the skills they needed beside their mothers, grandmothers, and aunts while the boys were trained by the male members of the clan to someday become future hunters and warriors. Their toys were small bows, arrows and lances and other tools of the adult.
The introduction of horses to the people of the plains changed
their
lives completely. It has been said that no other culture made such a
sudden and dramatic shift than the plains tribes did after they obtained the
horses. They became more mobile and able to better follow and hunt the buffalo.
Because their horses were so important, all of the tribal members were responsible
for the care of them. Babies spent many of their earliest days being carried
on the backs of the horses and learned to ride almost before they could walk.
Mothers would sometimes assign an older , gentler horse the task of baby-sitting
by tying the cradleboard to its back, and letting it rock the baby to sleep
while she did her chores.
The job assigned to the two Lakota boys in Guardians of the Herd is therefore vital. They are not expected to defend the horses, but have to raise an alarm if the herd is threatened in any way. Both of the boys have fallen asleep and are lying on the backs of the horses. One of them faces the sun and the other one has fallen forward with his head resting on the horses shoulder. Arrows have fallen from his quiver and lay at the horses feet. While they are adorable sleeping on the back of the faithful pony, if they are caught, they will be in big trouble. We hope that they will awake to find everything as peaceful as this moment so beautifully captured in this heart-warming bronze.



