IMHO, the main problem the ranch folks are having is the lack of leadership from the boss man, Mr. Cook. Between trying to placate his bossy wife, and trying to use his twenty-first century management skills -- "let's have a meeting. I totally understand where you're coming from" -- everything is going to pot. Already two cowboys have been "fired" and left the show.
I thought it was funny when he tried to negotiate with the Indians. He refused on principle to take the Comanche's offer of 25 cattle (he keeps calling them "cows" LOL) in exchange for the four horses that the Indians stole from him and the return of the cowboy that they took prisoner.
Instead, he gave 25 cattle for the four horses and left it up to the Indians good will whether they would release the cowboy or torture him to death.
In the end, the Indians went along, but when the rancher got home he counted the horses -- oops, they only gave him three (along with the horse that the cowboy had been riding when he was captured), instead of all four.
The other subplot is the "girl-of-all-work" who insists on being a cowboy and going on the roundup, rather than cooking, etc. (PBS even interrupted the filming to send her to cowboy school in the middle of the show to teach her how to ride, etc.)
She is insistent on bringing her twenty-first century views of women back to the eighteenth. I can see why no woman would want to go back in time, to an era where women were without value or status.
But then why sign up for Texas Ranch House 1857 if you didn't want to experience how life was back then, for good or ill?
MM
