Albuquerque Journal

Rider’s latest journey is to promote new book

- BY ROSALIE RAYBURN FOR THE JOURNAL

Howling winds, freezing temperatur­es, fatigue and the daily search for food and water have not stopped Bernice Ende from following her chosen lifestyle as a nomadic equestrian.

Over the last 14 years, she has covered nearly 30,000 miles, crisscross­ing the country with her horses and faithful companion Claire Dog.

Ende, 64, grew up on a dairy farm in Minnesota and fell in love with horses at a young age. She trained as a classical ballet teacher and taught dance in Montana for 25 years before she decided to change her life.

Some people have called her the “crazy lady,” and she admits to having soul-searching moments. But what began as a way of overcoming a personal loss, has evolved into a lifestyle. She acknowledg­es that she could never return to living in one place. She is called to be a long rider, one who rides journeys of more than 1,000 miles.

Ende (pronounced N-Dee) is lean and tanned with piercing blue eyes. She speaks in a resonant voice that captures the imaginatio­n. She has given hundreds of talks at schools, senior homes and community centers. She says everyone is on their own long ride, be it marriage, parenting or just life. She hopes her rides encourage women to become leaders.

Ende has written searing account of her many journeys in her book, “Lady Long Rider,” published in 2018 by Farcountry

Press. She is midway through a coast-to-coast book tour and will give three more talks in New Mexico.

The Land of Enchantmen­t has a special draw for Ende. It was the destinatio­n she chose on her first long ride in 2005, a 1,800-mile trek from her home in Trego, Mont., to the home of her older sister, outside Edgewood. She described that first journey as “nightmaris­h.” She traveled with only one horse — a Tennessee Walking Horse called Pride — and her dog. She had no tent and slept on sheepskins she used beneath her saddle, covered with blankets and a tarp. Neverthele­ss, she became hooked.

“Since then New Mexico’s enchantmen­t has lured me back again and again. I feel like I’m riding in a movie when I cross through New Mexico,” Ende said.

In 2006 and 2007, she did a 5,000-mile ride and encountere­d seven snow storms as she crossed this state. She writes about how grateful she was for the hospitalit­y she encountere­d from a family on the Alamo Navajo Indian Reservatio­n near Socorro and from residents of tiny Pie Town.

“I survived in large part to New Mexico’s generosity. My small notebooks from those years are filled with dozens of addresses, people who kindly helped a sorry looking traveler on her journey,” said Ende.

By 2008, she had honed her traveling skills and acquired a pack animal, a rugged Fjord horse called Essie Pearl. She was quite the sight as she rode through Quemado, Magdalena and Edgewood.

“Now I had two horses, a traveling dog and pony act came racing into town, as my dog rode on the pack horse!” she said.

People often stop her and say how they envy her freedom. She is passionate about what she does but honest about how tough it is and how much she depends on the kindness of others.

“Time and again, people have opened their homes, shared meals with me, washed my clothes, repaired tack, shod a horse, and encouraged or supported me in one way or another. I am truly indebted to hundreds of people,” she writes in “Lady Long Rider.”

 ?? COURTESY OF BERNICE ENDE ?? Bernice Ende is on a coast-to-coast book tour for her book “Lady Long Rider,” with stops in New Mexico, site of her first long ride, in 2005.
COURTESY OF BERNICE ENDE Bernice Ende is on a coast-to-coast book tour for her book “Lady Long Rider,” with stops in New Mexico, site of her first long ride, in 2005.

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