Photographing the 6666 Ranch in Texas

Inside the 6666 Ranch: Photographing a Legendary Texas Cattle Operation

There are few names in ranching that carry the weight of the 6666 Ranch.

Known simply as the Four Sixes, this West Texas operation has been shaping the culture of working cowboys for more than a century. I’ve had the privilege of photographing on the ranch twice — documenting the daily rhythm of cattle work, horsemanship, and the kind of labor that rarely makes headlines but defines the American West.

My first visit to the ranch was early on in the project, making this my first shoot on a Big Outfit. It was branding season, so the wagon was there and all the guys were camped out in teepees. Breakfast is at 4:45am, they said. To be sure they knew I wasn’t there to play around, I planned on being the first one in the breakfast tent at 4:15. So that morning I sauntered over in the dark and walked into the tent at 4:15 only to find every chair already filled!

Long before television crews arrived, this place had its own gravity.

The History of the 6666 Ranch (Four Sixes)

Founded in 1870 by Captain Samuel “Burk” Burnett, the 6666 Ranch grew into one of the most respected cattle and Quarter Horse operations in the country. Located in West Texas, the ranch spans hundreds of thousands of acres and remains a benchmark for breeding, land stewardship, and cowboy tradition.

Unlike many ranches that faded into nostalgia, the Four Sixes never stopped being a working operation. The cowboys here aren’t reenacting history — they’re continuing it.

The 6666 Ranch and Yellowstone

In recent years, the 6666 Ranch entered a broader public conversation through Yellowstone, created by Taylor Sheridan. America and beyond became obsessed with the Dutton Family and Rip Wheeler, but more importantly, the show shined a light on Western culture and made the masses care again. The ranch itself was later purchased by Sheridan, further tying fiction to a very real piece of Western heritage.

Some of my cowboy photography prints have appeared on the set of Yellowstone — a quiet crossover between documentary work and contemporary Western storytelling.

But what makes the 6666 important isn’t television. The show amplified awareness of a ranch that earned its reputation before the tv was even invented.

The Real Work Behind the Legend

The scale of the 6666 is difficult to understand until you’re standing in it. Wind across open pasture. Horses saddled before daylight. The quiet coordination of cowboys moving cattle with efficiency that comes from repetition, not rehearsal.

What struck me most wasn’t spectacle, it was discipline — the quiet economy to how things are done there. No wasted motion. No raised voices. Horses and cattle are handled with respect, and the cowboys know exactly where they need to be without so much as a glance from the Cow Boss. To see first hand how fast those guys can brand 400 hundred head of cattle was staggering. Masters of their craft.

Why the 6666 Ranch Matters in Real Cowboy Culture

For anyone photographing working cowboys — especially in long-term documentary projects like mine — places like the 6666’s represent continuity and quality. The rhythm of branding pens, early morning gathers, long fence lines, and the quiet skill required to manage cattle at scale are not cinematic props. They are real life. The ranch is revered not only for world class cows and horses, but cowboys as well. To earn a job as a cowboy the 6666’s means you’re the best of the best.

This is the version of the West that matters most — not the myth, but the labor.

A Legendary Hand of the 6666 Ranch

One of the most respected cowboys at the 6666 Ranch is Boots O’Neal — a man whose name carries weight all across the American West. I spent time documenting his life and work in a separate post that goes deeper into his story, his philosophy, and what it means to stay in the saddle into his 90’s!

→ Read more about Boots O’Neal and his life at the 6666 Ranch

Fine Art Prints from the 6666 Ranch

Select photographs made on the 6666 Ranch are available as museum-quality fine art prints, produced on Hahnemühle Baryta paper and offered in limited editions. These images are part of Calves to the Fire – Working Cowboys of the American West, a long-term documentary project examining the labor, landscape, and legacy of ranch culture.

Collectors and designers interested in availability, sizing, or framing options are welcome to inquire directly.

→ View Available Cowboy Prints

Commercial Licensing & Editorial Use

Photographs from this body of work have been licensed by Western brands and have appeared in commercial and editorial contexts, including on the set of Yellowstone.

If you are a brand, publication, or production designer seeking authentic working ranch imagery, licensing inquiries are welcome.

→ Inquire About Licensing

Horses shift in the fading light while riders regroup. Even before the sun, the work keeps its shape.

Cattle funnel through red steel gates as the sun sinks low. Geometry, dust, and routine — repeated season after season.

Close detail of a cowboy’s spur and leather chaps while horseback at the 6666 Ranch in Texas.

Worn leather, metal spur, dust at the hem. The details tell their own story — miles ridden and years worked into the grain.

Cowboy working a group of horses in a dusty pen at the 6666 Ranch in Texas, black and white photograph.

A cowboy steps into the dust to sort horses inside the pens at the 6666 Ranch. The light flattens everything but the movement — rope, muscle, and intention.

Cowboy riding horseback along a fence line beside a large herd of cattle at the 6666 Ranch in Texas.

A lone rider moves parallel to a wall of cattle, keeping steady pressure along the fence line. Much of ranch work is quiet and deliberate — miles of it.

Silhouetted cowboys on horseback working cattle in dusty pens at the 6666 Ranch in Texas.

Through dust and backlight, riders move like outlines against the sky. The geometry of steel pens frames a practice that hasn’t changed much in generations.

Two cowboys roping a calf in open pasture at the 6666 Ranch in Texas, photographed through fence lines.

Through the lines of a pasture fence, two riders close in on a calf. Speed and coordination condensed into a few seconds of dust and rope.

Inside the chuckwagon tent, hats balance on knees and conversation stays low. The stove glows steady at the center.

Canvas cowboy camp tents set up on the prairie at sunset at the 6666 Ranch in Texas.  On-Page Caption:

Temporary shelter in permanent country. The cowboy camp sits quietly against a fading sky.

Line of cowboys riding across open prairie at the 6666 Ranch in Texas under expansive skies.

A string of riders stretches across the Texas plains, dwarfed by sky. On a ranch this size, scale is always part of the story.

Group of cowboys on horseback pushing cattle through a red steel gate at the 6666 Ranch in Texas.

Riders ease cattle through the gate as dust hangs low in the afternoon light. It’s choreography more than chaos.

Cowboy sitting on a truck bed smoking near canvas tents at the 6666 Ranch in Texas.

Between gathers, a cowboy leans back with a cigarette as canvas tents dot the prairie behind him.

Cowboy leading a horse past canvas tents at before sunrise at the 6666 Ranch in Texas.

In early morning light , a rider walks his horse past the tents. The day narrows down to silhouettes and routine.

A tent glows in the dark prairie. Charlie Ferguson stands framed in canvas and light — temporary shelter in permanent country.

Three hands sit outside the tents at camp laughing together. The workday slows here, but it never fully leaves.

A cowboy ropes a runaway calf over the fence.

Smoke drifts through the pen as the brand meets hide. It’s a hard image, but it’s honest — this is part of the job.

Fringe, mud, and sweat-darkened leather. The uniform might be decorative but its also functional and earned.

Young boy watching cowboys brand a calf inside the pens at the 6666 Ranch in Texas.

A child sits in during branding, learning by watching. On ranches like this, knowledge isn’t taught in classrooms — it’s absorbed in the dust.

Leaning against a flatbed between sets, the crew trades stories. Humor is as necessary as rope.

At blue hour, one cowboy laughs while leaning back in a folding chair. The prairie quiets, but tomorrow is already waiting.

From above, the branding crew forms small circles inside a larger system of steel and cattle. Smoke rises evenly into a washed-out sky.

Charlie Ferguson - Chuckwagon Cook

Part of the process left in the dirt beside a steel post. Ranch work carries physical consequences — not symbolic ones.

Smoke lifts from hide as the brand settles into place. It’s a brief moment, but one that defines ownership and responsibility.

Bloody hands after branding on the 6666 Ranch in Texas

In the heat of a Texas afternoon, water cuts across the herd. Modern ranching is muscle, steel, and systems working together.

The Four Sixes gate falls behind the windshield at sunset. Dust still clings to the glass long after the work is done.

The Year's Best Photographs

American Photography Competition

The American Photography Competition is one of only a handful of competitions that I believe in out of the countless scams out there promising worldwide “exposure” for photographers. So it’s an honor to say that two of my cowboy photographs have been selected for the AP 40 - Year’s Best Photos! If you’d like to be humbled and inspired then go through the gallery of winning images . So much beautiful work in there.

If you’d like to see more of my authentic cowboy photographs go to this Gallery . And go HERE to purchase photography prints from the cowboy series.

Award winning cowboy photography

Award winning Western Photography

Boots O'Neal

Boots O’Neal - Cowboy - 6666 Ranch - Texas

Being a photographer has been a great pleasure and an even greater adventure. It’s taken me to some outstanding parts of the earth and allowed me to photograph some of the most famous athletes on it. “Who is your favorite?”, has always been a common question. Until recently that was an impossible question to answer. Now my final is abundantly clear - it’s the legendary Texas cowboy Boots O’Neal. Boots is a 90 year old cowboy on the iconic 6666 Ranch. A more inspiring human you will not meet. To learn more about him continue reading this piece I wrote that was originally published with Wrangler.

View More Cowboy Photography From The American West

Tom Moorhouse - Texas Cowboy

Fine Art Cowboy Prints

Branding Season at the 6666 Ranch

The photographs above are just one piece of a much larger story. Branding season at the 6666 Ranch is a coordinated effort and well oiled machine run by first class cowboys.

→ See the complete 6666 Ranch branding photo series

Photograph of legendary Texas cowboy Boots O'Neal on the 6666 Ranch

Boots O’Neal on his horse working cattle in the corrals at the 6666 Ranch

Boots O’Neal and the Tradition of Ranching in West Texas

Imagine for a moment, waking up in the hospital with 12 broken ribs, a punctured lung, broken vertebrae, and a bleeding brain. Now imagine that pain at 82 years of age. Cal Ripken Jr. was Major League Baseball's “Ironman”. Earning the nickname after playing 2,632 consecutive games. Put those end to end and you’ve got over 7 years of straight baseball. An astonishing stat and impressive feat only possible for a human made from the toughest stock. No offense to Mr. Ripken, but that doesn’t hold a candle to the Texas legend - Boots O’Neal, who's been horseback for the better part of the last 75 years. Despite the aforementioned injuries, piled on a lifetime of other broken body parts, the now 90 year old cowboy shows no desire whatsoever to retire. You’d think someone that’s lived in such a way would have a face much resembling their saddle that’s endured as many miles. Instead, O’Neal’s is endearing, and fixed with a perpetual smile that causes you to do the same. The kind of guy that inadvertently makes you a better person just by being in his presence. 

While we’re on the stat train, let’s dole out a few more just to drive the point home, what an outlier he truly is. The average retirement age in America is 62. The average age of death is 78. And a cowboy will normally take home about $31,466 a year. At a time in life when most folks are either dead or in a nursing home, Boots wakes up every morning with excitement to saddle a horse and work cattle alongside fellow cowpunchers that could be his grandkids. People just aren’t built like him anymore. Not a partier, but it would be safe to put O’Neal in the Keith Richards class. Immortal freaks, in the most beautiful way possible. 

Portrait of Boots O'Neal - Cowboy on the 6666 Ranch in Texas. Available as a photography print.

Portrait of Boots O’Neal

Cowboys in general are a strand of human unlike the rest of us. Born not made. And from birth, it was obvious O’Neal created a category all his own. Growing up in the 30’s he was one of 8 children living in a home without running water. The bathroom was an outhouse, and the bath, a tub filled with water and placed next to the kitchen oven, door open for heat. After 3 or 4 of the kids took their turn, that water was tossed outside to calm down the dust. He was never much for school. The only thing he excelled at was boxing, but usually just looked forward to running off the bus and into the barn to saddle a horse, only coming in when his mother hung a white sheet on the clothesline - their version of a dinner bell. 9th grade was as far as he cared to go, leaving home in August of 49’ at sixteen to cowboy for the JA ($90/week). That job found him on the wagon, sleeping in only a bedroll 6-7 months at a time. A lifestyle that fit him just fine. 

Before we go any further, it would be appropriate to define what makes a real cowboy. The loud mouth sporting a big black hat getting in drunken bar fights makes for good movies, but that’s about it. According to the man himself, a real cowboy is polite. Smooth. Talks gentlemanly to ladies and is good under fire. Dusty Burson (32) - foreman on the Four Sixes and close friend to Mr. O’Neal said it best - “What’s a cowboy? Well, they’re good people. Honest. They do what they say they’re gonna do. If they tell you they’ll be there to help, they’ll be there, and they’ll stay to the end.” If that statement made its way into Websters, the following words should read “also see Boots O’Neal”. 

Photograph of Boots O'Neal branding calves on the 6666 Ranch in Texas. Available for editorial and commercial licensing.

Boots O’Neal branding calves in the early morning on the 6666 Ranch in Texas

Photograph of a famous Texas cowboy

Boots O’Neal’s custom spurs

After the JA, he continued punching cows in different places including a quarter century stay at the Waggoner Ranch. All the while racking up a collection of buckles and saddles from bronc riding in rodeos all over the country. Word is he’s still pretty sticky. A wife (Nelda) also came into the mix as did a daughter (Laurie). Despite being opposites, Boots and Nelda remained in love for 44 years until her passing. She was a proper lady that enjoyed being in town but fully supported his innate need for open country. As their relationship grew, his career did along with it. The 50’s’ found him in Korea with the Army, where he stared out at vast foreign valleys, daydreaming about them filled with 1000 steer, and wondering why in the world they didn’t have any. After two years he was back on a ranch working hard to become a Peace Office and Brand Inspector at a time when cattle were still shipped by railroad. Along with the coveted title came a doubled salary, new clothes, fancy truck, and expense account. A novelty quickly erased by jealousy every time business on a ranch forced him to watch cowboys ride away on horses while he sat in a truck headed back to the office. “I just wanted to punch cows” he said. So he gave back a job that most in the industry would kill for and reclaimed his true love, working cattle from the back of a horse. 

Love is what it takes because the life of a cowboy asks a lot of a person, physically and emotionally. “ Even when I know tomorrow is gonna be a bad deal, and they’re predicting snow, and the wind coming out of the north blowing, and we’re gonna ride straight into it in the morning, I just look forward to getting out there and freezing my tail off” says O’Neal. How many 90 year olds have you ever heard say something like that? Burson again offers some insight - “he wakes up thinking I’m going to be happy today. He doesn’t let circumstances dictate happiness.” Dusty was the one who found the 82 year old O’Neal alone in a pasture, after the horse wreck that would have ended any mortal man. Even if it didn’t put him in the ground, the pain alone would cause a rational person to take a brush with death as a sign and say, ok, it’s been a good run. Burson visited him in the hospital shortly after and recalled the nurse asking why he kept lifting his left leg up in the air. Obviously, it was to keep the mobility of toeing a stirrup. “That’s how bad he wants to be a cowboy when he grows up” says Burson. 6 weeks later, he was back on that same horse and continues riding him today.  

Black and white photograph of Boots O'Neal and Charlie Ferguson talking in the chuck wagon tent on the 6666 Ranch in Texas

Boots O’Neal talks with chuck wagon cook Charlie Ferguson on the 6666 Ranch in Texas

Seems like it came naturally for Boots, but don’t get it twisted, any good cowboy is a student of the trade. Always figuring out a way to get it done better without asking for recognition. All of the best cowboys Boots ever knew and patterned himself after, accomplished unthinkable feats even Taylor Shariden couldn’t script, in the middle of nowhere with only a few people to witness. Another friend and Texas icon Tom Moorehouse (72) is quick to point out “I’ve known Boots almost all my life, and anything I’ve got to say about him is good”. From the outside you might think that cowboying is a physical game. Only for the young. Not so. Sure, you need the gumption to handle extreme physical abuse and relentless weather that doesn’t end after an eight hour shift. But Moorehouse says the thing that separates Boots from the rest is that he’s a “keen observer”. He continues “my dad used to say a real cowboy is somebody that pays attention. Now that doesn’t sound like a good story, but that’s the truth.” There is so much that can go wrong when you’re working with 2,000+lb animals and navigating remote unforgiving terrain. One mistake could mean the end. 

We’ve already established that Boots is an enigma, but for arguments sake, let’s say he got lucky? Somehow the body that’s been broken more times than anyone can count, managed to miss the big one. Even with luck, longevity like his doesn’t just happen. And living on a wagon, eating ranch food, wouldn’t make any blueprint for “healthy living”. Cowboys require hearty meals to get them through their overly demanding lives. So It should be no surprise that beef has made its way to Boots’ plate just about every day for the past 90 years. Along with the beef came biscuits, gravy, and potatoes. Breakfast was peanut butter and syrup sandwiches. All of which goes against everything you’ll read from the so-called nutrition experts. Although pinto beans, prunes, and raisins are foods he now tries to consume regularly along with said beef. The fresh fruit and vegetables he also concentrates on just wasn’t a thing back then.”It wasn’t until I got up in years that I ever worried about putting something bad in my body.”  A chuckle was the only answer given when asked about exercise, but “I’ve never been short on sleep” says O’Neal. Which he believes has been the holy grail to his success. For as long as he can remember, even as a young buck, he’d turn in early, ensuring 8-9 hours of shuteye every night. These days he says “it takes me longer to rest than it does to get tired”, but it becomes obvious shortly after meeting him, that modesty is one of his many virtues. He’ll try and claim that he can’t do this, that, or the other. Then he slips into the saddle and the truth is revealed. “It takes a whole crew to keep me going”, he says. Again, modesty perfected. Perhaps his days aren’t spent aboard wild broncs, but he always gets the job done with grace, and his expertise couldn’t be matched anywhere in the world. Ironic for a guy who’s never considered himself very smart. What Boots has can’t be taught. He’s got a PHD in punching cows. Anybody will tell you he’s on the Mount Rushmore of the cowboy universe, but who the hell else could be up there with him? Is there another human that’s punched cows for almost 8 decades?  “It’s amazing what all he’s got stored up inside him that someone oughta have recorded” Dusty says. A lot of people with such knowledge and history can become high and mighty. Not Boots. He’ll let you mess up, then suggest, in a non degrading way, how to do it better. He knows we’re all in this thing together.

Photograph of the famous Texas cowboy Boot O'Neal

Boots O’Neal offloading his horse from a trailer on the 6666 Ranch in Texas

Photograph of Boots O'Neal dragging a calf to the fire for branding on the 6666 Ranch in Texas

Boots O’Neal roping calves on the 6666 Ranch in Texas

If you think about the human condition and what we’re all after, one of the key ingredients is professional happiness. Everyone wants to spend their waking hours doing something they love. Why is that goal so elusive, so rare? A million dollar question. Even harder than finding that happiness, is keeping it. Somehow Boots O’Neal has managed to do it at one of the most physically demanding jobs on the planet and continues today at a very high level. Maybe the how doesn’t really matter. Maybe we should just use Boots as inspiration to be better humans. The iconic Four Sixes has been his home for the past 26 years. Panhandle, Texas is the closest town to their northern division where we met. The town sign fittingly reads “People of Pride and Purpose”. Just like the dictionary, there might as well be a picture of Boots next to that slogan. He figured IT out and still can’t get enough. He doesn’t need to work in a monetary sense. He wants to work, although it’d be a stretch to hear him use a four letter word like that. Even on a rare day off, he doesn’t look forward to a hobby or a vacation. Instead he’ll watch a rodeo on television or sit in a chair outside his bunkhouse apartment to watch the remuda come in. A sight he says, of 50 horses all running together, is one that most people will never get to see. Bob Dylan wrote a song on this very topic using only 17 words:  

“All the tired horses in the sun…..”

The guy has done it all, taken the beatings, and asked for more. He’s been inducted into every Hall of Fame a cowpuncher could possibly be associated with. Somehow that doesn’t seem enough of an honor though. Boots should be everyone's hero. He’s a national treasure and outstanding human being.  We should all strive to accomplish in our own lives what he has in his. Burson says “Yeah, he’s a cowboy, but he wants to be one tomorrow too”. If more people had that attitude, the world would be a better place. 

We were just about done talking when Boots’ story paused abruptly . A mischievous smile came to his face and the words stopped flowing. His attention fixed on one of the guys in a nearby corral working a young horse that was fixing to blow up. The grin stayed as he reminisced “I rode a lot of bucking horses in years past. I could get on a horse like that, just gather that thing up, and he’d be 3 feet in the air when I got that right stirrup”. Boots is a Christian. If he weren’t, and followed a religion believing in reincarnation, he says that’s what he’d want to come back as, a bucking horse. At 90 years young he knows precisely how good his life has been and isn’t scared of the inevitable. In a very matter of fact way he spoke about his funeral, being buried in the cemetery on the Four Sixes, and the speech by his friend Joe Leathers. When asked what he hopes Joe will say, Boots paused then replied humbly with a far off stare ”He was an honorable man. Done what he said he would. And didn’t mistreat his horses” 

Portrait of Boots O'Neal the famous Texas cowboy

Portrait of Boots O’Neal

Silhouette of a cowboy on his horse at sunrise on a cattle ranch in Texas

Boots O’Neal on his horse at sunrise on the 6666 Ranch in Texas

Boots O'Neal
from $900.00