BUFFALO ā George Clark might get around in the world with a wheelchair, but just tell him he canāt do something and watch what happens.
āIām Scotch-Irish,ā Clark told Cowboy State Daily. āIām very stubborn. If someone tells me I canāt do something, Iām going to do it.ā
Thatās how Clark, who has been in a wheelchair for about 14 years, happens to have a spunky little custom sheep wagon-making business in the Bighorn Mountains near Buffalo. Itās cranking out lots of dreamy throwback mobile tiny homes for the Wyoming prairie, as well as restoring older, historic sheep wagons to their former glory.
Clark has 13 wagons heās working on now, and contracts for six more coming in from people who have discovered his shop.
Each wagon is a custom job, with whatever bells and whistles a particular customer wants. In fact, Clark considers figuring out how to engineer oddball requests his particular specialty.
āIf you can think about something, we can do it,ā Clark said. āI canāt quit thinking about things to build. Thatās just how it works here.ā
Welcome To The Wagon Yard
Clark has several wagons sitting in the backyard of his home, which looks out on the Bighorn Mountains, in various stages of completion.
āAnything you see rotten, we rebuild,ā Clark said. āSo, the brake system on this one is getting rebuilt, and the wheels are in the beginning stages.ā
He also has plank after plank of lodgepole pine drying in a kiln heās built toward the back of his wagon yard. Thatās powered with a solar panel that Clark rigged up himself.
The dried planks are used to build custom features for his sheep wagons, like the pull-out table thatās generally always placed underneath the bed in the back of a sheep wagon.
He can also build custom boxes to hold rice, sugar and beans, as he is doing for one of his Amish friends, or for custom cabinetry. Not to mention the Basque-inspired mirrors that he places in each sheep wagon.
Thatās included as a personal gift in the sheep wagons to thank customers for their business, Clark said.
All of the sheep wagons use sailboat canvas for the outer shell, the toughest natural breathable canvas heās found. Heās also lately figured out how to construct an interior shell that includes insulation for those who need their wagons year-round.
Where The Magic Happens
The garage is where Clark has put his shop for the sheep wagon of the moment.
Itās not just a practical workspace, though. Itās a home for the spirit.
He has his own āwall of fameā with mementos passed down from family members that remind him not only who he is, but where he came from.
For example, thereās a hook hanging from a plaque crafted by one of his grandfathers in 1916. Thereās a harness from another grandfather, as well as a hammer that gets used every day. Thereās even an anvil from one of his grandfathers, set up on wheels so Clark can easily move it around wherever he needs it to go.
A ramp inside the garage leads to a platform that is just right for him to wheel himself inside a sheepwagon to work on its interior.
The platform even has ābumpersā on it, Clark said, at the insistence of his father.
āHe said, āYou gotta quit this. Youāre gonna run off the edge,āā Clark recalled. āYou donāt have any bumpers.ā
At first Clark said he thought, so what?
āWe rodeoed all of our lives, we got bucked off and stuff all the time,ā Clark said.
But eventually he saw the wisdom of bumpers and added them.
āSo I didnāt get chewed out any more,ā he said.
An Accessible Sheep Wagon
The wagon now in the garageās shop space is for a personal challenge. About 10 years ago, someone asked Clark how he liked sleeping in his sheep wagons.
But he hasnāt actually ever slept in one ā yet.
He soon decided that one day heād build a sheep wagon big enough for a wheelchair, one where he can turn around and sleep on the bed if he wishes ā on a king-size bed, no less.
His first challenge was figuring out how to electrify the wagon for anywhere he might take it to get his wheelchair up onto a platform and then into the wagon.
Technology had to advance a bit, and now itās helping him with that little problem. Two solar panels, one on each side of the wagon, capture the sun to charge up a couple of batteries.
Given that thereās electricity, heās also added a bladder for water and a small hot water heater so he can have running hot water for an outdoor shower setup, as well as a small refrigerator and a small sink to wash up.
There are two boxes inside the sheep wagon for seating, which double as a wood box. Those can be filled from the outside.
āFor me, Iām not going to carry the wood up and do all that,ā he said. āThis way, Iām able to put the wood into the box from outside.ā
āIām In A Wheelchair, Not Deadā
Clarkās business started because of old running gear sitting around in the garage that he had once used for draft horses. It was leftover from the ranch heād owned before he was forced to sell out by an oil field accident.
People, his dad included, kept asking him, āWhat are you going to do with that?ā
One day he popped off with, āIām going to build a sheep wagon on it.ā
His dad scoffed at the idea.
āYou canāt do that,ā he said. āYouāre in a wheelchair.ā
Well, that made the outcome a certainty in Clarkās mind. There would be a sheep wagon on that running gear one way or another.
āIām in a wheelchair, dad. Not dead,ā he told his father.
It took some time, and a little help from his wife Lori and a lifelong Amish friend he went to school with growing up. They helped him paint any areas he couldnāt reach, as well as certain other tasks that were physically difficult for him to accomplish.
Clark did all of the engineering and design work, though, as well as a lot of the custom woodworking.
āMy granadfather was a cabinetmaker,ā Clark said. āAnd my other grandfather was a logger and lumber man. I have a walnut desk here where one grandfather cut the walnut and the other made the desk.ā
Clarkās first sheepwagon looked a bit like a cedar tiny home on wheels. Clark had a quilt custom-made for the wagon, too, the perfect finishing touch for the homespun look of the rustic cabin.
It was cool enough that other people who saw the sheepwagon wanted one, too.
Before Clark knew it, he had a real business on his hands.
When Stubborness Is An Asset
Clark has been Scotch-Irish stubborn all his life.
That might have frustrated family members from time to time, but ultimately it helped him get through the oil field accident that left him without the use of his legs.
Thatās not something Clark likes to talk about. Itās a time in his life when he did a little of what he calls āfaltering.ā
Faltering, for most of us, is what happens in the morning when ambition hasnāt woken up yet and we hit the snooze button one too many times.
But for Clark, at that time, the faltering was about waking up to life itself.
Heād been forced to sell out of ranching, a profession that had once meant everything to him. Heād worked an oil field job just to make ends meet. Ranching was what he really loved.
His father had cautioned him about trying to continue ranching.
āYou just canāt do this anymore,ā his father told him at the time. āYouāre going to get hurt worse. And donāt you ever even try and get back on a horse.ā
Clark knew his father was right, even if he didnāt want to admit it.
āYou have bad cows, and they donāt give a shit if youāre in a wheelchair or not,ā Clark said. āTheyāll run over you and do whatever else they have to do.ā
Selling his ranch out was among the hardest days of his life.
But his dad also helped him flip the script that was playing in his head about that.
āSo, my dad goes, āBeing in that wheelchair is not the worst thing that could happen to you,āā Clark recalled. āAnd Iām thinking, āOh, hell no. the shitās going to hit the fan here. Iāve just had enough,ā and I told him so.ā
His dad shook his head.
āYou donāt understand,ā Clark recalled him saying. āItās not the worst thing that can happen to you. You could have been looking up at that grass instead of looking down at it.ā
Thatās how close Clark had been between life and death. He realized it was time to focus on what he had, not on what he had not.
āSo, I just turned my whole life around,ā Clark said. āI said, āYou know what, Iām going to do whatever I want to do. Iām going to figure out how to do it.āā
Thatās something Clark is still figuring out every day in his little garage where new sheep wagon dreams are born every day in the Bighorn Mountains.
āI donāt know how to do everything I want to do yet,ā he said. āI donāt. But Iām going to figure it out. And every day I come through the garage door right there, in here, thatās my therapy.ā
RenƩe Jean can be reached at renee@cowboystatedaily.com.