If you grew up in a place where there were more cows than people, you remember the kind—tight jeans that hugged just right, boots scuffed from work, and sun-kissed shoulders that spent more time bare than covered. They didn’t have gym bodies, but the kind that came from throwing hay bales, fixing fences, and long days working the fields, tending their crops beneath the hot Southern sun. On weekends they were up before dawn to hunt, out fishing by midday, and sipping beer from a bottle or a red Solo cup by nightfall. Some wore cowboy hats, though in Alabama it was more likely a baseball cap. They smelled like sweat, soap, and summer air. Some were rowdy, some were sweet, but all had that quiet confidence that could make your heart skip. They were good ol’ country boys—the kind who worked hard, laughed easy, and lingered in your memory long after you left home, and if you’re honest, one of them was probably your first crush.
5 comments:
"that could make your heart skip" traduction google en français "qui pouvait vous faire bondir." proche de "qui pouvait vous faire bander." : "that could make you hard"
Les beaux cow-boys :)
Nous en avons beaucoup dans les plaines de l’ouest du Canada, de la Saskatchewan à l’Alberta.
Le célèbre Stampede de Calgary attire des cow-boys du monde entier et offrir des bonbons pour les yeux :)
Monsieur Dupuis 🇨🇦
I lived in Texas for 8 years----Two in Wichita Falls, Texas-AF-and 6 in Dallas working and completing my undgrad----I have met plenty of country boys----Some are sweet as can be and some are just hell on wheels rednecks---I even have on gentleman caller take me to the rodeo and expalin to me every every compenttion and what the end goal was----I have seen my share of tight Wranglers, ropers, cowboyboots and hats---Loved my time in Texas----Now this was the late 80s through the mid 90s----
You had me at “if”.
¡¡¡¡¡¡AMO A ESTOS VAQUEROS TAN HERMOSOS!!!!!! Quiero uno para mi
Ángel
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