next, we meet photographer scott baxter, whose found inspiration in the american frontier in arizona. for almost a decade, baxter has photographed over 100 cattle ranchers and their ancestral ranches. he's helped to document the vanishing traditions of america's legendary west. rider: yah, yah, yah. [ whistles ] [ cattle mooing ] scott baxter: some of these ranches we're photographing aren't going to be around because development is gonna find its way in, and there's a lot of ranches i know that there's no one coming up behind them, so they'll most likely be sold. and i just thought, what if photographically i could at least try to record some of these families that have been around here since 1912 or earlier. and that's - it kind of started that way. i didn't really plan to do anything with it, i just wanted to see if i could accomplish it. we call it "100 years, 100 ranchers," and basically the criteria is the family has been nching in arizona continuously since 1912 or earlier. henry amado: my ancestors came here from valencia, spain, in the 1840s, and they were coming to tucson by