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Real Modern Cowboys


Calf Roping

Calf roping's roots can can be found on the ranches of the working cowboys and the skills are still in use today for catching and immobilizing calves.

 

The calf is given a head start while the roper waits in "the box" behind a barrier. If the roper leaves the box too soon, breaking the barrier, a ten second penalty is added to the roper's time. The roper pursues the calf at speeds of up to 30 mph and attempts to throw his loop around the calf's neck.


 

The roper's partner, his well trained horse, plays a key role in achieving a fast roping time. Once the calf is roped the horse comes to a stop. As the roper dismounts, sprinting to the calf, the horse will help the roper by taking small backwards steps to take up any slack in the rope. While his horse maintains tension on the rope, the roper then throws the calf on its side and uses a pigging string, which he carried in his teeth, to tie any three legs together.

 

The roper remounts his horse, moving ahead giving back some slack in his rope and waits six seconds. If the calf breaks free the roper gets no time.

 

Bull Riding

Bull riding pits a cowboy against a 2000 pound animal whose bucking is as unpredictable as its personality. Like the other rough stock events of bronc riding, the cowboy must hang on for eight seconds with one hand. In this case, it's a flat, braided "bull rope" tied around the bull's belly. His riding hand is wrapped into the rope and he cannot touch himself or the bull with his free hand. In this event the rider does not have to mark out his animal.


Strength, flexibility, coordination and a strong mental attitude are just part of the skills a cowboy needs to successfully ride a bucking spinning bull.


The bull rider receives points for spurring the animal as it bucks but he is also judged on his ability to stay on the bull. Unlike bronc riding, the uglier the action of the bull, the more points a rider will score for being able to stay on.

 

Each bull is different with its own personality and traits for bucking hard, spinning and changing directions. A cowboy who hangs on in a spin or who can hang on while turning the bull left and right can gain a higher score. It is in this sport where a cowboy is most likely to receive serious injuries. When the ride is over the danger remains as quite often the bull comes back after the cowboy. This is where the colourful and sometimes clownish-looking bull fighters perform the very serious job of saving cowboy's lives, often taking serious hits of their own while distracting a raging bull.

 

Team Roping

Team roping is the only rodeo event using a team with two riding team members at one: a "header" and a "heeler". Skill, fast hands, team work and good timing are essential in a successful run.

 

The ropers wait in their boxes on either side of the chute from which the steer is released into the arena. The steer is given a head start by a barrier that is released when the steer is at a given point in the arena.

 

If the header leaves too soon the barrier is broken resulting in a ten second penalty.

 

Once the steer is in the arena it is quickly followed by the header and heeler. The header must rope the steer first, either around both horns, around one horn and the head or around the neck. He then turns the steer to the left, exposing its hind legs to the pursuing heeler. The heeler then needs precision timing to rope both heels. When the header and heeler have then taken up the slack in their ropes and have their horses facing each other, the clock is stopped. If only one heel is caught, the team faces a five second penalty.

 

Barrel Racing

Riders race their horses into the arena to run a cloverleaf pattern around three barrels and out again. The goal is to have the fastest time without knocking over a barrel.

 

The rider tries to guide her horse as tightly around each barrel as she can to shave milliseconds off her time. A fraction of a second is all it takes to win or lose a barrel race!

 

 

 

This sport highlights the speed and agility of the quarter horse. An electric eye connected with an electronic timer and a judge with a stop watch record the time. The rider is given a running start into the arena and her time begins once she passes the start line. It ends when she crosses it again, after running a long stretch back from the third barrel located at the opposite end of the arena. Along this final stretch of the race the crowd will cheer enthusiastically while she pushes her horse to give her as much speed as possible to the finish line.


The rider's horse may touch and tip a barrel but knocking one over will add five seconds to her time. The Dodge Rodeo circuit also features Junior Barrel Racing. The sport is run exactly the same way and can result in as fast or faster times as the adults get, however Junior Barrel Racing highlights the skills of riders under the age of 15.

 

Mutton Busting

This event gives children under the age of eight an opportunity to experience participating in a rodeo. The children are placed aboard a sheep, hold on around its neck and the chute is opened. They must hold on for four seconds and are closely watched and helped by the arena's bull riders.

 

Afterwards each competitor gets a medallion from A-K Rodeo.

 

Steer Wrestling

Steer WrestlingSteer wrestling, demands courage, spit second timing and personal strength to avoid injury. Known as "bull dogging", it is the fastest event in the arena today. The bull dogger, leaps from his galloping horse, to grab a running steer (weighing between 400 and 600 pounds) and wrestle it to the ground.

 

Like the roping events, the calf is given a head start and is followed by the wrestler and his hazer. The hazer's job is to keep the steer from veering away from the wrestler as he prepares to slide down from the right side of his galloping horse to leap onto the steer.

 

 

 

The wrestler reaches for the steer's horns and swings his legs from behind him to in front as he comes off his horse, digging his heels into the dirt. He tries to use the momentum of that maneuver and his strength to bring down the steer. The clock is stopped when the steer's head, body and all four legs are on the ground.

 

All this action can take place in less than five seconds! As with roping, penalties apply if the wrestler leaves the box too soon in pursuit of his steer.

 

Junior Steer Riding

Steer riding is almost identical to bull riding except: the animal is a steer instead of a bull and the rider must wear a helmet for protection. The young cowboy is between the ages of eight and fifteen and the same skills as in bull riding are needed to earn a high score. Most steer riders will go on to become bull riders when they reach the minimum age of sixteen.

 

Saddle Bronc

Riding Saddle bronc riding is called "the classic event of rodeo", originating from the task of breaking wild horses for use on the cattle ranches of the Canadian and American west.

 

As it has evolved for the rodeo arena, it has also become one of the most complicated events for the rodeo cowboy.

 

It involves strength, timing and technique as the cowboy attempts to ride the bucking bronc for eight seconds, holding onto only a thick reign attached to the horse's halter.

 

He can only use one hand to work the reign and to help keep him on the saddle as he spurs the horse and tries to time his movements with the bronc's bucking in order to score high points.

 

The cowboy aims for controlled fluid movements as he tries to precisely time his movements with that of the horse. Ideally, he spurs the horse with his toes pointed outward, landing them on the bronc's shoulders as its front feet hit the ground, dragging the spurs along its shoulders as it bucks again. The rider, then in sync with the horses bucking action swings his feet back to the point above the bronc's shoulders for the next jump.

 

The saddle bronc rider faces a "mark out" rule, meaning both spurs must be above the bronc's shoulders until its feet hit the ground on the first jump from the chute. Failure in this means disqualification. Also, his free hand cannot make contact with the bronc, his equipment or his body during his eight second ride.

 

Bareback Bronc Riding

Bareback riding, originating in the rodeo arena, is one of the most bone-jarring events of the rodeo and is often the toughest on the cowboy's body with immense stress placed on the arm and back...but to score high points the cowboy has to look good while he's punishing his body!

 

The cowboy holds onto the bucking bronc with one hand in a rigging that resembles a suitcase handle on a strap. He has to hold on for eight seconds while spurring the horse. As with saddle bronc riding, as the bronc bucks the rider pulls his knees up dragging his spurs along the bronc's shoulders and as the horse's front feet come back to the ground, he straightens his legs so the spurs connect above the horse's shoulders, ready to do it again for the next jump.

 

As is the case with saddle bronc riding the rider must mark out his horse and his free hand must not touch his horse, equipment or body for the eight seconds. Bareback bronc riders tend to receive more violent and less fluid and controlled rides than saddle bronc riders, and as a result they tend to do more long-term damage to their bodies than most other rodeo cowboys.

 
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