Thursday, March 19, 2009

Ranch Rodeo



Last weekend we had the opportunity to watch the Cotulla Ranch Rodeo as part of the LaSalle County Fair and Wild Hog Cook-Off. Let me start by saying this was my “first rodeo”. Well my first Ranch Rodeo anyway!
Having grown up around and participated in rodeos most of my younger life I understood that all the events were “skill” events that cowboys would use on the ranches as they did their daily or seasonal work. Well almost all of the events. I don’t think bull riding was ever in any of the “Ranch Hand Job Descriptions” booklets. Other were however heavily influenced by needed skills. Both bronc riding events showcased the cowboys ability to ride a green horse and “break it” into a semi-permissive state. It was hard to use the horse if it was not rideable.
Roping events demonstrated the cowboys ability to use a common tool of the trade; the rope. Cowboys, some more efficient than others, would have to rope calves to allow a ground crew to “throw” or “flank” the calf in order to brand, de-horn, castrate (cut) and vaccinate during those seasons. In everyday life “doctoring” would need to be done. It is hard to convince a calf to stand still while you stick a needle in him for various reasons. Larger animals would need to be caught by one cowboy around the head or horns (headin’) and another would have to rope the back legs (preferably both!) and stretch them out so a ground crew could do what was necessary; thus Team Roping events are held
Even Steer Wrestling or “doggin;’ was used by some to take a larger steer down to the ground and allow crews to do what was necessary. I suppose some over zealous cowboy in an effort to “do his job” missed with his rope and just jumped off his horse to “wrestle” the steer down and an event was born.
Horse handling events like Barrel racing, Pole Bending and the “Rings” were all used to showcase horsemanship and to show off a particular horse’s ability.
All of these events essentially became contest as cowboys all tried to out-do the other. The difference in a “normal” rodeo as you may have watched on TV or even at your local arenas is that all of these are essentially individual events. My time or score against yours. Truth is that “cowboying” is more often a “team” event. Several times I have mentioned ground crews. Those are the cowboys handling the branding irons, saws, vaccine syringes and knives; the purpose of the roping and throwing.
Ranch Rodeo takes this into account with events consisting of teams of four or five cowboys riding into a herd picking out an animal (steer or cow) and roping, throwing, tying, branding or milking for time. Add the South Texas flair of wild hogs and you have a very entertaining afternoon and the opportunity for lots of wrecks. Add to this team fans that are as vocal and supportive as any NFL, NBA or NASCAR event.
Needless to say you can imagine the fun we had laughing when an over competitive cowboy forgot how hard he was spurring a horse and the horse decide that wasn’t part of the plan and in the middle of controlled confusion a “bronc riding” broke out. Or, the mad mother cow who decided that everyone and everything in the world was her enemy but particularly picked out one horse to focus on; the cowboy on the horse was sure happy the cow was a “Mulley” – hornless. Or, the countless perfectly thrown loops a wild hog can run through.
Thank Ranch Rodeo teams for reminding me what it was all about and while not exactly the same bringing up memories of times past!

2 comments:

landall said...

The man who invented Steer Wrestling, Bill Picket.

I only know this because I used him as my person one year for African-American History month in high school.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_Pickett

Donny Proctor said...

I remember your report. Original! I just didn't think people would really believe that when he turned the steers head he would bite the lip to maintain control!