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Many of the early wild west show cowgirls never knew ranch life. They had never gentled a range pony, branded or doctored a calf, mended a fence.... Yet, rather than settle for a life of arranged marriages, unfulfilling jobs, spousal abuse and a lack of freedom and control over their own lives, many chose to run away to circuses and wild west shows to become "rodeo cowgirls"

They risked their lives by climbing into the hurricane deck of a bucking bronc and tried to stay there for a few seconds to make their ride. Most times they did this with the stirrups hobbled, tied together beneath the belly of the horse. It kept them seated but was extremely dangerous and several of the cowgirls were killed practicing this very dangerous practice. But like one old cowboy said "If they stuck to it for a few seconds, they got to eat that night. That's why they were there and that's the only reason."

What do you think, was that really the only reason they were there? Would you have had the courage to do what those women had to do in the early 20th c. to escape the small world society and law would have them living in? Could you see yourself being a wild west show cowgirl?

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Lil' Booger Red was quite a rider as well. I believe she was his daughter.... Few photos of her exist today as an early cowgirl saddle bronc rider.

Booger Red Gets His Marker--By Jerry Bullock

http://www.sanmarcosrecord.com/column/x1221298753/Lifes-Like-That-J...

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Excerpt from story:

He was buried in the family plot in the GAR (Grand Army of the Republic) Cemetery. His grave has lain unmarked for 85 years. His loving wife Molly, his daughters and his sons would not have left him there intentionally. They fell on hard times, unable any longer to work in the professional Wild West shows, and moved back to Texas. Molly had every intention of placing a monument on Booger's grave.

That event that Eckhart is referring to is a wild horse roundup. (They turned the broncs loose in the arena.  Bronc riders had a team--the rider & his 2 partners.  They had to rope the bronc in the arena, ear it down, put the blindfold on it, & saddle the animal.  Then the rider got aboard & they pulled the blinder.  From then on it was the bronc & rider.  No time, no pickup men.  You either stayed with the animal until it tired out & quit bucking, or you got thrown.)  'Still done.  'Have a friend (big guy) who had his shin bone shattered within' the past year in such an event.

It's obviously not a PRCA event.  Back when I was riding in pickup rodeos, back before PRCA really took hold--late '50s, very early '60s--we had 'ranch rodeos.'  Calf roping, steer roping, headin' & heelin' (team roping), saddlebronc riding, & that was about it.  Once in a while we'd have bulldoggin'--they call it 'steer wrestling' these days.  No bareback broncs, no bull riding.  What we did was what a working cowboy would do on a ranch. 

 

In the Gene Autry movie it was described as 'saddlebronc riding,' which is why I thought that was what it was.  By the time I got into rodeo, in the middle '40s as a little kid, nobody was doing that at the rodeos I went to.  When my folks & I went to Cheyenne for Frontier Days in the summer of '47, that wasn't one of the events. 

 

About the closest thing we had to that was a calf scramble.  Every kid brought a piece of rope with him.  They turned maybe 20 calves loose in the arena.  Dozens of kids, each one with a piece of rope, started chasing the calves.  If you could catch one, get your rope on it, and pull it back to the chutes, you got to keep the calf. You had to be 12 or under to get into the calf scramble--no teenagers.  I haven't seen a calf scramble in a rodeo in probably 40 years.  Nowadays the event for little kids is mutton bustin'.  They put football helmets with face guards on kids up to about 6 & let 'em ride sheep.

Charley

 

They still hold "ranch rodeos" at least up here in South Dakota. I like them much more than professional rodeos.

 

Some have "wild horse" riding as described above, but that is a dangerous event, for horse and men.

 

Here in south-central Texas we are just beginning to have 'ranch rodeos' again.  We have a PRCA rodeo in connection w/our county fair every September, & for a while we hosted the teen-age National Championship Rodeo.  I don't remember what they call the organization.  Back when I was doing it the entry fee was usually $5 per event.  Top money was maybeso $50 per event.  I rode saddlebronc, but there were no 'association saddles' then.  You brought your own kack.  I found an old Sears saddle out of the '30s, sawed the horn off, cut down that high-scoop cantle so I didn't get a broken back, & replaced all the hardware & leather holding it.  I think I paid $7 for it in a second-hand store.  By the time I got done with it I had about $40 in it.  Of course, that was 1955 money.  $40 was a pretty good chunk of change in '55.
I went to Sisters Rodeo last year to watch Kaila Mussell ride in the saddle bronc contest. Before that, they had a wild horse contest. It was pretty exciting and entertaining even though a couple of the cowboys got banged up pretty good. Ranch rodeos are becoming popular in the Northwest too, Charlie.

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