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  • 2017 RAM National Circuit Finals Champions:

    2017 RAM National Circuit Finals Champions:

    Bareback Riding – R.C. Landingham, Hat Creek, Calif., California Circuit – $29,629

    Steer Wrestling – Justin Shaffer, Hallsville, Texas, Texas Circuit – $11,846

    Team Roping Header – Jesse Stipes, Salina, Okla., Prairie Circuit – $17,342

    Team Roping Heeler – Buddy Hawkins, Columbus, Kan., Prairie Circuit – $17,342

    Saddle Bronc Riding – Jacobs Crawley, Boerne, Texas, Texas Circuit – $25,344

    Tie-Down Roping – Matt Shiozawa, Chubbuck, Idaho, Wilderness Circuit – $15,541

    Women’s Barrel Racing – Emily Miller, Weatherford, Okla., Prairie Circuit – $13,646

    Bull Riding – Tanner Learmont, Cleburne, Texas, Texas Circuit – $20,090

    All-Around Cowboy – Josh Peek, Pueblo, Colo., Mountain States Circuit – $5,117

    Champion Circuit – Prairie Circuit (Neb., Kan., Okla.)

    2017 RNCFR Closes out with a Bang

     

    KISSIMMEE, Fla. (April 9, 2017) — It’s been a long road to the RAM National Circuit Finals Rodeo (RNCFR), but one that paid off with big dividends for champions crowned on Sunday. In addition to a share of the three-quarters of a million dollars in prize money, each champion won a Polarris RANGER UTV, a $20,000 voucher toward a new RAM truck, trophy saddle, buckle and other swag.

    Action started Thursday, April 6 at the Silver Spurs Arena at Osceola Heritage Park with the best contestants from 12 geographic regions in the United States and the country of Mexico competing for $1 million in cash and prizes.

    Everyone got two opportunities, hoping to be among the top eight that advanced to Showdown Sunday, April 9. From eight, the field was cut to four.  The top time or score in the final round of four secured the championship.

    1. C. Landingham from Hat Creek, California, was one of those champions. He qualified from the California Circuit in the bareback riding and was the most successful athlete here. Landingham was the big money winner at $29,630. When he entered this rodeo, he was 11th in the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association World Standings. The money he won here counts in the world standings for the first time in the 30-year history of the RNCFR. He should move into the top five and will be looking good for a spot at the 2017 Wrangler National Finals Rodeo.

    Landingham’s success came aboard a horse he was very familiar with, Korkow Rodeo’s Onion Ring. He had won the semifinals after receiving a reride where he scored 85.5 points on Smith Pro Rodeo’s R.D. Mercer. Then he met up with Onion Ring in the finals. Landingham had ridden the South Dakota horse to win the final round of the Pendleton Roundup last September with an 85.5 score. When the judges added up their scores at the RNCFR, an 88.5 gave him the championship.

    The steer wrestling champion came from the Texas Circuit and got here by competing at rodeos close to his home in Hallsville. Justin Shaffer had the fastest time in the finals at 3.6 seconds to beat three men who are veterans of the Wrangler National Finals Rodeo. Shaffer nearly doubled his season earnings collecting $11,846.

    This year’s team roping champions came from the Prairie Circuit. With Jesse Stipes from Salina, Oklahoma, heading and Buddy Hawkins from Columbus, Kansas heeling, they stopped the clock in 4.9 seconds for the win. They each won $17,342. This was the second RNCFR title for Hawkins, but the first for Stipes.

    One year ago, Jacobs Crawley, from Boerne, Texas, left here as the reserve champion. He finished second to champion Rusty Wright by 1.5 points. This year he came to Kissimmee with only one thought on his mind, leaving with the title, money and all of the prizes that go with it. His plan came together in a big way as he won $25,343 here after making an 89.5-point ride on Smith Pro Rodeo’s Resistol’s Top Hat. The native Texan was very happy to earn a title for the Texas Circuit.

    Veteran tie-down roper Matt Shiozawa, from Chubbock, Idaho, won his fourth RNCFR championship and $15,541. Riding his bay mare that he calls Alotta, the Wilderness Circuit athlete stopped the clock in 7.3 seconds for the win.

    Barrel racing champion Emily Miller from Weatherford, Okla., made the trip here with her horse that she calls Pipewrench. They made their first round run on Thursday, had a day off on Friday and ran again on Saturday night to be among the semifinals qualifiers. They placed third and came back in the finals, stopping the clock in 15.27 seconds, one of the fastest runs of the rodeo. Miller is also a dental hygienist so she is making a quick trip back home to go to work on Tuesday morning. She won $13,646.

    Texas got another champion in the bull riding. Tanner Learmont from Cleburne, Texas, was the only rider to cover on Sunday and which earned him the championship and $20,090. The all-around title went to Josh Peek who competed in steer wrestling and tie-down roping. This is the third consecutive title for the cowboy from Pueblo, Colo., who represented the Mountain States Circuit.

    Plans are underway for the 2018 RNCFR which will again be held in Kissimmee. It is scheduled for April 5-8.

    ###

     

    KISSIMMEE, Fla. (April 9, 2017) —The following are unofficial results of the RAM National Circuit Finals Rodeo at Silver Spurs Arena, April 9, 2016.

    Bareback riding: semi-finals 1, R.C. Landingham, Hat Creek, Calif., California Circuit, 85.5 points on Stace Smith Pro Rodeo’s R.D. Mercer, $7,581. 2, Caleb Bennett, Tremonton, Utah, Wilderness Circuit, 84, $5,686. 3, Justin Miller, Billings, Mont., Montana Circuit, 83, $3,791. 4, JR Vezain, Cowley, Wyo., Mountain States Circuit, 82.5, $1,895. Finals 1, Landingham, 88.5 points on Korkow Pro Rodeo’s Onion Ring, $7,581. 2, Miller, 88, $5,686. 3, (tie) Vezain and Bennett, 83, $2,843 each.

    Steer wrestling: semi-finals 1, Olin Hannum, Malad, Idaho, Wilderness Circuit, 4.0 seconds, $7,581.  2, Ty Erickson, Helena, Montana, Montana Circuit, 3.7, $5,686. 3, Justin Shaffer, Hallsville Texas, Texas Circuit, 4.0, $3,791. 4, J.D. Struxness, Appleton, Minn., Prairie Circuit, 4.2, $1,895. Finals 1, Shaffer, 3.6 seconds, $7,581. 2, Struxness, 4.0, $5,686. 3, Erickson, 4.3, $3,791. 4, Hannum, 13.1, $1,895.

    Team roping: semi-finals 1, Luke Brown, Stephenville, Texas, and Wesley Thorp, Throckmorton, Texas, Texas Circuit, 4.9 seconds, $7,581 each. 2, Coleman Proctor, Pryor, Okla., and Billie Jack Saebens, Nowata, Okla., Prairie Circuit 5.0, $5,686. 3, Edward Hawley, Surprise, Ariz., and Ty Romo, Whiteriver, Ariz., Turquoise Circuit, 5.1, $3,791. 4, Jesse Stipes, Salina, Okla., and Buddy Hawkins, Columbus, Kan., Prairie Circuit, 5.7, $1,895. Finals (two times) 1, Stipes and Hawkins, 4.9, $7,581 each. 2, Proctor and Saebens, 9.7, $5,686 each.

    Saddle bronc riding: semi-finals 1, Jacobs Crawley, Boerne, Texas, Texas Circuit, 86.5 points on Bailey Pro Rodeo’s James Bond, $7,537. 2, (tie) Chuck Schmidt, Keldron, S.D., Badlands Circuit, and Jesse Wright, Milford, Utah, Wilderness Circuit 82.5, $4,711 each. 4, Tyrell Smith, Sand Coulee, Mont., Montana Circuit, 81.5, $1,884. Finals (three rides) 1, Crawley, 89.5 points on Stace Smith Pro Rodeo’s Resistol’s Top Hat, $7,537. 2, Wright, 86, $5,653. 3, Smith, 86, $3,769.

    Tie-down roping: semi-finals 1, Jared Kempker, Eugene, Ore., Great Lakes Circuit, 8.1 seconds, $7,581. 2 Joseph Parsons, Marana, Ariz., Turquoise Circuit, 8.8, $5,686. 3, Randall Carlisle, Athens, La., Southeastern Circuit, 8.9, $3,791. 4, Matt Shiozawa, Chubbuck, Idaho, Wilderness Circuit, $1,895. Finals 1, Shoizawa, 7.3 seconds, $7,581. 2, Parsons, 8.1, $5,686. 3, Carlisle, 8.4, $3,791. 4, Kempker, 9.5, $1,895.

    Barrel racing: semi-finals 1, Tiany Schuster, Krum, Texas, Texas Circuit, 15.18 seconds, $7,581. 2, Ari -Anna Flynn, Charleston, Ark., Texas Circuit, $5,686. 3, Emily Miller, Weatherford, Okla., Prairie Circuit, 15.51, $3,791. 4, Nellie Miller, Cottonwood, Calif., California Circuit, 15.55, $1,895. Finals 1, Emily Miller, 15.27, $7,581. 2, (tie) Flynn, Schuster and Nellie Miller, 15.41, $3,791 each.

    Bull riding: semi-finals (one ride) 1, Tanner Learmont, Cleburne, Texas, Texas Circuit, 78 points on Silver Spurs Club’s Hang Em High, $7,581. Finals (no qualified rides)

  • Contestants from five countries, 36 states to compete for $1 million  at RAM National Circuit Finals Rodeo

    Contestants from five countries, 36 states to compete for $1 million at RAM National Circuit Finals Rodeo

    KISSIMMEE, Fla. — When the RAM National Circuit Finals Rodeo (RNCFR) gets underway at the Silver Spurs Arena on April 6, more than 200 rodeo athletes from 36 states, plus Canada, New Zealand, Australia and four states in Mexico, will gather to compete for national championships as well as $1 million in prize money and awards.
    The circuit system divides the United States into 12 geographical regions where Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association (PRCA) and Women’s Professional Rodeo Association (WPRA) members compete for points in their designated area to advance to their circuit finals. The winners of the 12 circuit finals as well as the year-end champions in each rodeo event are then invited to the RNCFR. This year, for the first time, the field also includes two contestants in each event from the PRCA’s Mexican Rodeo Tour.
    With over $1 million in cash and prizes, the RNCFR one of the richest rodeos in the United States. Winning contestants will get substantial paychecks which for the first time will count in the PRCA and WPRA world standings. Champions in each event as well as the all-around category will also get a $20,000 certificate towards the purchase of a RAM vehicle, a new Polaris RANGER UTV a champion buckle, saddle and new pair of boots.
    Events showcased at the RNCFR include: bareback riding; steer wrestling; team roping (heading and heeling); saddle bronc riding; women’s barrel racing and bull riding. The first four performances are being broadcast online on the Wrangler Network. The April 9 finals will air on CBS Sports Network on April 23.
    RNCFR Qualifiers by Circuit
    Columbia River Circuit (Washington, Oregon & Idaho Panhandle)
    Wyatt Bloom Bend, Ore. bareback riding
    Nick Gutzwiler Edwall, Wash. bareback riding
    Kathy Grimes Medical Lake, Wash. barrel racing
    Amberleigh Moore Keizer, Ore. barrel racing
    Roscoe Jarboe New Plymouth, Idaho bull riding
    Jordan Wacey Spears Redding, California bull riding
    Max Filippini Battle Mountain, Nev. saddle bronc riding
    Ryan Mackenzie Jordan Valley, Ore. saddle bronc riding
    Cody Cabral Hilo, Hawaii steer wrestling
    Dakota W Eldridge Elko, Nev. steer wrestling
    Russell Cardoza Terrebonne, Ore. team roping
    Brady Minor Ellensburg, Wash. team roping
    Riley Minor Ellensburg, Wash. team roping
    Hayes Smith Central Point, Ore. team roping
    Blair Burk Durant, Okla. tie-down roping
    Cooper Martin Alma, Kansas tie-down roping

    California Circuit (California)
    Teddy Athan Livermore, Calif. bareback riding
    R.C. Landingham Hat Creek, Calif. bareback riding
    Trula Churchill Valentine, Neb. barrel racing
    Nellie Miller Cottonwood, Calif. barrel racing
    Christopher Byrd Compton, Calif. bull riding
    Aaron Williams Pismo Beach, Calif. bull riding
    Cameron Messier Odessa, Texas saddle bronc riding
    Joaquin Real Santa Paula, Calif. saddle bronc riding
    Josh Garner Live Oak, Calif. steer wrestling
    Blaine Jones Templeton, Calif. steer wrestling
    Evan Arnold Santa Margarita, Calif. team roping
    Dugan Kelly Paso Robles, Calif. team roping
    Ryan Reed Farmington, Calif. team roping
    Victor Ugalde Orovada, Nev. team roping
    Jordan Ketscher Squaw Valley, Calif. tie-down roping
    Ryle Smith Oakdale, Calif. tie-down roping

    Wilderness Circuit (Southern Idaho, Utah & Nevada)
    Caleb Bennett Tremonton, Utah bareback riding
    Tyler Nelson Victor, Idaho bareback riding
    Jessie Telford Caldwell, Idaho barrel racing
    Calli Van Tassell Draper, Utah barrel racing
    Josh Frost Randlett, Utah bull riding
    Garrett Smith Rexburg, Idaho bull riding
    Jesse Wright Milford, Utah saddle bronc riding
    Ryder Wright Milford, Utah saddle bronc riding
    Olin Hannum Malad, Idaho steer wrestling
    Baylor Roche Tremonton, Utah steer wrestling
    Olin Pulham Payson, Utah team roping
    Jaguar Terrill Blackfoot, Idaho team roping
    Thad Ward Howell, Utah team roping
    Jason Warner Rigby, Idaho team roping
    J.C. Malone Plain city, Utah tie-down roping
    Matt Shiozawa Chubbuck, Idaho tie-down roping
    Montana Circuit (Montana)
    Jessy Davis Power, Mont. bareback riding
    Justin Miller Billings, Mont. bareback riding
    Lisa Lockhart Oelrichs, S.D. barrel racing
    Carmel Wright Roy, Mont. barrel racing
    Parker Breding Edgar, Mont. bull riding
    Luke Gee Stanford, Mont. bull riding
    Tyrell J Smith Sand Coulee, Mont. saddle bronc riding
    Chase Brooks Deer Lodge, Mont. saddle bronc riding & team roping
    Ty Erickson Helena, Mont. steer wrestling
    Newt Novich Twin Bridges, Mont. steer wrestling
    Dustin Bird Cut Bank, Mont. team roping
    Cody Tew Belgrade, Mont. team roping
    Sid Sporer Cody, Wyo. team roping
    Jake Hamilton Casper, Wyo. tie-down roping
    Logan Hofer Magrath, Alberta tie-down roping

    Mountain States Circuit (Wyoming & Colorado)
    Joel Schlegel Burns, Colo. bareback riding
    JR Vezain Cowley, Wyo. bareback riding
    Brittany Pozzi Tonozzi Victoria, Texas barrel racing
    Kim Schulze Larkspur, Colo. barrel racing
    Jess Davison Laramie, Wyo. bull riding
    Clayton Savage Yoder, Wyo. bull riding
    Colton J Miller Lance Creek, Wyo. saddle bronc riding
    Andy Clarys Riverton, Wyo. saddle bronc riding
    Nick Guy Sparta, Wis. steer wrestling
    Josh Peek Pueblo, Colo. steer wrestling & tie-down roping
    Travis Bounds Clifton, Colo. team roping
    Brit Ellerman Ft. Lupton, Colo. team roping
    Josh Fillmore Penrose, Colo. team roping
    T.J. Watts Eads, Colo. team roping
    Brice Ingo Boone, Colo. tie-down roping

    Turquoise Circuit (Arizona & New Mexico)

    Luke Creasy Lovington, N.M. bareback riding
    Delvecchio Kaye Round Rock, Ariz. bareback riding
    Sherry Cervi Marana, Ariz. barrel racing
    Lori Todd Willcox, Ariz. barrel racing
    Lon Danley Tularosa, N.M. bull riding
    Tustin Daye Lupton, Ariz. bull riding
    Josh Davison Miles City, Mont. saddle bronc riding
    Cooper DeWitt Rio Rico, Ariz. saddle bronc riding
    Dean McIntyre Cloncurry, Australia steer wrestling
    Damian Padilla Rio Rico, Ariz. steer wrestling
    Edward Hawley Jr. Surprise, Ariz. team roping
    Cory Petska Marana, Ariz. team roping
    Erich Rogers Round Rock, Ariz. team roping
    Ty Romo Whiteriver, Ariz. team roping
    Seth Hall Albuquerque, N.M. tie-down roping
    Joseph Parsons Marana, Ariz. tie-down roping

    Badlands Circuit (North Dakota & South Dakota)

    Ty Breuer Mandan, N.D. bareback riding
    Blake Smith Zap, N.D. bareback riding
    Jana Griemsman Piedmont, S.D. barrel racing
    Nikki Hansen Dickinson, N.D. barrel racing
    Ardie Maier Timber Lake, S.D. bull riding
    Tate Thybo Belle Fourche, S.D. bull riding
    Ty Manke Hermosa, S.D. saddle bronc riding
    Chuck Schmidt Keldron, S.D. saddle bronc riding
    Chason Floyd Buffalo, S.D. steer wrestling
    Taz Olson Prairie City, S.D. steer wrestling
    J.B. Lord Sturgis, S.D. team roping
    Levi Lord Sturgis, S.D. team roping
    Jordan Olson Surprise, Ariz. team roping
    Logan Olson Flandreau, S.D. team roping

    Prairie Circuit (Nebraska, Kansas & Oklahoma)

    Frank Morton Wright, Kansas bareback riding
    Justin Polmiller Weatherford, Okla. bareback riding
    Emily Miller Weatherford, Okla. barrel racing
    Tracy Nowlin Nowata, Okla. barrel racing
    Trevor Kastner Sulphur, Okla. bull riding
    Nate Perry Elk City, Okla. bull riding
    Shade Etbauer Goodwell, Okla. saddle bronc riding
    Roper Kiesner Ripley, Okla. saddle bronc riding
    Riley Duvall Checotah, Okla. steer wrestling
    J.D. Struxness Appleton, Minn. steer wrestling
    Buddy Hawkins II Columbus, Kansas team roping
    Coleman Proctor Pryor, Okla. team roping
    Billie Jack Saebens Nowata, Okla. team roping
    Jesse Stipes Salina, Okla. team roping
    Cody Quaney Cheney, Kansas tie-down roping
    Bryson Sechrist Apache, Okla. tie-down roping

    Texas Circuit (Texas)
    Jake Brown Cleveland, Texas bareback riding
    Bill Tutor Huntsville, Texas bareback riding
    Ari-Anna Flynn Charleston, Ark. barrel racing
    Tiany Schuster Krum, Texas barrel racing
    Dustin Bowen Waller, Texas bull riding
    Tanner Learmont Cleburne, Texas bull riding
    Jacobs Crawley Boerne, Texas saddle bronc riding
    Sterling Crawley Stephenville, Texas saddle bronc riding
    Matt Reeves Cross Plains, Texas steer wrestling
    Justin Shaffer Hallsville, Texas steer wrestling
    Luke Brown Stephenville, Texas team roping
    Paul Eaves Lonedell, Mo. team roping
    Colby Lovell Madisonville, Texas team roping
    Wesley Thorp Throckmorton, Texas team roping
    Caleb Smidt Bellville, Texas tie-down roping
    Marty Yates Stephenville, Texas tie-down roping
    Great Lakes Circuit
    (Wisconsin, Iowa, Minnesota, Indiana, Ohio, Illinois, Michigan, Missouri and Kentucky)

    Tanner Aus Granite Falls, Minn. bareback riding
    Tim O’Connell Zwingle, Iowa bareback riding
    Ashley Baur Virnamwood, Wis barrel racing
    Jordan Moore Mauston, Wis barrel racing
    Levi Michael Berends Maynard, Minn. bull riding
    Trevor Reiste Linden, Iowa bull riding
    Logan Allen Crescent, Iowa saddle bronc riding
    Jordan Corrigan Toddville, Iowa saddle bronc riding
    Bob Lawlyes Perrysville, Ind. steer wrestling
    Justin Zwiefel Burt, Iowa steer wrestling
    J.W. Beck Moville, Iowa team roping
    Cody Graham Everton, Mo. team roping
    Adam Rose Willard, Mo. team roping
    Jason Stroup Cape Girardeau, Mo. team roping
    T.J. Hobson Henryville, Ind tie-down roping
    Jared Mark Kempker Eugene, Mo. tie-down roping

    Southeastern Circuit
    (Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Florida, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and Arkansas)

    Tanner Phipps Dalton, Ga. bareback riding
    Chad Rutherford Lake Charles, La. bareback riding
    Lindsey Hayes-Banks Opelika, Ala barrel racing
    Sabra O’Quinn Ocala, Fla. barrel racing
    Lane Lasley Marshall, Ark. bull riding
    Michael Riggs Jr. Claxton, Ga. bull riding
    Heith Allan DeMoss Heflin, La. saddle bronc riding
    Curtis Garton Kaitaia, New Zealand saddle bronc riding
    Gary Gilbert St. Cloud, Fla. steer wrestling
    Chance E Howard Cedarville, Ark., steer wrestling
    Clark Adcock Smithville, Tenn. team roping
    John Alley Adams, Tenn. team roping
    Caleb Anderson Mocksville, N.C. team roping
    Jacob Dagenhart Statesville, N.C. team roping
    Randall Carlisle Athens, La. tie-down roping
    Braxton Laughlin Westlake, La. tie-down roping

    First Frontier Circuit
    (Maine, Vermont, New Hampshire, New York, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, Virginia,
    West Virginia, Maryland, Delaware and New Jersey)

    Andy Carter Ellsinore, Mo. bareback riding
    J.R. Mills Dewitt, Mich. bareback riding
    Wendy Chesnut Poultney, Vermont barrel racing
    Karly Stoltzfus McClure, Pa. barrel racing
    Scott Sellers Warwick, Md. bull riding
    John Leinaweaver Orrtanna, Pa. bull riding & steer wrestling
    Ray Hostetler Piffard, N.Y. saddle bronc riding
    Mike Johnson New Castle, Del. saddle bronc riding
    Olin Ellsworth Warrensburg, N.Y. steer wrestling
    Kevin Brown Keedysville, Md. team roping
    Darren Morgan Fort Ann, N.Y. team roping
    Shawn Quinn Schuylerville, N.Y. team roping
    Chuck Smith Townsend, Del. team roping
    J.R. Myers Felton, Pa. tie-down roping
    Carmine Nastri Ballston, N.Y. tie-down roping
    Mexican Rodeo Tour
    Jonathan Estrada Guadalupe, Nuevo Leon bareback riding
    Hector Gonzalez Campo, Calif. bareback riding
    Luisa Herrera Chihuahua, Chi. barrel racing
    Nas Yeverino Saltillo, Coahuila barrel racing
    Tigre Bustamante Cuauhtemoc, Chi. bull riding
    Francisco Garcia Saltillo, Coahuila bull riding
    Abelardo Gonzalez Chihuahua, Chi. saddle bronc riding
    Fernando Arballo Chihuahua, Chi. steer wrestling
    Carlos Ochoa Santa Teresa, N.M. steer wrestling
    Aldo Garibay Caborca, Sonora team roping
    Sergio Garibay Caborca, Sonora team roping
    Daniel Sanchez Nuevo Casas Grandes, Chi. team roping
    Catan Banuelos Chihuahua, Chi. team roping & tie-down roping
    Mike Valenzula Chihuahua, Chi. tie-down roping
    (Contestant roster is subject to change. – Contestants may designate any circuit as their home circuit.)

  • Roper Review: Brian Doty

    Roper Review: Brian Doty

    Brian Doty grew up in the small town of Joshua, a few miles south of Ft. Worth. Brian attributes his love of all things cowboy to the time he spent with his calf roping uncle, Richard Doty, and cousins, Ricky and Rocky Doty. As a youngster Brian spent as much time as possible watching and learning from his cousins. As a young man Brian roped a little and rode bulls for a while. Once he was grown and got his own place and horses, Brian started team roping.
    Now, at 39, with a flourishing career in television and radio, Brian is able to put it in perspective.
    “Even though I live in the country and have access to the family ranch of 400 acres, I don’t really get to live the cowboy lifestyle I love,” says Doty. “My uncle once told me ‘I’m a cowboy at heart even though I don’t live the lifestyle daily,’ and that’s always stuck with me. I haven’t always had the opportunity even though it’s been a passion.”
    “The show I host, This Is Country TV, has given me the opportunity to experience that lifestyle. Along with other segments, I show a day in the life of a cowboy and work cattle on big ranches. We film brandings where we rope, drag, and brand cattle. It gives people an idea what actual cowboys do in a day’s work.”
    Brian’s interests and passions have always been outdoor hobbies like hunting or cowboy activities. His journey into television, radio and hosting began after he created a hunting DVD for Cabelas. Friends encouraged him to pursue a television show so Brian called the Sportsman channel where he was told to send in a pilot. The pilot showed Brian bear hunting in Canada. Two weeks after sending it in, Sportsman Channel contacted Brian and offered him a spot. Later that year, Brian was recognized at their awards show in Las Vegas for Best New Series.
    “This is Country” is Brian’s television show where he is able to cover all the things he loves: western lifestyle, country music and hunting. “This is Country” has aired on the Wrangler Network.
    “I started doing my radio show, ‘On Air with Brian Doty for something extra to do. The very first show, I got my friend, Casey Donahew, to be my guest and play songs so I didn’t have to talk alone the full hour. I play all Texas Red Dirt country music and in between talk about rodeos & festivals. Now, my show airs on 40 country stations across 15 states, and can be listened to via cell phone or computer on Cowboy Lifestyle Network.”
    After being known as the “hunting guy,” Brian saw the need to expand his resume. Now, in addition to television and radio, Brian has become a sought after event host. Doty has hosted all the Major Texas Music Festivals, Miss Texas pageant interviews, Stockyards Rodeo Insider, Friday Night Fight Series, PBR Arena interviews, acted in several music videos & national commercials such as AT&T, models for several companies, and he has a major role in a new Billy the Kid movie that will be filmed this year.
    “Since 2014, I’ve done my live show in Vegas during the NFR and do the Wrangler Network interviews as well”
    Brian is a single dad and proud of his two children, a son, Hunter, 16; and daughter, Presley, 7. Brian and Hunter enjoy roping the mechanical dummy and Presley runs barrels on her bombproof horse.
    Brian closes his radio shows with, “I want you guys to take just a minute to think how blessed we are and be thankful for what we have. Attitudes are contagious so pass on a smile. God Bless!”
    COWBOY Q&A
    Who were your roping or rodeo heroes?
    My uncle, Richard Doty, trained horses; and my two cousins, Ricky and Rocky were both calf ropers.
    Who do you respect most in the world?
    My parents.
    Who has been the biggest influence in your life?
    My dad.
    If you had a day off what would you like to do?
    I would love to spend the day on a ranch, working cattle.
    Favorite movie?
    All the Pretty Horses
    What’s the last thing you read?
    Cinderella, to my daughter.
    How would you describe yourself in three words?
    Blessed, Driven, Happy.
    What makes you happy?
    When my kids are happy.
    What makes you angry?
    When a compact car blocks the diesel pump.
    If you were given 1 million dollars, how would you spend it?
    I would invest it & start my own charity for kids with western lifestyle interest.
    What is your worst quality – your best?
    My best quality is being a good dad. My worst is replying to text messages & phone calls.
    Where do you see yourself in ten years?
    In ten years, hopefully remarried with more land and be further along in my career.

  • ProFile: Curt Matthews

    ProFile: Curt Matthews

    Top Hand Ropes has been in production for six months. Under the direction of rope maker, Curt Matthews, the company has quickly spun its way into the hands of thousands of ropers across the country.
    Curt grew up around horses and landed a job at a western store on May 31, 1969. That store happened to have a rope company in the back. “As a kid, I wanted money and it was something I was interested in,” he said. “I made girths, swept floors, and did it all. I worked the western store on the weekends and helped in the rope company the rest of the week.” He apprenticed under Pete Emmons, a rope master and innovator. In 1986, at the age of 30, he and a few partners took that knowledge to open up their own rope shop. “I invented the first nylon poly rope right there,” he said. The poly blend rope completely eliminated the need for aging and breaking in ropes and was put together by a machine that Curt also improved, with the help of his father, Curtis Sr, and brother, Tommy. The new rope was so popular, Curt’s shop quickly grew to become one of the biggest rope shops around (Classic Ropes) and he had the opportunity to sell out. The original poly blend rope is called the Money Maker and is still available.
    He went to work for an order buying company buying cattle. “My family had done that so it came easy,” he said. After his five year non-compete was over, he took a job with Professionals Choice making ropes for them and eventually moved over to Fast Back, working with Al Benson. “Al was my first employee at the Classic rope shop and he and I made a good team. It was a good combination and I stayed there until Al retired from Fast Back Ropes last spring.”
    Shortly after that, two of his best friends convinced him to start one more rope company. “The other two owners are my best friends and their wives are my wife’s best friends and I hesitated because I didn’t want business to affect our friendships. It’s worked out great – we know how to be friends and we know how to do business.”
    He lives 12 miles from the shop and gets to work at 5:30 every day to check ropes that were made the day before. “Then by 10:30 I start shipping. I do all the shipping so I can see every rope that leaves here.” That pretty much takes the rest of the day. He does all the purchasing as well. Curt has surrounded himself with quality people, from the marketing to the management and he enjoys it all.
    When he’s not at work, he enjoys hog hunting, team roping, and spending time with his family. He has been married to Christi for 32 years and they have three children; an older son, Jim, two grandsons, their middle son, Cory, who is a baseball coach, and their daughter, Catherine, who played fast pitch softball. None of his kids roped, they were involved in sports – baseball, softball and football – which Curt helped coach. He is still involved in baseball through the Miracle League, a baseball program for children with physical and mental challenges that he is very passionate about.
    He is also still passionate about ropes. “My longevity and reputation as a rope maker from years of doing it has helped make Top Hand Ropes so successful from the start. You’ve got to prove yourself daily as a rope maker.” The company has three machines going, all day and Curt still has his hand in the tying, waxing, and overall manufacturing process. “I still have a few ideas of new ropes I’d like to try,” he said.

  • Rhett Beutler

    Rhett Beutler

    Beutler & Son Rodeo Company put its roots down in the rodeo world in 1929, starting out as Beutler Brothers Rodeo Company. Rhett Beutler, the fourth generation to work in the family business, and the son of Beutler & Son, brought a new angle to the company’s ranch outside of Elk City, Oklahoma, when he started guiding hunting trips in the late 1990s.
    As a college student with a lean wallet but a robust passion for whitetail deer hunting, Rhett decided he would guide hunting clients on weekend hunting trips on The Beutler Ranch. “In the early ‘90s, we started getting deer on our ranch in western Oklahoma, so all through high school, they were progressing and multiplying,” says Rhett. “I graduated high school in 1995 and went to college, but we had deer on the ranch and I had stands and food plots and feeders I was taking care of. I was a broke college kid running back forth between school and the ranch trying to hunt. I knew there were places I wasn’t even hunting yet.”
    Rhett mentioned his idea of guiding hunters to a friend, and within a few weeks, he had his first job. What should have been a three day hunt took only 30 minutes. The hunter filled his tag, paid for all three days, and was gone the same morning. “The next year wasn’t that easy,” Rhett says with a laugh, “but as I realized all the places I had to hunt and how much game there was, I knew there was no way I could hunt it all. Instead of poachers getting the deer, I decided to take a few days each year to take hunters out and make some money on the side.”
    Many hunting trips are scheduled in October and November between the lull in rodeo season and the WNFR, but they run through the end of bow season in January. Though the ranch is known for its whitetail hunting, it also offers quail, duck, and wild turkey. Among the rolling Oklahoma hills are prairies, timber, brush, and lakes, and the Beutlers have set up blinds, stands, and cameras to track where the mature bucks are. “We probably have forty different places to hunt, and we try to make the habitats the best we can for the game,” says Rhett. He teamed up with Record Rack feed last summer after extensive research on their feed and feeding programs, and recently started putting it out on his food plots.
    Numerous hunters fly into The Beutler Ranch, located 100 miles west of Oklahoma City. If they don’t want to fly the venison home, Oklahoma is one of several states employing Hunters Against Hunger, a program that donates meat to families in need around the state. “A lot of my guys will take their meat to a supporting meat locker, and then it will get distributed,” Rhett explains. “Some of the other guys will bring their ice chests and take their meat home. I’m more of a horn hunter myself, and I like to make jerky. We’re not like Kansas with the potential to kill a 180 – 200 inch deer,” he adds, “around here getting 150 – 160 is pretty good.”
    With the state department recently capping the number of bucks to two per hunter per season, along with running an education campaign on allowing bucks to mature before hunting them, Rhett has noticed a positive difference in the numbers and quality of deer. That, along with the food and hospitality The Beutler Ranch offers, has brought many hunters back for the last 10 – 12 years. “We have a big barn we turn into a hunting and lodging camp. I bring in some people I know from Texas to cook for them, and we have drinks and satellite TV, so we’ll be watching football or NASCAR. Everyone has a good time!”
    Many of the Beutlers are involved with the hunting on the ranch, including Rhett’s two children, Taylor, 12, and Jake, 9; his cousin, Justin Shireman; and his children. “My dad, Bennie Beutler, is a diehard quail and bird hunter, but he’s right in the middle of the deer hunters helping with whatever needs to be done,” says Rhett. “I enjoy doing it and making a little money to supplement everything we put into it. It’s good for the ranch and our family, and it’s about having a good time. I think most people keep coming back because they enjoy the food and hospitality that goes with the hunting.”

  • ProFile: Matt Reeves

    ProFile: Matt Reeves

    Steer wrestler Matt Reeves finished second in the world standings following the 2016 WNFR and hit the ground running by February, currently sitting #15 in the World Standings. He’s backed into the box at Texas rodeos including San Angelo, Belton, San Antonio, Los Fresnos, and The American. Of the myriad of rodeos the 38-year-old from Cross Plains, Texas, has competed in, Los Fresnos remains especially meaningful. “I went to that rodeo in 2006 with my friend Brent Arnold and my future father-in-law, Sam Koenig, and it changed my life,” Matt explains. “In 2005, I had been one out of the money thirty-eight times, and I wanted to win more. On the way home from Los Fresnos, we had a discussion on what I needed to do to win more, and the best advice I got was that I needed to ride a faster horse. I rode Brent’s horse Junior Brown through 2006, won the Texas Circuit in 2007, and made the WNFR. I never dreamed I’d rodeo for a living, but I’ve had a ball doing it.”
    Growing up in the Texas Panhandle, Matt and his sister junior rodeoed. Their dad roped and Matt followed suit, but switched to steer wrestling in high school. “There’s a lot more adrenaline rush for me in steer wrestling, and I was much better at it.” Matt high school rodeoed for Texas before competing in college for Texas A&M University and Oklahoma State University. He graduated with a bachelor’s degree in animal science, then coached the rodeo team at Clarendon College in Texas for a year. “Coaching wasn’t for me, so I rode horses for some people, and then I ran a water well shop that my sister owned.” Not long after that, Matt found his stride in the rodeo world and took home checks from numerous rodeos the winter of 2007. With his goal set of winning the Texas Circuit in 2007, which he achieved by April of that year, Matt knew it was time to take a chance and rodeo full time. “I loved the traveling, and I saw lots of rodeos I’d never seen before.” For Matt, another highlight of rodeoing is making his own horses, qualifying for the WNFR on three that he’s trained. He qualified for the most recent WNFR on Nacho, but sadly, the horse had to be put down in the fall after an accident in the pasture. Matt rode Ote, owned by Bray Armes, at the finals, and his own up-and-coming steer wrestling horse, Roy, is Ote’s son. “I hauled Roy last year and rode him at a lot of circuit rodeos; he’s a cool horse.” Matt uses the slower winter months to start his younger horses in the box, but adds, “You can’t make them until you haul them. Once you get your horses to where you can practice on them, you need to rodeo on them. I practice a few days a week, and most of the time it’s for the horses, but if I don’t feel good, then practice is for me.”
    Matt recently joined the team at Short Go Xtreme, whose products, like protein shakes and juices, promote energy, strength, and weight loss. “Having the energy I need and feeling my best were the biggest factors for me. Being diabetic, I had to do a few different things they suggested, but my blood sugar has been more stable and I have good energy,” he says. Matt, who learned he had type 1 diabetes as a teenager, also uses his success in the arena to bring awareness to the disease and the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation (JDRF). During the WNFR, his tack included a Flavio Ribeiro breastcollar tooled with the JDRF name and signed by all of the steer wrestlers. It sold at auction for $1,000, and the proceeds went to Bacon Bash Texas, which raises funds for children with type 1 diabetes
    When he’s not traveling, Matt enjoys hunting in the Panhandle and managing his small but ever-growing cow herd. “My in-laws run a lot of cattle, and I’ll help them out when I’m home. I also enjoy riding my younger horses, but we’re gone so much that it’s nice to just be home and see my son, Carson, and my wife, Savanah. She ran barrels for quite a while and won Calgary in 2010, so she’s rodeoed and had a lot of success.”
    Matt’s next destinations on the rodeo trail include stock show rodeos around Texas, and Kissimmee, Florida, for the RNCFR after winning the Texas Circuit for the fourth time. “In April, I’ll be heading to the Champions Challenges, and by the end of June, I’ll be on the road for good,” he finishes. “My goal is to get Roy to the WNFR, and I’d like to finish first there sometime. When you get to this level, that might as well be your goal!”

  • Featuring Karen Vold’s Recipes

    Featuring Karen Vold’s Recipes

    Karen’s Cowboys
    Favorite Salad Dressing (Makes a little more than 2 quarts)

    ingredients:
    2 qts mayonnaise
    4-5 hard boiled eggs
    16 oz sweet bread and butter chips (pickles)
    1 – 6 oz. can of olives
    1 – 12 oz. bottle chili sauce

    DIRECTIONS: Put pickles and olives through food chopper. Chop hard boiled eggs. Mix with mayonnaise in large bowl. Mix chili sauce in to taste and pink in color. Let dressing sit in refrigerator overnight or for several hours. This will flavor the mix. I put the dressing back in the 2 qt Mayonnaise jars and label it. You can store it in the refrigerator for a long time if they don’t eat it up quickly!

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    Crunch Square Breakfast Casserole

    Crunch Square Breakfast Casserole (Yield 12 servings)

    ingredients:
    1 tsp vegetable oil
    2 c (8 oz.) grated Colby and Monterey Jack cheese blend, divided
    1 package (22.5 oz.) frozen toaster hash brown patties, thawed
    8 oz. cream cheese, softened
    12 eggs
    ½ tsp. black pepper
    8 oz. thickly sliced deli ham
    4-5 green onions with tops
    3 plum tomatoes

    DIRECTIONS: Preheat oven to 450. Lightly brush 10 x 15 in. pan with oil. Crumble hash browns over pan, press gently into an even layer. Sprinkle half of the cheese evenly over hash browns. Bake 13-15 minutes or until crust starts to brown and cheese is melted. Meanwhile, in a bowl, whisk cream cheese until smooth. Gradually add eggs and black pepper, whisk until smooth. Coarsely chop ham, slice green onions, reserving ¼ cup of the tops for garnish. Place ham and remaining green onions into saute pan. Cook and stir over medium heat 2-3 minutes or until hot. Stir ham mixture into egg mixture. Remove pan from oven to cooling rack. Pour egg mixture over crust. Return pan to oven; bake 6-8 minutes or until center is set. Meanwhile, slice tomatoes in half and scrape out seeds, dice. Remove pan from oven; top with remaining cheese, tomatoes, and reserved green onions. Sprinkle with additional pepper. Cut into squares and serve.

    The “100” Cookie (Yields 4 dozen cookies)

    ingredients:
    1 c sugar
    1 c packed brown sugar
    1 c margarine, softened
    1 c vegetable oil
    1 egg
    1 tsp vanilla extract
    1 c crisp puffed rice cereal
    1 c flaked coconut
    1 c quick oats
    ¾ tsp salt
    3 ½ c flour
    1 tsp baking soda
    1 tsp cream of tartar

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    The “100” Cookie

    DIRECTIONS: In bowl, mix sugar, brown sugar, margarine, oil, egg, vanilla, rice cereal, coconut, and oats. Sift together salt, flour, baking soda, and cream of tartar. Add to sugar mixture and mix well. Drop teaspoonful size onto greased cookie sheet and bake 350 for 10-12 min. Makes 4 dozen. Note: Dough can be frozen in 6 oz. size frozen juice containers. Slice ¼ inch thick when ready to bake.

  • Freshman

    I was asked today what was important for freshmen athletes in college to learn. It got me thinking what were the qualities of successful freshmen athletes? After some thought, here is my list, most of these skills they need to come to college with. Some of the skills can be developed at college, but if you wait too long you may learn a hard lesson.

    1. You have to learn to do things on your own. Independence is a key for success of any college athlete. College forces you to be responsible and independent. Going to class, getting your homework done on time, doing your laundry; all of a sudden your parents are no longer there to do it for you. The quicker you learn to be independent in college the more successful you will be.

    2. You have to be able to work with others. If you are an athlete you are now on a team, you will be working with others and many times the groups success or failure depends on how well you can work together. All of a sudden this is real life stuff, just like a job, you may not like all of the people you work with but you must respect and work with them to get your job done. Not only on your team but in class group project you will have the one group member who lets the rest of the group carry them. This will be a skill that you will likely use the rest of your life so make sure you develop it well.

    3. Time management will be key. You only have so many hours every day. Class, practice and sleep will take up a big portion of that time every day. How you manage the rest of your time will likely determine how successful you are as a student and as an athlete. In no other time in your life will you have the opportunity to improve your athletic skills like you will in college, take advantage of it.

    4. Most college students have to learn to live on a budget. Success in college is about learning to make good decisions and one of the first places you can see students go down the wrong path is how they handle their budget. Athletes may have it tougher than many students because of their schedules it may be tough for them to have a job. It is important to learn to manage your money so it does not become an excuse for you to leave college.

    5. How to deal with difficult circumstances. Most college athletes were the star in high school, college presents a whole new problem for them, and all of a sudden you are surrounded by many talented athletes. You may not win as much as you did in high school right off of the bat, but how you respond to the difficult times will tell how good you will be in the future. If you start making excuses, and believe that your talent alone will carry you through college, you are sadly mistaken. In college the talent level starts to equalize, the hardest workers will start to rise to the top. Those who can handle failure and learn from it and work through it will be the toughest competitors.
    Just my observations…

  • Rance and Josey Butler

    Rance and Josey Butler

    Josey Butler, husband, Rance, and three year old daughter, Harper are making a name for themselves in the rodeo world. “She goes a lot with me,” said Josey about Harper. “She’s a trooper. My husband rodeos, so from the moment I started riding, she was going. She falls asleep to the sound of a diesel truck so it’s pretty easy.” Josey was born and raised in southwest Missouri. She grew up on the back of a horse thanks to her mom, Patty Batchelor.
    Born and raised in southwest Missouri, Josey rode anything from a pony to her mom’s barrel horses. She also rode various horses for individuals including one who went on the be the 2006 Buckskin World Junior Barrel Racing Champion. Josey competed in junior rodeo and jackpots. She went on to college rodeo at Northeastern Oklahoma. A & M and went back to Ft. Scott Community College for another year. She took Ag communications and she uses it for her graphic design and illustrations. Josey also does abstract horse watercolor art. “I’ve been drawing since I could hold a pencil. I was that little kid that was out in the country and if I wasn’t riding a horse I was drawing it. My grandparents had cattle, and we lived on their property. My mom runs barrels and still does. She’s 65 going on 25.”
    In 2006 she went to work for an AQHA facility in Sperry Oklahoma. Here she was exposed to the methods of both the Cow Horse Industry and the English world. Taking something from everyone she’s worked with Josey continues to use these foundations in her program today.

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    One of Josey’s watercolors

    Josey met her husband while working in Oklahoma. He was roping with her boss and they met at Judd Little’s sale and they ended up on a date. “After that we were inseparable,” she said. “We feed off each other very well – he starts a lot of horses and does it the way I like it done.” The couple has been married for ten years. Rance is a firefighter/paramedic for the city of Longview Texas . His schedule of one 24 hour duty and off duty 48 hours makes it great for starting colts. “It gives them one day to defragment and then gets on for two days in a row. I’m very fortunate; my husband is a great father. He’ll ride his colts in the morning, and I’ll stay with Harper. From the day she was born, we can go back and forth getting our stuff done.”
    The couple has six outside horses; Rance takes four two year olds at a time, keeping them for 60 days. “He does everything slow and easy. He follows how the old cow horse was started – real simple and basic.”
    They were able to start and ride Frosted Fling, bred and raised by Paris Wixon. “We rode his mom (Sun Frosted Moon) and maternal grandmother Zan to the Moon, so we knew how talented he should be, but we knew pretty quick we had something awesome. He belongs to Paris and we get to train him and ride him. She won the AQHA on his grand sire Zan Par Deck.” The owner and the jockey split everything after the entry fees are paid back. “He’s already qualified for the World Show in November.”
    Josey took Frosted Fling to the Semi Finals of the AMERICAN. “He’s only five, and he ran a little bit green in the Semi Finals, but we will try again this year. I’ve been pretty fortunate to ride him at some rodeos and will go on and derby him these next couple of months.” She was impressed with the AMERCAN and the Semi Finals. “Running at the Semi Finals was the biggest stage I’ve been on – I was proud of my colt, it was so professionally run. Same with the Patriiot – they are trying to do something for those of us that can’t travel up and down the road all the time.”
    Josey plans to fill her permit with one of the three horses she can run and after she does that she will set her next goal. The March born 37 year old has dreams to raise a happy, healthy little girl. “Everything else is a bonus.”

  • Back When They Bucked with Jim Ivory

    Back When They Bucked with Jim Ivory

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    Jim on Big Horn in Brawley, California, 1969 – Foxie Photo

    Jim Ivory admits he’s a gypsy, and that’s part of what has made him enjoy the rodeo world.
    The cowboy, who grew up in northern California rode bareback horses at the National Finals Rodeo (NFR) four times, and has worked behind the scenes at rodeos across the world.
    He was born in 1942, the son of Ed and Ellen Ivory, in the tiny ranching town of Alturas, California, the third generation of the Ivorys to rodeo. His dad worked on the ranches in the area, and “we were raised in those cow camps in the corner of Nevada, California and Oregon,” Jim remembered. Ed was a stock contractor, gathering bucking and saddle horses from the ranches and hayfields of the country. Jim and his siblings went along when it was time to rodeo. “That’s the only time we went to town, when the rodeos were going.”
    He competed in junior rodeos in nearly every event. There was no high school rodeo association then, and kids ages thirteen through eighteen could enter the juniors. The family moved to Redmond, Oregon during his high school years, and he competed in amateur rodeos while in high school.
    After high school graduation in 1960, he continued to rodeo. There were plenty of opportunities for it, too. “There used to be a lot of good amateur rodeos around there (California, Nevada, Idaho, and Oregon), and you could win a lot of money.”
    By 1962, he got his Rodeo Cowboys Association (forerunner to today’s Pro Rodeo Cowboys Association) permit, and hit the rodeo trail professionally. One of the first pro rodeos he competed in was the Portland (Ore.) International Livestock Show. From there, he headed south to the Cow Palace, where permits weren’t accepted but he was on the labor list.

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    Jim Ivory – Rodeo News

    He rode bareback horses professionally for four years, often serving on the labor list as well. He worked for the Christensen Brothers Rodeo Co., Beutler Brothers, Harry Knight, and Cotton Rosser, and frequently for his uncle, Buster Ivory, who had bucking horses and put on rodeos.
    It worked well, riding and working at the events. “The first year I won $9,000 and it was all in the bank, because I had a job all the time.”
    Working on the labor list, he did everything, flanking, driving truck, feeding and sorting stock. “I’ve done everything in the rodeo business except announce,” or work as a barrelman or bullfighter, he said. He rode bulls in the amateur ranks a bit but barebacks was his niche.
    In 1967, the first year of four that he qualified for the NFR, he traveled with fellow bareback rider Jim Houston. Houston had asked Jim to travel with him, and Ivory was glad he did. “He refined my bareback riding,” Ivory said. “He made me a better bareback rider than I was. He was a great coach.” One year, Houston helped hone the skills of the three top bareback riders: Ivory, Paul Mayo, and Clyde Vamvoras. It was a testament to Houston’s good teaching skills. “He was a heck of a coach, because we all rode different but he had the ability to see what your natural skills were and how to improve what you did,” Ivory said.
    Jim’s best year was 1969, when he finished second to the world champion, Gary Tucker.
    After the 1970 season, he quit rodeoing professionally. The most rodeos he had competed at during a year was 77. “I didn’t like that much, rodeoing that hard,” he said. He also liked to have fun. “One of my downfalls was I thought I was supposed to have fun, so I didn’t do as good as I should have, but I had a lot more fun than a lot of them.”
    He also knew he wanted to quit before he got to where he dreaded it. “I saw some of my old heroes, and they didn’t want to get on. They screwed around in the chute. I said, when this is no fun anymore, I won’t do it.” He could still win, but “it got to where I didn’t really like getting on.”
    In 1972, in partnership with Australian bareback rider Jimmy Dix and Jim’s brother-in-law Van Vannoy, he shipped quarter horses, including a Triple A race horse, to Australia. He and his wife Cathy lived there for four years, taking care of them.
    In 1975, he and Cathy came back to the U.S, and he worked at the Sunlight Ranch west of Yellowstone. In 1977, he began producing the Cody (Wyo.) Night Rodeo, which he would produce for a total of thirteen years (from 1977-1980 and from 1998-2006).
    He also helped his uncle Buster produce rodeos in Europe in 1970, spending three months there as part of Rodeo Far West. The entire rodeo “outfit” was shipped there, including 100 head of saddle horses and seventy bucking horses and bulls. A few times in the 2000s, he took a group of cowboys to Brazil to enter their rodeos: Cody DeMers, Wesley Silcox, and Steve Woolsey, and Lewie Feild, as pickup man, among others.
    Jim was part of a unique group: five cowboys at the 1967 and 1968 NFR had been members of the Redmond High School wrestling team: Jim, his brother John (a saddle bronc rider), bareback rider Ken Stanton, his brother Bill Stanton (a bull rider), and Larry Mahan, who did all three roughstock events.
    Jim won’t agree that they were tough, but they were: “I don’t know if we were tough or not but we were tougher than some of them.” The Redmond bunch was a good rodeo group. “A lot of really tough rodeo kids came out of that group that I rodeoed with. Jack Thrasher, the Stantons, Buzz Seeley” and others. “We could go to those amateur rodeos and win a lot of money.”

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    Jim bareback riding in Woodlake, California 1969 – Foxie Photo

    The best bareback horse Ivory encountered was a horse owned by Reg Kesler. Three Bars, a 2004 inductee into the Pro Rodeo Hall of Fame, “was no doubt the best, rankest bareback horse there’s ever been,” Jim said. “She could throw everybody off, and it always hurt, for some reason. There’s been a lot of good ones over the years but she was unbelievable.” Three Bars was selected to buck at the NFR in three decades and won the bareback horse of the NFR in 1967, 1973 and 1980. Jim got on her twice, getting bucked off both times. “She almost killed me the first time,” he quipped, “and she did the second time.”
    While he was on the rodeo circuit, Jim made Pampa, Texas his address, because his uncle Buster lived there. He loved Wyoming and Montana, and he and Cathy moved to Wyoming after marrying.
    In his later years, Jim has shared his experience with Chad and Matt Burch of Burch Rodeo, and Chad loves working with him. He has an eye for bucking horses, Chad says, and they have bought many horses from him. “He knows what to look for with a horse. He’s seen a lot of them,” Chad said. “He’s a very smart man, and he’s been successful at rodeo.”
    Jim has helped at many rodeos, including those for Burch, Reg Kesler, and Mike Cervi, among others. He’s raised a lot of horses that were sold to PRCA stock contractors and selected to buck at the NFR. Last year, Jim Dandy, a bareback horse whose mother Jim had sold to the Burches, carried Jake Vold to a sixth round win at the 2016 Wrangler NFR.
    He and his wife live in Banner, south of Sheridan, Wyo. He still has a half-interest in two studs and three mares, and continues to help the Burches with their rodeos but doesn’t do as much as he used to. When Chad asked him to come to Kaycee, Jim told him he was too crippled to do anything. “I’m just a pretty face,” he told Chad, and Chad replied, “that’s what we pay you for,” Jim laughed.
    He and Cathy, who married in 1969, have four children: sons Buster and James, daughter Mandy, and a daughter Kelly Jo, who passed away when she was four years old. Buster lives in Gillette and has two daughters and a son; James lives in Virginia with his two daughters and son, and Mandy is in Australia with two children.
    Looking back on his rodeo life, Jim can’t imagine doing anything else. “I really liked to get on bucking horses, and the lifestyle and the people, the freedom and the money. It was a lot better than working on the ranch.
    “I’ve been playing cowboy since I was three years old. That’s all I ever did, and I’m still playing it.”

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    Red Bluff 1969. First row: Ace Berry, Ralph Maynard, Jim Ivory, Jerry Hixon, Clyde Longfellow, John Ivory, Don Flannigan. Second Row: Bill Martinelli, Manuel Enos, John Hawkins, Louie Zabala, Bill Stanton, Sonny Johnson, Bob Swain, Bob Edison – DeVere
  • On The Trail with Burch Rodeo

    On The Trail with Burch Rodeo

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    Matt Burch at the 1995 College National Finals Rodeo, Bozeman, MT – JJJ Photography

    Max and George Ann Burch come from a long line of ranchers. The couple, who are in their 70s, met back in the 1950s in high school. “My folks had a ranch north of Moorcroft and her dad bought a ranch adjoining the ranch that my dad had,” said Max. They got married in 1965. The couple eventually settled back on the family ranch, living in her grandmother’s (Hazel Pickrel) original homestead, built in 1929 and added on to throughout the years. The ranch is 15 miles southeast of Rozet, Wyoming, which has a post office, school, and café/bar.

    Their sons, Matt and Chad, were born in 1976. Chad is older by two minutes. George Ann found out she was having twins less than two weeks before they were born. Both boys grew up ranching and rodeoing, competing in junior rodeos through junior rodeos, high school and on to college. George Ann admits that she couldn’t take her eyes off them for more than five minutes at a time. “We got new knives one time,” recalled Matt. “So we went to the barn where the saddles were and shortened all the saddle strings as well as the cinches. One of the hands thought it was mice, but dad knew better. Our punishment for that was to stay home from cattle work that day – we didn’t mind – it was 30 below.” Matt competed in bareback riding, winning the Wyoming High School Rodeo Finals three years in a row and went to Nationals, placing in the top ten each year. He went on to PRCA and made the circuit finals, won it a few times, filled his permit. He quit competing when the family got busy in the rodeo stuff and he had a daughter. Chad competed in saddle bronc riding and bull dogging; both boys team roped.

    Max started in the rodeo business in 1981. “Burch Rodeo Company started as a side line we got in on and we’ve gotten bigger in it than we ever planned to be,” said Max. “It’s what the boys want to do.” The business started when Pat Byrne from Mill Iron, Montana, came looking for pasture. “He was raising bucking horses and we made a deal to run 25 mares on shares. In the fall, when we pulled the colts off, he got the studs and we got the fillies. We had a stud we used in partnership.”

    In 1985 it got really dry and things were getting slow with the drought and Pat decided to sell out. Max bought the mares that were on the place. “We continued on with that stud until 1987. They called him Last Stand. In 1987, right after we turned him out with the mares, he was injured and I called Ernie Toot in Montana and asked if he had a stud I could buy. He had some young studs so we drove up there.”
    The plan was to pick up a gray stud, but Max eyed a different one – a three year old bay. “I walked through them horses looking at them and what impressed me about that horse – those horses would be chewing on each other, but that horse never quit looking at you as long as you were there and moving around.” The horse ended up siring many NFR broncs for Burch Rodeo. “Everything just worked,” said Max, who bought Tooke for $800. His offspring were big horses, one of them being the most recently retired Lunatic Fringe, out of an own daughter of Tooke.

     

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    Jesse Bail riding Lunatic Fringe at the 2016 Buck ‘n Ball in Gillette, Wyoming. This was Lunatic Fringe’s last ride before he was retired. – Rodeo News

    Even though Burch horses and bulls make appearances at the WNFR, Max and George Ann have only been to Vegas once. “I don’t like flying or crowds,” admitted Max. Instead they send Matt, Chad, and most recently, Matt’s daughter, Bailey, who has moved back home to help on the ranch.
    Bailey lived on the ranch all her life, and left for three years to go to college on a rodeo scholarship in Ranger, Texas. The 21 year old came back this year in May of 2016. “I wanted to start helping with the ranch and rodeo company. I want to see it progress and it’s a family tradition,” she said. “I really loved the coach (Llew Rust) and I liked the environment and I’m going to finish my degree in Ag Business online. I missed home.” She lives seven miles from the ranch and travels with her dad and uncle to the rodeos where she flanks the bulls and will eventually flank the horses too.

     

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    Max and George Ann Burch – Jackie Jensen

    The ranch, which encompasses 170,000 acres of owned, deeded, and leased land, is home to 750 bucking horses, 140 bucking bulls, and 2,000 Red Angus mother cows. Ten people work on the ranch and the winter chores include feeding hay to the rodeo stock that will be competing throughout the winter months. “The only hay we feed is 200 head that we are bucking. The rest are all running out on grass.” The majority of the bucking horses are kept in an 11,000 acre pasture. The yearlings up to the coming four year olds all run together and are gathered once a year to sort off the older ones and add the weanlings to the bunch.

    One of Chad’s favorite parts of ranch life comes in September when he brings in the horses. “It takes 10 days to halter break, brand and castrate the yearlings,” he explained. “They we turn them loose until they are coming 5.” They have a big barn by Moorcroft that is set up with bucking chutes, and that’s where Chad spends many days, putting dummies on the horses, bucking them out four or five times, and making sure they behave in the chutes. Foaling starts the beginning of May and by then the horses are sorted into pastures with a stud, where they will stay until September.

     

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    Chad Burch, 1994 – Hubbell

    While Chad is busy breaking the horses, Matt is busy with the hunting operation. “The lodge is 35 miles from here, between Moorcroft and Upton. We have hunters from September 1 until November 30. Hunters come from the East Coast to the West Coast, Canada and as far as Germany to the ranch to hunt antelope, deer, and elk. The family runs the ranch like a well-oiled machine. Chad and Matt both agree the secret is being able to compromise. “If we’re sorting, I have the list memorized in my head and we go through it,” said Chad. “It’s a give and take.” Most recently, the crew sorted 66 head to go to Rapid City. “We’ll come back for another 32 later in the week.” After Rapid City, they will have a rodeo every week all year long.

    “I think the future of the bucking horses is going to get big,” said Matt. “The bucking bulls got big because of the PBR, and the ABBI has helped with that. You could prove the genetics. Bucking horses are the same way, and BHBA, Steve Stone and Kenny Andrews, and ABBI – It’s moving forward and there are more futurities for horses. If you go to a sale now, you can prove what your horse is. We love doing it …”

    “We’ve got a lot of land, and could run a lot of cows if we got rid of the horses, but they mean as much as the cattle to us, ranch or bucking, it’s what we’ve always done. We’re going to keep raising them and hopefully Bailey will keep running with it. Mom and Dad provided us this lifestyle and it took a lot of years to get where we are with our card, and now we’re going to big rodeos that we want to go to … everything is set and ready to go.”

  • Rodeo Rock Star

    Rodeo Rock Star

    Red Bluff teacher is barrel racer, Round-Up competitor 

    Red Bluff, Calif. (March 13, 2017) – Kaillee Hamre is somewhat of a rock star in her own classroom.

    The fourth grade teacher at Bidwell Elementary in Red Bluff, Calif. is also a cowgirl, a barrel racer who will compete at the Red Bluff Round-Up in April.

    And because she’s a cowgirl, and for many kids, the only cowgirl they know, kids she doesn’t even know will greet her in the school hallways, and tell her they love her horse.

    It all started last year when Hamre brought her students, then the second and third grade class, to the Round-Up to watch her compete. She made her barrel racing run in slack, the extra competition that takes place during the day, so the students made a field trip out of it. She and the students visited after her run, and she brought her horse so students could see it and they could talk about the equipment – saddle, reins, spurs, boots, and hat – that she uses in barrel racing.

    It was a hit, she said. Students sat in the stands and cheered for her as she competed. “They thought it was so neat that they knew somebody who was doing that. They had so much fun.” Her students chanted her name, hollering for Mrs. Hamre, so that “a couple of people said, ‘Well, I see you brought your students,’” Hamre said.

    Hamre and her husband, AJ, live in Los Molinos, and AJ visited her students as well last year. A bull rider, he competed at last year’s Round-Up but has retired from the sport and won’t be competing this year.

    Students love to hear how she and AJ did on Monday mornings. “Every time we come back from a rodeo, I’ll show them the video (from the weekend’s competition). They think it’s cool.”

    Attending the Round-Up is a real treat for her students, Hamre said. The Round-Up gives tickets students who participate in the Cowboys and Kids program, and she said several of her kids came to the rodeo that night. The Round-Up is “one of the biggest rodeos in California and the nation, and it was neat to expose them to an element of it.”

    Hamre, who is in her ninth year of teaching and third year in Red Bluff, says she competes at about 30 rodeos a year, mostly in the summers. She and her husband used to compete at the same rodeos until he retired. “We are weekend warriors,” she said, “because of our jobs.” AJ is a territory manager for a heavy equipment company.

    This year, spring break falls on the same dates as the Round-Up, so Hamre won’t be bringing her class to it. But she’s hoping some of them will be in the audience to cheer her on. “I’ll spread the word and recruit some students to come.”

    The Red Bluff Round-Up is April 21-23 at the Tehama District Fairgrounds. Tickets range in price from $14 to $30 and are available online at www.RedBluffRoundup.com, at the gate, and through the Round-Up office at 530.527.1000. For more information, visit the website or call the office.

    Performances of the Round-Up kick off at 7 pm on April 21, 2:30 pm on April 22, and 1:30 pm on April 23.

    Kaillee Hamre, Los Molinos, Calif., makes a barrel racing run at the 2016 Red Bluff Round-Up. The cowgirl, also a fourth grade teacher, took her students to the rodeo last year to see the barrel racing. Photo by Hubbell Photos