Rodeo Life

Author: Darlene Craven

  • CSHSRA Meet the Member: Ella Zonneveld

    CSHSRA Meet the Member: Ella Zonneveld

    “Sometimes we’re tested not to show our weaknesses, but to discover our strengths.” This quote speaks to the challenges and obstacles that Ella Zonneveld, a 17-year old junior, has endured and her decision to push past the obstacles and continue rodeoing which is one of her passions.

    After a life-changing accident when she was fifteen that totaled her truck and trailer, but thankfully spared her horses, Ella’s life has been filled with multiple surgeries, including one to repair cracks in her skull that were causing cerebral spinal fluid leaks. Since the accident, her activities were restricted for two six-month periods to enable healing. Riding her horses was definitely off limits.

    While living with daily headaches and endless rounds of physical therapy, rodeo has been a “huge, huge lifesaver” for Ella who vows she “would do anything to do it” as it is a motivator and a source of hope.

    Ella, a home-schooled junior, and the youngest of four children born to Linda] and Ernie, lives on ten acres outside of Berthoud, Colorado. Mom keeps the household running smoothly and Dad works as a Materials Operations Supervisor at Xcel Energy. She has competed every year since the wreck, scheduling her surgeries after the rodeo season ended. Though Ella explained “2019 wasn’t the best season because my horse and I weren’t synching up that well,” she went into the state finals ranked fourth in the barrel racing. Then her horse ducked the second barrel, knocking her out of qualifying for the national high school finals. Past achievements include qualifying for nationals in her eighth-grade year in barrels and breakaway roping. In 2018, Ella was sitting at fourth in the state, but didn’t accomplish the outcome she was hoping for. This season, she’s currently ranked eleventh in barrels and eighth in goat tying in the CSHSRA and is hoping for a good comeback after her last surgery. “I’m very excited for the spring rodeos” and she’s using sky-high motivation, along with the physical therapy, to get her body ready to give her all.

    Synchronicity may be an overused word but it fits where Ella is with her competition partners, Legs, a 14-year old barrel racing horse who was trained by her sister, Ava. “Legs is solid all around horse and I can do anything off him.” A big teddy bear of a horse aptly named Teddy, whom Ella trained as her goat horse,rounds out the Zonneveld rodeo equine team.

    Though she’s focusing chiefly on barrels as a high-schooler, Ella has posted some great times goat tying with Teddy who “loves it so much he pushed me to love it more. It’s so essential to find the right horse that helps you to keep doing the best you can.”

    Traveling to rodeos and competing in new arenas gives Ella a thrill. She likes Eagle in particular, especially the dance, and finished in the top ten in all three rounds at Cortez last year. Leaving home is something Ella would like to do for college and given her familiarity with the practice, she thinks she’d like to study physical therapy. “I want to help people get better and go higher in life.” It’s a matter of doing the work and staying positive.

    Based on her goals, Linda focuses Ella’s studies on science, including anatomy and physiology. Though Latin is usually described as a “dead” language, Ella has embraced learning it because of her interest in the medical field and she finds it helpful in knowing the roots of the English language. “Once you start understanding the roots of the language, then everything else is easier.” Given this context, it isn’t surprising that Ella enjoys listening to all kinds of music. “I must have music in my life,” she claims.

    The Zonneveld kids are no strangers to hard work. Ella works part time at the local Chili’s in Loveland, Colorado. “If I didn’t work then I couldn’t rodeo,” she explains, “it helps with entry fees and keeping the horses shod.” Her parents taught their brood that if they wanted to do something, they have to work.

    Ella also loves being an aunt! She didn’t think she would, but once she got to hold her big sister’s brand new baby last fall, she fell in love with Hazel. Not that she’s ready to have any of her own. At seventeen, Ella has lots of other worlds to conquer. And she is ready.

    Every year since 2017 gets Ella closer to a new normal. A positive mental attitude and her faith keep her from getting down and staying in a bad place. And Ella Zonneveld has too much going for her to stay in a bad place. Now, if only she could get her braces off.

  • Art of Rodeo: Scott Ironworks

    Art of Rodeo: Scott Ironworks

    In a perfect world, Gregory Scott would have the ideal life balance between work and play. But he knows this isn’t a perfect world so he strives to make his bits look like they just grew out of the metal, without any sign that it is man-made. It’s almost as if, like Michelangelo, he’s freeing the bit from the raw metal. And that artistry translates into a substantial waiting list for his entirely custom-made, hand-crafted bits. Craftsmanship takes time and a bucket load of patience, especially working in the blazing heat of Arizona summers.
    Born and raised in Arizona, Greg and his brothers were on chore duty that included feeding horses, milking cows and chopping firewood while their widowed mother worked a variety of jobs to keep her growing family in jeans and food. When Greg was 15, his mother remarried and moved to Verde Valley, Arizona where Greg and his brothers caught roping fever. Without benefit of any formal coaching or teaching, the Scott brothers threw loops at dummies and competed amongst themselves for hours in the evenings, often into the wee hours. Greg even recalls a time when his brother roped an unprecedented 10 sets of hind feet in one round, a rare occurrence in the 70’s.
    Greg’s roping career gave way to the workaday world of earning a living after high school. For 36 years, Greg and his brothers built and worked a successful drywall business. In 2000, Greg wanted something different that didn’t take such a physical toll on the body, so he went into the remodeling business, indulging in his fascination with metal by playing around with twisting horseshoes on the side. Making crosses led to perfecting the twist that led to crafting spurs and bits.
    2005 was the year playing around with rasp spurs and horseshoe bits officially became Scott Ironworks. Greg made his first set of spurs and a couple of chain bits that he showed to roping buddies in the area. As Greg recalls, feedback from ropers who used those early bits compelled him put a port in the bit chain to add more “purchase” to the bit.
    Those initial bits were not perfected, remembers Greg. In fact, they were pretty rough. But Greg worked on the necessary innovation for producing bits that were the right weight with the right balance by listening to the feedback he got from ropers using his bits. Having roped as a kid, Greg knew that a successful roping horse needs to be comfortable with a nice, relaxed mouth. And the #2 port bit was born. Greg sold the spurs at ropings as fast as he could make them. The word spread amongst competitive ropers always looking for the next best thing. Given that the bits take about ten hours of work to make, including endless grinding, polishing and forging every piece except the chains, the waiting list continued to grow.

    With Greg’s passion for experimentation, what he calls “playing around with a piece to get the feel of it,” it wasn’t long before he started creating bits and spurs that went beyond functional to unique style and personality. While many bit makers were incorporating pistols into the shanks of their bits, Greg took it one step further by applying real bullets.
    Greg attributes much of his inspiration to God because no one has ever done what he’s done before. The spectacular snake bit, because the diamond pattern looked “snaky” to Greg, complete with 14K gold and real ruby jewel eyes, is a tribute to that inspiration. Those snake bits were so distinctive that Greg sold four of them right away.
    But that does not mean his customers get them right away. A custom-made bit with multiple hand-forged pieces takes painstaking hours of concentration throughout the entire process. While he might have started more than one piece, Greg can only finish one piece at a time. Because Greg is a one-man shop and there is no one else doing the work, he has to pace himself. At each step, Greg hand polishes every edge and curve for ultimate smoothness and fit, always in an effort to produce the perfect bit.
    Starting with the shoes he decides and chooses based on the customer’s needs, whether to use new horseshoes or gently used ones. Then he forges them, shapes them, and decides on rings. Different models feature different characteristics for different needs. For instance, the #5 twisted port bit is designed to get the maximum performance from the horse.
    Scott Ironworks’ reputation for perfection led to some pretty cool notoriety. In 2006, Greg’s pieces were chosen for display at the National Cowboy Hall of Fame (Colorado Springs, Colo.) in celebration of the National Day of the Cowboy. Greg made a special pair of spurs to go with the bit that earned high praise from Zane W. Mead, Art Foreman of National Day of the Cowboy, “They represent Cowboy America, Rodeo, Ranch, Cowgirl, Cowboy.” Scott Ironworks gained international distinction when New Mexico cowboy, Couy Griffin, set out on a horseback trip from the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco to the Golden Gate in Jerusalem. Griffin used Greg’s best selling #2 chain port bit and a pair of spurs throughout the two-and-a-half year sojourn that crossed three continents.
    Over the last fourteen years, Scott Ironworks’ client roster has grown to feature some of the most notable names in professional team roping, including Garrett Tonozzi, Tee Woolman, Luke Brown and Jake Barnes. In fact, Scott Ironworks bits have become so popular, Greg has gotten reports that his bits have been stripped right off the heads of tied-up horses and snitched out of barns. Every time a customer reports on winning a buckle or a jackpot, Greg is filled with the pride of exceptional workmanship that takes horse performance to the next level.
    When you work alone like Greg does, a certain amount of thought goes to finding the right balance between work—which he does sometimes seven days a week—and riding his 4-wheeler in the cool mountains or fishing with his nephew. Overall, Greg’s philosophy of life can be summed up as, “Life is short. Enjoy it.” Greg enjoys every call or email from ecstatic customers who rave about their success in the arena as a result of using a Scott Ironworks bit.
    Perfection is something Greg strives for in every piece he makes. And with every piece he makes, the bar is set a little higher. It is what keeps him doing what he does—handcrafting custom bits that get results.