Cody Snow will head out June 18, and be back to his home in Santa Ynez, Calif., when the season is over. This is the second year for this 19-year-old to cross the country in hopes of winning a chance to turn ten steers at the Thomas & Mack. “I like it,” he says of being on the road all summer. “It’s fun
He ended last season as Resistol Rookie of the Year in the team roping as a header, turning steers for his partner, Dugan Kelly. “Dugan is a veteran at this and makes it easy for me,” he said. “He does all the entering and maps out where we’re going.” The race for Resistol Rookie was a tight one, and Cody didn’t know he was the winner until the last couple weeks of the season. “You can win a lot of money at the end, so it’s not done until it’s done.”
Cody learned how to rope from his dad, Van, who was a noted orthopedic veterinarian. “My dad was my biggest help as well as influence. He got me a good start. He had a vet clinic at the house and we worked out of the house. I saw a lot of lame horses, and learned how to take care of horses and how to keep them sound.” He also learned from other people. “I’ve been around a lot of people that roped and I practiced a lot and figured it out. I had plenty of help.”
Cody was home schooled from the seventh grade through high school. He plans to take a few classes online, but not be a fulltime student, instead concentrating on his roping career. “It’s a job, and I make money at it,” he said. To make it fun, when he gets to the rodeo, he finds something to do in the town he’s in. “I don’t like sitting around, so I rope the dummy.” He likes to bowl so he tries to find a bowling alley when he has some down time.
He has made all his own horses. “I bought younger horses and brought them along and rodeoed on them.” Right now he has nine, and hauls two or three. His goal for this year is to make it to the WNFR. “I want to make the finals, and then do it consistently.”
Category: Archive
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Roper Review: Cody Snow
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ProFile: Bubba Paschal, P&P Trailer Sales
Bubba Paschal was raised in LaPorte, Texas – Southeast of Houston. “My family was involved in rodeo – they always enjoyed horses and my dad (Chuck) rodeoed in high school and bulldogged when I was growing up. He taught us how to bulldog and hazed for me and my brother for the first several years we prorodeoed. My Mom (Cecile) ran barrels and supported us through everything. Shane, my brother, bulldogged and team ropes. We travelled together a lot starting off, he won San Antonio one year but never really went hard enough to make the finals.”
Bubba started off calf roping, adding steer wrestling when he got into high school. “I played around team roping and never did it a lot until recently. I won the PRCA Rookie of the Year in the bulldogging and the All Around in 1995 and made the Finals in calf roping in 1998.” He realized that in order to rope and be competitive, he had to travel and keep up with his horses. “I made the Finals after I started the business (P & P Trailer Sales), but it wasn’t in my heart to stay out there and pound the pavement.” He went just enough to make Houston and go to the big rodeos. “2010 was the last year I roped calves and just went to some local jackpots. Since then I have changed my focus to team roping. They have become the place of old calf roper reunions.”
“I’ve always been somewhat of an entrepreneur. I was always looking how to make and save money. I always knew I wanted to be in business for myself. I started with a load of utility trailers and I was pulling a trailer when I won Rookie, trying to promote and sell them for a new dealer in the Houston area. I was still finishing up college. I refinanced my truck to get the money to buy the first load of trailers. We had a hay pasture with a portable building, and we set that up and I still rodeoed to pay the bills.”
From that hay pasture 18 years ago, P & P Trailer Sales now has five locations in Texas and Oklahoma to serve the needs of their customers. The latest one is in Hockley Texas, northwest of Houston “Every dealership we’ve added has been because of a person, not a place. If the right opportunity comes up, we’ll take advantage of it.” He believes the key to any business is good people. “I’m fortunate to have really good people at every location that are willing to show up and work hard and believe in what we’re selling. When they become part of something they enjoy, they stay. I’ve got several employees that have been with me more than 15 years.” The masthead of his business model is to treat people the way you want to be treated. “That’s how we treat anybody that comes to any of our stores. That’s the mindset that I portray to all our people. You encounter difficult people and all you can do is what you feel is the right thing.” He considers all of his locations and employees as one big family. “Both my grandfathers had tremendous work ethic, and believed to do things right the first time and always do the right thing. I hope I can carry this with me in everything I do.”
“I only get to practice a couple times a week right now, but that’s going to change when my arena is done.” He and his wife Sherry have two children, Cane (7) and Cade (14). Cade is involved in football, baseball, golf and other activities in school. Cane is into soccer and baseball. “I didn’t rodeo until I was in high school so there is no pressure for them to rodeo. Once I get my arena, they will be involved more, but I’ve let them do what they want to do.”
His plans for the future are to keep doing family things, work, and rope. “I’m going to keep looking for opportunities and take them as they come.” -

Back When They Bucked with Charley Lyons
Charley Lyons had one of the most unique acts in rodeo, one that has rarely been duplicated.
The Montana man built his reputation as a rodeo clown with his washtub saddle bronc act. With a #3 washtub bolted to a saddle tree and filled with flour, Charley would put it on a bucking horse. He’d sit in it, with legs over the bronc’s neck, and explode from the chute. Crowds loved it and it catapulted Charley onto the nation-wide rodeo scene.
He was born in 1938, the son of Ed and Vera Lyons, in Milliken, Colorado, just outside of Arvada. The city kid grew up with 4-H livestock: pigs, cattle, and horses, and somewhere in his youth, he decided he wanted to be a clown. His first rodeo was an FFA rodeo in Greeley, when he was a senior in high school.
After high school graduation in 1957, he went straight to the rodeo industry. The first few years were slim, but as committee members and stock contractors heard about his acts, he was hired for more and more rodeos.
In addition to riding a saddle bronc in a washtub, Charley had other acts. He had a pure white trick horse named Soapy who would crawl on his knees like an Indian scout, play dead, and sit like a dog. He had a half-Brahma steer named Roberto, who had foot-long horns. Roberto was broke to ride, and Charley rode him in parades and grand entries. He’d also ride Roberto in the barrel racing, dressed in a dress and wig and calling himself Charlotte. He also had a palomino Shetland pony named Dandy, and during the steer wrestling, dressed as Batman, he would bulldog a mini steer named Pistol.
Charley had a variety of solo acts, and he rounded out his repertoire with other acts, involving kids from the crowd (and later, his own kids). They milked his donkey named Ruba or were part of his very large family stuffed into a hollowed-out car.
Charley did more than clown. In those days, rodeo clowns often worked as bullfighter as well, and he was also a contestant in three events: bareback riding, steer wrestling and bull riding. He worked acts between contesting his events, and during the bull riding, the producer saved his bull for the last one. One time, at a small rodeo, they were short of contestants, so he had to work all five events, “and he couldn’t rope worth a darn,” his wife, Carol, laughed. There was no time to spare, he said. “I did all three events and worked two or three acts in between times. In my day, if you didn’t have a few acts, you didn’t get any jobs. Them bullfighters were a dime a dozen, but a clown could stay busy.”
He started out with stock contractor Hoss Inman, from Colorado, and worked many of his rodeos, before fanning out across the country. He worked rodeos in the Dakotas for Korkow and Sutton, in Iowa and Minnesota for Bob Barnes, in Canada for Harry Vold, and for the Christensen Brothers in the Northwest. He worked Pendleton, Ore.; Burwell, Neb.; Deadwood, S.D.; Fort Worth, Texas, and a whole bunch of other rodeos in between.
It was in the early 1970s that Charley and his wife Carol Lehl, who had married in 1961, decided where they wanted to settle. They had traveled across the country and found a beautiful place in Montana, just outside St. Ignatius, and decided to buy a place there. They made an offer on a ranch, it was accepted, and they moved there in 1972, calling the ranch the TUB and incorporating the TUB brand onto their Simmental-cross cattle.
As is typical among bullfighters, Charley had his share of injuries, just “broke a few bones, nothing serious,” he said. He broke his back twice, two legs, both arms, and at a rodeo in South Dakota, was unconscious when his head was knocked off the spinal cord. There was a doctor in the crowd who knew how to adjust it back on.
Some of the nastier bulls he recalls include one of Hoss Inman’s, named the Devil’s Partner, a fighting Mexican bull who would “darn sure come and eat your lunch.” Hoss also had another bull named Shorty who was fun to fight. “If he ever hit you, he’d back up and apologize. They’d have to rope him and drag him out of the arena, every performance.” And it was one of Erv Korkow’s bulls, Sonny Liston, who got ahold of him and knocked his head off his spinal column.
With the washtub, Charley rode whatever horse the stock contractor ran into the chute for him. Stock contractors liked the tub, he said. “They’d take a good solid horse that was slowing down, and he’d be good for another four or five trips” after he’d had Charley and the washtub on him.
And there was no getting off on the pickup man. “There was no way a pickup horse would run into that fog,” he said. “I’d catch my timing, bail out after a while, and try to land on my feet.”
Charley and Carol had three children: C.J., Anna and Katie, and before the kids were in school, they all traveled together. “We had a trailer house, a twenty-footer, and lived on the road,” Carol said. Charley had a two-ton truck with a big box he built on it for the animals, and the house trailer was pulled behind it. The family left in May and returned in October. The truck was full of animals: Charlie’s bulldogging horse, Carol’s barrel horse (she barrel raced for a short time), and the clown act animals: the trick horse, trained steer, donkey, and Shetland pony. When they pulled into a rodeo, it was like “the circus was in town,” Carol laughed.
Charley’s rodeoing slowed down after he bought the ranch. With three kids, 200 mother cows, hay to put up and irrigating to do, he stayed closer to home, and in 1972 he quit rodeo. He worked at a paper mill for a while, retiring in 2006, and the couple sold their cow herd in 2008. They rent out the pasture and continue to put up hay.
In 2014, he was inducted into the Montana Pro Rodeo Hall of Fame. He and Carol attend the rodeo clown reunions and they have never missed a year of the Wrangler National Finals Rodeo for the past three decades. In 2001, his washtub act was recognized and honored in one of the opening ceremonies of the Wrangler NFR.
He loved fighting bulls as much as he did clowning. “It would give me a big thrill to stand out in front of that chute and nod for the producer to turn out his fighting bull.” He fought the first Mexican fighting bulls that were brought into the U.S. at a rodeo Buddy Heaton promoted.
And his rodeo days were good ones. “I met a lot of good people rodeoing, and still have a lot of friends I stay in contact with.”
The couple’s children are married: C.J. to Miae, Anna to Jim and Katie to Ray. They have three grandchildren: Clay, Amanda and Mian.Charley throws an inner tube around Sammy, a Big Sky Company bull, at the Lewiston, Montana rodeo. – Rathbuy One of Charley’s acts was to steer wrestle while wearing a Batman suit. The steer was one of his, named Pistol, and his steer wrestling horse was Dandy. – Rathbuy Charley Lyons, dressed as a woman, barrel races with Roberto the steer. – Allen Photo Carol and Charley Lyons celebrate his induction into the Montana Pro Rodeo Hall of Fame in 2014 – courtesy of the family -

On the Trail with Garrison Panzer
“Be a blessing because you are blessed,” said 18-year-old rodeo announcer Garrison Panzer before switching off the microphone, closing the 2016 Kansas Junior High School State Finals Rodeo. Such are the values of the entire Panzer family, who instilled the importance of serving others in the cowboy from Lakin, Kan., at a young age. A family of rodeo competitors, judges, announcers, timers, and secretary assistants, the Panzers have helped in nearly every aspect of the National Little Britches Rodeo Association in their 30 years with the association.
“We absolutely love the National Little Britches Rodeo Association and everything it does for our kids,” says Garrett Panzer, himself a Little Britches alumni and now a rodeo judge and former member of the NLBRA board of directors. “We’ve gotten everything out of rodeo that we could ever want. We haven’t so much rodeoed with the world championships and buckles and saddles in mind, but instead used it as an avenue to help raise our kids and teach them the strong values of competing, being responsible, and respecting the western lifestyle.”
Garrett and his sister, Dia Panzer-Biddle, grew up in Little Britches, while their dad, Dwayne Panzer, served as a rodeo judge for the association, and continues to do so today. Even from a young age, Garrett knew the rodeo lifestyle and values were what he wanted to instill in his future family. “I played college football two years for Dodge City Community College and then two years at Hastings College. After my playing days were done and I found my wife of 20 years, Kim, we knew rodeo was the avenue we wanted to take with our family,” says Garrett. “I think God really blessed us with two great boys to raise,” Kim adds. “When I was pregnant with Garrison, we attended the baptism of a friend, who was born about five months before Garrison. In part of the sermon, they quoted Proverbs 22:6, ‘Train up a child in the way he should go: and when he is old, he will not depart from it.’ The importance of starting early with a solid, Christian foundation really stuck with me.”
Garrison, the NLBRA youth board president and a ribbon and team roper, was one of the competitors to qualify for the 2003 NLBFR in the newly minted Little Wrangler division. His 15-year-old brother, Hadley, rodeoed for several years before pursuing other sports, but continues to help behind the scenes at Little Britches rodeos and run sound while Garrison announces. The 2016 NLBFR is Garrison’s last as a competitor, but his days with the association are far from over. “I’m in the process of getting my NLBRA judge’s and announcer’s card, and I plan to apply for one of the announcer positions for the finals next year,” he explains. “It’s always been my goal and dream to judge a rodeo with my dad and grandpa, and after this finals, I’ll have a chance to do that.” While he’s qualified for the finals in both his events, Garrison is also announcing the grand entry and portions of the queen contest, along with helping Doug Wade on the production side – and finishing out his third term as the youth board president. “It’s a bittersweet year. I wouldn’t trade any of the ups and downs of the past 13 years for the world. People might say the competition isn’t as tough as others, but if you look at the times and scores turned in, it’s just as tough as many other rodeo associations. And the friendships you build and the rodeo family you have is second to none.”
Beyond Little Britches, Garrison announces rodeos for the NSRA, KPRA, KJHSRA, mini bull ridings, and even the 2016 Oklahoma vs. Kansas Border Bash Rodeo in Guthrie, Okla. “Monty Stueve and I were the two announcers for the weekend, then I turned around and announced the high school rodeo in Lakin,” says Garrison. “I also announced a high school rodeo in McCook, Nebraska, so within a month, I announced a rodeo in three different states. Then I decided to skip a weekend so I could graduate high school, but I have a rodeo to announce every weekend except for three this summer. At first I was worried about being repetitive, but with each rodeo, I’ve gotten more relaxed. I’ve come to realize as long as the contestants are having fun and the crowd is enjoying it, that’s what I need to keep doing!” With the help of his Sports Sound Pro and pointers from several people, including NLBRA producer Janet Honeycutt, he has more than 5,000 songs and sound clips at his fingertips. Garrison announces most of his rodeos from the stand, but he’s debuting his horseback announcing during the NLBFR. “I’ve watched Boyd Polhamus do it a few times, and I can definitely see where you can build a connection with the crowd. I’d like to add that to the performances.”
During the KPRA rodeo in Springfield, Colo., last summer, Garrison announced, while Hadley ran sound, Garrett judged, and Kim was a timer. Garrett’s goal is to judge both the NLBFR and the NHSFR in the same year, while Kim has helped the Little Britches secretaries with their local rodeos the past five years. She plans to continue after Garrison ages out. “I didn’t grow up rodeoing, but my family always had horses,” she says. “My mother was a paraprofessional in Garrett’s first classroom he taught, and she told me I should meet him when I came home from college for Christmas break. We hit it off, and the rest is history! Since I came to be part of the rodeo family, I see so much kindness and generosity. Everyone is more than willing to bend over backwards to help, and I want to pay it forward.” Kim is also the coordinator of the federal programs for her school district, helping migrant and ESL families, as well as coordinating buildings during testing season. Garrett teaches STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics) to seventh and eighth grade students at Lakin Middle School, while teaching driver’s ed. in the summer, refereeing basketball, and umpiring softball. He has coached football for more than 20 years at both the high school and middle school levels, and became a wrestling coach nine years ago.Garrison and younger brother Hadley at 2004 D-K Series Finals in Garden City, where Garrison won his first saddle – Courtesy of the family The Panzer Family at First rodeo all four of us worked together, Springfield, CO – Courtesy of the family Garrison announcing at his first rodeo association finals, KJHSRA, in Whitewater, KS 2003 NLBFR, first finals for Little Wranglers, Garrison’s favorite event still today – JJJ Photo Garrison Panzer 2015 NLBFR in Pueblo, CO An avid athlete, Hadley is attending several wrestling and football camps this summer, and playing baseball on a recreation ball team. “Football is my favorite – I enjoy being around my teammates. I play defensive end, and on offence I play center,” he says. “It’s me and my mom going to games most of the time since Dad is with Garrison at rodeos, and we have some good bonding time.” Hadley will be a freshman at Lakin High School this fall, which Garrison graduated from this spring at the top of his class with Honors. Like Garrison, Hadley will represent his class as the Class of 2020 Vice-President and serve on the Student Council. “We’re very pleased with the young man Hadley’s become,” says Garrett. “He graduated junior high lettering in four sports. Both our boys have learned from sports to compete at the best of their abilities and compromise without compromising their values.”
Throughout high school, Garrison was involved in Student Council (STUCO), band, vocal, golf, and refereeing basketball, while he played lead roles in two high school plays, including King Arthur in Camelot. His cowboy boots even travelled internationally in January when he went on a weeklong mission trip in Guatemala, which included building stoves for the people of Panajachel. A month later, he travelled to England for a week. A recipient of the OSU McKnight Scholarship and President’s Distinguished Scholarship, he’ll be studying Ag. Business at Oklahoma State University this fall and is considering law school in the future. Prior to that, he’s running sound for Jared Slagle at several PRCA rodeos this summer, and plans to keep up his roping through jackpots and helping the college rodeo team.
“It will hit me in August that Garrison’s not going to be able to walk through the door and give me a hug,” says Garrett. “But we’ll be there for him whenever we can. My mom and dad drove four hours to listen to him announce the KJHSRA finals – that’s how our family is. We meet ourselves coming and going sometimes and wonder why we do this crazy life, and I think the result is in the character of our kids. If between Kim and I our boys grow up to be fine gentlemen, then I think we’ve done our job.”
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Roper Review: Cody Thornton
On the Friday before Thanksgiving in 2015, Cody Thornton was in the roping pen training an outside horse. He had already headed ten steers and was getting ready to throw his rope on number eleven. As he stood to throw, without warning, his horse buried his head and bucked, hard. And Cody landed, hard. After spending a night sick from pain he ended up at an Urgent Care clinic the following morning where he learned he had fractured his C5 vertebrae. The injury resulted in two rods, four screws, and his C4 and C5 vertebrae being fused together. After spending seven weeks recuperating, Cody started back riding.
Cody grew up in Huntsville, Texas where he was raised roping and catching wild cows. He started team roping about the age of five. While growing up he went to high school rodeos and earning a rodeo scholarship. Cody graduated from Sam Houston University with a degree in General Agriculture and a minor in Management.
For the six years following college Cody chose to train horses, riding up to 13 per month. Putting his degree to good use Cody now manages the Steinhauser’s Feed Store in Navasota, Texas, where they carry just about everything including a full line of feed, ranch supplies, and even home décor. Steinhausers has total of eleven stores located in southeastern Texas.
As a #9 heeler, Cody enjoys rodeoing on the weekends and giving roping lessons. When he’s not working or roping, you can usually find him spending time in the woods hog hunting with his friends and family.
Cody’s dad, Lynn Thornton, is a farrier in south Texas and shoes some of the best barrel horses in the country. His mom, Tamera Gann, is the City Manager of Huntsville, Texas.
Cody owns and lives on 20 acres next to his sister and brother-in-law, Kassie and Chad White. He spends much of his time with them and their two sons, Cougar and Riggins.
How much do you practice?
Three or four times a week.
Do you make your own horses?
Yes.
Who were your roping (rodeo) heroes?
Clay O’Brien Cooper, Leo Camarillo.
Who do you respect most in the world?
The good Lord for sure. My grandpa and my sister.
Who has been the biggest influence in your life?
My sister.
If you had a day off what would you like to do?
Go hog hunting.
Favorite movie?
Lonesome Dove and Where the Red Fern Grows.
What’s the last thing you read?
The Bible.
How would you describe yourself in three words?
Caring, loyal, hard working.
What makes you happy?
Being in the country.
What makes you angry?
Being in the city.
If you were given 1 million dollars, how would you spend it?
Buy a ranch.
What is your best quality – your worst?
Best quality is I’m very honest. Worst quality is being too independent.
Where do you see yourself in ten years?
Having a nice piece of property with a nice herd of cows. -

ProFile: Brandi Hollenbeck
Brandi Hollenbeck finished out her second and final year at Garden State Community College winning the Central Plains region in the breakaway and was honored with being female athlete of the year for the college. “We were honored to have Brandi on our women’s team,” said her coach, Jim Boy Hash. “She’s talented enough to go anywhere to compete in the breakaway and team roping. She is a quiet and humble person, and we’re going to miss her.” She graduated with high honors and is part of the Phi Beta Kappa. After graduation, she drove all night to go enter a roping. After that, she headed home to pick up her breakaway horse and head to another rodeo.
“The year is just starting,” she said. “Hopefully this summer and fall will continue to be good.” Brandi is going to be a junior, and she’s headed to Alva to Northwest State University to study ag business and get her degree in that and rodeo for the team.” She is looking into real estate appraisal. “I’m really interested in that. It’s something that is flexible with the lifestyle that I live.”
Brandi, from Hutch, went to Pretty Prairie High School, making the High School National Finals all four years. She won it in 2011, her freshman year, and again in eighth grade. Her fastest time ever is a 1.9 – and she’s done it twice. Her secret to success is the horse power. “That’s one of the key things in my opinion; one that can get from point A to point B in a short amount of time. One that gives me the same shot every time.” Brandi has competed on five different horses since she started roping when she was 6. “I rode my dad’s calf horses then. I pretty much took over my dad’s horses for the first two I rode, them my grandpa (Junior Lewis) trained one and Jerome Schneeberger rode him, one day he told me to (Junior Lewis) get on him and that was that. I rode him until the middle of my sophomore year, and I borrowed my Uncle’s calf horse, and then we came across this horse that my dad knew about. We called the people about a year ago, and they said no, and then they changed their mind. I took him home that day …and the rest is history.”
Brandi learned how to rope from her grandfather and her dad, Shawn. Her whole family will be cheering her on at her second CNFR, Mom, Mardee, little sister, Blair, and grandma, Gaynell Lewis. “She always comes to every rodeo to watch me,” said Brandi. Brandi had the college finals made before the final two rodeos in the season. She was also trying to make it in the team roping, but the #4 header admits she and her partner “had heck. We actually switched ends the last two rodeos. We’re going to work on it this summer and hopefully go in the team roping next year to the college finals.”
She plans to go to the CNFR for the rest of her years in college. “It’s a field that I want to go back to. It’s the NFR for college kids – it’s something you definitely want to be a part of. I went last year and had a blast. It is like a reunion from the high school finals. My parents were out there the whole week and we went up to Casper Mountain. I’m very honored to represent my school and my region.”
“Balancing school and rodeo is hard – for me, school is first. The coaches have scheduled practices every day and it helps to have the classes scheduled to be done at noon, then I can study and then go to practice. I made the Presidents Honor Roll and the Deans Honor Roll.” Biology was the toughest class for her. It wasn’t an everyday class, you had two labs per week at 7:30 and the hybrid part was on your own. I don’t go to the gym, I have really bad burcitis in my shoulder, and I get it injected two or three times a year … main thing is make sure my horse is in tip top shape and make sure he gets out of his pen everyday, and I rope everyday.” -

ProFile: Jacob Smith
Jacob Smith (20 in May) set some goals for himself. “When I won the Mountain Circuit Finals in 2014, I decided that the next year I would win the Year End Title and get the saddle, as well as win the college region. I only rode one bull my freshman year, so I decided to come back and do it.” He focused on handling his business. “I took the momentum I had riding in the summer to the college and it stuck all year.”
The Platte Valley High School graduate in Kersey, calls LaSalle, Colorado, home. He went to the Greeley Stampede when he was little, entering the mutton busting, and decided to be a bull rider. He got on his first bull when he was 12, in the junior high rodeo and continued in the high school rodeo. “I made the Finals for both junior high and high school, and made the National Finals my sophomore, junior, and senior year.” He admits he wasn’t riding as good as he should at the Finals and fixed it by going back to the basics and sticking with it. “Success in this game is keeping your head straight, having a positive outlook, and taking care of your business.”
Jacob is attending the University of Wyoming, studying petroleum engineering. “I’m not sure what I’m going to do with it, for now, I’m planning on rodeoing after I graduate. I’m going to focus on PRCA – I’m going to try for the Rookie.”
His dad (Gary) owns part of a construction company and his mom (Teri) is a homemaker, Jacob is the oldest of four children; two sisters, Maggie (18), Claire (14), and a brother, Eric (16). Eric rode bulls, but now he’s raising his own bulls. The whole family shows up to support him, even though they never rodeoed. They will continue to show up and support him as Jacob makes his first CNFR appearance. He is going to rodeo as hard as he can as soon as school gets out, but other than entering and competing, he’s not doing anything special to get ready for Casper. “I’m going to spend the whole summer rodeoing.” Jacob will make sure he’s got a ticket to the circuit finals, so he will hit at least 15 rodeos in the Mountain States Circuit, and after that he will pick the best and go.
Jacob is holding on to a 3.0 GPA and admits the hardest part is balancing rodeo and school. “We are on the road for five weekends out of the semester, and in reality, it’s hard to study while you’re at the rodeo, so you’ve got to make sure it’s all done before you leave.”
The biggest influence in his life are his parents. “My dad is always working so hard, and is busy every day … he gets up early to make sure the company is running but he still goes to all our sporting events. My mom has taken care of four kids and they have both worked really hard.” -

On the Trail with Clayton Van Aken
Clayton Van Aken is a California transplant. Born and raised in Descanso, California, a little town 40 miles southeast of San Diego, he grew up playing baseball and football and roping. He high school rodeoed, making the finals his senior year. Everywhere he roped to compete, he drove at least 300 miles to Phoenix or Oakdale up north to do so. The only child of John and Maggie, Clayton is the first one in his family to compete. “My dad has always roped – he shoes horses – and he’s always telling me he doesn’t know anything about how to enter and how to get the traveling done.”
After high school, he went to the University of Wyoming where he obtained an undergraduate degree in farm and ranch management with a minor in finance. He has been to the CNFR all four years – one time heading, twice heeling, and three times tie down roping – and will make it this year too in the tie down roping. “I roped a lot of calves – I went to six of the pro rodeos and made the amateur rodeos – but I’ve never had a horse that I could go on – I’ve always sold them early on.” He has concentrated on team roping admitting, he can’t tie fast enough to beat the pros going down the road. “I’m more of an 8.2, not a 7,” said the 24-year-old that is currently working on his Masters Degree at Chadron State College in Nebraska. He is taking his classes online and will finish with his Masters in Organizational Management with an emphasis in sports. “My main deal is to look at sports from a business perspective like an agent would do. Put numbers to values and values to talent. That’s how they do it in the big industry – baseball and football – I want to help the program inside and outside the arena.”
His goal is to become a college rodeo coach and integrate that with his growing roping cattle business. Three years ago, Jerry Palm from Centennial, Wyo., approached Clayton with a partnership idea. “I was thinking about going home,” said Clayton. “Jerry brought it up and it’s developed into something pretty cool. We’ve got 130 head of jackpot steers that Jerry buys and I run. This is the third year for this partnership.” The cattle come from Gem, Wyo., get broke in, then get leased or hauled depending on what the customer wants. “We’ve got a lot of two year olds that are good to rope and they are leased out. I’ve got fresh ones coming in.” Clayton puts on a jackpot series in Laramie, Wyo., every Thursday night May through June. He hauls them to other local jackpots and producers, and by the end of June all the cattle are leased or sold for the summer. “I get the jackpots done seven weeks in a row and we end after the college finals, and then I head out after I lease them out for the rest of the summer.”
Then it’s Clayton’s turn to hit the pro rodeo road for the summer, a dream he has had since he was 15. “When I won the Lucky 7 #15 in Laughlin in 2009 with Wade Hooker, I realized I might be good enough to do this.” He got his Rookie card when he turned 18 so he could go to Cheyenne and the close rodeos and the bigger ones. “Those are the ones in our circuit that I could get to while I was in college.” He started his PRCA career heeling for Paul Beckett and made they made the circuit finals twice. “I went down to Texas and started riding this really nice head horse, so I switched and it’s working out – I can’t complain.”
Going down the road with Paul helped Clayton learn the ropes of the road. “He’s been around and knows where to go. He’d always have a plan and be good where we needed to be good.” Now Clayton is heading for Cole Cooper, from Sheridan, Wyo. “We just decided to rope together the other day – I roped with him in Colorado and we finally are going to make it work. The plan is to hit the road this summer and go. Our first one is Guymon and we’ve got our schedule set through the first of July.” Cole’s wife is going to have a baby around July 1, so the plan is to be rodeoing around home then so Cole can be with her. “The way I’ve got it mapped out, we’ll be everywhere. This year if we go hard and give it a good lick we might have a shot at the NFR. But the real goal is to get into the big rodeos like San Antonio, Denver, and Ft. Worth next year. It helps to get the ball rolling.”
For now, Laramie, Wyo., is home. “There’s nothing like this where I come from in southern California. I can rope, rodeo, run cows, and ride horses. What more could I want?”
Clayton at age 4 – Linda Allen Clayton at the 5 & under dummy roping in 1997 at Scottsdale USTRC roping with Philip Murrah Clayton Roping with Cullen Teller at the PRCA Mountain States Circuit Finals in Rock Springs, Oct. 2015 – Hubbell Clayton roping at College National Finals Rodeo – Hubbell -

Back When They Bucked with Liz Kesler
story by Gail Woerner
Liz was born to Chesley Russell and Irene Faulkner Russell on June 10, 1926 in Clay County, Texas just south of Henrietta. She had one sister, Margie, two years older. They lived in a two story home on a farm/ranch located on Old Joy Shannon Road which had belonged to her paternal great-grandparents. Her daddy was born in that house, too.
Their young lives were idyllic for young country girls. Liz and Margie had dolls galore, buggies for dolls, paper dolls, and a trike to ride. They had a swing and playhouses under the trees. They also got together with other children in the community at Sunday School as well as socials that were held in the area.
When Liz was old enough to go to school she went to the Bluegrove School for the first nine grades. There were 15, or so, in her class and several grades were in one room with one teacher. They had programs for parents with students performing. The principal, Mr. Gilbert and his son both played the fiddle. Mr. Gilbert taught Liz to play the bass fiddle. It took some doing, not because Liz had trouble learning, but because Liz wasn’t tall enough to stand and play the bass fiddle. First they removed the peg from the bottom of the fiddle to make it shorter, but Liz was still to short. Solution: They stood her on a box and she played just fine!
Liz was always an honor student and was valedictorian at her grade school graduation. She only attended school for eleven years and the last two years she was at Henrietta High School where she took typing, bookkeeping and regular courses.Liz Kesler and Dr. Greer 1944 – Margie and Elizabeth Russell 1934 – Margie and Elizabeth Russell Anna Lee and Bud Purdy, Liz and Reg Kesler Her dad was always interested in rodeos, both in Henrietta and in Fort Worth. The family always went with him to rodeos and Liz found it a special treat. She was always interested in the events and the rodeo people. When Liz was 17, at the rodeo in Henrietta, one of the timers did not show up. The announcer saw Liz as she was finding her seat in the grandstand and asked her if she would time. She did not hesitate. Obviously she did a good job because it wasn’t very long before she was asked to time other area rodeos.
She was hired by Mr. Gilbert, her former principal, who had become the Superintendent of Schools in Clay County. Her position was Assistant County Superintendent of Schools for Clay County. Her office was located in the court house in Henrietta. She held that position for eight years. Later Liz attended Draughan’s Business College in Wichita Falls to get more business training. She was an excellent administrative person and was eager to gain more knowledge and skills.
Liz met June Bull from Pampa, Texas, and when June finished high school her parents hoped she would want to go to college. Instead it was June’s desire to barrel race. Being their only child her parents were patient with her and agreed. Liz traveled with June Bull to various rodeos around Texas and beyond. At first, Mrs. Bull traveled with them. They always had such a good time and found people in rodeo easy to get to know. It wasn’t long before the rodeo people they met seemed just like family. By the early 1950s they were going to rodeos further from home. Cheyenne Frontier Days, Madison Square Garden Rodeo in New York City, the Boston Garden Rodeo and many others. By this time Liz had resigned her job as Assistant County Superintendent and could travel the country.
In time, Liz went to work for Standard Oil Company, and was offered a transfer with a substantial increase in salary and title. The transfer took Liz to Liberal, Kansas, which seemed like ‘the end of the world’ to her. Fortunately she could still see friends when she worked at a rodeo. She and June learned to secretary rodeos together and soon their reputations as ‘outstanding’ rodeo secretaries spread through the rodeo world.
She often worked in the rodeo office for Everett Colborn, who was the ramrod of the World’s Championship Rodeo. He had some of the biggest and the best rodeos in the country. His daughter, Rosemary, who married World Champion All-Around Cowboy, Harry Tompkins, was generally her dad’s secretary and often Liz would assist or do whatever was necessary.
In 1954 June Bull and Buster Ivory, a bronc rider, were married during the Cheyenne Frontier Days at a Methodist church in Cheyenne. Liz was maid of honor and Jo Decker was matron of honor. Casey Tibbs, World Champion saddle bronc rider and Bill Ward, also a bronc rider were Buster’s attendants. Bill Linderman, All-Around World Champion and President of the Rodeo Cowboy Association, gave June away. Mr. Bull was not ready to give his only daughter up and refused to attend the wedding. It was truly a rodeo wedding.
Liz met Reg Kesler, in Oklahoma City during the 1966 National Finals Rodeo. Liz was a good friend with Jim and Sharon Shoulders, Clem and Donna McSpadden as well as June and Buster Ivory. All these people were good friends with Reg. He was a former three-time All-Around Champion cowboy in Canada who worked every event. He was from Alberta, Canada and went to college there, but was more interested in playing hockey or riding bucking horses. It was evident his life was going to be rodeo. He also collected bucking horses and in 1951 he produced his first rodeo. He had become a well known stock contractor and produced rodeos in Canada and the United States until 1995. Later they became an item.
They married in Bozeman, Montana in 1971 during the NIRA (National Intercollegiate Rodeo Association) Finals. Those attending their wedding in the Methodist Church were Liz’s mother, and niece, Phyllis Jones, and good friends Bud and Anna Lee Purdy. Liz remembers that Byron Walker and Martha Tompkins were among the college students competing at the rodeo. She assisted announcer Don Harrington by identifying the various college contestants and what colleges they represented.
Two days after their wedding Liz was secretary and timer at the Red Lodge, Montana, rodeo. The newlyweds lived in Missoula, Montana and Rosemary, Alberta, Canada, but traveled most of their time on the ‘rodeo road’. They produced rodeos in Denver, Houston, San Antonio, all over the province of Alberta, all over Montana, Idaho and too many other places to mention. Often Reg would be hauling stock to one rodeo and Liz would be heading another direction and putting on a rodeo somewhere else. Reg trusted Liz and knew she had the skills and ability to run a rodeo the right way. Liz often was responsible for getting the cowboys monies to the bank and traveled by herself many miles with never a problem. They were a good team.
Reg was very instrumental with two other men in starting the ProRodeo Cowboy Association Circuit Finals in 1987. It was held in Pocatello, Idaho, and Reg not only helped organize it, he backed it financially, as well as offered his knowledge and his stock for the event. This allowed all 12 circuits in the United States to send their best cowboys in each event to compete against each other. A circuit was made up of one state, or more, depending on the rodeo activity in the states. PRCA cowboys could register for one of the twelve circuits. Liz was the secretary at the very first circuit rodeo held, which was in Montana. She, also secretaried the first National Circuit Finals in Pocatello. This additional level of competition helped the cowboys, who held jobs or were needed on their own ranches and couldn’t rodeo full time, earn more money.
Reg had outstanding broncs for both Saddle Bronc and Bareback events. He had good stallions that bred good bucking stock. Liz once said, “Reg only had to see a horse buck one time to know if it was going to be a good bucking horse.” His horses were chosen as top horses many years in the RCA, PRCA and the National Finals Rodeo. He also had some bucking bulls that were tops, too. He continued in the rodeo business until 1995, when his grandson, Duane Kesler, bought the business. Reg was inducted in to the ProRodeo Hall of Fame, the Canadian Rodeo Hall of Fame, Alberta Sports Hall of Fame and the Rodeo Historical Society Rodeo Hall of Fame in Oklahoma City. He was well respected and appreciated in the rodeo world.
Liz also began teaching others to secretary rodeos and held schools in Canada and also helped train secretaries in the U. S. At that time in rodeo the secretary was much more involved with those entering rodeos as it was all done by telephone directly calling the secretary. There was so much more ‘hands on’ administrative work done by the secretaries. They were working without all the technical machines and computerized programs that are in use today.
Liz, Donna McSpadden, Sharon Shoulders, June Ivory, Irene Harris and Nell Shaw started a Ladies Fashion Show during the National Finals Rodeo held in Oklahoma City in 1967. In the beginning they used contestant’s wives and mothers to model the clothing in the show. The local stores and boutiques were so gracious and allowed the gals to come in to the store and pick whatever they wanted to model. This style show has continued annually during the National Finals Rodeo in Las Vegas. It is still being organized by the wives of today’s contestants. The proceeds from the show, including sales of auction items and cost of the show are now given to the Justin Crisis Fund which helps cowboys that are injured or have a serious financial problem pay bills other than their medical bills.
When Liz’s mother became ill she and Reg came back to live with Mrs. Russell so Liz could help care for her. In 2001 Reg went back to his Canadian ranch on business and was tragically killed in an automobile accident. He was 82. It was a big shock to Liz and the entire rodeo world, Reg was still very active in rodeo.
Reg and Liz were involved with Buster and June Ivory in holding the Cowboy Reunion, during the National Finals each year. Today Liz is the ramrod of the event, held in Las Vegas, and still gathers the ‘movers and shakers’ in rodeo, from all across the United States and Canada, each year. The proceeds from this 501c3 organization, are given to the Justin Crisis Fund, the ProRodeo Hall of Fame and Museum of the American Cowboy and the Rodeo Historical Society.
Presently Liz lives in the family home which has a 130 year history for the Russell family. When her mother died, at the age of 98, Liz became much more active in the community and the county. She is a founding member of the Clay County Historical Society, and was a chairperson for the renovation of the museum. She is also involved in the Pioneer Reunion and rodeo and was chosen Pioneer Reunion Queen in 2000. She is a member of the Bluegrove Baptist Church. Her great-grandparents gave an acre of land for the Bluegrove Cemetery of which she is a member of the cemetery board. She also is a Clay County Memorial Hospital Foundation board member. In 2010 Liz received the Silver Award from the Retired Senior Volunteers of North Texas (which includes 17 counties). In 2013 she was honored as the Outstanding Senior Citizen of Clay County.
In the rodeo world she was honored by the Women’s Professional Rodeo Association in 1984 for her contribution to them which involved making each PRCA rodeo in Montana also a WPRA rodeo for the barrel racing event. At that time WPRA had to get each rodeo committee to agree to their requirements and Liz got the entire state committed. She also received the Montana Governor’s Award for the preservation of our western heritage in 1986. In 1988 Reg and Liz were honored as Outstanding Citizens of Missoula Montana. The Kesler outstanding bucking horse, Three Bars was inducted in to the ProRodeo Hall of Fame in 2004 and Liz accepted. In 2008 Liz and Reg were inducted in to the Texas Rodeo Cowboy Hall of Fame. Liz received the Tad Lucas Memorial Award at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum, in 2010, which is given to women who give above and beyond what is expected of them in rodeo as did the namesake, Tad Lucas. That same year Liz and Reg were inducted in to the Montana Wall & Hall of Fame in Billings. In 2013 Liz was given an American Cowboy Culture Award as Pioneer Woman at the Cowboy Symposium held in Lubbock, TX.
She helped organize and is a member of H.A.N.D.S. which stands for Help A Needy Diva Survive. It is a fifty member group of rodeo women, dedicated to helping any rodeo family member who has been injured or has medical problems and may need help either financially, or emotionally.
Liz has enjoyed her life immensely. She has worked hard at everything she has done, and accomplished much. She has never hesitated to assist when anyone needs help. Liz is actually an important part of three families. Her own family, including her sister Margie, Margie’s children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren, as well as Reg’s children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren and the rest of her relatives; her second family is the rodeo family which includes everyone who has had the good fortune to meet her or worked with her at rodeos and rodeo functions. Especially the young cowboys, who were just starting out in rodeo and love her so much for all the help she gave them when they were still ‘wet behind the ears’; and last but not least her Clay County family which grows with each and every event Liz participates in.
Liz is truly proud of her heritage and deep Texas roots. She has the manners and demeanor of a lady. She gains the respect of everyone she meets because of her gracious ways. She is no where near finished making memories and living her life to the fullest. Don’t expect to see her sitting in a rocking chair and watching the world go by. She still has much she wants to do, so many events to attend and so many friends to see. -

Scotch Oatcakes & Potato Soup
Scotch Oatcakes
recipe courtesy of Agnes Loeschner, Siri Steven’s grandmother
INGREDIENTS:
1/2 1b. oatmeal (2 cups)
1 cup sifted flour
2 Tbsp. sugar
3 oz. butter or margarine
1 tsp. soda water
1/4 tsp. salt
1/2 cup milkDIRECTIONS:
Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Melt the butter in the microwave, then mix into oatmeal. Mix the dry ingredients in a separate bowl. Add the dry ingredients to the butter/oatmeal mixture, then gradually add the milk. Sprinkle four onto surface then roll out until thin and cut into squares. Place on greased cookie sheet and bake for 8 minutes.Potato Soup

Potato Soup – Courtesy of Celeste Lindell recipe courtesy of Andrea Wilson, “Cookin’ with Cowboys”
INGREDIENTS:
6 large potatoes
1 can Campbell’s cheese soup
(any variety)
1 medium onion
2 cups milk
3 slices cooked bacon
1 cup grated cheddar cheeseDIRECTIONS:
Peel and dice potatoes. Fill a pot with 6 cups of water, bring potatoes to boil. Add can of cheese soup. Add milk and chopped onion, salt and pepper to taste. Bring to boil, then lower heat and simmer about an hour. Serve topped with bacon crumbles and cheese. -

ProFile: Chuck
Sometimes in life, it’s a matter of finding out what you’re good at, and then doing it.
That was the case for a thirteen-year-old buckskin named Chuck.
Chuck was no good at ranch work, and he didn’t really care about the tie-down roping, but when it came to steer wrestling, he loved it.
Chuck was purchased by a Nebraska Sandhills ranch family as a weanling from the Ft. Pierre, S.D. sale barn. The family brought him to their neighbor, professional cowboy Kyle Whitaker, to break. Kyle could tell from the beginning that Chuck wasn’t an easy horse. “He was pretty rank,” he said. “He liked to buck all the time.” The horse wasn’t a bad one, but he wasn’t rider friendly, either, and Kyle knew his neighbors didn’t ride often and Chuck would require a lot of riding. So they agreed to sell him to Kyle.
Chuck had a couple of vices. He liked to run, and he liked to kick. Kyle started him in the tie-down roping, but that didn’t work well. “The first three calves I’d run, I’d be holding him back, trying not to run over the calves.”
And a person had to be careful around him. He kicked when someone walked around him.
Kyle, a seven time Linderman Award winner, would have started him earlier in the steer wrestling, but he was afraid of being kicked. He finally got brave enough to try the gelding, wearing a football helmet the first time he steer wrestled on him.
It only took a few runs for him to realize that Chuck loved steer wrestling. In 2013, he took him to a few amateur rodeos and the next summer, he tried him at a pro rodeo in Hamel, Minn. Kyle won the first round on Chuck with a time of 3.5 seconds.
Now, nearly two years later, Chuck excels at his job. At rodeos, it’s not uncommon for steer wrestlers to share horses, and Kyle often mounts out up to four steer wrestlers on Chuck at a performance. Fellow bulldogger Nick Guy has ridden Chuck a lot in the last six months. Since the week after the Wrangler National Finals Rodeo (WNFR), Nick has won $70,000 on him. He’s won checks at the American qualifier in Rapid City, Tucson, Ariz., the National Western Stock Show and Rodeo in Denver, and San Angelo, Texas. “It seems like every time I ride him, I win,” Guy said.
Kyle Whitaker steer wrestles on his horse Chuck at the 2016 RAM National Circuit Finals Rodeo in Kissimmee, Florida – Rodeo News Guy, a three-time WNFR qualifier, loves riding him. “He gives you the same trip every time,” he said. In the box, “he stands there, and doesn’t mess around.”
Kyle, who hazes for Nick and also steer wrestles, warms Chuck up. “He’s not the funnest horse to lope and warm up,” Nick said. Kyle “rides him in one of the most severe calf roping bits you can be in, because Chuck runs. Chuck wants to go, and you have to have him bitted up. If you put a snaffle in there, he’ll just run off with you.” If the bulldoggers must ride through the arena on the way to the timed event box, Chuck might “blow through there and take out a judge, or whatever else is in his path.” Kyle also rides Chuck to steer wrestle, and Chuck doesn’t change his ways for either cowboy. “It doesn’t seem to affect the way he works for me or Kyle,” Nick said. “It’s one thing if you mount a guy out and you’re winning a bunch of money, and the horse isn’t working for the other cowboy. Chuck still works great for Kyle, and Kyle’s winning.”
When a steer wrestler rides another person’s horse, and wins money, he pays the horse’s owner “mount money.” The typical amount is 25% of what the cowboy earned for the run, and Nick’s been writing checks to Kyle all winter. “I’ve paid Kyle good this winter,” Nick quipped. “If you take twenty-five percent of $70,000, that’s pretty good money, that’s big money for him and for me.”
Nick, who grew up in Wisconsin but now lives near Denver, is excited for the summer rodeo run. He and Kyle, who was one of his early mentors in pro rodeo, will travel together this summer. Kyle hazed for Nick at his first WNFR in 2010. “It’d be cool to make (the WNFR) on his horse, and for him to make it. It’s cool that it’s come full circle, and we’re traveling together, and I’m able to win on this horse.”
And Kyle and Nick are glad that Chuck found his niche. He “wasn’t very fun to ranch on, and he’s not a real great calf (roping) horse,” Kyle said. “It was a matter of finding out what he liked to do and what he was made for.” And Chuck was made to steer wrestle. -

Back When They Bucked with Larry Clayman
Larry Clayman comes from a long line of rodeo clowns. He is third in the line of Claymans, including his daddy, Bill, and his granddaddy, Stanley, who were in the business of making rodeo fans laugh and protecting bull riders from angry bulls.
Clayman, who was chosen as the 1973 National Finals Rodeo bullfighter, was born in 1941 and “raised up” in the Missouri Ozarks, in the southwest part of the state. He worked his first rodeo in Mansfield, Mo., with his grandad at the age of 13. For two performances, he got paid twenty bucks, and “I thought, my gosh, I’ll never see another poor day,” he laughed.
Larry had already signed up for the Marine Corps when he was approached at an amateur rodeo in Okmulgee, Okla., by a legend in the rodeo world. World champion Jim Shoulders walked up to him, asking if he would clown rodeos for him. It “about floored” the barrelman to have the legend standing in front of him, but he had to decline, as his commitment was to the Marines came first. Shoulders told him about the rodeos held at Camp Pendleton in California, and that he should meet a Colonel who was working at Pendleton.
When Larry got out of boot camp and was assigned to Pendleton, he got to meet Colonel Ace Bowen, the man Shoulders had told him about. That acquaintance led to Larry meeting one of old original stock contractors in California, Andy Jauregui, an immigrant Basque sheep herder-turned contractor who was also the 1931 world champion steer roper. Andy owned J Spear Rodeo Co., and hired Larry to work his first professional rodeo. His dad and granddad had only worked amateur rodeos, but after being hired by Andy, Larry never worked another amateur. It was in Bishop, Calif., and he worked alongside Slim Pickens.
Larry clowned rodeos at Camp Pendleton, and then worked a lot of rodeos in southern California for Jauregui.
At the end of his four years in the Marines, he was stationed in Washington, D.C., at Marine Corps Headquarters, with top secret clearance, working for generals and colonels. He became acquainted with Howard Harris, Cowtown Rodeo, and began working his weekly rodeos in New Jersey.
While he was in D.C., Jim Shoulders was putting on a bi-weekly rodeo in Leesburg, Va., on a polo field. Larry clowned for him, as well as for other stock contractors up and down the East Coast: Foy and Reynolds, among others, in Virginia, Florida, Pennsylvania, Alabama, Delaware, all over. He worked for stock contractors across the country: Cotton Rosser, Harry Vold, the Alsbaughs, Keslers, Suttons, and Korkows,
After discharge from the Marines in 1965, he went back to California. Cotton Rosser’s Flying U Rodeo Co. and Any Jauregui’s J Spear combined to make the Golden State Rodeo Co., one of the biggest in the business. He clowned and fought bulls for them, which was a great thing, he said. “They had more rodeos than anybody, and kept me busy.”
Larry wasn’t working exclusively on the coasts. Throughout his career, which spanned three decades, he worked some of the biggest rodeos in North America: the Calgary Stampede, the National Western in Denver, Madison Square Gardens, the Cow Palace, the National High School Finals, the Indian National Finals, the College National Finals, and, in 1973, the National Finals Rodeo, which he worked with Jerry Olson
as the funnyman and Tommy Lucia
as barrelman.
Back in those days, the bullfighter and rodeo clowns were one and the same; the sport hadn’t evolved to where different people do each job. Larry was proud of his roles and loved doing both of them. “I was considered a good bullfighter, and took a lot of pride in that,” he said. “I loved to fight bulls. It was fun, exciting, and a challenge. And yet I loved to make people laugh.” He credits his grandpa with that trait. “It was natural for him to make people laugh.”
Larry was best known for his chimpanzee, Todo. He bought Todo in 1967 when he was six months old. For the next fifteen years, Todo traveled the rodeo road with Larry, making people laugh everywhere. One of his first acts was as a “doctor.” Larry would dress Todo in a white uniform with a red cross, with a red cross on his bag. Larry would be “down” from losing a shootout with the other rodeo clown, and his help would drive an “ambulance” into the arena, with Todo in it. Todo would jump out of the ambulance with his bag, stethoscope dragging on the ground, and bring the house down. He would give Larry CPR, jump on top of him, and make the monkey sound – “ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh.” Todo loved it. “He could hear the crowd roaring,” Larry said. “He got the biggest kick out of it.”Larry bullfighting 01 Sue at the 1973 NFR, Oklahoma City, OK – Gustafson Rodeo Photography San Diego, CA 1973, Thunder, Todo and Blaze – Foxy Photo arry steer wrestling in Springville, 1993 – Foxy Photo ull Fighting Championship, Rapid City, SD 1979. (left to right) Red Stegall, Wick Peth, Jon Taylor, Skipper Voss, Miles Hair, Bob Robertson, kneeling Larry Clayman, Kelly LaCosta, little girl is Amy Noe – Johnny’s Photo George Doak, Larry Clayman, and Jon Taylor at Gold Card Reunion in Las Vegas – photo courtesy of the family
Todo also Roman rode a team of horses, slapping one of the horses on the backside, throwing him off. As the horses made the circle around the arena, Todo would tumble across the circle and get back on.
Todo was Larry’s main act, but he had others like a poodle named Squirrely Shirley who had “beatcha” bugs… scratch in one place and they “beatcha” to a new spot. He had a border collie act, and had trained horses that laid down, sat up, bucked him off, counted, and, while they napped together, stole the blanket off of Larry.
One of his greatest honors was being part of a rodeo tour in Europe in 1970. It was organized by Buster Ivory, and the group, called Rodeo Far West, performed in Italy, Switzerland and France. Larry took Todo as one of his acts, and also drove truck, hauling equipment and livestock. The tour lasted three and a half months. World champion bull rider Freckles Brown was also part of the tour, and Larry got to be good friends with him during that time.
In 1977, Larry decided to put on a pro rodeo in Springfield, Mo, and then he began a pro rodeo in Branson, Mo., six nights a week, all summer long. Harry Vold and Jim Shoulders were hired as stock contractors, and Jerry Olson came with his dress acts and worked as the barrelman. He got so busy producing the rodeos that his clown/bullfighter career slowly phased out.
And Todo had to be put to sleep for safety reasons in 1980. That was the final straw. “I didn’t intend to quit clowning, but it broke the straw in me a little bit,” he said. I didn’t have the umph, the fire in my belly, to go back on the road.”
And he wanted to live a normal life. He announced a few rodeos, but began trucking as his second career. He’d driven truck as a kid, and loved being around them. At the age of 75, he’s still driving. “Everybody asks me why I don’t retire. Heck, I don’t want to. Somebody’s gotta keep America rolling,” he joked.
Larry had a son, Stan, who died in an auto accident, and Stan has two sons, Joseph and Isaac, who live in Arkansas. Larry has three other kids: Kimberly, Matthew, and Michael, and five grandchildren. He and his wife Renee have been married twenty years.
He remembers fondly his rodeo days, and has no regrets about his work. “I never dreamed I’d fight bulls at the (National) Finals. I never dreamed I’d have that kind of success. I loved the rodeo business and it was so good to me.” He met a lot of people, went a lot of places, and had some unbelievable experiences.
He worked rodeos in nearly every state, he remembers, and one thing he is proud of is that he never missed a performance due to injury or illness. “I take pride in that,” he said, even though he suffered broken arms, legs, and had teeth knocked out. “You just keep working.”





















