Rodeo Life

Tag: rodeo

  • Back When they Bucked with Richard Claycomb

    Back When they Bucked with Richard Claycomb

     

    Richard, (Dick), Claycomb, was born June 6, 1939. He spent the first two years of his life in a two-room cabin in Fox Park, Wyo. “My dad was hauling logs from Fox Park, Wyoming to Ft. Collins, Colorado. Mom hauled water from the creek.” The family moved to Cheyenne when his dad got a job at the UP Railroad. Dick decided to take on a paper route when he was ten, at first riding a bike, and then switching to horseback, and extending the route from 22 to 145 papers. “I paid $15 for the horse,” he said. “I’d ride seven miles every night – that’s where I learned how to ride.” His mare stepped on a coffee can and severed a tendon, which ended the paper route. Dick’s next job was as an apprentice mechanic and he received his mechanic license.
    Dick got his first taste of rodeo in Pine Bluffs, Wyo., at a high school rodeo, when he was 16. “I won the bull riding and was second in the bareback riding. I got $47 and I was hooked.” He won the All Around saddle at the Cheyenne High School Rodeo riding bareback horses and bulls and after he graduated from high school, he continued to rodeo in the summer and packed hod in the winter. “Packing hod for brick layers kept me strong,” he said.
    Dick met his wife, Darlene Stumpf, when they were seniors in high school. They married in 1958 and they worked winters and rodeoed summers and later went to college. “Tracy was born in 1964 and Troy was born in 1966. Tracy is an attorney for Office Depot in Idaho, and she has two middle school daughters, Maureen and Emery. Troy is a principal in Gillette, Wyo., and he has three children, Sophie a senior, Lainee is a freshmen, and Jess a sixth grader. He operates a fly in fish camp in Saskatchewan, Canada in the summer. I go up there every summer to help and fish, mostly fish.”

    Full story available in September 1, 2014 issue.

     

  • Back When They Bucked with Ferrell “Flashbulb” Butler

    Back When They Bucked with Ferrell “Flashbulb” Butler

    Ferrell “Flashbulb” Butler hadn’t a penny left to pay his entry fees. So the calf roper took out his camera and started shooting rodeos, selling the photos for a dollar and a half apiece in the 1960s. Each click of the lens drew him closer to the acclaim he receives today for the moments of rodeo history captured with his German Rolleiflex T camera.
    Butler, born in 1936 in Davidson, Okla., was the only child of his parents, UJ and Hazel Butler. His family later moved to Mesquite, Texas, and young Butler began competing in rodeo when he was 15. “I wanted to rope calves like all the other kids in the ’50s. I wanted to ride bulls, too, but that didn’t last long.” Butler went on to compete on the Arlington State College rodeo team. He was a charter member of several rodeo associations, but much of the time he competed in his hometown in Mesquite. It was there that 24-year-old Butler began his photography, learning the trade as he went. “I started taking pictures for money and the picture taking got plumb out of hand!” In 1960 at the NFR in Dallas, Texas, Butler met rodeo photographer DeVere Helfrich, future friend and mentor. Helfrich pioneered the technique of classic saddle bronc pictures capturing the rein picked up and the horse stretched out, jumping and kicking.

    Full story available in the July 15th edition.