Rodeos

Cowboy Up!: The History of Bull Riding

What started as an exhibition to entertain audiences has turned into the most popular-and dangerous-event in rodeo: bull riding. When a 150-pound man attempts to ride a two-ton bull with a killer instinct, it’s not a matter of whether the rider will get injured, but when, and how badly. As cowboy Jim Shoulders says, “You can’t stop something …

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Bulls, Broncs, & Buckles

“Bulls, Broncs, & Buckles” is a collection of 41 stories from 41 of rodeo’s most influential cowboys, stock contractors, and performers. Need help with the FBI? Clint Craig has you covered. Want to know what it’s like to meet your hero? Riata Ranch cowgirl Sarah Thompson can tell you. Stock contractor Kirsten Vold talks …

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Blacktop Cowboys: Riders on the Run for Rodeo Gold

Blacktop Cowboys chronicles the 2004 rodeo season through the eyes of several steer wrestlers trying to make it back to rodeo’s version of the Super Bowl, the National Finals Rodeo (NFR) in Las Vegas.   Steer wrestling is an adventure that entails riding into an arena at 25 mph, sliding off a horse while taking hold of a 500-pound …

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Barrel Racing for Fun and Fast Times: Winning Tips for Horse and Rider

Barrel racing, in which horse and rider gallop in a cloverleaf pattern around three barrels, is the fastest-growing rodeo event. Author Sharon Camarillo, a successful contestant-turned trainer, teacher, and commentator, presents a comprehensive program that takes the novice barrel racer from the process of choosing her horse up to preparation for and taking part in real races. More …

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Rodeo: Behind The Scenes at America’s Most Exciting Sport

“Campion’s photos and prose convey the gritty details of the sport, as well as the very American roots of rodeo. I urge anyone with an interest in rodeo to pick up a copy of this book. The photos alone are worth the price of the volume.” -Horsemen’s Yankee Pedlar More than seventeen million people attended rodeos in the …

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Cheyenne Frontier Days (Images of America)

Cheyenne Frontier Days originated in 1897 after a few individuals conceived a signature event as a way to revive the thrilling incidents and pictures of life in the Old West. Their vision included a celebration that would bring visitors from all over the world to the capital city of Wyoming. From its beginnings, Cheyenne residents valued a rural …

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Rodeo Time in Sheridan Wyo

Rodeo is a cornerstone of the Western experience and this book is an invaluable chronicle of one of the veterans of that tradition. The Sheridan-Wyo-Rodeo’s span of the better part of the 20th century and continuation into the 21st is documented here by author and Rodeo Board member Tom Ringley with complete details of its conception, …

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Chasing the Rodeo: On Wild Rides and Big Dreams, Broken Hearts and Broken Bones, and One Man’s Search for the West

From its roots as the quintessential Western pastime, rodeo has grown into an international, prime-time television sport. Steeped in tradition and spirit, the rodeo calls aspiring cowboys and cowgirls to its rough-and-tumble fame as they repeatedly risk their lives for eight seconds of triumph. In Chasing the Rodeo, Kip Stratton takes us into the addictive core of bull …

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Riding Pretty: Rodeo Royalty in the American West (Women in the West)

When the town of Pendleton, Oregon, held its first large-scale rodeo, it introduced a new kind of rodeo queen—not a traveling cowgirl performer but a young, middle-class woman from its own town. Riding Pretty examines the history, evolution, and significance of the community-sponsored rodeo queen, from the introduction of this new phenomenon at the 1910 Pendleton Round-Up to …

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