Professional rodeo horses are bred to buck
By Cindy Schonholtz
As with any other industry or sport that utilizes animals, the sport of rodeo
must continually educate the public about the care and handling of the livestock
used in rodeos. Critics of rodeo often show many areas where they do not understand
the sport of rodeo and the livestock involved, but the bucking horse seems to
be the most misunderstood animal in rodeo.
How do you make them buck?
In rodeo, we dont make horses buck, we utilize horses that already have
an inclination to buck. To understand this statement, it is important to know
the origin of bucking horses. Approximately 40 percent of rodeo bucking horses
are in the sport because they have continued to buck their owners and riders
off. They come from the racetrack, feed lots, ranches and just about every other
equine discipline. These horses are considered too dangerous for other equine
activities, yet they are perfect for the events of bareback riding and saddle
bronc riding. Stock contractors, the owners of rodeo livestock, continuously
get phone calls from anxious owners who cannot seem to train the buck out of
a horse, but want to insure the horse receives a good home.
Another way bucking horses make their way into professional rodeo events is
that they are bred specifically to buck.
Just as there are two ways a horse makes its way into rodeo, there are two
types of bucking horses. The type of horse used for bareback riding varies from
the type used in the saddle bronc-riding event. Bareback horses are smaller
animals with a wilder bucking style while saddle bronc horses are generally
larger with a more classic style of bucking that allows the rider to sit up
in the saddle and get a rhythm with his feet forward from the horses neck
and back to the cantle of the saddle. Many saddle bronc horses are draft horse
crosses, these large sturdy animals have the perfect classic bucking action
as well as the strength and durability that make them excellent athletes for
long-term careers in the sport of rodeo.
Classic Velvet is the perfect example of the horses that have come to rodeo
because they bucked. A registered Quarter Horse and grandson of a running Quarter
Horse named Three Bars, Classic Velvet was originally bred as a team roping
horse in Santa Rosa, California. After a time it was determined that he bucked
too much for that task and he was sold to Calvin Milhous, a cousin of Richard
Nixons. Milhous tried in vain to train the horse to drive (pull a cart)
and finally gave up. Cotton Rosser, a famed California stock contractor, was
called to try the horse as a bucking horse and knew almost immediately he would
be a star. The great gelding bucked for 17 years in the PRCA and was named the
Bareback Bucking Horse of the Year in 1981. At the age of 24 he
was retired to the Pro Rodeo Hall of Fame in Colorado Springs. Healthy, with
barely a scratch on him and completely sound, Classic Velvet spent three years
at the Pro Rodeo Hall of Fame in Colorado Springs before finally retiring to
Larry Mahans picturesque ranch in Guffey, Colorado, where he lived out
his days in a pasture with other retired rodeo stock. Khadafy Skoal, a champion
bucking horse from Hank Franzens Wyoming Ranch, is another registered
Quarter Horse that had better characteristics for a bucking horse than a saddle
horse. After bucking off one too many ranch hands on a cattle ranch in Wyoming,
Khadafy was sold to Franzen and has racked up the awards for his bucking talent
since.
Breeding for bucking
Many of todays rodeo stock providers have developed sophisticated breeding
programs to allow them to breed horses specifically to buck. Of the 60 Professional
Rodeo Cowboys Association stock contractors, about 40 operate some type of livestock
breeding program. Some of the finest bucking horses in the world of professional
rodeo today are products of these Born to Buck programs. Ike Sankey
of Sankey Rodeo Company, a former national finals bareback and saddle bronc
rider, ventured into the rodeo livestock breeding business in the mid-1980s
with a mission to prove that horses can be born buckers.
Race horse people for years have spent untold dollars trying to raise
race horses, Sankey said. I think for a long time people went the
other way trying to breed the buck out of them, and I think they were pretty
successful. Were just trying to go the other way and breed it back into
them.
A big part of Sankeys effort can be linked to Custer, a great bucking
horse stud. Sankey said Custer was a solid, middle of the road horse that always
bucked but was never sensational. Because he was not a spectacular bucking horse,
no one knows why his colts are so much better than others. However, with Custer
as the foundation sire, Sankey claims that 85 percent of the colts born into
his breeding program grow up to become successful bucking horses. Nowhere was
this more evident that at the 1996 National Finals Rodeo where Sankeys
17 selected horses included 15 from his carefully planned breeding program and
nearly 30 of the bucking horses competing at that national were sons, daughters,
grandsons or granddaughters of Custer. At the 1997 finals, Sankey hauled 19
broncs to Las Vegas from his ranch in Cody, Wyoming.
Custers bloodlines dont only run through the Sankey string, but
they are strong throughout rodeo. Among his famous progeny are Bobby Joe Skoal,
a daughter owned by legendary stock contractor Harry Vold, who was 1991-93 PRCA
Saddle Bronc of the Year, and Skitso Skoal, a granddaughter who was 1994 Saddle
Bronc of the Year.
One of the best indicators of the suitability of horses to the sport of rodeo
is their longevity of life and career. High Tide, a legendary bucking horse,
bucked off a 19-year old-cowboy at the national finals when he was 32 years
old. Sippin Velvet, a descendent of Man O War, bucked at the National
Finals Rodeo 18 times and was retired to a standing ovation during the 1994
National Finals Rodeo at he age of 25. The Calgary Stampede Rodeo Company, one
of the oldest breeding programs in rodeo, include many older horses in their
list of top bucking horses. A few of these older champion broncs currently bucking
include: 21-year-old Go Wild, 21-year-old Kloud Grey, and 24-year- old Guilty
Cat.
Spurs, straps, and horse welfare
The Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association takes the welfare of all animals
used in PRCA sanctioned events seriously, and the bucking horses are no exception.
Many questions often arise about the equipment used on bucking horses. Riders
in both the saddle bronc and bareback riding use spurs while riding. All spurs
used in these events must be dulled and the rowels (the wheel-type devices on
the end of the spur) must be able to roll along the animals thick hide;
no locked rowels are allowed. Riders are disqualified if their spurs are too
sharp of if the animal is injured in any way due to the riders actions.
The flank strap is used in bucking events to encourage a bucking horse to kick
higher. The flank strap must be lined by fleece or neoprene and placed loosely
around the flank area of the horse, just in front of the back legs. To pull
a flank strap tightly would restrict or stop the motion of the animals, quite
the opposite of what is asked of rodeo bucking horses. Horse flank straps are
equipped with a quick release mechanism that allows the rodeo pickup men to
release the strap when the ride concludes. Veterinarians familiar with rodeo
events and equipment have testified that the flank strap does not injure or
cause pain to the animal.
Overall, the animal welfare program employed by the PRCA is extensive. More
than 60 rules are in place to govern the care and handling of livestock at PRCA
rodeos. Professional judges enforce these rules and inspect all livestock before
a competition; if any animal is not healthy and fit, that animal will not compete.
PRCA rules also require a veterinarian on-site. These on-site, independent veterinarians
are allowed by PRCA to conduct surveys to calculate the percentage of the rate
of injury to livestock competing at PRCA rodeos. The latest survey was conducted
at 57 rodeos during the 2000 PRCA rodeo season. Out of 71,743 animal exposures,
38 injuries occurred. This calculates to a rate of injury of .00052, or five-hundredths
of one percent.
As the sport of rodeo continues to grow in popularity, the care of the livestock
involved will be under greater scrutiny. The PRCA and other rodeo associations
will continue to make the welfare of all rodeo livestock an important part of
the rodeo industry.
For more information about rodeo, see the NAIA
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