Bronc Riding the Old West Way
Elko, Nevada,
holds a special event that recreates the old-timer's way of
topping off the rough string. The Silver State Stampede
Association in Elko, Nevada, sponsors a special event in
conjunction with
its annual PRCA rodeo held in July. This event is
called Old West World Championship Bronc Riding.
In
2003, twenty top bronc riders came from several western states, out of remote
ranches and cows camps with names such as, State Line Camp,
Kitchen Meadows, White Horse Ranch, and Devil’s Corral to ride
the “bad ones”. These twenty bronc riders each put up a $400
entrance fee, with no stock charge, for a chance to ride for
$8,000 in prize money and a World’s Championship buckle.
Saddle bronc riding is the classic event in
professional rodeo. This Old West version of the event takes
bronc riding back to its origins when the big outfits sent their
top “bronco men” to town to compete against each other. At the
turn of the twentieth century, there were hundreds of cowboys
working on cow outfits in the Elko area. It was a practice for
neighboring cowboys to get together and ride the “rough string”
to see who was the best.
The Silver State Stampede is the
oldest rodeo in Nevada. The tradition of an annual rodeo in Elko
started in 1913, sponsored by G.S. Garcia, world famous bit,
spur, and saddle maker. Garcia, who owned the G.S, Garcia
Harness and Saddle Shop in Elko at that time, figured the rodeo
would get northern Nevada cowboys gathered for a good time, and
it would provide entertainment and income for the townspeople.
Bronc riding, at that time, had a minimum of rules. Of
course, the cowboy who made the wildest and showiest ride
usually took home the money. The hands in the region would plan
all year to attend this rodeo and try their luck. There have
been many saddle bronc riders who came out of Great Basin high
desert country to go on to the big time in the professional
rodeo circuit. Names like Marvel, Wines, Slagowski, Gardner, and
others are well known throughout the West in bronc riding
circles.
Fifty years ago, the Prunty Brothers trailed their
native bucking stock over 100 miles from the Diamond A Desert,
which straddles the Nevada-Idaho border near Charleston, Nevada,
to put on the Silver State Stampede. Continuing this tradition,
the bucking stock for the Old West Bronc Riding this year was
furnished by Wally Blossom from Owyhee, Nevada. The broncs used
were a mixture of big strong horses that had bucked before and
some young horses that had only been bucked out of a chute once
or twice before.
The riders used their own stock saddles and
a standard bucking horse halter and buck rein and the horses
were turned out from regular bucking horse chutes. The riders
rode in typical buckaroo style gear including chinks, some flat
hats, and occasionally, Garcia spurs. There were very few
broncs that did not buck well and it was a very even pen of
horses. Two experienced cowboy pickup men were used to pick up
the bronc riders and clear the horses from the arena. Two
experienced rough-stock judges marked the rides. Unlike the
original old time bronc riders, where the rider rode the horses
until they quit, this event was timed for an 8 second ride. And
the broncs did buck!!
The rules for Old West Bronc Riding
in 2003 were:
- Using a standard stock saddle, slick-fork saddle, or
slick-fork saddle with bucking rolls.
- Bucking rolls, sack or saddle blanket rolled up and tied
across the fork is allowed.
Riders can hold horn, cantle,
night latch (rope or safety strap tied through saddle gullet
to help the rider hold on), or rope strap.
- No spur-out required and loss of stirrup is allowed.
- No hobbling of stirrups (tying stirrups together under the
belly of the horse) or binds on stirrup leathers (tying
stirrup leathers to cinch and off-side billet).
- No “chapping” a horse at the gate (throwing or slapping a
pair of chaps or raincoat at the horse).
- Horses will be throat latched, at contractor’s discretion.
(“Throat latch” means tying the buck rein to the halter strap
that goes under the throat instead of tying to the halter ring
under the chin.)
- Same hand must remain on rein throughout ride.
- Fanning with hat is allowed. Quirts will not be allowed.
Coiled rope is allowed on saddle, attached by rope strap.
- Ride is for 8 seconds.
- Two well qualified rough-stock judges each score horse
from 1 to 25 points and rider 1 to 25 points (100 points total
possible for ride).
- The rodeo event is open to amateur and professional
riders.
All twenty bronc riders rode at a “long-go” kick-off
performance on Thursday evening. [print 3 or 4 or slide 11 bronc
riders getting ready] Before the bronc riding began, there was a
Calcutta auction held. Each bronc rider was auctioned off and
sold to the highest bidder. The Calcutta paid $1,470 to the
bidder who bought the winning rider for the evening. Rolly Lisle
of Bruneau, Idaho, [print 1] earned the winning bronc riding
score, which paid $1,000. Joe Heguy of Elko, Nevada, and Josh
Smith of Winnemucca, Nevada, split second and third places and
were paid $500 each.
The twelve highest scoring bronc riders
out of the original twenty in the “long go” came back on Friday
and Saturday evenings during the PRCA performance, six riders
each evening in a “sudden death “ ride. Based on a one-head
score, a champion was declared after the bronc riding ended on
Saturday. Cody Coucham of Lee, Nevada, and
Eli Bur of Victor, Idaho, had identical scores and split first and second places.
Each was awarded $2,400. Dan Hoots, Spring Creek, Nevada, placed
third and collected $1,200.
Since there was a split for the
first prize, in true Nevada cowboy fashion, the buckle winner
was decided by the flip of a coin. Eli Bur won the coin toss and
the World’s Champion Buckle. The $8,000 purse and the
championship buckle that these 20 bronc riders rode for makes
this, no doubt, the richest Old West Bronc Riding held anywhere
in the United States today.
Winner for 2004 Jack Payne

Silver State Stampede PRCA Rodeo and World's Championship Old
West Bronc Riding
July 8-9-10, 2004 Elko, Nevada
Sell out
crowds at the Elko County Fairgrounds watched real working
cowboys and buckaroos from around the west ride broncs with
their regular stock saddles and ropes for a lot of money,
prizes, and bragging rights. Forty ranch bronc riders signed up
for the Old West Bronc Riding during a three-day special event
at the Silver State Stampede in Elko, Nevada. There were working
ranch cowboys competing from Nevada, Utah, Wyoming, Oregon,
South Dakota, Colorado,
Washington, Montana and Texas.
Twenty
riders rode on Thursday night and ten rode on Friday in the
“long-go.” The top fourteen riders came back in the championship
“short-go” round on Saturday night. A Calcutta was held on
Thursday evening selling all forty of the bronc riders to the
highest bidders.
When the
scores were added up, Jack Payne, buckaroo from Jordan Valley,
Oregon, came out in first place. Jack received a check for
$6,000, a trophy buckle, and a Fredrick Remington bronze, “The
Outlaw,” donated by Western Horseman Magazine. Six places were
paid in this riding event. This makes the Old West Bronc Riding
in Elko, Nevada the richest riding event
of its kind in the United States.
Wally
Blossom from Owyhee, Nevada furnished the stock and
the horses did buck! First place Calcutta bidder was paid
$3200.
The Old
West is alive and well in the Great Basin of Northern Nevada.
The Silver State Stampede
committee would like to see more entries in the Old West Bronc
Riding event every year.
Sponsorship of the event and of contestants is encouraged.
Sponsors’ names will be announced during the rodeo
performances.
Elko has long been known as the heart of the
far West. Elko has been a leader in preserving our western
heritage. The Elko National Cowboy Poetry Gathering is a premier
western event held each year. The Western Folk Life Center
displays horse gear made by working buckaroos from throughout
the Great Basin and the West and is open to the general
public.
If you want to see that the Old West is alive and
well, come to Elko in July 2005 for the Silver State Stampede PRCA rodeo and Old West Bronc Riding.
For applications,
sponsorship, or more information concerning entries for this
event and the Stampede
contact the Silver State Stampede
Association at PO Box 5635, Elko, NV 89803 or call
J.M. Capriola
Company at 775-738-5816.
Article by Mike
Laughlin Photos by Lee
Raine
A version of this article appeared in the December, 2003 issue
of Western Horseman Magazine. |