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Who doesn’t love a good rodeo?? 😍
10 条评论

I was a Team Penner when I was younger … 🤠I had a Great horse !!

That’s awesome !!

I get in trouble, because I root for the bulls...😏

😂

I spent my teenage years in Kansas. Rodeos were big time there. The best kind were on huge horse ranches. My first date was at one of these rodeos. I married her, had two boys, and stayed with her almost 20 years. Rodeos are great, but I don’t like the big commercial type.

We have one in our town

I miss the good old days when rodeo clowns dressed like clowns! Guess that’s the kid in me talking!

😂 no, it’s missed.

Bull riding may look like sheer recklessness, but to the people who do it (and the communities that support them) it serves several overlapping purposes: 1. A centuries-old test of horsemanship and nerve •The roots go back to 16th-century Mexican charreadas, ranch competitions where vaqueros proved their skill by riding fighting bulls (then called jaripeo)  . •As Anglo-American “cowboy” culture blended with these traditions in the late-1800s, bull riding became a staple of the modern rodeo program, symbolising bravery and mastery over powerful stock. 2. A professional sport with real money at stake •Today’s top league, Professional Bull Riders (PBR), pays a US $1 million bonus to its world champion and six-figure purses at its World Finals; even weekly “Velocity Tour” stops guarantee at least $20 k added money  . •Riders such as 2025 champion José Vítor Leme have now topped $8 million in career earnings, making it a viable (if very short-lived) profession . 3. Personal thrill, identity, and community •Many riders describe the eight-second ride as an unmatched adrenaline rush and a way to “prove something” to themselves and peers. •Local rodeos and county fairs still function as social hubs in rural parts of the U.S., Canada, Brazil, and Australia; young cowboys (and now cowgirls) gain status, friendships, travel opportunities, and sometimes college scholarships. •Media—from televised PBR events to shows like Yellowstone—has reignited broader fascination with Western life, drawing newcomers from suburban backgrounds as well . 4. A high-risk skill sport (with evolving safety) •Bull riding is statistically the most injurious event in rodeo: recent sports-medicine reviews put its injury density at ≈48 injuries per 1,000 competitor exposures, far higher than other rough-stock or timed events   . •Modern riders mitigate the danger with Kevlar-lined vests, full-face helmets, custom mouthguards, and specially trained rodeo clowns (bullfighters) who protect downed athletes, plus on-site trauma teams. •Still, the very danger is part of the appeal: success requires immense core strength, balance, split-second reactions, and mental composure. 5. Cultural debate and animal-welfare concerns •Critics argue the sport endangers both humans and animals; sanctioning bodies counter with veterinary oversight, weight limits on flank straps, and strict stock-handling rules. •This tension mirrors larger conversations about tradition vs. safety and ethics—yet for many participants the cultural, economic, and personal rewards continue to outweigh the risks. ⸻ In short: People ride bulls because it sits at the intersection of heritage, sport, ego, community, and the prospect—however slim—of life-changing prize money. The danger is real, but so are the structures and motivations that keep riders climbing over the chute gate.

That's why cowboys say, YEEHAW.
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