Quantcast Renegade Rip
College Media Network

Rodeo is quite the fair fiesta

Marcinda Coil

Issue date: 10/10/07 Section: Features
Young women dressed in traditional Mexican clothing ave flags at the close of the Fiesta rodeo at the Kern County Fair.
Media Credit: Ally Armstrong
Young women dressed in traditional Mexican clothing ave flags at the close of the Fiesta rodeo at the Kern County Fair.

Speckles of white cowboy hats decorated the packed grandstand to watch the wonders of horsemanship at the Fiesta Rodeo in celebration of Azteca Day at the Kern County Fair, Sept. 30.
"No one else that I know could do what he is doing right now," said the Fiesta Rodeo announcer, as the Mexican world champion demonstrated horse etiquette by waltzing his horse with only his hand.
According to the announcer, the champion had to compete in seven different events in order to become a world champion.
Not only can a horse waltz, it can bow and walk on its front knees.
However, it was the grand entry that got rodeo spectators in the mood as the Spanish and English announcers introduced the Mexican, American and Californian flags, carried out by the No. 3 girls' drill team in California.
Besides horsemanship, team rope riding, Mexican-style bareback riding, calf riding, bull poker, American and Mexican style bull fighting, and an on-the-spot new game involving a bull entertained the audience.
The new game, which is yet to be named, involved a bull, six big rings, six men from the United States Marine Corps and an Australian man on stilts.
These men, besides the man on stilts, had to each stand in the middle of the rings while a bull ran around trying to knock them down.
The last man that stayed within his ring won the game.
Not all men were knocked down and dragged.
Some ran as if threatened by the bull's proximity. Other men challenged their courage by ducking as the bull charged at them.
The last man standing was the Australian on stilts, who just walked around and taunted the bull.
Bull Poker was another event that the Marine Corps participated in, again challenging their courage as well as challenging the bull.
This time it was four men who sat around a poker table, trying not to stir as the bull charged at each of them.
However, two men were knocked down immediately as the bull left his pen.
Two men were left sitting awhile as the bull seemed to be amused with other distractions until the rodeo clown enticed the bull into knocking down one more man.
Page 1 of 2 next >

Article Tools

Be the first to comment on this story

  • NOTE: Email address will not be published

Type your comment below (html not allowed)

  I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.

Advertisement

Poll

What do you recycle?
Submit Vote

View Results

Advertisement