In 2014 an old friend of mine was honored in Mexico for his
pioneering leadership in promoting the rodeo sports in that country. The news release credited Carlos Ochoa for
his dedicated work over the past 40 plus years, inspiring rodeo popularity in a
country that always revered ranching and horsemanship, but whose style of
competition was very different. In his
homeland, the Charro was, and is, the historic icon of the competing horseman
and “ranchero”. Over the years, Carlos
had a lot to do with bringing another venue to Mexico. As I read the article, my memories found
their way back to the Chihuahua rodeo of 1966.
Carlos and I became good friends during my first year at New
Mexico State University, along with a number of other Mexican students, mostly
from Chihuahua, coming off ranches and farms to attend the College of
Agriculture and become proud Aggies.
Over the years NMSU became every bit as much Chihuahua’s Ag School as
our own. Carlos was the consummate
Mexican gentleman; self assured, energetic, enthusiastic, able to handle any
situation well, whether an academic project, formal public meeting, or
pugilistic barroom contest.
NMSU was populated by plenty of restless cowboys, and Carlos
took advantage of the opportunity by inviting a bunch of us to enter the rodeo
he was organizing in Chihuahua City. My
college roommate, Ron Lamb, and I decided this sounded like an adventure with
our names on it, especially with Carlos’ offer of fun, hospitality, culture,
and roughstock. That was enough for us,
so several carloads of “hats & boots” college students lit out for a rodeo
300 miles south. None of us had ever
been to Chihuahua, and few spoke Spanish, but these were minor impediments,
compared to the notion of roping & riding in an exotic setting.
In those days, the highway to Chihuahua was a long narrow
two-lane no-shoulder pavement with lots of wide buses and big trucks, so there
was sure no sleeping in the small caravan of cars on our Friday after-dark
trek. We hit town sometime around
midnight and spotted a sign with the name of the hotel Carlos told us to look
for, checked in, and turned in. Morning
light introduced us to a sprawling city of plastered buildings on meandering
streets that all seemed to lead to a distant skyline dominated by the twin
steeples of a massive old cathedral, declaring the city’s plaza. Carlos arrived, and over breakfast laid out
the plan for the rest of the weekend.
The rodeo was going to be just one performance on Sunday
afternoon, so our Saturday was filled with touring, matched horse races,
mariachi music, food, and an abundance of beverage. The local crowds were hospitable, getting a
curious kick out of this little band of Aggie vaqueros. That night, at the hotel, the music didn’t
end until sometime in the late dark hours with a couple of gringos standing on
a table, dramatically belting out vocal injustice to a traditional corrida (no,
not me).
Finally, the next day, we were about to get on with what we had come south for. We arrived late morning at a traditional keyhole shaped arena for the charreada that had been modified to hold an American style rodeo. It was pretty small, at most 30 yards across the round part with some homespun bucking chutes cobbled together on one side, and a roping box in the end of the long part of the key. A shaded grandstand surrounded the walled circular area, which was already filling with spectators and, of course, an always-present band of musicians.
Ron, Ralph Murray, Victor Karnes, Charlie Oney, and I
strolled over to the corrals to get a look at the roughstock. The bucking strings we’d been around in our
short careers were typically gentle, or at least unafraid of their two-legged
opponents, but when we stepped up on the fence, these horses fled to the other
side of the pen, bunching up in a corner.
The pen of bulls was not so timid. They were mostly crossbred brahmas,
but not very big, apparently somebody’s range bulls. It was hard to say whether they would have much
buck in them, but they were sure showing some snort. We found out later that they were off a
couple of area ranches, but the horses were wild, having been trapped in the
mountains and brought here for the event.
This was going to be interesting.
The atmosphere was festive as the crowd grew, music played
and abundant BBQ and beer was consumed.
The folks were from all walks; ranchers and cowboys, folks from the
city, Mormons, Mennonites, rich, poor; all there to see what this American
style rodeo was about. Time didn’t mean
much, and there was no way to know when everything would get started. It didn’t really matter, other than the
longer it took, the later we’d be getting back home for class the next
day. College wasn’t going to wait on us,
and our plan was to head north as soon as the rodeo was over.
In their own time, things started happening. The crowds filled the stands and workers
started filling the four hastily built bucking chutes. Instead of drawing for horses, we drew chute
numbers. As we climbed up with our
riggings, the horses started trying to climb out. Small by bucking horse standards, the horses
rattled around and fought the chutes, making pulling the rigging and finally
getting set to call for the gate a dangerous exercise in itself. When the gates opened it was a wild show,
with some running, some bucking, some falling, all hard to score. Each ride was accompanied by the shouts of
the spectators and the trumpets of the mariachi. The quality of a high scoring ride was pretty
much lost on this crowd, but the bigger the crash, the more thunderous the
applause of the packed grandstand. Among
the biggest crowd pleasers was Ron’s ride when the chute gate came off its
hinges and all three, high spurring rider, wild bucking horse, and tumbling
pipe chute-gate all piled out together into the center of the tiny arena. Had prizes been paid for the wildest wreck,
Ron’s ride would have been voted the winner.
My first horse wouldn’t stop fighting whenever he felt me on
his back, so I had to take my hand-hold while standing over him and then get
set as the gate opened. I was off the
rigging a little when we came out and didn’t know if I got him marked out. The horse was small and not very stout, but
jumped high with head out of sight, twisting all over the place under me. I spurred over his neck, turning sideways in
the rigging just as we hit the wall of the grandstand. Next thing I knew I was on the ground, against
the wall, scrambling out from under the bronc as he bucked away while the crowd
applauded and the mariachis played.
Victor and the other bull riders weren’t having much problem
making their rides, but had their hands full getting away from these
high-horned head slinging brutes that made up for their lack of mass with
testosterone driven anger. The same
principal of proportional applause-to-wreck applied, as one after another found
themselves in a race for the fence after their ride.
The calf ropers were using borrowed horses because of the
problems they would have had getting their own across the border and then back
home. Pat Trujillo caught and tied his
calf in the long part of the keyhole-shaped arena, and few spectators saw it,
so the rules were changed on the spot that the roper wasn’t allowed to catch
until he was in the main part, in full view of the crowd. The calves were good, running fast and giving
the ropers a good shot at the catch and tie-down.
The riders and ropers were able to get two or three head
that afternoon, and all came away without serious injury, so for all the Aggie
cowboys it had been a good run. We piled
back in our cars and turned them northward, and by the time we pulled off the
highway onto the NMSU campus sometime in the dark on Monday morning, we were
completely spent from a day we couldn’t have made much longer.
So went Chihuahua’s second annual Carlos Ochoa Rodeo,
probably no less wild and exciting as the one a year previous. It wasn’t really a rodeo as much as an
exhibition and, looking back, I don’t recall if they were even judging the
rides, but for Carlos it was a good start as he strove to introduce this new
style of competition to Mexico.
Today, almost 50 years later, the American style of rodeo is
entrenched in the culture of Mexico, thanks to Carlos’ early exhibitions, wild
and unconventional as they were, and his decades of unremitting support and
promotion. Mexican cowboys and cowgirls
are now prominent in both their own country and the United States, expressing
skill and bearing common to the typical world-class rodeo athlete. Some are champions and role models in both
countries.
In that single week-end experience, a few of us had the
privilege to see the early seeding of a nationally recognized sport in Mexico,
and to have a special appreciation for the dedication of those who brought it
into prominence.
Thanks, Carlos. Saludos, y Que le vaya bien…
Myles Culbertson grew up in the ranching and cattle business in New Mexico. In his varied career he has been engaged in agriculture, banking and international trade and is the former Executive Director of the NM Livestock Board.
Myles' story reminds me of some folks I hadn't thought of in years and some fond memories.
For one thing, I'm a married man today because of Carlos Ochoa.
Fast forward six years. During Easter break in the Spring of 1972 a bunch of us loaded up to spend the weekend at Carlos Ochoa's ranch. Among the group was a pretty little thing by the name of Sharon Rose Chesher. I wasn't exactly on my best behavior that weekend, but she took a liking to me anyway and we were married in May of 1973.
Fast forward 20 plus years. I was invited by the Chihuahua Cattle Growers to receive an award during their annual convention which was held during their State Fair. And during the State Fair you naturally have a rodeo and Carlos Ochoa was the arena director. The rodeo announcer introduced the Governor of Chihuahua and then introduced me. About thirty minutes later he introduced me again. And after awhile he introduced me again. If you were a friend of Carlos Ochoa, you were more important than the Governor!
3 comments:
That's right, Frank. If you were his friend you were indeed "more important than the governor!"
Is "Don Carlos Ochoa", out of respect, for all of us that were members of the AVR, asociacion de vaqueros de rodeo, that he wisely directed for many years and cemented the mexican rodeo
Love this story!I love all things rodeo, one of the best parts of my childhood. I loved the days when we would go back and forth to Mexico as if it were just an extention of here.Such good friends, good times, special memories. Thank you for posting this!
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