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Diary of a Rodeo Virgin . . .

A Patch regional director tells about her first time competing in rodeo. She tried steer deco and goat dressing at Hot Rodeo 2011.

It was literally my first rodeo. My sister Stef and her husband Jeff Curtis from Broomfield, Colo., have been competing and having fun in gay rodeo events for a couple of years.

When we learned the rodeo was coming to Banning, Stef asked me to compete with her in the goat dressing competition.

Yes, I am thinking what you are thinking, what is goat dressing? Turns out, it's a fast little event where two contestants compete to get men's fruit-of-the-looms on a goat in the shortest time.

So, I thought . . . sure, why not? How hard can it be?

Full disclosure: I'm 40 years old, 5'5" and not gay. What interested me about the gay rodeo was the people I had heard so much about from my sister and her husband, the community they had joined, and all the fun they have.

We all go to register for events on Friday evening, and I am greeted by rodeo veterans who were very welcoming to a "rodeo virgin" - my new title for the weekend.

Trust me when I say I had plenty of misconceptions on what gay rodeo was all about. This is actually a very serious rodeo, with  fantastic riders and competitors, some that have been in the national circuit for years. Gay, straight, male, female, Republican, Democrat, everyone is welcome to compete.

In the middle of registering, my mom and sister come up to me very excited and ask if I want to enter into the "steer deco" competition. In their exuberance, they oversimplified and said that my brother-in-law Jeff will hold a steer and I would simply tie a bow on its tail. Jeff wanted to enter and needed a partner.

So I thought . . . sure, why not? How hard can it be?

Let me repeat, I have never been to a rodeo. I don't even know what a steer is.

John Beck, one of the founders of the International Gay Rodeo Association asks me if I know how much a steer weighs. I'm thinking, it's like a bull right? Good lord, I'm in trouble!

So, it turns out a steer is a castrated young male bull. Just when I think I've had a
little luck, Jeff lets me know that the tail end may be a covered in baby bull dung.  Umm, okay, I'm a trooper. I will do this!  I go home that night and start looking all over for a pair of latex gloves, and by sheer luck, I have one pair. 

Okay, now I'm ready.

Saturday morning the events start at 9:30 a.m., I am on time and ready!

Calf roping on foot, team roping on horseback, and breakaway roping are the first three events . . . then the steer deco. Contestants are called down to the arena, and while walking to the contestant area, Jeff's giving me pointers. I figure I will just be calm and let the steer do what the steer's gonna do.

The first two teams head out and get into position. One team member is 10 feet from the chute and holding the rope that's tied to the steer. The other team member is another 30 feet behind the first person.

The judge drops the flag and the steers are pulled out past the 10-foot mark. Once the steer is past the 10-foot line, then the second team member runs up and tries to tie a ribbon on the tail of the steer.

That's right, I said "tries." Now, if the steer were just mellow and standing there it wouldn't be much of a problem. Since, they are being pulled out of the chute, their natural tendency is to resist, so they are bucking, kicking and trying to get away.

I see the first two teams go and the steers are jumping and bucking all over. I'm thinking, oh crap! I will just try my best and chances are the timer will run out long before I get close to the crazy thing.

The bovine gods must have been on my side, as we were in one if the last few groups to go and the steers were a little tired. The judge drops the flag, the steer is let out of the chute . . . I'm still thinking this is futile. 

Jeff gets the steer right next to him and I get right behind Jeff, and this is when I see the steer's whole rear end is covered in fresh dung. But I've got my latex gloves on and I tie that bow on and run back to tag the judge in 13.5 seconds!

The crowd is cheering. Okay so it's the few folks we brought along with us, but I can hear them nonetheless. Jeff's beaming and people are giving us accolades on our walk out of the arena. As I strip off my latex gloves and dispose of them, the other contestants were giving us a rub about how the steer just handed us his rear and made it easy.

Fine by me! I did it! I'm done! My gloves saved me. Seriously, had I been bare-handed, I would have seen the awesomeness of mother nature and would have walked away or just stood there dumbfounded.

Turns out for my first rodeo event, we finished fourth place on the first day! Not bad for a rodeo virgin, although it was mostly thanks to a tired steer and beginner's luck.

The day's events continue with pole bending, a "Grand Entry" parade, junior bullriding, and then the long-anticipated goat dressing.

Goat dressing is another timed event. Contestants have to sprint 50 feet to a tethered goat, put a pair of large men's fruit-of-the-looms on the goat, and run back to the starting line.

My sister has the whole thing figured out and is reminding me more for days - hold the underwear with the waistband side up and hold the holes so I can just slip them on. Oh, and run as fast as you can!

We are in the second heat, get up to the starting line and the announcer starts chatting it up, so I am looking at him when the flag drops and my sister takes off.

I hear the crowd laugh and just start to run as fast as I can. I'm not the competitive kind, but I don't want to let anyone down either.

My sister has to grab the goat's front feet, and again I have the rear end of some domesticated farm animal. I'm just slipping on the underwear, but the goat has dewclaws, like extra thumbs partway up their leg - and the tighty whiteys get caught.

I tug, she pulls, we get them on and high tail it back to the starting line, 17.01 seconds round trip. Not bad considering I wasn't even paying attention.

The funny thing was these goats were very friendly and once any team got the underwear on the goats, they would chase or follow the contestants as they ran back. It was really kind of cute.

The animal gods had already blessed me with one success and as usual, beginners luck wanes. We didn't place for goat dressing, and I was officially and quickly no longer a rodeo virgin.

The day continues with chute dogging, barrel racing, flag racing, wild drag, and bullriding. As this was also my first rodeo as a spectator, I was awed by the finesse, courage and tenacity of the participants in horse riding, speed and agility events as well as the bullriders and ropers. 

Don't be fooled by any titles, these were real cowboys and cowgirls giving it their all.

Jennifer Pastorini is the Regional Director for Patch in Southern California. She is based in Los Angeles. More images from Hot Rodeo 2011 are here and here.

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James Hampton May 21, 2013 at 11:05 am
Well said ATC. Like I mentioned, it will be interesting to see if any rental properties that CityRead More Council members, or others who work for the City, seem to always fall into the self inspect category. Unless the City posts an open listing of all rental properties and their status, those things always fly under the radar. The City must be in that "innovative" cash flow mode. They need cash, and viola! Things just pop up.
ATC May 21, 2013 at 10:50 am
Looks to me like a nice easy way for the city to squeeze even more money out of property owners, forRead More a problem that doesn't actually exist. There will indeed be a cost for these inspections (look at the last sentence of the agenda item). If there was a history of ongoing issues related to the quality of rental units, that might be another story, but nowhere in the agenda item is that claim made. So they are in effect creating a solution to a non-existent problem, and billing for that solution. What, the city isn't making enough money off of Mello Roos?
James Hampton May 21, 2013 at 10:37 am
Its not such a bad idea to make sure rental housing is safe. Renting out some of the brand new homesRead More is not a problem, but the older homes rented to many tenants should have a legal CO. However, one wonders if there is a cost for these inspections, who will cover it, and if those in City government will be favored with the self-inspect clause for rental property they own. It always happens.
Renee Schiavone (Editor) May 20, 2013 at 01:07 pm
Hi Rosie... I will ask about the weather bug! Thanks for the comment :)
Claire Frémont May 21, 2013 at 08:08 pm
You are right, they did delete your post. I noticed the Patch also is now allowing bloggers toRead More delete comments of people who post on their blogs. I wonder if that will only be for insulting comments, or if a blogger can just delete someone with a different opinion. Its the people who comment that give more information than any of the articles do.
ATC May 21, 2013 at 01:18 pm
And the new "fornmat" continues to disappoint. Of course Victor deleted his insultingRead More response to Jeremiah, but then the powers that be deleted my lengthy response to Victor, which also had a number of salient points regarding Jeremiah's post. Seems the "censorship" is a bit more zealous with this new format, eh? Oh well, I predict a major decrease in the local voices that made the Patch one of the "go to" sites for local information, commentary, and debate. Sad, really, as I learned a significant amount of info about my community here in the past. No more, obviously.
Washy May 21, 2013 at 05:44 am
I agree albeit easy to figure out how to do things, I liked the list on the side to track on goingRead More conversations. This new method makes you have to get email alerts to know when someone replied. I guess if less traffic is what your advertisers were looking for its what you got
Ellen Carr May 21, 2013 at 04:56 pm
Nice to hear a positive note about a Banning High graduate!
Nancy Hunt May 20, 2013 at 02:06 pm
Wonderful! Hope this is in the local paper and Press Enterprise too! Congrats to Carl and hisRead More family!
Renee Schiavone (Editor) May 20, 2013 at 12:38 pm
Congrats to Carl!!
Victor S Dominguez May 21, 2013 at 12:11 pm
Steve, I was not aware of the lecture until the earlier post. Like you, I am learning the new siteRead More and how to navigate it. I was trying the new tools, Willie Boy was the topic of input, no agenda. So yes in the future I will have more meat and less potatoes :}
steve l May 21, 2013 at 12:02 pm
so this was a commercial for the lecture? i really didnt know, what with the new format, if i justRead More wasnt finding the article. i would have preferred some sort of story.
Victor S Dominguez May 21, 2013 at 11:56 am
James, it got you to talk about it. Now look, information was shared and more people are aware ofRead More the speaking event on June 15. Not bad for just posting a picture. I wonder how many people googled more information as well just from this picture. James thanks for your input, it`s people like you that make me relevant ;]
Jeremiah Price May 20, 2013 at 06:56 am
Renee - I agree 100% with Lloyd on this and you will find all the posters who used to make the PatchRead More an interesting read are going elsewhere. I know you are stuck with what they give you, but you need to stop defending this change and address it's failure. Holding our comments does no good - giving them to the people you deal with AFTER the site becomes set in stone will not work. Even the news stories don't rotate fast enough - the same things are on the page that were there after the changeover. I won't be using the new features - they are not nearly as user-friendly as you try to portray and new responses to blogs and new comments are hidden. If they even show up - many of my comments on this new format have posted and then disappeared. Not a good move and it has hurt your paper. Jeremiah
Renee Schiavone (Editor) May 19, 2013 at 10:14 pm
Hi James, Actually all the Patch sites are switching over to this format, as the west coast wasRead More just the latest roll-out. They tested this model on the east coast, and most of the sites do have our "2.0" format now. However, they do encourage us to forward on user feedback about features you guys like— and don't like. I am saving all these comments to pass on to our teams. I appreciate your thoughts and I hope you will come to take advantage of some of the new features (as you already have with this board posting.) Patch is all about getting the community involved, and that's why there are now more ways for people to post, and why the blogs are now in the main column.
Lloyd White May 19, 2013 at 05:31 pm
James, I couldn't agree more. My posts on the old format generated many more comments than with theRead More new format. Sometimes my posts wouldn't make it to the front page and no one saw them until I asked the editor to move them to the blog column. Now they get lost in the news column and they drop off faster. Newcomers to the patch won't know whose blogs to go and check out. I hope the patch will find away to return the focus to the blogs, you are right there is no difference from the newspaper sites now.
ATC May 21, 2013 at 11:53 am
Never mind the fact that genetically modified crops have saved countless thousands worldwide fromRead More starvation, right? Let's all hold hands and sing "Kumbaya!".
Tina West May 17, 2013 at 03:12 pm
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bRxJrtmGPbg Join us! http://on.fb.me/ZUxe3o Find cities alreadyRead More participating: http://bit.ly/ZTDsk8
Tina West May 17, 2013 at 03:09 pm
Join us for the March! We will have picket signs that clearly state our different perspectives. WeRead More will have brochures that explain the cause. Distributing fliers before the march is a HUGE part of this. Please tell your neighbors about this... www.march-against-monsanto.com
bryce May 19, 2013 at 11:27 am
TOTALLY AGREE 100% too !! Especially with Mr. Price regarding replying to individual comments, vs.Read More these big 'ol run-on threads -- & the ginormous ad panel sucks too...Patch doesn't feel as intimate as before. It was cute, handy, & informative ...Now it thinks its Facebook, ....Errrr..... :(
Renee Schiavone (Editor) May 15, 2013 at 03:28 pm
I personally don't have too much control over the way the site looks and functions, since it's partRead More of Patch overall. However, I am forwarding all your suggestions on to our design team and appreciate all the feedback-- positive and negative! And Jeremiah, I've asked around about the FB commenting thing some more, and there really are no plans to do away with our Patch logins. The FB comments are just meant to be a "plus" for those who want them... and others don't have to touch :)
Jeremiah Price May 15, 2013 at 03:01 pm
100% agree with that! Plus I liked the way that in the old one you could reply to an individualRead More comment. This one only lets you post at the end of the thread. Pretty sure she has started using the Facebook comments program, which by itself will keep me from posting. If the old one doesn't come back I will most likely be saying sayonara. I pretty much like everything else, but this was the real draw of the Patch and it's strong point - especially during the fire. Advertisement pane is about 10% too large as well and should be on the other side of the page to look right. Renee is trying though, which is appreciated. I just hope she listens about the comments section. Jeremiah
Renee Schiavone (Editor) May 14, 2013 at 01:38 pm
Congrats!
Kathleen Embry May 8, 2013 at 12:14 am
Congrats to you and yours, make sure you put as much time and effort into your marriage as you willRead More in planning the perfect wedding! Invite God in you will surprised what he knows. I am so happy for you. Kathy Embry (Nikki's Grandmother's friend on her mother's side)