Some 13-year-old girls like wearing frilly dresses and have a cat or dog as a pet.
Cheyenne Martin, 13, prefers wearing jeans and western shirts and keeps bulls as pets.
These are mean bulls that weigh almost a ton and will toss cowboys who try to ride them off their backs and then try to gore or trample the would-be rider.
The Tharptown School eighth-grader from Mt. Hope began raising rodeo bulls three years ago. She now owns six that compete in rodeos around the Tennessee Valley as well as dozens of cows and calves.
So far this year, cowboys have managed to ride only two of her bulls for the eight seconds required to earn a score from rodeo judges.
“Everybody who tries to ride them talks about how good my bulls are,” she said. “They tell me my bulls are tough to ride.”
The teen begins preparing her bulls for rodeos when they are 1 year old by placing an 18-pound dummy on their back and allowing them to buck it off. She then uses a 25-pound dummy and eventually a real cowboy.
“The first couple of times somebody tries to ride them, the bulls usually don't know what to do,” Martin said. “But once they realize that if they buck, jump and twist around enough, they can throw that cowboy off their back. They become tough to ride.”
The more a bull bucks, jumps and twists during a rodeo, the more points earned by a cowboy who is able to stay on for 8 seconds. Bull riders prefer the bulls to be active and downright ornery.
Martin said she never turns her back on her bulls when she is working around them.
“Sometimes when they are out in the pasture, they will run at you,” she said. “Sometimes when you have them in a stable or a holding pen, they will snort when you walk by. They make me nervous sometimes, but I always keep my eyes on them.”
Her father, Jim Martin, said the teen has been around cattle and rodeos all her life and knows how to avoid being injured by bulls.
“She knows what she is doing,” he said. “She knows a bull can hurt you, and she respects them. She knows the danger and knows how to take care of herself around the bulls.”
In addition to raising bucking bulls, the teen also raises and trains ponies.
She competes in barrel-racing competitions at rodeos and for a time thought about riding bulls.
“When she was younger, she wanted to ride a bull,” Jim Martin said. “I was able to talk her out of it. I tried riding a bull one time and that was enough for me. There's no animal at the rodeo any tougher to ride than a bull.”
Her bucking bull business could pay her way to college. Bucking bulls sell for about $700 for an unproven calf to more than $30,000 for a rodeo star.
“She likes to reinvest the money she earns from her bulls and ponies back into her business,” Jim Martin said. “She already has a pretty good bank account from the money she has earned.”
The teen spends time with her cattle and ponies every day and makes sure they are in top notch condition at all times, Jim Martin said.
“She makes sure her animals never want for anything,” he said. “She's a good
rancher.”
Having grown up on a farm and being a member of 4-H, Cheyenne said farming and taking care of animals
comes naturally.
She plans to continue her bucking bull business as an adult and hopes that some of her bulls will be selected for professional level rodeos such as those sponsored by the Professional Bull Riders
organization.
“She's off to a good start,” Jim Martin said. “She has some good bulls and they keep getting better every year. Several people have told us she has some bulls that have the potential to move up to the pro circuits some day.”
Jim said a rodeo bull's career typically last from the time they are 3 years old until they are 6 or 7. The good ones will be put out to pasture after their rodeo career in hopes of getting calves that are just as good. Bulls that fail to live up to expectations in rodeos are typically slaughtered to become ground beef.
“Most people don't realize it, but when they eat a hamburger, they might be eating and old rodeo bull,” Jim Martin said.
Monday, July 4, 2011
Been happening for years !
Bulls, not riders, under steroids cloud in bull riding
By Josh Peter, Yahoo! Sports
October 2, 2007
The steroids scandals have claimed the latest and perhaps most unlikely suspect yet.
The sport of bull riding may start drug testing some of its athletes – not the riders, the bulls.
As if the four-legged beasts that weigh up to 2,200 pounds don't have enough testosterone, some bull owners allegedly are injecting the animals with anabolic steroids.
"Oh, I think damn near everybody's doing it," said Jerry Nelson, one of the sport's top bull owners. "It ain't going to slow down. It's just like baseball, football, whatever. It's not going to slow down until you legislate (against) it."
Gary Warner, a prominent veterinarian in the world of bull riding, said he recently received calls from two bull owners asking him to look into the possibility of drug testing what some in the industry refer to as "the bovine athletes." Warner intends to bring the matter up for discussion at this month's World Finals in Las Vegas.
The PBR board of directors met Sept. 20 to discuss the implementation of an anti-steroids policy, tour CEO Randy Bernard said. The board will meet with Warner and PBR's attorney before fine-tuning the language, according to Bernard, who said the policy likely will call for the testing of the top-performing bulls at each event.
Gilbert Carrillo, a former rider who now raises bulls, said he would welcome drug testing considering what he's seen on the circuit.
"When you got a 2-year-old bull or a 3-year-old bull looking like Arnold Schwarzenegger, there is some form of steroid there," he said.
The practice dates back at least to the late 1990s, when Nelson said steroid use was so rampant he decided to give it a try. He said his bulls became more aggressive and muscular but also developed side effects. For some, hair color changed. Others grew sterile, jeopardizing their value as potential breeders.
Nelson said he promptly swore off steroids, but how many other trainers followed suit is a matter of debate.
Warner, who works with some of the sport's leading trainers, said inquiries from bull owners about steroid use has dropped substantially in the past 10 years to the point where few in the industry even have discussed it since he got the recent calls about the possibility of drug testing. Though there is no anti-doping policy for livestock in the Professional Bull Riders tour – the major leagues of bull riding – or the rest of the rodeo world, the use of anabolic steroids in bulls is unapproved and illegal.
Despite what steroids might do for major-league sluggers and NFL linebackers, Warner said he sees no competitive advantage by pumping bulls full of steroids. Yes, he said, steroids promote muscle gain, but only if you work out.
"The case in point is, gee, we're not sticking a bull underneath the weight rack and doing 700-pound squats," Warner said.
But suspicions of drug use heightened in 2004 when someone found empty syringes outside the pen that housed the bulls during the Professional Bull Riders World Finals in Las Vegas. The syringes could have been used to inject vitamin B-12 shots, which are approved for bulls. But Don Kish, president of American Bucking Bull Inc., took renewed concerns to the board of directors.
"We brought it up, passed some rules and then found out we passed some rules we didn't have the ability to enforce," he said.
Apparently the group couldn't settle on a definition of an illegal drug, considering some of the medications allegedly abused are narcotics approved for therapeutic use in bulls. But Warner said the industry could set permissible thresholds for approved medications and employ the same technology that is used to test racehorses to test bulls.
The root of alleged cheating in bull riding is – what else? – money. This year ABBI will pay out more than $1.6 million in competitions for bulls between ages 2 and 4.
Carrillo, who retired from riding last year to focus on raising bulls, said owners find themselves asking the same question.
"How can I make my bull perform better than it's already performing?" Carrillo said. "The first thing that comes to mind is steroids. They think steroids will make a bull jump over the moon.
"It does make a bull gain weight quicker, get more muscle mass quicker and make their performance a little better, but not as much as people think it would."
He paused momentarily as he considered bigger, faster and meaner bulls tossing cowboys into the air.
"I think they need to give the riders some steroids to help them hang on," he said.
By Josh Peter, Yahoo! Sports
October 2, 2007
The steroids scandals have claimed the latest and perhaps most unlikely suspect yet.
The sport of bull riding may start drug testing some of its athletes – not the riders, the bulls.
As if the four-legged beasts that weigh up to 2,200 pounds don't have enough testosterone, some bull owners allegedly are injecting the animals with anabolic steroids.
"Oh, I think damn near everybody's doing it," said Jerry Nelson, one of the sport's top bull owners. "It ain't going to slow down. It's just like baseball, football, whatever. It's not going to slow down until you legislate (against) it."
Gary Warner, a prominent veterinarian in the world of bull riding, said he recently received calls from two bull owners asking him to look into the possibility of drug testing what some in the industry refer to as "the bovine athletes." Warner intends to bring the matter up for discussion at this month's World Finals in Las Vegas.
The PBR board of directors met Sept. 20 to discuss the implementation of an anti-steroids policy, tour CEO Randy Bernard said. The board will meet with Warner and PBR's attorney before fine-tuning the language, according to Bernard, who said the policy likely will call for the testing of the top-performing bulls at each event.
Gilbert Carrillo, a former rider who now raises bulls, said he would welcome drug testing considering what he's seen on the circuit.
"When you got a 2-year-old bull or a 3-year-old bull looking like Arnold Schwarzenegger, there is some form of steroid there," he said.
The practice dates back at least to the late 1990s, when Nelson said steroid use was so rampant he decided to give it a try. He said his bulls became more aggressive and muscular but also developed side effects. For some, hair color changed. Others grew sterile, jeopardizing their value as potential breeders.
Nelson said he promptly swore off steroids, but how many other trainers followed suit is a matter of debate.
Warner, who works with some of the sport's leading trainers, said inquiries from bull owners about steroid use has dropped substantially in the past 10 years to the point where few in the industry even have discussed it since he got the recent calls about the possibility of drug testing. Though there is no anti-doping policy for livestock in the Professional Bull Riders tour – the major leagues of bull riding – or the rest of the rodeo world, the use of anabolic steroids in bulls is unapproved and illegal.
Despite what steroids might do for major-league sluggers and NFL linebackers, Warner said he sees no competitive advantage by pumping bulls full of steroids. Yes, he said, steroids promote muscle gain, but only if you work out.
"The case in point is, gee, we're not sticking a bull underneath the weight rack and doing 700-pound squats," Warner said.
But suspicions of drug use heightened in 2004 when someone found empty syringes outside the pen that housed the bulls during the Professional Bull Riders World Finals in Las Vegas. The syringes could have been used to inject vitamin B-12 shots, which are approved for bulls. But Don Kish, president of American Bucking Bull Inc., took renewed concerns to the board of directors.
"We brought it up, passed some rules and then found out we passed some rules we didn't have the ability to enforce," he said.
Apparently the group couldn't settle on a definition of an illegal drug, considering some of the medications allegedly abused are narcotics approved for therapeutic use in bulls. But Warner said the industry could set permissible thresholds for approved medications and employ the same technology that is used to test racehorses to test bulls.
The root of alleged cheating in bull riding is – what else? – money. This year ABBI will pay out more than $1.6 million in competitions for bulls between ages 2 and 4.
Carrillo, who retired from riding last year to focus on raising bulls, said owners find themselves asking the same question.
"How can I make my bull perform better than it's already performing?" Carrillo said. "The first thing that comes to mind is steroids. They think steroids will make a bull jump over the moon.
"It does make a bull gain weight quicker, get more muscle mass quicker and make their performance a little better, but not as much as people think it would."
He paused momentarily as he considered bigger, faster and meaner bulls tossing cowboys into the air.
"I think they need to give the riders some steroids to help them hang on," he said.
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