One special example is when I was given her good
horse, Full Speed Rebel, which some may remember as "Reb". I was probably only
11 yrs old and granted had ridden some good horses for that age, but he
was a real champion. She had already won the Austin County Livestock Show and
Rodeo on Reb several times, been the Ft. Worth Rodeo's Reserve Champion twice
and pro/open champion many times over
most everywhere. I wanted to ride him so badly, but was scared to death of him
because he was a big, stout powerful horse.
When I was nine I tried to ride him around an arena at a walk and he broke and ran with me sticking my head through a pipe fence and giving me a concussion. One day I got my courage up and wanted to sit on him so when he was tied up to my mother's inline trailer I slipped around and jumped on top of him. He and I had a long talk that day....probably too long a talk because, to my surprise, my mom, the late Allison Powers and Kay Cervantez caught me sitting on him. He could be a fractious kind of gelding and you should have seen the looks on their faces. I guess she realized how badly I wanted to win and from that day forward Reb became mine.
I went on to break her arena record at Austin later that year on him and win the rodeo. I know she could not have been happier. Later in the 80's she gave me another gelding she had trained named Bexar Claw aka "Bear" which I ran and broke the same arena record on and won the Austin Rodeo again. I won quite a bit on Bear. Bear was a futurity money earner at the North Tx Futurity, Wichita Falls Futurity, and Ft. Smith Arkansas ran the fastest time at Ft. Smith in the short go, but hit a barrel, won two large barrel futurities in Oklahoma the same year. Bear was ridden in futurities by my mother and Renee Youree Ward.
I won or placed at 62 barrel races/rodeos the
next year on him which
was a lot to go to then. I was the Nestea/PRCA Top Hand Challenge Champion for
Texas on Bear. Won numerous saddles, buckles and other awards on him, just too
many to list.
Besides my mother, I credit Dale Youree, Addington, Oklahoma. Dale's way of
riding and style would want to make anyone become a champion. Dale encouraged me
to ride correctly at a young age. He had as many criticisms as compliments for
me, all trying to point me in the right direction.
As far as professional women barrel racers, I'd
have to say that I would admire Wanda Bush for the way that she always put a
handle on her horses and her competitive spirit (she is also the toughest woman
I know besides my mother), Martha Josey for her devotion to promoting barrel
racing to youth riders, and Janet Stover for her ability to hang tough. Janet is
one person who never gave up on herself when times got tough.
If you don't think she's seen good times and bad, you either don't know her very
well or not at all. She is absolutely one of the best riders I know.
Today I am training and selling a good deal of young, broke, started horses. I
deal with a lot of problem finished horses and do a lot of tuning on finished
horses for everyone from novice riders to wpra cowgirls. I compete in several
Texas based barrel associations and ride in a couple of futurities/derbies as
time allows each year.
Most of my time is spent seasoning and hauling
my prospects and
helping my daughter as she is starting to run barrels herself. I have
placed a lot of nice pro horses in the past years that are winning with their
riders...i.e. Liz Loeffler Pinkston purchased Pistol (who won the
California Circuit Finals with Tona Wright this past year) and Project Lightning
who is a top wpra horse and consistent 1-D winner in the D & G's.
I also trained the '99 Texas NBHA SR 1-D champion barrel horse, Jet To Texas, which my mother rode to that win. He also was in the Top 10 1-D in Augusta GA. I have ridden and trained a top 1-D horse, Ima Flashy Fuel (currently owned by Lori Marsh of College Station), "Flash" carried me to the short round in the NBHA TX 1-D finals in '97, and numerous association, district 1-D and series championships. I recently finished training a young mare who is a tough winning 1-D horse winning in the GA. High School Rodeo Assoc. to name a few.
I feel very fortunate to have been able to sell
and see successes with my horses in Texas, Oklahoma, Louisiana, Florida,
Pennsylvania, etc. I compete mainly here in Texas, due to family ties. I have
two sons, ages 15 & 13, and a daughter, age 11 who is starting to run barrels.
My husband Steve of nearly 17 years is also involved with my horses. He keeps me
on the road, most everyone sees him with me everywhere
I go. He is either leading a horse or working on someone's truck while we are
there. We live in Hamilton Texas and I ride part time for customers and own a
hair salon. While I am unable to compete pro-fessionally and haul down the road,
I consider being a professional barrel racer a goal that I'd like to do at some
point in my career willing that the right horse comes along, and the timing is
right also.
As for advice??? The best advice I could give anyone running barrels would
be.... Have faith in yourself. There are a lot of great riders out there
WITHOUT great horses. There are men and women out there with
the ability of achieve greatness in this sport. Not being mounted is the most
awful feeling in the world if you are a competitive person. Don't get
discouraged. Take every run and learn something from it. Don't be afraid
to ask for help. If the road to winning is your destination, then the journey
there will build your character---don't give up on yourself.