Cowgirl Up - Transcript
Cowgirl Up Info |
Segment
in QT | Segment in Real
When you think of rodeos certain images probably come into mind. Rugged weatherbeaten men, cutthroat competition, and more testosterone than your average marine base and that's not even counting the bulls. But what if we told you that right here in Nebraska there's a rough stock rider who's been bucked off some pretty wild broncs, and who bucks tradition every time.
Her name is Tina Vanderpool and after working on a farm, being an airport baggage handler, working as a welder, and even serving in the Marine Corps, she found her true passion just over a year ago, bare back bronk riding.
[Tina Vanderpool:] "I went to a barn dance out at Lakota Stables and they had a TV playing a tape of a rodeo from that year in Omaha. And I started watching it and I was just amazed by the things, the events that they did. Chasing goats and the whole rodeo deal."
Not long after that she paid fifteen dollars for a practice ride at Douglas Arena in Springfield. She was bucked off after four seconds and careened headfirst into a fence. She was hooked.
Tina competes in the I.G.R.A., The International Gay Rodeo Association. With thousands of members the Gay Rodeo is actually beginning to grow larger than the pro rodeo circuit. That may be because, unlike the pros where women are limited to barrel and drag-racing events, Gay Rodeo lets women compete in rough stock.
[Tina
Vanderpool:] "What I really like is competing alongside with the guys. As soon as you nod your head and the gate opens, everything happens very quick. It's kinda like being on a rollercoaster where you're up in the air and then you go straight down. That's what it feels like, except a lot of power pulling you back. If you land flat you're gonna get hurt."
What sets Tina apart from most rough stock riders isn't that she's a woman, or even that she's into Gay Rodeo. Tina rode her first bronc when she was thirty-nine, an age when a lot of professional riders think about hanging up their spurs. But the urge to jump on bareback horses began when she was a little girl growing up in a small town in Illinois.
[Tina
Vanderpool:] "I've always had horses. I remember when I was real young, I don't know if my mom knew I was out there. When I was little I'd sneak out of the house and find some baling twine and I'd see some horse out in the pasture and I'd just go ride 'em. I didn't know if they were broke, I didn't care. I'd just go ride horses."
Tina doesn't need to borrow the neighbor's horses anymore. She owns a farm in Greenwood near Lincoln. She's got two roommates, Dave Elliot and Kurt Reid. They're also involved in rodeo. In this household it's all rodeo all the time.
[Curt
Reeve:] "You keep your shoulder back if you leg into the turn. In other words if he turns right, you leg right. You're going to just follow right around with him.
"Tina is an adventurer. I mean, it's kinda like she doesn't really follow the same routine every day. I mean, each day is a new day. For Tina, this is not about win or lose. This is about mastering a challenge."
[Tina
Vanderpool:] "This buckle here is one I wear when I compete. I always have that buckle on. One of my friends, she came up to me and she says, 'You know, I have a lot of respect for you.' She says, 'You're the one that gets up on them horses and I just want to give this to you. So it's kind of a special buckle.'"
This
weekend Tina's off to the Seventeenth Annual Texas Gay Rodeo in
Fort Worth. It's a 12-hour drive, but even on a few hours sleep
she's hoping to win a buckle, maybe try out a new event -- she's
been threatening to get on a steer -- and make it back in time for
work on Monday.
[Tina
Vanderpool:] "The night before is when I start getting kind
of nervous about it. I'm thinking about the ride, I want to get
a mark out. You have to be really focused. It's just a body, mind,
spirit thing."
It
may be a cliché to say that the more things change the more
they stay the same. But to meet a woman like Tina Vanderpool is
to see how a new twist on an old tradition can actually help preserve
that tradition. There may be people who say that women don't belong
on bare back broncs. Certainly there are those who would question
the wisdom of taking up a dangerous hobby at the age of 39. But
the spirit of the West and the spirit of rodeo has always been about
what's possible rather than what's dangerous or scary or just plain
unusual. In that sense Tina may be the quintesential cowgirl. By
breaking the stereotypes she breaks all the rules except for the
most important one of all. She always gets back on the horse.
[Tina
Vanderpool:] "A lot of people has told me I'm crazy for doing
it. Nobody's told me, 'Oh you can't do that.' No. If they have I've
ignored 'em. Don't let it get to me.
"I
love it."
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