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Submitted photo
true cowboy
Middle-schooler Mirabal
embodies the Old West
By Jonathan Miller
Magdalena
True cowboys are tough. They
have a reputation for being salt of the
earth, sons-of-guns who represent
the good ol days, the rough and
tumble days. They ventured West,
tamed the wild and conquered an
unforgiving and unknown landscape.
If youre looking for a true cowboy
in Socorro County, look no farther
SU M M E R 2 0 1 5
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Mirabal: Happy
from page 5
seventh-grader.
I just want him to go compete
and enjoy the experience, and do his
best and let the cards fall where they
might, Jory said. I just hope he
enjoys it and takes it all in.
Not only will Jaxson feel the pressure of competing against the best in
the country in Des Moines in rodeo
events, but hell also feel the pressure
of running for office. Hes running
for vice president of the NJHSRA.
It doesnt seem like all that pressure will affect him too negatively
though.
I just think doing my best and
knowing what I did If I know
I tried my hardest Ill be happy,
Jaxson said.
And of course like a true cowboy,
hell keep it all in the family.
Im just happy for my dad
because he always takes me to all of
these rodeos and supports me.
Submitted photo
Magdalena Middle School student Jaxson Mirabal practices for upcoming rodeo competitions.
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cow-man
Sanchez breeds
prize-winning
Angus bulls
By Kenn Rodriguez
Los Chavez
When Patrick Sanchez talks about his Angus bulls, he
can hardly contain his enthusiasm. In fact, talking to him
over ice tea in his home in Los Chavez is a lot like talking
to someone whos discovered exactly what they should be
doing in life which is pretty much the situation he is in.
Sanchez and his wife Theresas company, Sanchez Angus
Cattle and Farm, recently had one of its Angus bulls, named
PS Emblazon 1478, was the top-selling Angus bull out of 80
at New Mexico State Universitys Tucumcari Bull Test.
The average score is 100 and our bull had a 120 to win
it, so our bull is better than the average by 20 percent probably, Sanchez says. There were only 10 bulls over 110, so
it was like running the Kentucky Derby and winning by a
nose. We were really fortunate.
This was the second time Sanchez Angus has produced
See Sanchez Page 9
SU M M E R 2 0 1 5
Patrick Sanchez of Sanchez Angus Cattle and Farm in Los Chavez, recently had one his Angus
bulls, PS Emblazon 1478, honored as the top-selling Angus bull at New Mexico State Universitys
Tucumcari Bull Test.
from page 8
COWBOY
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10
Shoot em up
SASS in
Edgewood has
100,000 members
By Rory McClannahan
Edgewood
Sometimes the best ideas come about when you
are among friends doing the things you enjoy.
Without a group of friends and a common interest in cowboy-era firearms, there might never have
been a Single Action Shooting Society or the sport of
cowboy action shooting.
Now SASS has about 100,000 members worldwide
and thousands of shooters come to Founders Ranch
in Edgewood every year for the annual End of Trail
event that crowns the best shooters in the world.
Both the sport and the organization has grown
beyond the imaginations of that group of friends who
would get together on weekends in the California
desert in the early 1980s and fire a few rounds.
They all grew up watching westerns and had an
affinity for the lifestyle, said Barbara Cat Ballou
Ormond, who along with her husband, Don Tex
Ormond, were there at the beginning.
Word got around that these friends were going out
and shooting and having a good time. More people
started showing up at these excursions and folks
started coming dressed up like theyd just stepped
out of a time machine.
A little organization was needed for these gatherings, so these friends which included Harper
Creigh, Gordon Davis and Bill Hahn came up
with a few competitions with some loose rules.
The first End of Trail was held in 1982 with 65
participants.
By 1987, the original group of friends realized that
the sport was growing and they needed to organize
even further. So in 1987, SASS was created to help
in the development of local clubs and serve as a governing organization for Cowboy Action Shooting.
Shooting and costumes do go together. The Single Action Shooting Societys mission is to promote the
sport of Cowboy Action Shooting and preserve the lifestyle of the Old West. The organization has more
than 100,000 members world wide.
The sport continued to grow, but Ormond said that
by the early 2000s, it was getting more difficult to
hold events in California.
The political climate had changed and we lost our
leased range to a housing development, Ormond
said. We started looking for a new place and fortunately found the property near Edgewood.
By 2004, SASS had moved to New Mexico and
moved onto the 480-acre Founders Ranch. The ranch
has several ranges and horse arenas, but the centerpiece is the Old West main street that was built
on the property. During End of Trail, most of the
Western buildings are used in conjunction with the
event, and any visitor who arrives wearing 21st century duds will look out of place.
A big part of SASS and End of Trail is the celebration of the Old West, which means most folks are
dressed accordingly, Ormond said.
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Every member of the Single Action Shooting Society gets a badge. The organization was formed in 1987 in California but moved to Edgewood in 2004.
Each year in June, the Single Action Shooting Society hosts its annual Cowboy
Action Shooting event, End of Trail, at Founders Ranch in Edgewood. The
ranch sports ranges, arenas for mounted shooting and an Old West town.
from page 10
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from page 12
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14
Chilili
Under New Mexicos big sky a verdant landscape spreads out across the
foothills of Chilili, where the Baditude
Bucking Bulls graze and roam, bred to
buck riders from far and wide off their
broad backsides.
Just to (wake up) and see how
healthy they are, make sure the calves
are born (makes it worthwhile),
Antonio Ortiz, a local ranch owner
and an employee for the Torrance
County Department of Roads, said
as he oversaw his prized bucking
bulls approach the fence. Watching
them buck is a lot of fun, too. The
bulls make their own names for themselves.
Bull riding isnt as popular as it used
to be, ranch owner Ortiz admits as he
guides his massive pick-up truck up
along the dusty road leading towards
his grazing grounds. Here a handful
of bulls come slowly trundling along
as he calls to them, expectant for
hay. Chief amongst them, and first to
arrive, is the imperious patriarch and
leader of the herd, a monstrous black
plummer cow, who walked with the
regal grace of a king, who had earned
the name Ironhide.
We havent named them (when
theyre young) Ortiz said. We see
what they can do and then we name
em.
Ironhide was named by Antonios
wife, Annette, after her favorite
Transformers robot.
Ortizs ranch is home to a number
of cows, bulls and goats. He shares the
land with pig farmer Harold Dow, who
raises Red Wattle Heritage Hogs, an
endangered species of porcine. Ortizs
son and daughter, Abelino and Anita,
have grown up on the ranch.
Abelino rides bulls himself, with
aspirations to be a world champion,
while Anita is interested in the business side of bull raising. Abelino will
be going to Abilene, Texas, in August
to compete in the Professional Bull
Riders World Championship.
Travelers are welcome to come by
and see the bulls, take pictures and
learn about the art of cattle herding,
bull bucking, rodeo clowning and any
number of skills that Ortiz is versed
in.
(The bulls are) smarter than heck,
Ortiz said. When the cows are being
born, the bull will walk the fence line
and bawl all night long to make sure
the predators dont take their calves.
For prospective riders, Ortiz knows
exactly what you need to succeed at
staying on a bucking bull.
You need to work out, be strong,
agile and have no fear, he said. It
takes a lot of focus, too.
Young Abelino patrols the edges
of the ranch on a crimson all-terrain
vehicle. The cows know the sound of
the engine, and come up the dusty path
to watch him make his rounds, trying
to locate a missing calf.
The calfs mother remained atop a
See Bulls Page 15
Old Ironhide charges at the fences to demonstrate his position as the alpha
bull of his herd at the Baditude Bucking Bulls Ranch in the East Mountains.
Saturday August 29 th
10 am on California Street
SU M M E R 2 0 1 5
15
from page 14
A boys life: The Ortiz family gathers to watch the bulls approach the fence. Cow rearing is in their blood.
Antonio Ortiz, in the cowboy hat, recalls his father raising cows, and his son and daughter have both taken
to the art with gusto.
WildlifeWest.com
COWBOY
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medicine
Valencia
County vets
By Julia M. Dendinger
Dr. Fabian Sanchez, DVM, owner of Yucca Veterinary Medical Center in Belen, examines a pregnant mare at
Double LL Ranch in Bosque. The veterinarian uses a portable, digital ultrasound to measure the progress of the pregnancy. Much of the work Sanchez does is related to equine reproductive health.
his fellow practitioner, Dr. Florian
Sanchez, DVM, owner of Yucca
Veterinary Medical Center in Belen,
has been alive.
McCallister graduated with a
doctorate of veterinary medicine in
1984 from Kansas State University,
after earning his bachelors in animal science from New Mexico State
University.
In August 1987, his dream of owning his own practice came true when
he established the local veterinary hospital on The Farm.
On the other hand, Sanchez is a
2004 Belen High School graduate and
graduated from Texas A&M before
he completed veterinary school at
Colorado State University, where he
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SU M M E R 2 0 1 5
17
from page 16
animal, he said.
One area of focus for Sanchez is in
equine podiatry. He will spend time
analyzing a horse to make sure everything is addressed by adjusting different pressures and forces as needed,
corrective shoes and sometimes lowerlimb surgery.
Think about a person; we ask a lot
of our feet, Sanchez said. A horse
is 1,100 pounds on four pretty small
feet.
While the injuries and medical
issues are as old as time, the equipment McCallister and Sanchez have
available to treat their patients is
advancing rapidly.
There is a lot of new digital radiology, McCallister said. The equipment
we have now is 10 times better than it
was seven years ago.
Sanchez regularly uses a portable,
digital ultrasound when he visits
breeding farms to check the progression of equine pregnancies.
McCallister, who does equal
amounts of large and small animal
treatments, said working with the
small animals has actually made him a
better surgeon.
We do more of them, he said. I
love a good C-section. I can be in and
out in 45 minutes and have 10 live
puppies.
Speed is the key to a good cesarean,
McCallister said. Speed means everybody lives.
To help his clients, Sanchez tries
to focus on what is considered small
producers, ranchers with herds of 30 to
100 head of cattle.
Through proper management, we
can help them improve and maintain
the animals they have, he said. What
we hope to do is educate people. If
we can help them improve the quality of their animals, we can help them
improve their economics.
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On a sprawling ranch in Cedar
Grove, north of Edgewood, 69 rescued
abused, abandoned and unwanted
horses are maintained, trained and
most of them adopted out.
Walkin N Circles is one of 30 horse
ranches in the United States and
Canada that are a part of the Doris
Day Equine Clinic that teaches workers how to deal with traumatized
horses and recently began a fodder
program where the ranch makes its
own food for the horses.
As long as you dont have a halter, everyone is friendly, Walkin
N Circles Executive Director Ruth
Andrews said.
The Doris Day Equine Clinic
Walkin N Circles Ranch Executive Director Ruth Andrews lets Max smell her
hand. Walking N Circles Ranch is a horse rescue that takes in abandoned,
abused and unwanted horses with the hope of eventually adopting them out.
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SU M M E R 2 0 1 5
19
Horses: Help
from page 18
Ruth Andrews
Executive director
can cost between $30 and $50 depending on the type of training, Andrews
said.
Currently, the ranch owns all 69 of
the horses and would like to get that
down to 50 since they cost an average of $3,000 per animal per year to
maintain, which includes feed and veterinary bills.
Horses stay at the ranch an average
of three years, longer for ones that are
ill and forever for ones that cannot be
adopted out, Andrews said.
For more information, go online to
www.wncr.org.
505-865-1826
Dr. Jerry Cosper
Dr. Patrick Sanchez
Dr. Sarah Lopez
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20
cowboys gals
News-Bulletin Editor
For our honeymoon, we went to the bull riding
championships in Scottsdale, and when it ended, we
kind of looked at each other like, whats next? It was
wintertime and there wasnt much to do until rodeo
season, we went trapping in the mountains for three
months. It was the only logical thing to do, right?
Actually, it was amazing and I learned a lot, mostly
about who I had just married. ~ Cowboy Tails
Rio Communities
Terri Powers has always had a fascination with
cowboys, but at an early age, she made a decision
about the breed of man who would much rather
spend time with his horse rather than with his
wife.
At 8 years old, I decided I would never marry
a cowboy and I never did, Powers said laughing.
The work is so hard it looks like those women
have it hard. Being a cowboys woman no
thank you.
Growing up in Tijeras, Powers was knee deep in
the cowboy lifestyle. Her father was an equipment
contractor for the Professional Rodeo Cowboys
Association, and her brother enjoyed roping as a
youngster. While she tried to keep away from getting involved with a cowboy, her son, Sal Gomez,
ironically, is a roper in Texas.
Even though she kept to her promise to never
marry a cowboy, she has always been fascinated
with the lifestyle and the women who put up with
those rough and rugged men, who work hard,
play even harder and have little to no time for the
women folk.
Her fascination with these particular types of
women led her on a journey to write a book of the
tales shes heard throughout the years. Cowboy
Tails: Good ol Gals Tell All, her second book,
was published in early December, just in time to
debut it at the National Finals Rodeo in Las Vegas,
Nev. Every day, all day, Powers signed books for
anyone and everyone who bought a copy.
Those cowboys are some hard dogs to keep
under the porch, she said. They just do whatever
they want. Just the lifestyle of carrying stuff, pulling stuff, driving stuff and all that stuff just looks
See Women Page 21
SU M M E R 2 0 1 5
Rio Communities author Terri Powers will be holding a book signing for Cowboy Tails: Good ol Gals
Tell All from 1-4:30 p.m., Saturday, July 11, at Hastings in Los Lunas. You can also get a copy of the
book at Cowboytails.com or from Amazon.
21
Women: Love
from page 20
hard.
While Powers doesnt have anything personally against cowboys,
she just didnt want one of her own.
Her first book, Gold Buckles
Dont Lie, a biography of Fred
Whitfield, the only AfricanAmerican rodeo world champion, got
her somewhat back into the lifestyle
from a distance. She began talking
to women about their cowboys, their
lifestyles and some of their best and
worst memories of living the life of a
cowboys cowgirl.
I saw there were some smart girls,
good women and theyre married to
cowboys and its not killing them,
Powers said. This book is kind of
an exploration of my decision not to
marry a cowboy. Weve got everything in there. The bull riders did
not fare very well theyre pretty
wild.
Every chapter in Cowboy Tails:
Good ol Gals Tell All tells one
womans story, while there are a couple of women whose stories are told
throughout the entire book. There is
only one story of a happily-ever relationship involving a bull rider.
Powers didnt seek out women who
had a bad relationship with cowboys,
simply if someone had an interesting story. Shes quick to point out
that she writes about a lot of great
relationships women have had with
cowboys some really good men.
My mothers married to a cowboy
and hes one of the best men Ive
ever known, she said. Theres some
really good men and then theres
some really ornery men. I really tried
to decipher with each story if, Is this
just a man in general or are these
traits specific to a cowboy? I think I
Submitted photo
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Ranch life
Submitted photo
Sissy and Tom Olney demonstrate that part of success is in being a good team, and a loving couple whether it be
working cattle, fixing fence, managing the sales, raising kids or just out having a good time.
What kind of faith does it take to wait all that time, and then
get on that boat with two babies, and travel to a new world,
not knowing what you will find?
Sissy Pound Olney
Socorro County rancher
23
from page 22
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24
therapeutic
Horses help
those with
special needs
By Deborah Fox
Jarales
The smell of horses, hay and sunshine is good for anyones soul, but in
particular, horseback riding is good
therapy for people with disabilities.
Horsin Around Therapeutic Riding
Center, located in Jarales, is a nonprofit organization dedicated to helping children and adults with disabilities to reach their potential through
equine facilitated therapy.
Starting in the cool hours of morning, the instructor and owner of the
riding center Donna Hofheins-Tolbert
and a small group of volunteers help
individuals with disabilities groom and
saddle horses for therapeutic riding
sessions.
One young man from Bosque Farms,
Kevin Spulak, who has epilepsy,
shovels manure from the stall of a
sorrel mare he has ridden for the past
four years. The pre-ride activity helps
him coordinate his physical movements before getting on horseback, the
instructor said.
The mare stands patiently while
Donna instructs Kevin on how to
brush the horse.
With the fur, not against it, she
demonstrates to him.
Its been a process for Kevin to
learn how to concentrate and focus on
Donnas commands.
Following verbal commands is really hard for him, says his mother, Pat.
For him to be sitting on a horse and
Donna to be out in the arena and hes
listening to her and following directions is a huge thing for him. He does
that very little in other settings.
Sessions at Horsin Around have
helped Kevin increase his attention
span and control his muscle movement, which is really hard for him
because of his epilepsy. He also has
aphasia, so he has little language
skills. Aphasia is partial or total loss of
SU M M E R 2 0 1 5
During the Outlaw Ambush portion of a creative riding course at Horsin Around Therapeutic Riding Center in Jarales,
Donna Hofheins-Tolbert, left, an advanced therapeutic riding instructor and CNA, asks rider Kevin Spulak, right, if he
wants to shoot the squirt gun.
the ability to articulate ideas or comprehend spoken or written language,
usually the result of damage to the
brain from injury or disease.
The sun illuminates the horses sleek
coat and the half ton creature carefully
carries her precious cargo with the
grace of a ballerina. Its as if horses
know as if they can sense the
emotional, physical and psychological
needs of humans with disabilities.
A lot of the therapeutic part comes
from the horse. Im just helping to
facilitate it, says Hofheins-Tolbert,
who is a certified nursing assistant and
an advanced certified therapeutic riding instructor.
Each week, the corral is set up in a
new course configuration. This week
its the Pony Express, and starts out
at a barrel labeled, California. From
California, the horse and rider travel
between two rails set up to simulate
the Platte River, and Kevin is encour-
25
Horsin Around Therapeutic Riding Center, a nonprofit organization dedicated to helping individuals with developmental disabilities, is supported by sponsorships and a volunteer staff. Pictured from left, are Pat Spulak, Sylvia Meketi a volunteer staff member; Pooh the horse, Donna Hofheins-Tolbert, therapeutic
riding instructor and Horsin Around owner; Kevin Spulak, a regular rider at the center; Dalton Meyer, a client and volunteer staff member; and Toni Wright, a
volunteer staff member.
from page 24
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Deborah Fox-News-Bulletin photo
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