The Art of Roping

preview_player
Показать описание
.

Roping is an old skill that most likely originated in ancient times, as soon as humans began to manage herds of livestock. It was brought to the Americas by the Spanish and was soon incorporated into the American cowboy tradition. Today, roping is practiced as a competitive sport in rodeos but also continues to serve a practical purpose on working ranches.

At Ranchlands, we use ropes to catch and restrain animals that need doctoring or branding, since being roped out in the pasture is a far less stressful experience for cattle than having to be brought into a set of corrals somewhere.

In this video, Ranchlands founder Duke Phillips talks about the art of roping--the subtle techniques, such as positioning your horse with precision and keeping the herd of cattle calm, that go beyond basic skillfulness with a rope.

Original Score by Brent Rowan
Рекомендации по теме
Комментарии
Автор

A Cajun named Jackie was the best ranch/working pen roper I have ever seen. I'm 72. Jackie roped with my dad. He was the only paid cowboy to work our cattle. I hired him every spring to stand in the sorting gate with his buckskin "Buck" to hold the calves and let the cows go. Buck would jam any calf. Buck knew the game. Jackie is near 90 years old now. He had polio in one leg and stuffs socks in the bottom of that boot. He has a million cowboy stories that he could tell in Cajun French or in English. He always has a unlit cigar. His grandfather is pictured in coffee table books as one of the first cowboys on our SW Louisiana prairie. Jack NEVER swung his rope. He would "flip" it left or right. Forward or backwards. I have never seen him miss. Not once. We all dally, but Jackie was tied off hard and fast. I asked him about that. "Jackie what if you got to rope a bull?" He pulled a razor sharp knife from his back pocket. "I got this, " he smiled. When the sorting and the pen roping was done Jackie would leave before the shoot-work began. He wouldn't do shoot-work. When he dismounted, Buck was loaded and Jackie would leave. He always say, "Boys! I got to go see a man about a horse!" Then he'd drive off. Jackie cowboyed for sale barns and individual ranchers in the prairies and in the gulf coast marshes.

I want to stress practicing roping the right way, the safe way, on the ground, and on a horse with a dummy before you catch something that could hurt you. And practice with a real roper. A cowboy who can tell you what your doing wrong. I regret healing a big steer for a beginner header who dallied with his thumb down. A wrap cut his thumb off. We packed his thumb in ice and sent both of them to New Orleans. The roper lived for months with his right thumb sewed to his belly. This guy had roped tie down calves all his life but never headed. He shouldn't have been in the roping pen steer roping.

Count on hundreds or thousands of hour to learn right and to be automatic with your swing, slack, and dally. Don't ride no dink, either. They will get you in a jam. And don't drink and think you can cowboy. You'll get hurt and hurt someone you love.

sorry for the lecture. I've been to a few funerals. stay safe.

chipkyle
Автор

The vaquero traditions continue on !!🇲🇽

brandonperez
Автор

This feels like a skill I'll use later in life, I've seen it used quietly in marine boat-to-harbor ties and it looked downright magical

MrHocotateFreight
Автор

I'm just learning to rope and i have a huge respect for these guys. Let me just say its not as easy as it looks!

isabelnava
Автор

Every free minute spent roping bales and saw-horses with the standard throws and then played around with ocean waves, butterflies and lyndseys.
A few times a year not a word said between any of us in the branding pen and after having competitions back on the dummy to see who could muley, horn, heel and figure eight between the horns while we took turns chanting 1 guerrilla, 2 guerrilla etc. as a stopwatch.
Poly's, nylons and back when I started grass magueys that I got from Lorne Wells were the tools and always on the lookout for that perfect used heading rope for calves at brandings.

greatwestemporium
Автор

American cowboys/historians are reluctant to say "Mexico" when it comes to the vaqueros ...they always say "Spanish" . respect to this man for saying it like it is. good roping amigo!

vaqueritof
Автор

Love the narration and I agree with you when you say "to do it in a minimally stress full way"

GeorgeVeater
Автор

Roping has indeed changed or evolved a lot ever since the vaqueros came to what is now the American southwest. Most roping shot used today were actually invented in the late 19th to early 20th century in Mexico. Roping during the 18th century was actually very rudimentary, where old tools like the hocking knife were still used in conjunction with roping. At that time there was no team roping; there was also no fancy roping. In Some areas in Mexico, like Veracruz, vaqueros were still tying their lassos to their horse’s tail, since not everyone had adopted the vaquero saddle with a horn. So yeah, roping has indeed changed.

Nortekman
Автор

God this channel should have more subscribers.

kadenkardell
Автор

Loved this. Worded perfectly. Loved the left handed cowboy. 🤠 thank you for sharing this.

bargreiner
Автор

Brent Rowan, one of the contemporary Guitar greats strumming the back-ground music. kenxqed♫

kennewman
Автор

Is anyone else waiting on SHARK to comment how they are “abusing” everything😂🙄.As a cowboy, I love how he explains roping, you don’t try to cause a ton of stress, get the job done and get out

bowmanwalker
Автор

VIVA MEXICO LA TIERRA DE LOS VAQUEROS
🇲🇽 M X 🇲🇽🌵🌵🌵🌵🌵

vaqueromx
Автор

I wish I was like these men. Most my family even my dad grew up on farms and ranches doing this stuff. Wish I did, but I have to live in the city :/ still wear cowboy boots and dress how I would living there and living up to that as much as possibly though. They also grew up in the backwoods which i kinda wish I did too haha

CJMyup
Автор

This is totally different than roping in a rodeo where the calf is deliberately stressed before exiting the chute and then pulled to a full stop fro approx 50 km an hour then picked up dumped on the ground and hog tied.

toshadavinci
Автор

Hermosa profesion me encantaria poder hacerla

flakolopez
Автор

Jesus and KathrynMiller say Thankyou for sharing ✝️🤍✝️🤍✝️🦅🇺🇸🍀🍀🍀

JesusKathrynMiller
Автор

If I see anything about animal abuse in the comments I'll freak out

bodieburton
Автор

and art taught By mexicans the real Cowboys never forget We are the real cowboys

mannyvazquez
Автор

what kind ropes are those and were can I get one

tituslightburn