Monday, January 13, 2014
Leo Moomaw
raised, bought, traded and provided good bucking horses from 1915 to 1960.
Dynamite, Blue Blazes and Badger Mountain were three of the many outstand
bucking horses. In 1925 Blue Blazes was born on the old ranch at Monse,
Washington. He started bucking bare back as a yearling and continued to buck
into his late thirties. Badger Mountain was runner up to Hell’s Angel in a vote
to determine the best saddle bronk in the world. Badger had a rearing style
finished with a leap forward and a high kick. In his 20+ year bucking career it
was estimated that only nine riders were able to make a qualified ride on the
great horse.
In 1969 the Pendleton Round up opened it’s
hall of fame. Two of the first inducted were Blue Blazes and Badger Mountain.
Badger Mountain has also been inducted into the Ellensburg hall of fame.
Sunday, January 5, 2014
Remembering the Old Bucking Horses
The Old Bucking Horse Museum
and Hall of Fame was created to preserve the memory and honor all of the great
old bucking horses. A select few are honored in various Rodeo Halls of Fame
like Steamboat, Tipperary, Midnight, War Paint, Miss Klamath, Hell’s Angel,
Badger Mountain and Blue Blazes.
Badger Mountain and Blue
Blazes were two of Leo Moomaw’s great horses. Badger was acquired in a trade
and bucked his way to fame as the second best bucking horse in the world in
1942. Blue Blazes was born on Leo Moomaw’s old ranch east of Monse, Washington
in the year of 1925 to a bucking mare named Maude.
Blue Blazes started his
career as a yearling. He bucked bareback with a bull rigging until he was five
years old and he was never ridden. About the third jump he would pull a suck
back and if he did not lose his rider, he would jump the opposite way and suck
back again. Blue’s tricks were always successful. His mother Maude bucked the
same way.
Blue Blazes matured into a great saddle bronk
and bucked off many of the great saddle bronk riders of the day. He continued
to perform well into his thirties. At the 1942 Pendleton Roundup Ed McCarty and
Vern Elliott, the owners of Midnight and Five Minutes to Midnight, offered Leo
$2,000 for Blue Blazes and Badger Mountain. To Leo Moomaw those good horsed
were worth more than money. He declined the generous offer and that weekend
Blue and Badger bucked off three or four of the world’s best bronk riders.
When they were loose in a
pasture Blue Blazes and Badger Mountain always were found together.
Blue Blazes
They bonded together with an outlaw pride.
Blue Blazes and Badger were impossible to ride.
Blue was born on the ranch in twenty five,
thirty years later he was still alive.
He was a mighty bronk, as I have been told.
He started bucking when he was one year old.
Blue Blazes went unridden, even at that time.
On him few good riders could win a dime.
He bucked bare back until he was four.
By then he certainly knew the score.
He would jump to the right and suck back hard,
then to the left and it would be, “So long, pard!”
The pictures show him twisting about.
Blue Blazes was very quick and stout.
One of Frank Van Meter with cig in mouth,
shows Blue’s head go north and shoulder south.
Deb Copenhaver told me with pride,
he drew him once and he was hard to ride.
All the champions tried him at one time
and he got them all when in his prime.
Along with his partner’s famous name,
Blue is honored in Pendleton’s hall of fame.
Just as they always gave the crowds a thrill,
Blue and Badger Mountain are together still.
© Ted Moomaw
June 20, 1998
To see more photos and stories stop by the
Old Bucking
Horse Museum and Hall of Fame at 330 Market Street, Baird, Texas. 325-513-6702.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)