Close Menu
    What's Hot
    – 20230173bccc501cd5ca1cb6d4e1a55309c444

    Child mental health forum to be held in Norristown

    May 13, 2024
    – 202309651575b3861327.14722519

    GameStop's stock prices surged when Roaring Kitty made a comeback on social media

    May 13, 2024
    – 202303van Jones 2023

    Van Jones criticized possible Trump VP candidates for avoiding 2024 election questions, saying it's like failing kindergarten

    May 13, 2024
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Telegram
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    The Plaza JournalThe Plaza Journal
    Subscribe
    Sunday, June 22
    • Sports
      • American Football
      • Basketball
      • Baseball
      • Boxing
      • Cricket
      • Football
      • Hockey
      • Tennis
    • Politics
      – 2023102

      John Dean believes the hush money case against Trump is very strong

      May 13, 2024
      – 202405my screenshots 2024 05 13 at 85135am e1715608366191

      “Cruel and unfeeling” Trump assistant boasts about causing innocent homeless people to be arrested

      May 13, 2024
      – 202305stopthestealrally 01062021 getty

      Only 5 percent of people mention January 6th as the most important memory from Trump's presidency: Survey

      May 13, 2024
      – 202405AP24082659643362 e1714510107248

      7 in 10 say they’ve given a lot of thought to election: Gallup

      May 13, 2024
      – 202405AP24133009758539

      Trump: ‘Hannibal Lecter is a wonderful man’

      May 13, 2024
    • Technology
    • United States
    • United Kingdom
    • Business
    • Entertainment
    • Science
      1. Archaeology
      2. Anthropology
      3. Space
      4. Biology
      5. Ecology
      6. Geology
      7. Nanotechnology
      8. Neurology
      9. Paleontology
      10. Psychology
      11. Mathematics
      12. Geography
      13. Astrophysics
      14. Oceanography
      15. Physics
      Featured
      – 20240513unesco hunting cave

      How perspiration and endurance helped humans become excellent runners and hunters

      Biology May 13, 20244 Mins Read
      Recent
      – 20240513unesco hunting cave

      How perspiration and endurance helped humans become excellent runners and hunters

      May 13, 2024
      – 202405112024 aurora photos

      Amazing photos of colorful skies around the world as auroras shine in bright colors

      May 11, 2024
      – 20240510mosquitoes scotland

      Scotland has suddenly seen a large increase in mosquitoes

      May 10, 2024
    • Health
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    The Plaza JournalThe Plaza Journal
    Home»Animals

    Dirt can make or break a rodeo

    By John ArcadipaneJanuary 26, 2019 Animals 6 Mins Read
    – 20190125E6GC2VIIWFES7T6LS7PBDVJCZY
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Rodeos are really a seven-part rebuke of death.

    Steer wrestlers in studded chaps leap from their noble steeds to grab a cow by its horns until it topples over. (The legendary bulldogger Bill Pickett brought steer to heel by biting their lips.) Barrel racers, bedazzled boots gleaming, guide their horses in a tight clover at breakneck speeds. Tie-down and team ropers in embroidered pearl-snap western shirts lasso calves to the ground. Bull riders and their equine equivalents, saddle and bareback bronc riders, simply hang on for dear life.

    There’s a long list of ingredients in the recipe for rodeo success: practice, style, an almost inhuman fearlessness (and, many critics say, an inhumane attitude toward animals). But perhaps the most important part is right under your cowboy boots. It’s the rodeo dirt.

    a woman wrangling a cow
    “Classic cowgirl” Fox Hastings in the midst of a bulldogging victory. She ran away from convent school at 14 and made her name in the rodeo arena. liz west via Flickr

    “There’s clay, there’s sand, there’s loam,” says Matt Brockman, communications manager for the Fort Worth Stock Show and Rodeo, which runs until Feb. 9 this year. “Depending on the particular needs, you may have more [of one than the others].” In Fort Worth—which at 123 years old is the nation’s longest-running rodeo—the floor is covered in a rich red clay. It’s dredged up from the bottom of the Brazos River, 50 miles to the west, and packed for the specific demands of the world’s rodeo stars.

    “Some of those contestants are more concerned with dirt than others,” Brockman says. “To a barrel racer, dirt is extremely important.” Horses in this category need solid footing in order to make tight turns around the three barrels laid out on the competition floor. To keep the surface smooth—all the better for riding fast and sliding safely—Fort Worth has staff dedicated to raking the floor in between each barrel racing performance, to remove any divots and prepare the soil for the next performer.

    Fort Worth Texas vintage postcard rodeo
    Fort Worth is not only the oldest rodeo in the country (established 1896), it also pioneered the indoor rodeo environment, hosting its first event in the North Side Coliseum in 1918. Wikimedia

    “For the other events, it’s important to the extent that their horses can maintain their footing without slipping or falling,” Brockman says. “You don’t want it too wet, you don’t want it too dry.” Moisture content is also important to fans in the stands. “Our rodeo is held indoors. Having dust stirred up in the air doesn’t provide for a good spectator experience.”

    Staffers water the dirt every day before competition with the goal of keeping the golden mean between mud and a dust bowl. It appears to be working: Fort Worth won third place in the 2018 Women’s Professional Rodeo Association Justin Best Footing Award for Texas.

    Brockman and his peers rely on the expertise of soil scientists, like those at the Safe Arena Footing Committee, to prepare the perfect floor. The SAF standard is a three-layer rodeo cake. On top of a typical concrete stadium base, rodeos should place a base layer of dense soil, like clay or even gravel, at least 6 inches thick. Then, they should add a 4-inch cushion of firm, compacted dirt, and a final 3 inches of loose soil on top. The committee also advises on issues like water quality (salts, sodium, and bicarbonates can alter the composition of soils) and the ideal silt to clay ratio (one to four).

    Cowgirls rodeo attire
    Cowgirls in their rodeo best for the Springfield Exhibition. liz west via Flickr

    Rodeos may be major events, but they’re typically tenants, not landlords. Prior to the rodeo season, Fort Worth’s dirt is stored in a special outdoor bin at the Will Rogers Coliseum. It’s close to but carefully separated from other soils, like the cutting horse competition soil and the coliseum’s general purpose earth. Depending on the monthly mix, the 36-event rodeo might be sandwiched between a monster truck rally with its own dirt and a hockey game on ice.

    The San Antonio Stock Show and Rodeo, which is held at the AT&T Center, has similar storage, according to Darci Owens, rodeo director. San Antonio’s 2,160 tons of soil dates back to a 1988 purchase from a dirt company outside Charlotte, Texas. It’s kept under a tarp for 11 months of the year, then hauled out for a few weeks of action. Workers sift out debris (mainly horse poop, or as the Houston Chronicle once called it, “gifts”) and systematically replenish it. “We determine if additional sand, clay or other materials are needed to maintain its composition,” Owens writes. Three days before the first performance, workers truck the soil in, load after load.

    In San Antonio, the dirt “is laser-levelled and checked for an even depth,” Owens writes. But not every part of the floor in San Antonio is identical. Work crews, operating enormous earth movers, know that “adequate depth and soft padding helps reduce the pressure on joints and muscles as the athletes compete in their respective events,” she writes, and that different sports stress animals and humans in different ways. “In the riding events… the dirt is packed more firmly near the chutes so animals do not slip as they are bucking and have better traction,” she writes. “In the timed events, specifically, the barrel race, the dirt is looser around the barrels so it gives when the horses make the turn.” This year’s festivities begin Feb. 7.

    San Antonio Texas rodeo
    The first San Antonio Stock Show & Rodeo was held in February 1950. Wikimedia

    The reasons for recycling dirt are mostly pragmatic. Storage costs are minimal, but replacing a whole arena’s worth of soil would cost $25,000 a year. But there’s something a little subtler at work. According to Kathryn Siefker, a curator at the Bullock Texas State History Museum, rodeo administrators, fans, and athletes all have a special affinity for their local mixture. What else explains the Houston rodeo’s decision bring their pile with them when they left the Astrodome?

    When Siefker began working on the Bullock’s “Rodeo! The Exhibition” two years ago, she sought out competition footage and historical artifacts, like star roper Sam Garrett’s cables and a bronze statue of bulldogger Bill Pickett. But soil wasn’t really on her mind. “No, no, I had no idea going in that rodeo dirt was important,” she says. Once she got a tip from a consultant in the rodeo and started digging, she couldn’t deny the importance of a good footing.

    The rodeo exhibit, which closes Sunday, ultimately featured two large beakers, amidst a sea of rhinestones, sweat, and tears. One was filled with Fort Worth’s dazzling clay, the other with Rodeo Austin’s brown loam. While every athlete has their own specific needs, Siefker says, in rodeo, “dirt has to be all things to all people.”

    History North America Sports
    John Arcadipane

    Keep Reading

    – 20240513Depositphotos 241148346 L

    Chicken fat supercapacitors may be able to store future green energy

    – 202405Screenshot 2024 05 13 171607

    Aquatic activities near Kradan Island will be stopped to protect the coral

    – 202405chiangmai 1

    On the intense front line of Thailand’s battle against smog

    – 202405441536669 1111252649964347 9171024601220791237 n

    The first ‘extreme’ solar storm in 20 years resulted in stunning auroras

    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Must Read
    Latest Posts
    – 20230173bccc501cd5ca1cb6d4e1a55309c444

    Child mental health forum to be held in Norristown

    May 13, 2024
    – 202309651575b3861327.14722519

    GameStop's stock prices surged when Roaring Kitty made a comeback on social media

    May 13, 2024
    – 202303van Jones 2023

    Van Jones criticized possible Trump VP candidates for avoiding 2024 election questions, saying it's like failing kindergarten

    May 13, 2024
    – 20240513Depositphotos 241148346 L

    Chicken fat supercapacitors may be able to store future green energy

    May 13, 2024
    – 202405antisemitism

    Most students at prestigious universities believe that there is an issue with antisemitism, as per a survey conducted by U.S. News & World Report

    May 13, 2024
    The Plaza Journal White Logo
    X-twitter Facebook Google Pinterest Telegram

    News

    • World
    • US Politics
    • EU Politics
    • Business
    • Opinions
    • Connections
    • Science

    Company

    • Information
    • Advertising
    • Classified Ads
    • Contact Info
    • Do Not Sell Data
    • GDPR Policy
    • Media Kits

    The Plaza Journal

    • Contact Us
    • Subscription
    • Submit an Anonymous Tip
    • Newsletters
    • Sponsored News
    • Advertise With Us
    • Privacy Notice

    Keep updated

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    Copyright © 2025 The Plaza Journal. All rights reserved.
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Use
    • Cookie Policy
    • Accessibility

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.