Mary Williams Hyde

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Welcome to Buckaroo Country

by Mary Williams Hyde

I started my journey in 1990 and, since then, I have traveled to many remote places in eastern Oregon, northern Nevada, northern California, Idaho, Utah, Colorado, South Dakota, Wyoming, and Montana!

If you have been following my Buckaroo Country website and my Facebook page for a few years or if you are brand new to Buckaroo Country, I hope to take your viewing and learning experience to another level.  My goal since the beginning has been to photograph as many people who keep the traditional buckaroo/vaquero/Californio traditions as possible. I am really close to the end of that phase of the journey.

What is the difference between a cowboy and a buckaroo? 

Answer Source as good as any I could find: https://www.wikipedia.org

Great differences exist between the two cultures and styles of stockmanship. To say both are the same, would be akin to saying Mexicans and Spaniards are the same. Vaquero/Buckaroo horsemanship is a light-handed, more humane method of work than that of the traditional cowboy. A cowboy will use his horse to work cattle, whereas a vaquero/buckaroo will use the cattle to work his horse.

Often, the mode of dress between the two can be one form of identification between the two. The equipment used in doing the same work is another way to differentiate. Buckaroos tend to prefer a shorter form of legging, called chinks. There is also a more natural and less flashy type of legging used, called Armitas. Cowboys tend to prefer the more gaudy batwing chaps or some for of shotgun chaps. Cowboys can be distinguished by the synonymous hat that we see throughout the modern western culture and throughout Hollywood! Buckaroos tend to prefer a more flat-crowned and flat-brimmed hat. Buckaroos often like the use of a rawhide reata, instead of the nylon and/or poly rope. The longer, the better for buckaroos. Buckaroos also prefer a more flashy and larger style of spurs than do their cowboy counterparts, as with their bits too. Buckaroos prefer a more ornately decorated spade bit, which takes a long process and years of horse training to get to, whereas cowboys will utilize a more simplistic curb bit or something similar!

Saddles have many differences between the two cultures as well! Cowboys utilize a more generic, western-style saddle from which they can rope from. Buckaroos employ what is referred to as a Slick Fork Saddle, one with a larger Mexican or Californio style horn, which lends itself to better dallying and more ease of use.

These and many more differences exist between the cultures. It is unfair to both to say they are the same. To voice such an opinion would belittle all that each culture has worked for and worked toward in order to preserve their own history.

For more information on the subject of Buckaroo and Buckaroo lifestyle, these Google searches are recommended: Great Basin Buckaroo; The Californios; Buckaroo Horsemanship; Buckaroo Lifestyle; and  Ranch Roping.

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Visit the Buckaroo Country Archives; https://buckaroocountry.smugmug.com

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©2016 Mary Williams Hyde, 2705 California Avenue, Klamath Falls, OR 97601 541 883-7456 mary@maryhyde.com