Dictionary of Some Rodeo Terms

Atlantic States Gay Rodeo Association

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  • Bucking Chutes
    The place where contestants get on rodeo stock prior to their rides.

  • Butterfly
    The form a rope is supposed to take when a team roper goes after the back legs of a calf.

  • Chaps
    Pronounced "SHAPS", also called "leggings", these colorful leather coverings are there for more than decoration. Chaps afford considerable protection to cowpokes who get ironed against a fence, mashed in the chute or bucked off. Arena dirt is harder than it looks from the stands.

  • Cowboy Cadillac
    Pickup trucks equipped with gun racks, four wheel drive, well-worn mud flaps and more miles on dirt roads then freeways.

  • Covering
    When cowboys and cowgirls manage to stay on broncs or bulls long enough to qualify for a score.

  • Face Plant
    This refers to those unfortunate cowfolks who fail to cover.

  • Goose Egg
    The score a contestant earns when he or she gets a scalp scraper or throws a wounded moth. (0)

  • Grand Marshal
    An honor bestowed by the rodeo community to someone who has made substantial contributions to the Gay and Lesbian Community.

  • Pickup Man
    No, this is not the driver of a pickup truck. This is a mounted arena official who assists bareback bronc riders in dismounting from their horses.

  • Seeing Daylight
    When a rider comes loose from a bucking animal far enough for spectators to see daylight between the rider and animal. This not always a bad thing, and does not always mean the rider is about to be bucked off. There is a riding technique called "floating" used by bronc riders which makes them appear as if they are going to be bucked off at the animals every jump.

  • The Well
    Inside side of a spinning bull. When a contestant enters the well, they can usually count on a dirt dive, face plant, or worse, rather like being suck inside a tornado.

  • Wounded moth
    The form a rope is not supposed to take.

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