07-20-23

24 MONTEREY COUNTY WEEKLY july 20-26, 2023 www.montereycountyweekly.com To the untrained eye, some rodeo events look like vicious human-animal battles. Put them in context, and they start to look more like practices used by ranchers in the American West for well over a century. Consider tie-down roping, in which a cowboy’s object is to lasso a calf as quickly as possible—from horseback— then to dismount from his horse, tie three of the calf’s legs together, and remount his horse, all while the horse is responsible for ensuring the rope is tight, with no slack. Change the background from a rodeo arena to an open pasture. All of a sudden, these same actions are not for sport. They are a method for cowboys to isolate a sick or injured calf for medical treatment. “The roping events, they are done on a ranch still to this day,” says Scott Dorenkamp, livestock program and government relations manager for the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association. Other events, like saddle bronc riding—in which an athlete tries to stay on a bucking bronco for eight seconds—emerged from the practice of training unbroken horses. “These are all derived from ranch activities,” Dorenkamp notes, although not all activities are still common practices. Dorenkamp is accustomed to explaining the origins of rodeo sports to urbanites who have little or no context to make sense of them. He collects data from the professional rodeo circuit nationwide, including the California Rodeo Salinas, and reports that animal injuries occur less than 0.1 percent of the time. That’s not to say injuries do not occur. In 2014, the Animal Legal Defense Fund sued the California Rodeo Salinas on behalf of the group Showing Animals Respect and Kindness, claiming onsite veterinarians had violated the California Penal Code by failing to report animal injuries to the California Veterinary Medical Board. The group allegedly discovered at least 49 animal injuries over two years, during which time just four injuries were officially reported. “By their very nature, rodeos entail a serious risk of injuries to animals,” according to the suit. “Rodeos frequently cause trauma to the animals that are forced to participate.” In 2016, Monterey County Superior Court Judge Thomas Wills ruled in favor of the Rodeo. “The Court finds there is no triable issue of material fact…SHARK has failed to show that the Rodeo engaged in unlawful acts or practices,” Wills wrote. SHARK appealed the ruling, but later abandoned the case. In papers submitted to the court, injuries are indeed documented. In a letter to the California Veterinary Medical Board providing a livestock injury report for 2013 (one of the years of concern in the nearly decade-old case), Tim Eastman, the veterinarian for the event, documented injuries day by day. Thursday there were none. On Saturday and Sunday, a steer and a calf were injured, one outside of a formal rodeo competition event. “Both animals that were casted are bright, alert, and responsive,” Eastman wrote. “They are both also walking and eating very well.” On Friday, there was a fatality after steer #78 turned in front of a competitor’s horse, causing both to stumble. “The horse stepped on the steer’s neck causing a fracture/luxation at approximately the level of C3-C4. He was deceased by the time he left the arena.” It’s the potential for scenarios like these that gets attention from animal welfare groups (including SHARK’s lawsuit). PRCA rules are meant to preempt some concerns. For example, a veterinarian is required to be onsite during PRCA-sanctioned events, like the California Rodeo Salinas. Beyond that, in Salinas, SPCA Monterey County’s humane officers also have full access to the grounds to monitor for any rough handling or injuries to animals, a practice that’s been in place for 20-plus years. (This access is at the invitation of rodeo officials, not a legal requirement; the SPCA does not accept a donation or a fee from the rodeo.) “This is a very visible event in our community that has the potential for injury to animals,” says SPCA spokesperson Beth Brookhouser. “If us being there can in any way prevent suffering of even just one animal, that’s very important to us.” The humane officers respond to over 900 reports of animal cruelty in Monterey County every year, mostly concerning cats and dogs but also livestock. “The rodeo is hard because we still have our normal number of calls coming in—it is a very busy time of year,” Brookhouser says. She adds that what humane officers are looking for in general are signs of neglect or cruelty, that a law has been broken. They are investigating for compliance with California’s 53 statutes relating to animal treatment and welfare. Brookhouser notes that a lot of calls that come in about dogs raise concerns about animals that are left outdoors at all hours, or are never walked or exercised. But that is legal—state law requires just that dogs have access to food, water and shelter. Of course, the law doesn’t resolve questions about ethical treatment of animals. “My animals sleep on my bed every night,” Brookhouser says. “They are treated as full members of the family. Other animals are not so lucky. A conversation our humane officers have daily is, there is no state law that requires that you love your animal.” Dorenkamp notes that working animals—not just in rodeo, but also police dogs or other service animals—are trained to fulfill a certain function. Rodeo animals are of course working animals, but they are working for the purpose of human sport and entertainment. Does that make rodeo unethical? Dorenkamp’s answer is that the purpose of the animal is up to its human to determine. “I own them. As long as I am taking care of them, and making sure they’re healthy, am I allowed to make a living with them? I think I am.” (Dorenkamp, also a pro rodeo athlete himself, keeps two 20-plus-yearold horses that formerly performed in the rodeo at his Colorado home. “They’re old, all they do is eat hay and drink water, and get brushed,” he says. “They earned the right to stay on the place until they die.”) Dorenkamp’s invitation to skeptics: “Come to the rodeo and watch with an open mind. Walk around, look at the animals and see how well taken care of they are.” Tie-down roping is a practice used by cowboys on ranches to immobilize sick or injured calves for treatment, but roping events are a focus for SPCA Monterey County’s humane officers, who are on the lookout for potential injuries such as broken bones or trachea and spinal cord injuries to calves. “There is no state law that requires that you love your animal.” The Great Dustup Rodeo animals are working animals. Opinions differ as to whether that makes it ethical. By Sara Rubin nic coury

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