I sat on many a West Coast rodeo fence when I was a little girl. My brothers
and I went with our dad, who team roped, bulldogged and roped calves, and so
many of the saddles, buckles and trophies in our living and tack rooms came from
Rosser-run rodeos.
Patriarch ProRodeo Hall of Famer Cotton Rosser was and still is the
consummate showman. He’s been there with a smile, tip of his hat, hug or
handshake for everyone who crosses his path all my life and long before
that.
When I was a kid, Cotton’s son, Lee, was the quiet one who often put on the
pickup-man chaps. Over the years, the Rosser family grew. I went to college at
Cal Poly with Brian, and was at the Reno Rodeo with my dad the year they
announced baby Reno Rosser’s grand entry into the world. In more recent times,
Katharine has joined the crew.
But growing up a little girl, Cindy Rosser was the coolest. She was the
blonde bomber who carried the American flag down the cliff-like hillside that
overlooks the Rowell Ranch Rodeo in Hayward; the gutsy girl who burst through
the gargantuan paper horseshoe on her black horse and lit up the arena at the
Cow Palace; the one who rose up through the big, beautiful liberty bell,
horseback, Old Glory in hand, then revolved center-arena during the national
anthem.
When my brothers and I played rodeo on the back lawn, I always kicked off the
festivities by racing as fast as my bare feet would carry me around the
perimeter of the grass, makeshift dishtowel flag in hand, while one
rodeo-announcer brother blared Cindy Rosser’s name and the other broke into a
round of "Oh say can you see…"
In later years, barrel racing NFR secretary Cindy married the handy, handsome
Julio Moreno. Julio had a brown horse by the name of Six Pac, and the
combination proved a tall order for the rest of the pack. For many years, Julio
was a perennial fixture in the heading box at the Wrangler National Finals Rodeo
and was always "right there" for the world title. If you’re into trick and fancy
roping, watch Julio today when he’s clearing the NFR arena, a PBR event or doing
his pickup-man thing. The guy can do the most amazing things with a rope that
even the big dogs stop to watch him work.
On January 29, 1988, Julio and Cindy were blessed with the most precious
brand of gold buckle there is in the form of a bouncing baby boy they named
Mikel Jay. They were thrilled, adoring, doting parents, and the darling little
bundle became the center of their universe.
Mikel grew into a big, strapping young man who loved to play football, shoot
a game of pool, fire off a paintball gun, rock the house running the sound
system at rodeos and bull ridings, raise great bucking bulls and cook.
We were all shocked when Mikel was diagnosed with leukemia three years ago.
The rodeo family was still hanging its head at the tragic loss of Brittany
Gellerman, who left way too soon, at 15, after a miserable bout with the
dreaded disease. The daughter of World Champion Team Roper Doyle Gellerman and
Supermom Denny Dobbas was so special, bright, beautiful and young.
We would not and could not lose another. Mikel would whip it. Things would
turn out differently somehow.
Again, the rodeo world rallied. "We are here for you. What can we do? Just
name it," their family of friends told the Morenos. Mikel faced the
fight
head-on, Cindy and Julio at his side, the rodeo community at the
ready.
Superstar friends such as Sandy Kenney, a surgical nurse by
trade, rodeo
secretary by hobby and the most amazing friend by nature,
served on the front
lines.
The best doctors on the planet and even an unselfish bone-marrow donor
stepped in with the best that modern medicine has to offer. Mikel held
his head
high and fought the strong, brave fight. But by early May this
year, his body
had had enough. His liver was failing. His doctors sent
the Morenos home to
Marysville from Seattle, with the devastating news
that there was nothing more
they could do. Wrong answer. Rossers and
Morenos don’t give up that easily. They
tried it all. Then the end drew
near.
Mikel’s family and friends were incredible. They gathered round him, day and
night, talked to him, played cards with him, loved him. The 2006
Wheatland High
Prom King was presented his high school diploma and a
well-deserved academic
letter to join those earned for football,
basketball and track the morning of
Friday, May 19. It was his wish to
graduate, and he got it done.
That evening, about 6 p.m., Mikel fell into a final, peaceful sleep. He drew
his last breath cradled in Cindy’s arms, Julio at his side, holding
cousin
Linsay’s hand.
Again, the rodeo world stopped, hung its head and cried. Then everybody
gathered hands, took a deep breath and stood back up. Time to celebrate
a short
but nonetheless spectacular young life. Time to drop
everything, get together
and hug each other.
If you’re one of those people who wanted to go, but didn’t really have time
to go to the memorial service, or maybe figured there’d be so many
people there
that they wouldn’t even notice if you were there or not,
rest easy. It’s OK. I
just about did the same thing, and they wouldn’t
have held it against me,
either.
I was swamped with work, and the 10-hour round-trip drive sounded like more
than I had in my half-empty energy tank. Then the phone rang. It was
Johnny and
Sherrie Jones from Morro Bay, offering to pick me up and
take me with them.
Thank God for good friends.
If you don’t know Johnny and Sherrie, he’s John W. Jones Jr., the three-time
champ of the world, Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association rookie of
the year,
ProRodeo Hall of Famer son of fellow world champion steer
wrestler, PRCA rookie
of the year and ProRodeo Hall of Famer John W.
Jones Sr. They’re legends who
don’t act like it. I went to Cal Poly
with Johnny, and Sherrie Whitlow was that
cute, slender Arizona girl
who roped with power she wasn’t built to have.
Johnny and Sherrie set sail on his professional rodeo career together, and
pulled up in the prime of his career the day their oldest daughter,
Katie,
started kindergarten. Katie turned 20 on May 13. Their baby and
my goddaughter,
Shannon, is 17 now and graduated from high school with
Mikel and the rest of the
Class of 2006 this year. Sherrie was
diagnosed with MS a few years back, though
you’d never know it. Like
Cindy, she’s right there behind Johnny and their kids,
a smile on her
face and an encouraging word at the ready, every step of the way.
Johnny gives Sherrie a shot in the arm once a week, but she’s not about
to
complain about that or anything else. Rodeo people don’t tend to do
that.
Instead, they cope and conquer.
Johnny, Sherrie and I sat in the front row of the Wheatland High
football-field bleachers at Mikel’s May 24 memorial service, and what a
breathtaking experience it was. The bright blue sky, dotted this day
with
cotton-like clouds, was the perfect backdrop to this festive
farewell that also
featured floral hearts, stars, crosses and
horseshoes. Blue and white are the
colors of Mikel’s beloved Wheatland
Pirates, after all. How magically
appropriate to send him off that
field he’d starred on so many times one last
time.
Mikel’s closest friend since second grade, Ashley Claire, kicked things off
with some special remembrances of the dear boy she so knew and loved.
Then Bob
Tallman stepped up and reminded us that Mikel is God’s kid
now, and asked that
all the cowboys in the crowd put their hats back on
their heads, knowing well it
would have been Mikel’s wish.
"There must be some angels up there who think it’s slack instead of a
performance," Tallman quipped, figuring Mikel’s already busy tightening
up the
Heavenly ship.
"Big Mike" loved his football, and I loved Tallman’s observation that the
standout high school lineman had "a grin as wide as a goal post."
Tallman
recalled Cotton paying him $2.50 a day 40 years ago
for such
rodeo-related
chores as untying calves. I’m not quite
old enough to
remember that, but I do
recall working the
roping chutes at Leo, Jerold
and Reg Camarillo roping schools
during the days when this skinny,
wide-brimmed, upstart
announcer lived in a
rundown singlewide
on Leo’s
place. The first time I heard Tallman do his thing
was at a
little rodeo at Lake Comanche, and I clearly remember asking my dad on
the drive home why the guy talked so much and so loud. Hey,
I’d grown
up to that
point listening to the relatively
reserved master, Cy
Taillon.
Tallman has since revolutionized his craft, joining Taillon in the ProRodeo
Hall of Fame. He’s also single-handedly responsible for raising the
decibel
level at my house on a daily basis for over a decade
now. My
oldest, Lane—and
yes, he’s named after my late, great
Frost friend—has
watched Tallman work in
person and via NFR
and BFI tapes all his life,
and can and does do a mean
Tallman
impersonation when he and little
brother, Taylor, rope the dummy in our
living room.
I laughed and could relate when Tallman told us at the memorial service that
Mikel used to have to help him program his cell phone all the time. My
kids have
to keep me techno-tuned, too.
A flankstrap, the very one Mikel used to flank bull superstars like Reindeer
Dippin’ for the very first time, and a football joined the colorful
spray of
flowers that lay atop the casket. So it made perfect
sense
that Tallman turned
the mike over to Pastor John Burns,
aka Mikel’s
high school football coach and
mentor-like friend.
He spoke of Mikel’s
determined, strong spirit; the one that
kept him on the football field
even after the diagnosis.
"He never quit or gave up on or off the field, and he was always smiling,"
Burns said, in confirmation of what we’d all witnessed. Mikel’s
favorite play
was the "832 trap," and he no doubt daydreamed
about
getting back to such moves
while hitting the hospital
treadmill to try
and stay in shape through it
all.
We laughed. We cried. Then a few of Mikel’s best buddies—Nic Prather, Devin
Sullivan, Jarrett Stutler, Zack Sanders, A.J. Dunn and Jeff
Shearer—carried the
casket over to the bed of Mikel’s
black
truck, Wheatland Pirates flag
flapping in the breeze.
Jeff was the only
one in the bunch who wore a cowboy
hat. The
rest, including Reno, who
took the wheel of Mikel’s truck for the
procession to the cemetery,
wore one of Mikel’s beloved ball
caps.
If you don’t know Jeff, he often serves as a pickup man alongside Julio and
rode broncs at the Finals a few years back. "Shetland" Shearer jumped
in with
Julio, Lee, Linsay’s brother, Levi, and a few Flying U
crew
members in 1997 when
a broken railroad trussel caused an
emergency
flood that stranded a band of
bucking horse mares
and their colts. The
courageous cowboys herded the horses,
sometimes at a swim, to
safety.
Levi is a testicular cancer survivor, who was diagnosed while rodeoing at Cal
Poly. He headed for Portland for his regular screening a
couple days
before
Mike’s memorial service, and was given a
clean bill of health
from Dr. Nichols,
whom he shares with the
likes of Lance Armstrong.
Levi’s going to marry his
sweetheart, Katie Wolcott, on November
18.
At service’s end, Mikel’s family and friends released hundreds of blue and
white balloons, each with a special hand-written message on it, into
the
Heavens. As the bleachers emptied onto the field, we all
fell in
line on foot
and followed Mikel’s truck, built-in boom
box of a radio
blaring his favorite
Hip Hop tunes, in a
massive procession down the
road to the peaceful and quaint
Wheatland Cemetery. As his truck left
the field, it tore down
the paper "Once a
Pirate, Always a Pirate" sign
held up by his
football teammates.
Along the way, a pretty blonde woman grabbed Sherrie from behind and hugged
her hard. I so felt for her. It was Brittany’s mom, Denny. When we
gathered
round at the cemetery for one last goodbye, I
happened
straight into the arms of
my old stock contractor
buddy John Growney.
It was a powerful deja vu of that
sunny
Oklahoma day when we buried
Lane Frost right by his fellow Hall of
Famer,
adopted grandpa and bull
riding mentor Freckles
Brown.
Cody Lambert was one of Lane’s closest friends in the world, and he was a
pallbearer that day. He was there on Mikel’s day, too. I’d spoken to
Cody on the
phone a week or two earlier and he’d told me that
he and
his wife, Leanne, had
just been to El Paso to
bring
their
basketball-star son, Riley, home for the
summer from his
first year of
college. When I said it
felt like Riley’s first
year away from home had
flown
by, Cody’s comment was, "For
you, maybe." Cody
will go down in
my
rodeo history recordbook
as the guy who got the most
homesick
when he
had to leave his
family behind to
hit the rodeo trail and go to
work.
Dr. Tandy Freeman flew in from Texas for Mikel’s day, too, and rodeo has
known no better friend than Freeman. I know the hospitality of Tandy
and his
wife, Maureen, firsthand. When he reconstructed my
knee and
repaired leftover
complications of an old
goat tying
injury a couple
years ago, they took me into
their home like
family. After being turned
away by
other doctors because my knee
was such a wreck and surgeons at
Stanford had already taken
their best shot,
Tandy
stepped in, took his
best shot and
changed my life. I don’t
live in pain
every single day
like I
used to, thanks
to him, and he’s humbly worked the same
kinds of
miracles on
countless cowboys.
From the cemetery, we headed for the wide-open gates of Lee and Bonnie’s
place right there in Wheatland. The Santa Maria Elks, where the Rossers
have run
a first-rate rodeo for decades, made the
journey from
half the
state away to
fire up the
barbecue and serve up their
world-famous
Santa Maria-style
tri-tip
to the appreciative
crowd. The community
baked up literally hundreds of homemade
treats for
dessert.
Clifford and Marguerite Happy joined Johnny, Sherrie and I at our table for a
visit over dinner. They’re renowned Hollywood stunt
people
now, but
when I was a
little girl Clifford
worked at my dad’s
vet clinic for
entry-fee money between
rodeos. His mom was the
great ProRodeo Hall of
Fame
trick rider and rodeo
secretary
Edith Happy Connelly. Cliff
and
his trick riding sister, Bonnie, still
really miss her.
They lost their
pickup man and PRCA gold card
member dad, Don
Happy, earlier this year.
And now Marguerite
is
missing her mom. Sally Martins
died of emphysema
this
spring, just short of Daddy Jim’s 75th birthday. Oh how
he
misses
his wife of 56 years.
Wow. What a day. I am so grateful to Johnny and Sherrie for getting me there
to experience it. I walked in the door about midnight, wiped out, but
overwhelmed with appreciation for my family, my friends, my life. I
kissed my
boys on their cheeks, and sat on the sides of their
beds and
watched them sleep
awhile. I’ve done that
every night
of their lives,
and still check to be sure
they’re breathing
eight or 10 times a night.
The
history on that dates back to
long before they were born.
When I first went to work for the PRCA, straight out of college, I met a
wonderful couple by the name of Kim and Tommy Keith. Kim had worked at
the PRCA
for many years, and Tommy was and still is a ProRodeo
Judging
Official. They had
a darling little blonde
boy named
Braden, and on
July 14, 1987, Braden was
blessed with a little
brother, Dillon Charles
Keith.
Their family was complete.
Kim returned to work from maternity leave on October 1st that year, and
Dillon died that very day of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS). I
wanted so
badly to pick that beautiful baby up out of that
tiny casket,
revive him and
hand him back to my
friends.
Instead, all I could do was
pat him and tell him
goodbye. It
was an experience that changed me
forever. Knowing Mikel Moreno and
his entire family changed us
all,
too. We’re better for it.
We’re blessed for
it.
An endless sea of friendly, familiar faces made the journey to Wheatland to
say goodbye to Mikel, and give Cindy and Julio a hug. There were world
champions, ranch cowboys, 80-somethings and babies in strollers. I’m
sorry I
didn’t get to visit with everyone. I didn’t even know
them all.
But these are
rodeo people. These are my
people.
Well, Mikel, I know you’ve got a show to run. And because you have the spirit
of a Moreno and a Rosser, I know it’s your wish that
the show
go on. So
in the
words of that catchy tune
your family has
used to close many a
successful
performance over the years,
"Happy Trails to You—Until We
Meet Again."
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