Hunting the Grisly and Other Sketches eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 219 pages of information about Hunting the Grisly and Other Sketches.

Hunting the Grisly and Other Sketches eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 219 pages of information about Hunting the Grisly and Other Sketches.
horses.  At their own work of mastering and riding rough horses they could not be matched by their more civilized rivals; but I have great doubts whether they in turn would not have been beaten if they had essayed kinds of horsemanship utterly alien to their past experience, such as riding mettled thoroughbreds in a steeple-chase, or the like.  Other things being equal (which, however, they generally are not), a bad, big horse fed on oats offers a rather more difficult problem than a bad little horse fed on grass.  After Buffalo Bill’s men had returned, I occasionally heard it said that they had tried cross-country riding in England, and had shown themselves pre-eminently skilful thereat, doing better than the English fox-hunters, but this I take the liberty to disbelieve.  I was in England at the time, hunted occasionally myself, and was with many of the men who were all the time riding in the most famous hunts; men, too, who were greatly impressed with the exhibitions of rough riding then being given by Buffalo Bill and his men, and who talked of them much; and yet I never, at the time, heard of an instance in which one of the cowboys rode to hounds with any marked success.[*] In the same way I have sometimes in New York or London heard of men who, it was alleged, had been out West and proved better riders than the bronco-busters themselves, just as I have heard of similar men who were able to go out hunting in the Rockies or on the plains and get more game than the western hunters; but in the course of a long experience in the West I have yet to see any of these men, whether from the eastern States or from Europe, actually show such superiority or perform such feats.

[*] It is however, quite possible, now that Buffalo Bill’s company has crossed the water several times, that a number of the cowboys have by practice become proficient in riding to hounds, and in steeple-chasing.

It would be interesting to compare the performances of the Australian stock-riders with those of our own cowpunchers, both in cow-work and in riding.  The Australians have an entirely different kind of saddle, and the use of the rope is unknown among them.  A couple of years ago the famous western rifle-shot, Carver, took some cowboys out to Australia, and I am informed that many of the Australians began themselves to practise with the rope after seeing the way it was used by the Americans.  An Australian gentleman, Mr. A. J. Sage, of Melbourne, to whom I had written asking how the saddles and styles of riding compared, answered me as follows: 

“With regard to saddles, here it is a moot question which is the better, yours or ours, for buck-jumpers.  Carver’s boys rode in their own saddles against our Victorians in theirs, all on Australian buckers, and honors seemed easy.  Each was good in his own style, but the horses were not what I should call really good buckers, such as you might get on a back station, and so there was nothing in the show that could unseat the cowboys.  It is only back in the bush that you can get a really good bucker.  I have often seen one of them put both man and saddle off.”

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Hunting the Grisly and Other Sketches from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.