Some wind noise but a good one. His list of injuries at the 11:00 mark is hard to believe.
Some wind noise but a good one. His list of injuries at the 11:00 mark is hard to believe.
I'll go back and listen this and it may be in this interview, but I saw where he kept the bull/bought the bull that broke his neck.
He purchased Arctic Assassin that broke his neck and ended his career.
More fuel = more boost!!
7 million dollar bull rider. the best to ever do it
i wish a buck was still silver, back when the country was strong
Listening to him talk about how he got in the chute, wasting no time for the bull to know he was there was absolutely amazing. He rode on a whole other level than everyone around him.
For the ducks
JB lived bulls since he was able to walk and talk. He was a couple years younger than me and I remember when he started riding sheep. That dude loved it more than anyone to the point it would get annoying. All he ever talked about was bull riding and how this bull does this and how he does that. I remember we went coon hunting one night and him talking bull riding for so long I finally had to tell him to shut up I can’t hear the dog lol. It was pretty cool to see him progress from sheep to the best of the best.
I can't imagine how that ole boy is gonna feel when he crawls out of the bed when he gets to be 50-60 years old
I am a nobody, that met somebody, that can save anybody.
“… duckhunting stands alone as an outdoor discipline. It has a tang and spirit shared by no other sport—a philosophy compounded of sleet, the winnow of unseen wings, and the reeks of marsh mud and wet wool. No other sport has so many theories, legends, casehardened disciples and treasured memories.”
--John Madson, The Mallard, 1960
"Never trust a duck hunter who cares more about his success than his dog's."
"I am a man, not an animal and I always try to conduct myself accordingly. Doing anything less is just giving up and expecting (and being okay) with failure."
Rubberhead
Here's a good one
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