Trinidad Roundup Time

Written
1993

 Proud, prancing palomino

      sidesteps with trained tail high

      and neck arched like a Roman statue.

Polished saddle of silver and finely tooled leather

       are without sign of range work wear.

A curb bit is attached

      to a brightly colored

      headstall of woven horse hair and leather.

Lizard skin boots, polished to lacquer,

      are thrust into stirrups.

Sharply creased gaberdine pants fill the saddle.

Gene Autry fancy dress coat covers a colorful shirt

      with its turquoise and silver bolo tie.

All this finery is topped by a new white Stetson.

Once a country boy, now a city man, but today a cowboy.

For man and horse it is Roundup time in Trinidad. 

Flags and marching bands are surrounded by

      sleekly groomed horses and riders.

4-H club members on floats in their

      country green and white uniforms

      display their year's work.

Big nosed clowns, who in the afternoon will

        hide from death in a wooden barrel,

       laughingly harvest road apple reminders

       of the passing Roundup parade.

The beautiful classic Packard convertible displays

      the beauty of queens

      and smiles of political leaders.

Streets are lined with peddlers selling

      cowboy vests and hats

      for the under 6 crowd.

Pickups covered with dust

      and time dented horse trailers

      are reminders that

      the county folks are in town.

The September sun

      and wind provide enough

      heat and dust to authenticate the event. 

After the parade ends its time for viewers

       to be on stage and visit county friends.

Give a promise to take

      in the exhibits and see

      Esther, the prize ram, and Billy's pet beef

      auctioned off in a tribal rite of male passage.

Try a picnic in Kit Carson Park

      or go on out to the

      Rodeo and eat the Roundup Committee's

       beef, beer and beans.

Smell the horses

      and hear the sheep protest.

Follow that 12 year old girl

      in green and white

      and admire her big fat pig.

Sit in the stadium

      and listen to hear when

       the ghost of great Jesse Like

        will come out of chute three.

Watch the horse race

         and remember to friends

        that long dead Yellow Gold

        could have beaten them all.

Push back your day old stetson,

       talk country and

       for just a few days

      be alive in 1880.

 

Notes
Published in Trinidad, Colorado My Home Town' The round uo is a very strong community tradition.