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[캐나다 캘거리 여행] 캘거리 스탬피드 로데오쇼_캐나다 알버타주

by 드론타고 여행 2019. 9. 1.
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캘거리 스탬피드에서는 무료쇼도 꽤 볼 수 있지만 로데오쇼랑 나이트쇼를 본다면 더 풍성하게 즐길 수 있을거에요.

로데오쇼는 스탬피드 기간 내내 오후1시30분에 하고 이브닝쇼는 오후7시45분에 열려요.

인터넷으로 구매하면 수수료를 더 내야하니 좌석별 가격만 조회해보시고 직접 오셔서 구매하셔야 7불 아끼실 수 있어요.  매표소에 가면 친절하게 좌석에서 경기장 보이는 뷰까지 다 보여줘서 선택하기 어렵지 않았어요. 다만 매표직원분이랑 대화를 해야한다는거...가 문제죠. 

2일동안 스탬피드에 갔는데 우선 로데오쇼를 보기로 했어요. 

500번대 좌석으로 긴 대화끝에 결정했어요. 금액은 티켓 하나당 70불정도요. 

표를 사서 자리를 잡습니다. 팝콘, 맥주 많이들 먹더라고요. 500번대도 충분히 괜찮았어요. 비와도 지붕이 막아주는 마지노선 자리입니다. 뙤약볕도 막아주고요. 

오프닝을 시작합니다. 영어는 너무 빨리 말하니까 거의 못알아 듣습니다. 그래도 문제없어요. 쇼니까요. 

로데오 경기는 여러종목이 있어요. tie-down roping, team roping, steer wrestling, saddle bronc riding, bareback bronc riding, bull riding and barrel racing 

그 중에 가장 기본적인 8초 견디기입니다. 그냥 견디기만 하면 안되고 말의 폼과 카우보이 자세가 점수에 들어가요. 말은 높이 뛰어야 하고 카우보이는 위풍당당한 포즈를 취하고 있어야 해요. 

<검색> 미국 카우보이들이 길들이지 않은 말이나 소를 타고 누가 오래 버티는가를 겨루는 경기. 로데오라는 용어는 스페인어에서 유래되었는데, 가축을 모으는 일이라는 의미를 담고 있다. 즉 옛날 미국 서부에서 카우보이들이 흩어진 가축을 모으는 일을 하다가 이와 같은 경기를 착안한 것으로 짐작된다. 오늘날 로데오의 주요 경기는 황소 타기, 안장 놓고 타기, 안장 없이 타기, 송아지 옭아매기, 수송아지와 겨루기 등이다.

그 밖에도 로데오 경기는 야생소나 야생마와 겨루는 등 여러 가지 형태가 추가 되고 있다. 로데오는 1945년 로데오카우보이협회가 결성되었을 만큼 흥행을 목적으로 하고 있으며, 적지 않은 상금을 내걸고 내기에 이용되기도 한다. 현재 로데오는 미국을 비롯해 캐나다와 오스트레일리아 등에서 성행한다.

[네이버 지식백과] 로데오 [rodeo] (체육학사전, 2012. 5. 25., 스포츠북스 체육학연구회)

 

이 종목은 새끼양을 빠른 시간내에 로프로 잡아 다리를 묶는건데 시간 내에 양을 제압하면서 단단하게 묶는거라 스킬이 대단합니다. 1등은 정말 다르더라고요. 

중간에 이런 군악대 공연도 있고요. 

배럴레이싱도 있어요. 이건 여성카우보이들이 말을 타고 일정 코스를 빠른 시간내에 도는거에요. 멋있어요. 

로데오 종목에 대한 설명을 퍼와봤습니다. 

Professional rodeos in the United States and Canada usually incorporate both timed events and "rough stock" events, most commonly calf roping, team roping, steer wrestling, saddle bronc and bareback bronc riding, bull riding, and barrel racing. Additional events may be included at the collegiate and high school level, including breakaway roping and goat tying. Some events are based on traditional ranch practices; others are modern developments and have no counterpart in ranch practice.

Rodeos may also offer western-themed entertainment at intermission, including music and novelty acts, such as trick riding.

Timed events[edit]

Team roping, here, the steer has been roped by the header, and the heeler is now attempting a throw.

Roping[edit]

Roping competitions are based on the tasks of a working cowboy, who often had to capture calves and adult cattle for branding, medical treatment and other purposes. The cowboy must throw a type of rope with a loop, known as a lariat, riata or reata, or lasso, over the head of a calf or onto the horns and around the hind legs of adult cattle, and secure the animal in a fashion dictated by its size and age.

  • Calf roping, also called Tie-down roping, is based on ranch work in which calves are roped for branding, medical treatment, or other purposes. It is the oldest of rodeo's timed events.[14] The cowboy ropes a running calf around the neck with a lariat, and his horse stops and sets back on the rope while the cowboy dismounts, runs to the calf, throws it to the ground and ties three feet together. (If the calf falls when roped, the cowboy must lose time waiting for the calf to get back to its feet so that the cowboy can do the work.) The job of the horse is to hold the calf steady on the rope. A well-trained calf-roping horse will slowly back up while the cowboy ties the calf, to help keep the lariat snug.
  • Breakaway roping - a form of calf roping where a very short lariat is used, tied lightly to the saddle horn with string and a flag. When the calf is roped about the neck, the horse stops, the flagged rope breaks free of the saddle, and the calf runs on without being thrown or tied. In most of the United States, this event is primarily for women of all ages and boys under 12. In places where traditional "tie-down" calf roping is not allowed, riders of both genders compete.
  • Team roping, also called "heading and heeling," is the only rodeo event where men and women riders compete together. Two people capture and restrain a full-grown steer. One horse and rider, the "header," lassos a running steer's horns, while the other horse and rider, the "heeler," lassos the steer's two hind legs. Once the animal is captured, the riders face each other and lightly pull the steer between them, so that both ropes are taut. This technique originated from methods of capture and restraint for treatment used on a ranch.

Other timed events[edit]

  • Barrel racing - is a timed speed and agility event. In barrel racing, horse and rider gallop around a cloverleaf pattern of barrels, making agile turns without knocking the barrels over.[15] In professional, collegiate and high school rodeo, barrel racing is an exclusively women's sport, though men and boys occasionally compete at local O-Mok-See competition.

 

Steer wrestling

  • Steer wrestling - Also known as "Bulldogging," is a rodeo event where the rider jumps off his horse onto a Corriente steer and 'wrestles' it to the ground by grabbing it by the horns. This is probably the single most physically dangerous event in rodeo for the cowboy, who runs a high risk of jumping off a running horse head first and missing the steer, or of having the thrown steer land on top of him, sometimes horns first.
  • Goat tying is usually an event for women or pre-teen girls and boys; a goat is staked out while a mounted rider runs to the goat, dismounts, grabs the goat, throws it to the ground and ties it in the same manner as a calf. The horse must not come into contact with the goat or its tether. This event was designed to teach smaller or younger riders the basics of calf roping without requiring the more complex skill of roping the animal. This event is not part of professional rodeo competition.

"Rough stock" competition[edit]

 

Saddle bronc riding; in rough stock events, the animal usually "wins."

In spite of popular myth, most modern "broncs" are not in fact wild horses, but are more commonly spoiled riding horses or horses bred specifically as bucking stock. Rough stock events also use at least two well-trained riding horses ridden by "pick up men" (or women), tasked with assisting fallen riders and helping successful riders get safely off the bucking animal.

  • Bronc riding - there are two divisions in rodeo, bareback bronc riding, where the rider is only allowed to hang onto a bucking horse with a type of surcingle called a "rigging"; and saddle bronc riding, where the rider uses a specialized western saddle without a horn (for safety) and hangs onto a heavy lead rope, called a bronc rein, which is attached to a halter on the horse.
  • Bull riding - an event where the cowboys ride full-grown bulls instead of horses. Although skills and equipment similar to those needed for bareback bronc riding are required, the event differs considerably from horse riding competition due to the danger involved. Because bulls are unpredictable and may attack a fallen rider, rodeo clowns, now known as "bullfighters", work during bull-riding competition to distract the bulls and help prevent injury to competitors.

 

Bull riding

  • Steer riding - a rough stock event for boys and girls where children ride steers, usually in a manner similar to bulls. Ages vary by region, as there is no national rule set for this event, but generally participants are at least eight years old and compete through about age 14. It is a training event for bronc riding and bull riding.

Less common events[edit]

Several other events may be scheduled on a rodeo program depending upon the rodeo's governing association.

  • Steer roping —Not listed as an official PRCA event,[16] and banned in several states, but quietly recognized by the PRCA in some areas. It is rarely seen in the United States today because of the tremendous risk of injury to all involved, as well as animal cruelty concerns. A single roper ropes the steer around the horns, throws the rope around the steer's back hip, dallies, and rides in a ninety-degree angle to the roped steer (opposite side from the aforementioned hip). This action brings the steer's head around toward the legs in such a manner as to redirect the steer's head towards its back legs. This causes the steer to "trip". Steers are too big to tie in the manner used for calves. Absent a "heeler," it is very difficult for one person to restrain a grown steer once down. However, the steer's "trip" causes it to be temporarily incapacitated allowing its legs to be tied in a manner akin to calf roping. The event has roots in ranch practices north of the Rio Grande, but is no longer seen at the majority of American rodeos. However, it is practiced at some rodeos in Mexico, and may also be referred to as "steer tripping."
  • Steer daubing—Usually seen at lower levels of competition, an event to help young competitors learn skills later needed for steer wrestling. A rider carrying a long stick with a paint-filled dauber at the end attempts to run up alongside a steer and place a mark of paint inside a circle that has been drawn on the side of the animal.[17]
  • Pole bending is a speed and agility competition sometimes seen at local and high school rodeos. It is more commonly viewed as a gymkhana or O-Mok-See competition. In pole bending, the horse and rider run the length of a line of six upright poles, turn sharply and weave through the poles, turn again and weave back, then return to the start.
  • Chute dogging is an event to teach pre-teen boys how to steer wrestle. The competitor enters a bucking chute with a small steer. The boy will then place his right arm around the steer's neck and left hand on top of its neck. When ready, the gate is opened and steer and contestant exit the chute. Once they cross over a designated line, the competitor will grab onto the horns of the steer (colloquially, to "hook-up" to the steer) and wrestle it to the ground.

이상 서울 수도권 용인 기흥 성남 분당 화성 동탄 수원 영통 경기동남부 드론 국가 자격증 학원 서울비행교육원(진코치,드론의 미래가치를 만드는 사람들)이었습니다.

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