Whitney Savoie can barely remember a time when rodeo wasn’t part of her life. She remembers watching her parents ride in the arena when she was a little girl and jumping at the opportunity to mount up when she was just 6 years old. An all-around competitor, she roped, ran barrels, tied goats and joined in just about every event she could as part of the All Florida Junior Rodeo Association.
Now 38 and president of the AFJRA, Whitney and her husband work a ranch of 2,500 cattle in Moore Haven. She still rides as part of their cow-calf operation, but her kids have taken over in the rodeo arena.
“We’ve worked on the ranch our whole entire lives and been around horses and farming our whole entire lives,” she says. “Rodeo has just been something we did when we were little, and that’s how we’ve brought up our kids.”
The couple’s 11-year-old daughter, Avery, has already won several rodeos at the 10 and under, 15 and under and 19 and under levels. By her already high standards, the 2024 season has been disappointing, mostly because her brother, Rance, 7, has been beating her in the arena.
“Breakaway is my favorite because I get to rope with my cousins and my brother,” Avery says. “We compete a lot.”
Those relationships made junior rodeo a lifelong project for Whitney. Many families have competed for generations, just like hers, and seeing them in the arena alongside her own kids is as much of a thrill as the roping.
“It’s just a big, family-oriented association. Everyone gets along, everyone likes to see each other’s kids win,” Whitney says. “We have friends that I grew up with, and now their kids are coming back. It’s just unreal.”
First Rodeo
Heather Fleckinger comes from one of those rodeo families. She started competing in first grade, taking on every event girls were allowed to do. When her son Slone, 12, started rodeo in kindergarten, it was the perfect opportunity for her to get more involved with the AFJRA.
“Coming from a rodeo family and rodeo myself, we know what kind of help they need,” Heather says. “It takes a village to run a nonprofit like that.”
Heather’s experience also gives her a full understanding of challenges families unfamiliar with rodeo might face when their children take an interest in the sport. Competitors must own their own horses and have a place to board them. Each rodeo lasts a full weekend, and many are not near accommodations, so families often need their own trailers with living quarters. There are also strict dress codes and GPA requirements.
“It’s a fairly expensive sport because, unlike a baseball bat, you have to take care of a horse every day,” Heather says. “It doesn’t matter if you’re not using it that weekend or not.”
Even with those barriers to entry, Heather has noticed more families without a long history in rodeo coming to the sport in the last decade than when she was competing. Her hunch is they’re drawn to the culture around rodeo as much as the sport itself.
“When you show up to a rodeo or a child goes to dinner, it’s ‘Yes ma’am’ and ‘No ma’am’ most of the time,” she says. “There’s manners, there’s politeness. Just a very different level of how they’re being raised.”
Heather has found junior rodeo in Florida to be a welcoming community, albeit a competitive one. Each year, AFJRA takes a trip to Las Vegas for the national rodeo finals, where the state has been successful.
“Since my child has been there from before kindergarten, I will not be freaking out at the rodeo when I don’t have my eyes on him because everyone kind of looks out for everyone else’s kid,” she says. “Some kids come in that are a little more beginner, and they still have a really great time. So, they don’t really mind getting their booties kicked on the weekend.”
Green Pastures
All that work can seem daunting, but for Whitney, there is no question that it is worthwhile. Not only do kids have the chance to learn discipline and earn the satisfaction that comes with a winning performance, but they also pick up skills that serve them well outside the arena.
“It keeps them busy and doing things that are active, not just sitting around playing on a phone or an iPad,” she says. “It gets them out in public. They get to do interviews when they win in Vegas or Texas at one of those big ropings. They get to meet people. Later in life, it’s going to help them when they go to school or if they need anything.”
It can also be a path to a college scholarship for those at the front of the pack. While competitors must move on from the AFJRA after eighth grade, they can continue in the Florida High School Rodeo Association. Several Florida students have gone on to earn full-ride rodeo scholarships in recent years at schools such as Carlton State, Texas A&M, Sam Houston State and McNeese State, where Whitney herself went on a rodeo scholarship.
While Heather still rides and would love to compete, she has her hands full keeping up with AFJRA and her son’s rodeo aspirations. Caring for his six horses, practicing with him daily and traveling to another rodeo almost every weekend leaves time for little else. For her, it’s all part of the rodeo lifestyle.
“For us, it’s not a hobby; it’s a way of life,” Heather says. “It’s a very different way of life and a very demanding one. There’s just nothing else like it in Florida, and that’s why it’s been around for so long.”
Rodeo Season
If you’re new to rodeo, here’s what to expect from the AFJRA season:
August-April: The association holds a rodeo on the third weekend of every month except December. Each is a weekend-long event, with competitions on Friday and Saturday nights and a banquet on Sunday.
Athletes accumulate points from events at each of these rodeos, from 10 points for first place in an event to one point for 10th place.
May: The 15 athletes with the most points go to the state finals the third weekend of May. The competition is two days, just like the regular season.
What’s a Chute Dog?
Not sure what to make of events such as chute dogging, pole bending or breakaway? These are some of the most common events spectators and athletes might encounter at junior rodeo competitions:
Cutting—A horse and rider work to isolate a single cow within a designated area. Riders are judged on horsemanship, ability to anticipate the cow’s movement, reflexes and agility.
Bull riding—Riders fight to stay on their bull for as long as possible. They are judged on body position, use of their free arm and the animal’s efforts.
Tie down—Also known as calf roping, riders chase a calf and rope it around the neck. Once the calf is caught, the rider dismounts and runs to tie the calf by three legs as quickly as possible.
Barrel racing—A horse and rider attempt to run a cloverleaf pattern around a set of barrels in the fastest time. Time may be added if the rider touches or moves any barrels.
Breakaway roping—This event is a variation of calf roping where the calf is roped but not tied. The calf is given a head start before the rider attempts to lasso the calf with a rope tied to the saddle with a string. Once they’ve roped the calf, the rider stops and the string breaks.
Chute dogging—A competitor leads a steer 10 feet out of a chute into the arena and must wrestle, or “dog,” the steer to the ground in 60 seconds. They cannot trip the steer; a legal fall requires all four feet and the steer’s head to face the same direction.
Goat tying—Competitors leave a chute on horseback and race toward a goat staked on a 10-foot-long rope in the arena. They dismount while the horse is in motion, drop the goat on its side and tie three of its feet as quickly as possible.
Team roping—Two riders attempt to rope a steer together in the fastest time. The first, known as the “header,” ropes the steer around the horns or neck, and then the “heeler” ropes the steer by its hind legs. A time penalty is added if the heeler only catches the steer by one leg.