![]()
|
||||||||||
|
The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here. ©
2002 |
English
couple take cowboy holiday
Frank Davies lived his cowboy
dreams last week.
The truck driver from Sheffield,
England, along with his wife, Jo Burton, built their two-week American
vacation around the Sisters Rodeo -- where they immersed themselves in
the kind of cowboy action that has thrilled Frank since he was a kid.
Back in England, Frank does
what he can to live the cowboy way -- on a steel horse.
"Like all little boys, I always
wanted to be a cowboy," he said. "And since I don't have room to keep
a horse, I turned me Harley into the horse."
He tricked out his bike with
a cowboy saddle, with a scabbarded replica Winchester rifle on the side.
A painting of Monument Valley -- the archetypal setting of John Ford's
Westerns -- graces the gas tank.
Jo is not quite so enamored
of horses as her husband, but she enjoys the "cowboy thing" in her own
way.
"I like the clothes, the style,"
she said.
The couple discovered Central
Oregon through an ad for motorcycle adventures in an English biker magazine.
The Central Oregon road trip was jettisoned as soon as Frank found out
they didn't offer Harley Davidsons to ride.
But by that time, they'd found
out about Sisters and the Rodeo. The pictures in the brochures they sent
for sealed the deal.
"It looked so quaint," Jo
said. "As soon as I mentioned it to Frank, he was sold. We were going
to the rodeo this summer."
Rodeo is not the easiest sport
to follow in England. In fact, says Frank, "it's not possible to do it."
So the couple had only a general
idea of what to expect. They were impressed, not only by the events themselves,
but by the continuous, professional entertainment spectacle they enjoyed.
As luck would have it, the
couple picked the perfect accommodations for their stay in Sisters.
The Lazy Rockin' B 'n C Ranch
Bed-and-Breakfast is owned and operated by Cindy and Bert Murray, who
are both deeply involved with the Sisters Rodeo and are examples of the
western lifestyle Frank and Jo love.
According to Jo, getting to
know the Murrays was like reuniting with long-lost friends.
Jo noted that Central Oregon
is an exceptionally welcoming place and Frank was dazzled by the "beautiful,
unspoiled countryside."
|
|
||||||||