High Country News

Black cowboys reclaim their history in the West

AS THE SUN SETS over Phoenix’s South Mountain Park on a crisp desert evening, dust swirls over the park’s outdoor riding arena. Laughter carries from the stands and into the mountains as four men and their horses take turns flying around blue barrels and over the pockmarked dirt. They call themselves “As the Crows Fly,” after their unique riding style — blazing over obstacles instead of around them. The Crows work as a team in a kind of horseback relay, training for the annual Arizona Black Rodeo.

Wearing a beige cowboy hat, jean vest, bandanna and worn leather boots, Ricky Magee, who works as

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from High Country News

High Country News4 min read
Researching A Reborn Riverscape
DESIREE TULLOS and Will Nuckoles clambered down a steep slope high above what used to be Iron Gate Reservoir in Northern California one mid-February morning. As they wound through buckbrush, trying not to slip on the gravelly soil, Tullos, an Oregon
High Country News1 min read
High Country News
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR/PUBLISHER Greg Hanscom EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Jennifer Sahn ART DIRECTOR Cindy Wehling EXECUTIVE EDITOR Gretchen King FEATURES DIRECTOR McKenna Stayner NEWS & INVESTIGATIONS EDITOR Kate Schimel INDIGENOUS AFFAIRS EDITOR Sunnie R. Clahchis
High Country News15 min read
Behind Bozeman’s Boom
THE FIRST TIME ROSA SAW SNOWFLAKES falling, she thought they were pieces of cotton. “I thought I was going to choke,” she told me. Rosa, who is from Honduras, had never seen snow before, but it’s become a familiar sight now that she’s living in Bozem

Related Books & Audiobooks