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What makes bulls and horses buck riders off their backs?
Are the bulls and horses given something to make them mean and angry or is it just their natural nature to buck to throw the riders off their backs?
4 Answers
- lakeladyLv 76 years agoFavorite Answer
Look at a video. See that strap in the back? That's a flank strap. The animal is bucking to get rid of it. If you let them out of the chute with no rider they would buck. You notice they buck even after the rider is unseated. And those corrals full of quietly grazing horses at the rodeo? many of those are the broncs sans the flank straps.
- SnezzyLv 76 years ago
In addition (so I am told by a fellow who rode bulls about 40 years ago) some of the bulls have reputations for particular patterns of bucking. So if the rider draws a bull that he "understands" he just might have a slightly better chance than someone else would, on that same bull.
- JeffLv 76 years ago
Frankly the flank strap is a instigator
Horses learn by release of pressure. Getting rid of a rider is that reward .... Most are bred for this and enjoy it.
If you ride a bucking horse out.... To the point he can be controlled he probably won't be worth a darn as a rodeo horse.
Bulls ? Pretty much the same thing. Most bulls are a little anti social anyway.