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Bronc riding
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==The horse== [[File:Blood bay IMG 5602.jpg|thumb|A bucking horse at pasture during the off season]] The bucking horse is usually a mare, but occasionally, a [[gelding]] (a [[castrated]] male horse) is used. Bucking horses usually travel in close quarters and are housed in a herd setting, geldings are generally less disruptive and more prone to get along with one another. [[Mare (horse)|Mares]] are also used, and while a mixed herd of mares and geldings is a bit more prone to disruptions, they can be kept together without great difficulties. [[stallion (horse)|Stallions]] are less common, because they can be disruptive in a herd and may fight if there are mares present. The modern bronc is not a truly [[feral horse]]. Most bucking stock are specifically bred for use in rodeos, with horses having exceptional bucking ability being purchased by [[stock contractor]]s and fetching a high price. Most are allowed to grow up in a natural, semi-wild condition on the open range, but also have to be gentled and tamed in order to be managed from the ground, safely loaded into trailers, vaccinated and wormed, and to load in and out of bucking chutes. They also are initially introduced to bucking work with cloth dummies attached to the saddle. Due to the rigors of travel and the short bursts of high intensity work required, most horses in a bucking string are at least 6 or 7 years old.<ref name="Diamond">Partian, Chris. "Diamond in the Rough." ''Western Horseman,'' July 2007, pp. 132-140</ref>
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