PURCELL - They look like cowboys.
A quick glance and you'll see the jeans, the cotton shirt and, probably, a hat.
There's the rope.
The chaps.
The scarf.
And the boots - gotta have the boots.
They act like cowboys.
They're on horseback or on a mule or in a wagon and they are covered in a fine patina of red dirt. Dirt and dust earned from miles and miles of Oklahoma.
They have that "Western" look. That stoic, cowboy stare; the quiet nature and those small beads of sweat that leave their mark on the face.
Yeah, they act like cowboys, too.
But they're not.
Not really.
Some are retired. Some are widows. One is a 13-year-old schoolgirl from Maysville and another, a civilian employee at Fort Sill in Lawton.
A couple raise cattle.
One was a sheet metal worker.
But others just raise children.
Those are their "real" lives. The day-to-day things they do to make a living and find their place in the world.
But here, they are different.
Here, like the song says, they belong to the land.
This is fun.
This is for the joy of it.
This is to celebrate all that is Sooner and earthy and history.
This is the '89er Wagon Train Association's 30th annual Land Run Ride.
"I've been doing this since the beginning," said Joe Howard, a rugged, calloused man who calls Glenn Heights, Texas, his home. "I went to the first ride, 30 years ago."
And, despite the fact that Howard hails from Texas, he's come back to ride almost every year.
Complete with a green, Colorado Highlander covered wagon - with wooden wheels - Howard looks like he stepped out of the late 1800s. He speaks softly; his large hands are calloused from years of hard work.
“I run some cattle," he said. "But I retired as a sheet metal worker."
But he doesn't ride a horse.
Howard prefers his mules.
"You can take an 800-pound mule and kill a thousand pound horse," he said. "Mules have more endurance. They're stronger and they're better behaved."
Lisa Wright agrees.
A smiling, bluejeaned woman with a rich Oklahoma accent, Wright serves as the president of the '89er Wagon Train Association.
She's the one with the flag and the red band on her hat.
And, like the others, she's here for the adventure.
"We do this to celebrate history and to have fun," she said. "You get pretty connected to these people. You get to know them well. They are like a huge family."
With planning that takes almost a full year, the horses, the mules and wagons are a way of life for Wright and her group.
A way that reflects both the past and today.
While Wright has the prerequisite Western attire and the necessary animal for the ride, she also backs a two-way walkie talkie and a cell phone.
Her friends are no different.
Many of the wagons sport steel-belted radials instead of the former wooden, spoked wheels. A few had side mirrors and at least one sported plush bucket seats.
"You could say we've blended," she said. "Sure, the wagons have changed. But the world has changed. Cars and people have changed."
For those in the wagon train those changes include shipping their own water and a structure that could only be described as the group's MBF - mobile bathroom facility.
OK, it's some PortaPotties being pulled by a tractor.
"Like I said, we're self-contained," Wright said.
And once the riders hit town for their evening, instead of camping out, they sleep in RVs or trailers with sleeping compartments.
Still, despite the conveniences, the technology and the Goodyear tires, there's something rustic, and old school about riding a horse - or mule - 17 miles a day across Oklahoma.
It is all about the ride.
At least that's what 13-year-old Troi Hornbuckle thinks.
Normally a middle school student - who somehow, managed to slip away from school for a few days - Hornbuckle has been participating in the ride since she was about eight or nine.
"I do it cause it's what I like to do," she said.
Hornbuckle, who raises horses in Maysville, joined her grandmother and her sister-in-law on the ride. And despite the bugs, the humidity and the dust, she was delighted to be there.
"It's all about riding the horses," she said.
A smile, which stretched from freckle to freckle, confirmed her statement.
While Troi Hornbuckle, Lisa Wright and Joe Howard may all, indeed, look like cowboys, the fact remains they are modern residents of the 21st century.
But for a brief time this week, this group will do more than just look the part.
This week, they'll pay homage to those who made the run more than 100 years ago and for a short they, too, will become part of the past.
The '89er Wagon Train Association will arrive in Norman today. Look for them - along with their horses, wagons and mules - at the Cleveland County Fairgrounds.
M. Scott Carter366-3545scarter@normantranscript.com
Local news
Technology a friend to modern cowboys
<a href="http://www.normantranscript.com/multimedia/local_story_108192957.html">View Photo Gallery</a>
- Local news
-
-
Theater’s the scene for Norman marketing director
Nancy Coggins landed a job with a prestigious Oklahoma City advertising agency before the ink dried on her OU journalism diploma. The job was a first rung on her career ladder and she admits that it didn’t call for her creative talents. ...
-
New jail to install curtains
The F. DeWayne Beggs Detention Center, though still in its infancy, is getting a facelift: new curtains....
-
Businesses go the extra mile for Valentine’s Day
Among the various images the phrase “Valentine’s Day” might conjure in one’s mind, probably the most immediate is the iconic dozen roses and heart-shaped box of chocolates....
-
New rehabilitation, skilled care center will be next to HealthPlex
StoneGate Senior Living President and CEO John F. Taylor announced Friday that his company has completed the purchase of approximately 6.7 acres of land in the Norman Regional Health System’s Medical Park West project at NW 36th Avenueand ...
-
Mystery performance provides theatrical fatal attraction
James Briggs has a pretty steady day job with the city parks department, doesn’t live anywhere near Little River and probably never owned or slept in a hatchback. He doesn’t usually wear sport coats that are two sizes too small, either ...
-
'Get the Lead Out' annual children's art festival enters 10th year
Longfellow Middle School had a special “GLO” about it Saturday morning....
-
County prisoners moved to new jail
Cleveland County sheriff’s deputies began moving prisoners from the detention center adjacent to the courthouse to the new F. DeWayne Beggs Detention Center at Franklin Road and U.S. 77 early Saturday morning....
-
School board elections Tuesday
Voters go to the polls Tuesday in four Cleveland County school districts. Cleveland County Election Board Secretary Jim Williams said this will be the first election using the new voting system. Polls will open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. on ...
-
Identity theft crackdown sweeps nation
WASHINGTON — The Internal Revenue Service and the Justice Department recently announced a national sweep cracking down on suspected identity theft perpetrators as part of a stepped-up effort against refund fraud and identity theft....
-
Darry Stacy seeking county commission seat
Darry Stacy, a fifth generation Oklahoman and lifelong resident of Cleveland County, announced Friday that he will be a Republican candidate for the District 2 Cleveland County commissioner seat....
- More Local news Headlines
-
Theater’s the scene for Norman marketing director






