Sarasota Herald-Tribune March 8-14 /1981 FLORIDA
WEST
"MR. COWBOY"
VICK BLACKSTONE'S RIDE TO FAME AND GLORY
By Kyle Booth
Vick Blackstone hobbles to the far side of the
barn, where he takes an old lariat from its peg
on the wall. He runs his hands along the length
of the rope, rubbing out a few of the kinks and
muttering softly to himself, "Let's see if I can
still do this a little."
Stepping from the shadows of the barn into the
morning sunlight, he begins to twirl the lariat
in a large loop around his head, ignored by the
few head of cattle in the nearby pasture. Soon
the whipping motion of his arm picks up speed
and he begins to fling the rope from side to
side, hopping awkwardly through the loop as it
passes from left to right, then right to left,
until finally it catches the heel of his boot
and falls slack to the ground.
Not unlike the lariat, age and disuse have left
a few kinks in Vick Blackstone too. But if you
look beyond the deeply lined face and the
fragile knees, you see the bronc-bustin', bull-ridin',
calf-ropin' rodeo star; the cattleman, rancher
and conservationist; the man whom folks in
Manatee County affectionately call "Mr. Cowboy."
And Blackstone looks perfect for the role. From
the bend in his hat to the bow in his legs, he's
the very picture of a fella who's a lifetime in
the saddle, training a cow pony, tending a
cattle herd or chasing a dream. Yes, he was even
married in the saddle.
"That was in 1937," Blackstone recalls. "I was
following the rodeo circuit up through Nebraska
when I met Faye. She was a trick rider, 22 years
old." The two struck up a romance that led them
to an alter of sorts, in the middle of a rodeo
arena in Bladen, Neb., where they took their
vows on horseback and literally rode off into
the sunset.
Today, almost 44 years later, Vick and Faye
Blackstone share a 40 acre spread south of
Parrish just off Highway 301. A visitor must
drive underneath a large wooden arch that marks
the entrance to "The Flying V Ranch," then
follow a dirt road that bisects the fenced
pastureland, leading to a white, double wide
mobile home.
Fifty yards beyond the mobile home sets the barn
that houses Blackstone's office, where an
occasional neighbor still comes when he's having
a problem with his cattle, his soil, or if he
just wants to sit a spell and chat: Blackstone,
you see, is an expert at all three.
"See that picture on the wall?" he says,
pointing to a photograph of a tall, slim
youngster in boots, jeans and a Western shirt,
"I was 15 years old there, and I was making it
as a ranch hand. I'd been gone from home two
years before that."
Home was his father's farm in
west Texas, outside the small town of Flory,
where he grew up with seven brothers and five
sisters. By the time young Vick was 13, however,
He already had a mind of his own, and he and his
father didn't always see eye to eye. One day
things came to a head: "There was a big bunch of
us kids, and me and my dad got into an argument
one morning when 1 didn't get up and go to
school. He told me I'd better get on up, and I
told him I didn't think I was going to school.
Well, he gave me a whipping and said, 'You get
your boots on and get on up to school.' I got my
boots on and 1 went, all right, but 1 never
stopped at school."
Vick caught a ride with a
traveling salesman headed for Midland, about 50
miles to the south, where the youngster found
his first job, as a ranch hand looking after 200
head of cattle. "I'd see that they had water,
keep the fences up, and if a cow got sick I'd
doctor it. . . . I was getting $35 a month, and
I'd go back home to visit after that, but from
then on I was on my own."
In the years that followed,
Blackstone honed the skills that would shape his
future. He began breaking horses' for the
Scarborough Cattle Company, one of the biggest
ranch holders in the state, and developed a love
for life on the range. He wasn't making much
money at the time, but then he didn't need much.
A ranch hand would only get into town once every
couple of months, then he'd buy a new pair of
Levi's and a shirt-- and spend the rest of his
wages honky-tonkin'. "And you'd be broke when
you got back to the ranch," Blackstone chuckles,
"but it didn't matter because you didn't have
anywhere to spend it out there."
In 1930, however, the
Depression came galloping across west Texas, and
although a cowboy could still find jobs,
Blackstone was making barely enough to stay in
the saddle, maybe $15 or $20 a month. But he'd
heard of other fellas winning $100 just for
staying on a bucking horse for a few seconds,
the same thing he'd done on the Scarborough
Ranch all day long. "So I thought, 'Why should I
work for $15 a month when I could go to the
rodeo and make a lot of money?'
That's when he set out on the
road to stardom, a road that led him to
Albuquerque, N.M., where he made his
professional rodeo debut. There were two days of
competition and he had entered three events -
bull riding, bareback riding and saddle broncs.
Afterward, figuring he had done pretty well for
a newcomer, he headed over to the front office
with the other riders, only to find that the
show's promoter had run off with all the money.
It was an inauspicious
beginning, to be sure, but Blackstone was
undaunted. He stuck with rodeoing, at first
making only enough to buy the liniment he sorely
needed, but eventually riding his way to a
national reputation. In 1939, he won all five
events at the Largo, Fla., Fair rodeo, and in
1942 he finished second in the nation in the
saddle bronc competition.
Faye, too, was making a name
for herself, originating the Faye Blackstone
Fender Drag (a trick in which she positions
herself prone alongside her galloping horse,
with her head dangerously close to the hooves)
and winning the Florida Champion Cowgirl titles
on two occasions.
Meanwhile, following the
competition at New York's Madison Square Garden
in 1932, most riders on the tour headed for the
next rodeo in Boston. But not Blackstone. "It
was getting cold up there," he remembers. "That
was in November, and somebody said they were
having a rodeo in Arcadia, Fla., so I came on
down." And from then on, he carne to Florida
every winter, making his home base in Manatee
County.
Through all the traveling and
all the rodeos, Blackstone had his favorite
events, and then there were some he didn't care
for at all: "I liked to ride broncs and rope
calves, but I didn't like to ride bulls. Them
ol’ bulls are mean and they'll fight you, and if
they buck you off, they'll jump on you. I had
one that bucked me off over his head, and I
turned crossways to him and just laid flat on
the ground. He got down on the ground on his
knees after me. He was hittin' the ground with
his horns trying to hook me, and he had his
knees up on my back. That pretty well took the
wind out of me right there."
So when the Blackstones were
getting along pretty well, Vick didn't ride
bulls. "Then when we'd get down and get broke
and need to make some money, I'd have to enter
the bull riding again."
As the years passed, the
rodeo trail seemed to get longer and longer, and
the Blackstones began staying closer to Parrish,
where Vick was managing the 6,000-acre Quarter
Circle A Ranch on Highway 62 east of town.
"I'd still go off to rodeos
here in the state that I could get to on
weekends and still get back home. And, sure, I'd
still want to win, but rodeoing wasn't the main
thing for me anymore."
By then, Blackstone had
turned his energies to ranching and land
management. While looking after the cattle on
the Quarter Circle A, and trying to learn what
he could about them, he also became a student of
the land.
"Managing a spread like that,
you've got to figure for a year or two years
ahead of time. It's not something you can learn
totally from books, and you can't learn it in a
week neither.
"You've got to know your
cattle and be able to figure your budget. But
most important, to make a spread pay you've got
to stay within that budget. If you have to cut
things, you just cut them where they don't hurt
the worst."
He irrigated the land,
improved the soil and developed a better cattle
herd as well. And before long, folks from
neighboring ranches were watching his operation
and turning to him for advice. His membership in
local farm organizations grew, and so did his
list of achievements.
Blackstone became a director
of the county Soil Conservation District and
winner of its coveted Goodyear Award, a director
of the Manatee Farm Bureau, a director of the
Manatee River Fair Board, a member of the
county's Beef Advisory Committee and of the
Florida Beef Council.
He was selected as the
county's outstanding rancher and was the Kiwanis
Club's "Agricultural Man of the Year." He also
served as president of the county cattleman's
association and a director of the Florida
Cattleman's Association. And last year the Fair
Board named him Manatee County's "Distinguished
Citizen."
The honor he treasures most,
however, came in 1977, when the Florida Senate
nominated hlm for membership in the National
Cowboy Hall of Fame, a shrine in Oklahoma City
dedicated to great rodeo riders from the past.
What made the award so
special, Blackstone recalls, is that it came as
a complete surprise. He was in Tallahassee to
help with the commissioner of agriculture's
annual trail ride, an outing on horseback for
all the legislators and their families. And
State Sen. Tom Gallen, of Braden ton, invited
him over to watch the Senate in session.
"Tom was rules chairman, and
he took me in, sat me down on a couch and said
for me to stay there until after the opening,
and then if I felt like it I could leave.
"Well, right off the
secretary started reading this formal
resolution, and I knew he was reading these
things that I had done. Then the Senate
president, Lou Brantley, asked Sen. (Dempsy)
Barron to escort me up to the front, where Mr.
Brantley presented me with this plaque.
"After they gave me the
award, I told those senators they'd talked about
things I'd done since 1939 or '40, but if they'd
checked back further then that, they'd find out
there was a sheriff or two after me."
Today that Senate plaque
hangs on one of the white paneled walls in
Blackstone's office. From his desk there, the
true-life cowboy who once managed thousands of
head of cattle can gaze past the window onto a
small pasture where eight cows graze. He knows
each by name. To the south of the pasture,
Kiowa, his wife's quarter horse, romps across 15
acres of fenced orange grove, which Blackstone
works with an aging John Deere tractor.
"I've had to work for what
I've got," Blackstone says, moving over to the
sofa and lighting up one of the Bugler-tobacco
cigarettes he had rolled the night before. "When
I was younger, I had a big time when 1 could,
and the rest of the time 1 was trying to get
enough to eat. And when I was doing those things
on the Quarter Circle A, if I had enough help,
fine; and if 1 didn't have enough help I did it
myself. Sometimes it took me a little longer,
and I'd have to work till after dark sometimes,
but I'd finally get it done. I never put in to
do nothin' that I didn't get done."
Blackstone pushes back the
brim of his hat and scratches a temple. On his
arm, the wristwatch had stopped more than an
hour earlier. But then time doesn't mean quite
as much to him as it used to. He says he still
likes to get over to Kissimee each year for the
rodeo that he once directed. And each December
he heads for Oklahoma City, for the National
Finals rodeo and a reunion of a group of old
timers who call themselves The Wild Bunch.
But today the only trip he's
thinking about is a ride to the Casa Mia, a
restaurant about five miles down the road in
Ellenton, where he likes to go for late-morning
coffee.
"You know, they have a wall
down at the Casa Mia with a lot of my stuff
hanging on it, my old bronc-ridin' chaps, some
riding spurs, my hat and rope... and some
pictures. That's about the only part of my life
that hasn't been written up."
Yep, everybody in these parts
has heard of Vick Blackstone, the man who's
shown that a young cowpoke from West Texas can,
indeed, get along in this great big world.
"I don't think I'd a done
anything different," he says, and as he looks
abound at the trophies and awards, his eyes
reflect, not pride, but rather a deep sense of
satisfaction. "I wouldn't want to do it again,
but I wouldn't take nothing for it."
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