Roping or Riding
  • Reads 26,868
  • Votes 1,023
  • Parts 27
  • Time 2h 6m
  • Reads 26,868
  • Votes 1,023
  • Parts 27
  • Time 2h 6m
Complete, First published Jan 04, 2017
1, the seconds it takes to decide whether or not to get into the chute. 
2, the seconds it takes for you to get into the chute. 
3, the seconds it takes for the adrenaline to kick in as soon as you get in the chute. 
4, the seconds it takes for your heart to pound in your chest. 
5, the seconds it takes to keep your cool during the ride. 
6, the seconds it takes to know your still alive. 
7, the seconds it takes for you to smile. 
8, the seconds it takes to hold on......... 

Dallas Astrin grew up with parents that transported broncs to rodeos. She loved watching the wild horses buck and wished she could ride them herself. Once she hit high school the first sports she wanted to do was bronc riding. Since then it's been her passion. 

Charlie Mote. Son of Bobby Mote. Roper. He followed in his dad's footsteps as one of the Elite Rodeo Athletes. Right out of high school he was signed on with ERA alongside his dad. Roping is his passion. His dad may be a bronc rider but he's the roper of the family.
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Big Girl Boots by lindsle
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**Book 3 in the Coda Paxton Series** My Aunt Callie always said I had to get back on the horse if I fell off. It didn't matter if I got bucked off, or if my cinch was too loose, or if I went to turn a barrel and slipped too far. I always had to get back on that horse before she would let me leave the arena. She'd tell me "Blake, you need to put on your big girl boots and get back in that saddle". So I did. That's how I grew up, riding with my dad or his sister every chance I got, and that's the way they taught me to live. If something scared me, they'd just tell me to put on my big girl boots, and that was enough challenge to get me to do it. Also, cowgirls don't cry. I'd never been much of a crier. Hell, I was known for being tougher than my cousin Kellan, and I was proud of that. I was proud because I was tough. Then, I met Coda. Coda was the girl with the whole world against her. Every time she started gaining confidence and feeling good about life, she'd get knocked back down. The thing about her was she didn't give up. Coda may have been a sweet, quiet soul, but she was tougher than any bull rider or bronc buster. She's the girl that showed me you can cry and still be tough. She's the girl that showed me what tough really is. Coda Paxton was the girl who made me want to put on my big girl boots and get things done, and not just because of the challenge. SEQUAL TO RIGHT BACK ON This story is from Blake's perspective so it can be read as a standalone, but things might make a little more sense if you read Into My Own and Right Back On first :)
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3 barrels 2 hearts 1 dream That's every barrel racers dream. For Mackinzie Jordan, she's lived that dream everyday since she was three. She got her first pony, was taught how to ride and started competing after her grandfather took her to her first rodeo. It's not her dream anymore. She is a team with her gelding at her side. Twenty years later she's big in her name and knows what she's doing. When guys from another circuit start coming to the PRCA circuit, things get hectic. Especially when a guy she hasn't seen she was eighteen joins back.