A mini metropolis of teepees sprawls across the parched plains, and
in the early hours of the morning the first to rise are the children.
Each August, the rolling
hills surrounding Little Big Horn River in Montana are transformed into
the "teepee capital of the world," with over a thousand tents and
hundreds of horses converging for the Crow Fair and Rodeo.
In the world of Indian
Relay fearless jockeys race bareback around an oval track three times,
leaping from horse to horse while still in motion.
They have an important job to do.
"We'd wake up in those
teepees, and we were pretty happy to slip the bridles off the horses and
ride bareback to the river," remembers Jim Real Bird, today a man of
58.
"We'd take the horses to the river to drink water -- that was our first job as young boys."
Started over a century
ago in 1904, the four-day festival is one of the largest gatherings of
Native Americans in the country, with spectacular traditional costumes
casting a luminous kaleidoscope of color beneath a brilliant blue sky.
It's also an important training ground for the next generation of rodeo stars.
m
"It's one of the largest
Indian rodeos within the United States of America," explained Real Bird,
who today teaches youngsters how to hold on for dear life in the arena.
"We've had quite a few young Indian men that have ridden here, gone into professional rodeo, and become world champions."
Real-life horse whisperers
Indeed, if you thought the world of rodeo was simply that of the white cowboy, think again.
There is another master of the saddle, one who has honed their horsemanship over hundreds of years.
"American Indians have a
special relationship with horses because it was a way of life," said
Jim's uncle, 78-year-old Robert Old Horn, also of the Crow Nation tribe.
"My family were known
for their ability to ride bucking horses. There was a mastery to how
they could ride a horse -- it involved timing, balance," said Old Horn,
each word tumbling out slow and deep.
Outside the rodeo ring however, there's another sport taking place at Crow Fair -- and it's as fast and furious as they come.
Indian Relay
At the end of each lap
the rider jumps from their first horse, hits the ground running, then
climbs onto the back of their next horse for the following lap.

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