windymtnman
Active member
- Joined
- Sep 17, 2014
- Messages
- 484
Living on our 49 acre ranch in So. Colorado, we have 2 horses and a mule for trail riding & packing. Last April, I went over to the Canon City Prison and adopted a wild Burro from the BLM's "Wild Horse & Burro Program". At the time, I thought we'd just have a pasture pet and another lightweight packer.
Then, I discovered Western Pack Burro Racing last June. It's an indigenous sport to Colorado, where you race your Burros/Donkeys over courses that vary from 6 to 29 miles. Some races have stupendous elevation gains, and run up to 13,200 ft. Mosquito Pass. In that I'm coming up on 67 yrs. old, I just opted for the "short course" races. However the short course is 15 miles long, and at the Leadville race still started at 10,200' and we topped out at over 12,000 ft. So, I suppose by the time this season ends on Sept. 9th, I will have raced about 56 miles, all at altitude. While others beg, curse, and rope slap their Burros in an attempt to get them back in the race, all I ever had to do is ask my guy to run, and run he did! We finished in 22nd place twice, 14th, and 9th thus far, and won $100 bucks in Buena Vista's race a week ago. The starting line has an absurd bunch of contestants, varying from the super athletes, to housewives, and everything in between. Often 60 to 80 show up and pay $50bucks for a sufferfest on uphill gradients that go on sometimes for 4+miles.
No ribbons, no age classes, and no wimps. You might be a 30 yr. old champion, corporate sponsored ultramarathon 100 mile racer, but when you get teamed up with a rent-a-Burro like I've seen happen, you can get beat by some random old guy! Ha!
This ain't related to Elk hunting, except I've never lost sight on how this is going to keep me in that game as well come season opener.....
Then, I discovered Western Pack Burro Racing last June. It's an indigenous sport to Colorado, where you race your Burros/Donkeys over courses that vary from 6 to 29 miles. Some races have stupendous elevation gains, and run up to 13,200 ft. Mosquito Pass. In that I'm coming up on 67 yrs. old, I just opted for the "short course" races. However the short course is 15 miles long, and at the Leadville race still started at 10,200' and we topped out at over 12,000 ft. So, I suppose by the time this season ends on Sept. 9th, I will have raced about 56 miles, all at altitude. While others beg, curse, and rope slap their Burros in an attempt to get them back in the race, all I ever had to do is ask my guy to run, and run he did! We finished in 22nd place twice, 14th, and 9th thus far, and won $100 bucks in Buena Vista's race a week ago. The starting line has an absurd bunch of contestants, varying from the super athletes, to housewives, and everything in between. Often 60 to 80 show up and pay $50bucks for a sufferfest on uphill gradients that go on sometimes for 4+miles.
No ribbons, no age classes, and no wimps. You might be a 30 yr. old champion, corporate sponsored ultramarathon 100 mile racer, but when you get teamed up with a rent-a-Burro like I've seen happen, you can get beat by some random old guy! Ha!

This ain't related to Elk hunting, except I've never lost sight on how this is going to keep me in that game as well come season opener.....