WESTERN HORSEMAN
The International Magazine of Stock-Horse Culture
World's Leading Horse Magazine Since 1936
Sweet Hearts of the Rodeo By Tim Keller and Christina Boyce Are rodeo queen programs passé? They shouldn't be, because they produce amazing young women. A full-length national feature based on Christina Boyce's Op/Ed essay.
June 2016
Cowboy Candy Store
Solano's Boot & Western Wear
For 60 years, this family-owned business has outfitted cowboys from near and far.
Story and photography by Tim Keller
November, 2015
Rare Breed
While many of his generation have left ranching behind, Landon Berry chooses to carry on his family's legacy in New Mexico.
July, 2015
Pencil Pusher
For 30 years, artist Dino Cornay has built a career portraying in pencil the hardy people, livestock and horses around his home ranch in northeastern New Mexico.
August, 2013
Arabian Wind
Hindi Ranch Horses: Handy, Hard-Working, and Arabian.
Breeding for speed, longevity and toughness, the Hindi family of New Mexico has raised Arabian horses for ranch work and endurance racing for 60 years.
September, 2011
The Horse Who Made Max Evans a Writer
The famous novelist remembers the many horses who have inspired his stories, including a bronc named Blackie whose outlaw ways helped him soar as a writer.
June, 2011
Women of the West >> Linda Jackson
This longtime horsewoman finally realized her dream when she opened her Raton, New Mexico, horse motel at age 62. Six years later, she's busy and happy.
Interview and photograph by Tim Keller
December, 2010
Story and Photography by Tim Keller
August, 2010
Women of the West >> Brittany Rouse
Stories, Interview, and Photography by Tim Keller
February, 2010
In the remote cattle country of northeastern New Mexico, a community-based rodeo series fuels young competitors' hopes for the future.
October, 2009
Archie West: Last Stockman on the Turquoise Trail
"To be the last one grazing on this piece of earth, it's a melancholy subject."
By Tim Keller
May, 2009
Driving on Blacktop Instead of paying for rising trucking costs, two New Mexico cattlemen decided to drive their cattle to fall pasture the old-fashioned way.
January, 2009