Kam Hwy is
quiet. I look around for any evidence of winter and find none. The ocean rests,
the sun is high and hot, and the same wanderers waiting for the swell to arrive
are scattered around the North Shore—praying for surf. My husband’s Ford 250 is
old, the AC does not work and his attempt to clear his junk out of the truck’s
cabin went unsuccessful. I can see the dust on the dashboard slowly levitating
and swirling around us as I try to concentrate on Sunset Beach, which lays on
my right. We are on our way to the Honolulu International Airport where we are
going to board a flight to the mainland. I am hot and sweaty, but the thought
of meeting Lee Hart in the next day makes the cabin of the old Ford 250
bearable.
I live on
the North Shore of Oahu, in the Hawaiian Islands, and of course, I am a surfer,
or at least, I used to be, but since my daughter decided on a destiny of her
own I had to change gears and go with the flow. Born in Hawaii, it is not a
surprise, that my daughter can surf, but she decided that she needed to ride
not only waves, but ride beasts as well. She is what we call here in Hawaii, a
Paniola “Hawaiian Cowgirl” and we are on our way to the mainland USA to train
with Lee Hart a Kansas Cowboy.
We arrived
in Kansas City, Missouri, in a cold Saturday afternoon, and the Cowboy’s
girlfriend was waiting for us with her badass King Ranch by the terminal. As Pris drove us to Topeka, Kansas, she explained that Lee would be picking up Hickory,
the horse that my daughter was going to ride in the World Finals of the Extreme
Cowboy Race in Texas, the next day. “But don’t worry Elena, I am sure you can
jump on one of Lee’s horses,” she told our excited teenager. The drive from
Kansas City, Missouri, to Topeka, Kansas, is becoming familiar to me since it
is my third time around. I sit on the back seat of the King Ranch amused
by its comfortable space and luxurious leather seats. Lee’s girlfriend drives
fast as she updates us on their latest endeavors, and soon, I become
confortable with the speed, since every other car seems to be flying by,
pushing eighty.
Pulling in the
driveway of Black Jack Creek brought me memories of the previous year when Lee Hart
was just moving into his new ranch. Old, distressed and without running water
but with “lots of potential,” we left Lee to a challenging undertaking—to get
Black Jack Creek up and running. As the girlfriend’s truck zipped
into the property, I could see that Lee had been quite successful in accomplishing
his dream. Below, by the big grassy arena, a crowd of people with their horses
was busy weaving through the obstacles, which Lee uses to train his and his
clients’ horses. While we unload at their house, I continued watching the crowd
cantering through the mazes, but saw no sign of Lee. Until that moment, I was still
unsure if it had been a good idea to accept Lee’s and his girlfriend’s invitation
to stay with them at Black Jack Creek, but when I saw Lee smiling as he got out
of the barn seeing that we had arrived, I knew it had been a good decision.
“You guys are family! You are staying here
with us,” he said when I told him on the phone that we were coming to the World
Finals of the EXCA in Texas, where my daughter had been invited to compete
along with Lee. “And by the way,” he continued, “I am sponsoring Elena
with her horse,” and he left me speechless. “You don’t have to rent a car either,
because we are all going to drive together down to Texas,” he advised. Back
home in Hawaii, I hung up the phone, looked at my daughter and husband’s faces
and told them that Lee Hart had just invited us to stay at his place. You
should have seen my daughter’s face—have you seen a kid in a candy shop, or in
a country fair? Well… you get the picture. Horses, manure, grassy fields and wild
deer, I could see . . . was all that went on inside her mind.
Lee Hart is
bigger than life, and I do mean it. His heart is so big that his well-defined chest,
can’t seem to control it, and that’s why I called him “Rock and Roll Cowboy.” Lee
will take on anything and everything. “No,” is a word missing in his
vocabulary, and the reason why, is because he is a believer. There is nothing
his horses won’t do either. You name it and he will train it, and so, having the
honor of staying with him at his facility, and seeing him on his daily life was
an opportunity of a lifetime.
Waking up
at Black Jack Creek was somehow surreal. The moon, shining through the old
lofts window, where we bunked, was still high in the dark sky. I woke up with a
dried mouth resulted from the new heater Lee had bought to keep the house warm.
As I weave through the loft, I hear sounds coming from the first floor and walk
down the stairs to the kitchen, where I find Lee busy, wearing some heavy-duty
leather gloves. “Good morning,” he says to me, who still half asleep. “Morning,”
I say trying to moisten my mouth. “Thanks again for having us, Lee” I say
honestly and I walk to the cheap coffee maker I bought the night before to brew
myself some coffee. “Did you feed
already?” I ask him, concerned about the horses. “Yep, he answers, inspecting the coffee,
but popping open a can of Diet Coke.
“Lee!
That’s stuff is bad for you,” I try, but he smiles and takes a big gulp from
his can and assures me that it wasn’t. I watch him finish the Coke as I pour myself
a cup of the warm brew. Lee walks to the living room and sits on his chair in
front of the heater to make himself warm.
“Lee!” his
girlfriend calls, from their laundry room-walk in closet. “I have the song you
want me to play at the World Finals,” she says when she joined us by the heater.
“What is it?” I ask expecting it to be one of the top country songs we had been
listening on the Kansas radio stations—probably some song about a beer, a woman
and a horse—I was wrong! Kid Rock’s “Cowboy” was Lee’s request.
There may be,
of course, more respected horse trainers and I am sure you may have heard
about Buck. No? Go Google him. I am sure there are wealthier cowboys too, with
fuller bank accounts, newer trucks and some big sponsor names behind their
backs, but I can assure you, Lee Hart is one of a kind. One of good stock! Lee
lives in the heart of the country; the land of Toto and Dorothy, the land of
the Tornados, the land of the Rolling Hills—where the sunsets are red and gold,
where everywhere you look you can imagine Tin Man walking down the long empty
road, and, it was in this land that Lee was bred by cowboys.
In his “not fancy” house, a picture sitting on
a beautiful hardwood sideboard called my attention. Standing with a belt buckle
that could be more like a shield, Lee Hart stood younger and skinnier between
his grandfather and granduncle. Suddenly, all of the John Wayne’s movies became
real and I finally realized that there is no stopping Lee Hart from popping his
soda can and there is absolutely no stopping this Cowboy—not in his ranch, not
in competition, nor in life. His bright and mischievous eyes, glowing in the
black and white photo, kept true to him. The same bright and mischievous blue-green
eyes I saw when he popped the can and told me that it was the only thing that
had been faithful to him, referring to the sweet, carbonated and caffeinated drink.
He was wrong! His eyes are still faithful. Through his eyes, I see that he still has the same dreams he had as he
stood next to his older generation in the black and white picture, but maybe the
dreams are just a bit clearer now—colorful.
I met Lee Hart
the first time I was in Kansas. The Rock and Roll Cowboy was kind enough to
lend us, “The Hawaiians,” horses to compete in our first EXCA world finals. A
large group of people, who had flown from Hawaii for the competition, sat anxiously
on the veranda of the historical Cottage House Inn, in Council Grove town on
the Santa Fé Trail. The town’s history goes back to the earlier eighteen
hundreds as there was the last stop for supplies, before the pioneers moved further
West. It was in that town that Lee Hart was raised, the town where Daniel
Boone’s grandson traded with the old adventurers. Waiting for Lee Hart’s
arrival, sitting on the confortable chairs of the old Inn, all we knew about
him was that he was a Kansas Cowboy, and that he had won the World Finals of
The EXCA competition the previous year. I had watched Lee Hart’s winning run on
his horse Buster, on YouTube, but when the white truck, pulling the six horse
trailer stopped in front of the Inn steering some dust in town, I had no idea
of what to expect.
“Welcome to
Kansas!” he said, as he walked on the deck of the Inn with the sounds of his
spurs announcing his arrival.
Wearing
Wrangler Jeans tucked inside his tall, red cowboy boots, a white shirt and a black
Cowboy hat, he patiently shook hands with all of us. After all the
introductions were done, Lee stood in front us inspecting the trouble he had
got himself in, since all he knew about us was that some adventurous group of
people who lived in Hawaii, needed some horses for the competition. Lee agreed to help. Like I have said; too
big of a heart, too many people to please, and he did it with finesse making it
look effortless.
“Let’s go
see the horses!” he said, and got back in his truck, with an entourage of
“Hawaiians” following him.
It was the beginning
of an everlasting friendship.
This was
three years ago, and as I drank my coffee, and Lee got warm by the heater, I questioned
him about his life and I asked him about his kids. “They were here over the
week,” he said, and I saw that he was already missing them. The kids live with
their mom, whom Lee says, “is an amazing woman.” We hear my daughter coming
down the stairs from the loft and as she sees us she asks Lee the same question
I had asked him earlier. “Did you feed already?” and she walks to the kitchen,
where she looks out the window, to the barn. “Yes!” he answers, clearly disappointing
her, since she believed it would be her chore. “You will help feed tonight.” He
makes her smile.
Slowly we
made our way to the barn and I watch the Cowboy get busy moving horses around.
Feeling the need to help, I start to muck, which, by the way, has been my
chore, for the last three years. Lee brings a colt out of a stall, and starts
to work with him. While moving manure and peeking at Lee and the colt’s
connection I admire their relationship.
“I am going
to win my Futurity run on him,” Lee says when he notice me watching them. I don’t doubt him. If anyone can do it, he is
the one.
“Lee, any
horse I can ride?” I ask playfully for having yet to master the art of
equitation. “Sure, go get Dude.” I inspect Dude and decide that he is too big
for me, so I ask if I could ride Jelly Bean, the pony. “If you can catch him,
you can ride him,” Lee teases me knowing how hard of a ride I was getting
myself in to.
As I ride
Jelly Bean in the big open grass field, where obstacles were set for training
purposes, I ponder how in the hell I ended up where I was—In the heart of the
country, watching the Cowboy teach my daughter everything he knew. I endured the
ride on Jelly Bean taking breaks to watch Lee train his colts and by the end of
the morning, Jelly Bean and I had made friends. Lee had worked a hand full of
horses, and my daughter was in seventh heaven.
As we put
the horses away, some of Lee’s clients arrive to train. A pilot, a beautiful stylish
grey haired woman, a retired executive of some well known telecommunication
company; are just a few of Lee's many followers. They come with their horses,
they spend the day and then go home a better rider. Lee, not only trains the
horses, he trains the horses’ people too, and when the horses and their people
pull out of the Black Jack Creek ranch they are a better team.
Lee Hart is
a Cowboy of very few words, but the few words he uses are wise. He just
finished reading Buck Brannaman’s biography, and assures me that there is no
one like his hero, Buck. What Lee doesn’t know, is that he, Mr. Lee Hart,
Kansas Cowboy, is himself many people’s hero. Craig Cameron, one of the
greatest American Cowboys, calls Lee Hart “Mr. Hustle.” Bill Cameron, EXCA
judge, wrote that one of Lee Hart’s 2012 World Finals runs was one of the best
in the EXCA history—like I said: there is no stopping this Cowboy, and Lee’s
utmost adventure is still to come; the Calgary Stampede, in Alberta, Canada. Lee
Hart’s performance throughout his career has earned him an invitation to
participate in what is considered by many, one of the greatest horse events in
the world, and Lee will be there in 2013. I remember one morning sitting by
the heater, in his living room at Black Jack Creek, when Lee was talking about
the Calgary event: “Only the best of the best are invited to participate,” he
said, not realizing that he was one of the best of the best. The collection of
belt buckles displayed around his house, proves so. Bronco rider Champion, EXCA
Champion, Ranch Rodeo Champion, you name it, Lee Hart has got it.
My week at
Black Jack Creek slipped away, it went too fast and too soon, but I will never
forget it. It was a week of Jelly Bean,
cooking, mucking stalls and watching Lee do what he does best—train horses. By
the end as I watched my daughter applying what she had learned from the “Rock
and Roll Cowboy” on the colts Lee trusted her with, I understood why in the
hell I ended up where I was. Surfers, Cowboys and Rock and Roll have more than
a few things in common. The cowboy thrives on his horse, the Surfer thrives on
his waves and Rock and Roll thrives on the uncertainty of tomorrow. Tomorrow
the Surfer doesn’t know how the waves are going to be, the Cowboy doesn’t know
what problem to fix; if the horse or if the horse’s person and Rock and Roll
will keep reinventing itself through new generations. When the horses are done,
Lee will send the horses and their owners their way. I asked Lee one last
question. “What is your approach Lee?”
“The problem is . . . sometimes it is not the
horse,” and Lee Hart will wait or people will wait for the trainer to train
them and their horses.
Before Lee pulls
out of the Texas Arena where he won the Futurity on the colt he told me was
going to win, with one more buckle under his belt, he asks my daughter, my
husband and I: “Will you guys get me up on a surfboard when I come to Hawaii?”
Off course
we will.
As I get
back to Hawaii, now with Sunset beach by my left, I find Kam Hwy busy with
surfers from all over the world. What
happed? I ask myself. It’s been only
two weeks and the place is a madhouse.
It takes me a week
or so to realize that the crowd is not a different crowd from the previous
years’ winter. The same surfers, with their same dreams, have arrived to surf
the giant waves.
I must get
back in to gear, but in my mind, I still can see Tin Man walking on the empty
path in front on Black Jack Creek where a Cowboy is busy going on with his day.
Kansas
Cowboy. The best of the Best!
Since this has been written Lee Hart married his girlfriend, moved to a much larger ranch, won many more buckles and is succeeding in what he loves