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This episode is sponsored by Matrix Reformed.
This week on the Black Knuckle Ranch Podcast, it?s exactly what you?d expect?real ranch, real problems, and zero sugarcoating.
We?re breaking down a heated fence-line confrontation with a neighbor, the reality behind viral ?rage bait? videos, and why ranch life doesn?t always look the way people think it should. From property line disputes to social media misunderstandings, this one gets into it.
We also cover:
Building out the roping arena (and taking advice from the pros) Ranch construction, cleanup, and prepping for a wedding on the property The truth behind that fence fight?and what actually happened vs. what you saw online Handling conflict as grown men (or not ?) Selling another solid horse and making deliveries out of state Planning future clinics and what real horsemanship actually meansAnd of course? plenty of unfiltered stories, bad decisions, and laughs along the way.
If you?ve ever dealt with neighbors, fences, or internet opinions?you?ll feel this one.
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In Part 2 with Kyle from 6S Horsemanship, we go deeper into the reality of horse training?where things don?t always go right, and most days aren?t pretty.
This episode dives into what separates real horsemen from everyone else: the ability to just get by one, even when it?s frustrating, uncomfortable, or flat-out not going your way.
Kyle and the crew break down:
Why not every ride is a breakthrough?and why that?s normal The difference between ?training? and just surviving the day How pressure changes everything when you?re riding in front of people Why social media only shows the worst moments (and why that?s what people want) The challenge of training horses for their owner?not yourself Why most problems in horse training actually come from people The reality of time constraints when you?ve got a full barn to ride Why consistency beats perfection every timeThere?s a heavy emphasis on something most people don?t talk about:
? The job isn?t always to fix everything?it?s to make progress and come back tomorrow.
This is the unfiltered side of the horse world?the part that doesn?t make highlight reels but actually makes good horses.
In Part 1 with Kyle from 6S Horsemanship, we get into everything from getting thrown off a horse for the first time? to the deeper mindset behind bull riding, horse training, and what it really means to be a horseman.
We kick things off with a story from the ranch that quickly turns into a bigger conversation about risk, confidence, and learning the hard way. From there, we dive into a heated (but respectful) discussion around bull riding culture?should you get on anything you draw, or is there a smarter way to develop?
Kyle brings a unique perspective with his rodeo background and horsemanship approach, breaking down how beginners actually progress?and why mindset matters more than most people think.
We also get into:
The difference between practice pens vs real rodeo expectations Why bull riding is at least 70% mental Social media, criticism, and the reality of dealing with haters The truth behind ?it must be nice? and earned success Ranch horse vs cutting horse?what actually gets the job doneThis one covers a lot of ground?horses, rodeo, mindset, and real talk from guys living it every day.
Some weeks on the ranch go smooth. This wasn?t one of them.
We kick things off with another call from Wally Gator? and let?s just say, it raises some serious questions about personal hygiene and life choices. From there, things only get better (or worse).
We talk about picking up the new ranch truck, the kind of deal you don?t usually walk away from, and swap stories about old jobs?including one that somehow involves working for a pimp in Hawaii. Yeah? it goes there.
We also get into cowboy movies?why Lonesome Dove didn?t quite hit like expected, what actually makes a ?real? cowboy story, and how nostalgia plays into it.
On the ranch side, we?re gearing up for the upcoming roping, dealing with missing buckles, last-minute prep, and getting feedback from a legend in the roping world. It?s one of those weeks where nothing goes exactly as planned?but the work still gets done.
This is the Black Knuckle Ranch Podcast?real horses, real ranch, real talk? and occasionally, really bad decisions.
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A ?good week? on a working ranch doesn?t look like what most people see online.
This week on the Black Knuckle Ranch Podcast, we talk about what actually happened around the ranch ? selling a couple horses for the first time, the never-ending search for a decent ranch truck, and a debate that lit up the internet: a $100,000 cutting horse vs a good ranch horse that can actually get the job done.
We also get into the realities of bull riding after watching a practice event where the bulls weren?t exactly cooperating, why young riders are getting hurt, and what the sport really demands from the people who do it.
Along the way there?s hotshot roping footage, castration talk, pole dancing in a welding helmet, and the usual unfiltered ranch commentary.
It wasn?t a flashy week.
But on a working ranch, a quiet week where things get done might just be the best kind there is.
Real horses. Real ranch. Real talk.
Welcome back to the Black Knuckle Ranch Podcast ? where ranch life isn?t filtered and the stories definitely aren?t polished.
This week the crew covers everything from bull riding sponsorships to cowboy beer preferences, and somehow ends up in a full-blown debate about cowboy laundry habits and shirt rotations. If you?ve ever wondered how many shirts a ranch hand actually owns? you?re about to find out.
We also talk about:
Trying to sponsor a bull rider (Lennon Cook)
Why Billy Bob?s might not be the best place to get on a bull
The cowboy hat brands we actually wear on the ranch
Why one of the guys keeps showing up on camera wearing the same shirt
Ranch security patrols? apparently done in pajamas
And the usual chaos that happens when a bunch of ranch hands sit around a table with microphones.
Out here there?s no script ? just real ranch life, real horses, and real conversations.
If you enjoy ranch content, horses, rodeo, and the occasional completely unhinged cowboy story, you?re in the right place.
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Building an arena sounds simple?until you try doing it while the ranch still has to run. This week we break down what went into building our facilities, where we screwed up, how projects spiral when scope changes mid-job, and what we learned about managing work without burning people out. Plus: chainsaws, steer wrestling chaos, and a few stud colts that aren?t studs anymore.
Real horses. Real ranch. Real talk.
This week on the Black Knuckle Ranch Podcast, the conversation gets real.
We talk about mental load, burnout, broken equipment, and whether it?s finally time to hire a full-time operator. When you?re scaling a ranch business, the work doesn?t slow down ? the stakes just get higher.
Billy opens up (a little) about perfectionism and why he won?t ask for help. We break down what it actually costs to run heavy equipment every day, why things break, and why $1,800?$2,000 per day isn?t as crazy as it sounds.
We also talk about:
9 million social media views in 24 days
Landing strategic sponsors (skid steers, mulchers, medical partners & more)
Why some companies won?t ever get our business again
Growing the ranch without losing what makes it real
And somehow? toilet paper sponsorships
This isn?t a highlight reel.
It?s what scaling a working ranch actually looks like.
Real Horses. Real Ranch. Real Talk.
This ain?t a social media highlight reel.
This is a working ranch.
In this episode of the Black Knuckle Ranch Podcast, we pull back the curtain on what it really takes to make money in ranching ? and why most people get it wrong.
We talk about:
The difference between income and sustainable income
Why diversification matters (horses, hay, mulching, events)
The real cost of running skid steers and heavy equipment
Leasing roping steers vs. owning them
Why deadlines mess with your head
When to eat a job? and when to double down
What happens when integrity costs you money
And why communication in business matters more than being right
We also introduce Austin, swap stories about busted fuel filters, nearly dropping a gooseneck on Billy, 200-foot shrapnel from buried farm equipment, and the reality that some jobs go perfect? and some eat you alive.
If you?re trying to:
Start a ranch
Grow a ranch
Add a revenue stream
Or just understand how real operators think
This episode is for you.
We?re not here to impress you.
We?re here to tell the truth.
Real Horses.
Real Ranch.
Real Talk.
Some weeks on the ranch go according to plan. This was not one of those weeks.
In this episode of the Black Knuckle Ranch Podcast, we?re living exactly how we always do ? by the seat of our pants. From hauling hay math that somehow never adds up, to broken equipment, questionable decisions, and trying to keep horses getting worked while everything else demands attention, this is real ranch life as it actually happens
We talk through:
Juggling hay deals, time, and manpower
Equipment failures and how small mistakes turn into big ones
Why ranch work is never just ?one job?
The chaos that comes with trying to do everything at once
And how we decide what has to get done when plans fall apart
No highlight reels. No sugarcoating. Just honest conversations about running a working ranch, figuring it out as you go, and showing up ready to work ? even when the week goes sideways.
Real horses. Real ranch. Real talk.
Nobody builds a ranch without screwing a few things up first.
In this episode of the Black Knuckle Ranch Podcast, we get honest about the mistakes we made during our first year of operations ? the ones that shaped how we work today, and a few that almost put us in the hospital.
We talk about learning things the hard way, why experience matters more than perfection, and how ranch life doesn?t come with a manual. Along the way, we recap last week on the ranch, including winter storm chaos, mulching jobs, busted equipment, and why OSHA would probably hate us.
Things take a turn when we dive into a framing nail gun incident that definitely wasn?t ?almost? an accident, a Carhartt jacket that caught on fire, and how one bad decision can go sideways real fast. There?s also plenty of ranch humor, arguments over jeans, laundry habits, Pop-Tarts, and why nothing gets done unless you show up ready to work.
This episode is a reminder that standards are built through experience ? not getting everything right the first time.
Real horses.
Real ranch.
Real talk.
?Ranch broke? is one of the most overused and misunderstood terms in the horse world. This episode exists to clearly define what we mean by it at Black Knuckle Ranch, what standards a horse must meet before we?ll use that term, and why we avoid overpromising just to make a sale. It sets expectations and protects both the horse and the buyer.
At Black Knuckle Ranch, we?re dedicated to raising and developing good-minded, well-started performance horses with the kind of foundation you can trust.
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Most problems in horse sales don?t start in training ? they start at purchase.
In this episode, we explain how we think about buying horses, what trainable actually means to us, and why walking away early often protects both the horse and the buyer. We talk about the real differences between trainable and finished horses, why ?finished? doesn?t always mean lower risk, and how pressure, timelines, and expectations can ruin otherwise good horses.
We also recap a real week at the ranch ? including a surprise calf, cold-weather challenges, a viral broken-rib incident, travel prep, and a horse that showed up lame at auction ? to show how real-world problems shape how we make decisions.
This episode covers:
The true cost difference between trainable and finished horses
Why finished horses aren?t always the safer buy
What trainable really means ? and what it doesn?t
Why buying right matters more than training hard
How timelines and pressure ruin good horses
Mental softness without fragility
Willingness to try and recover after pressure
Soundness standards required to hold up over time
Non-negotiables we won?t train through
Structural and soundness issues we walk away from
Temperament deal breakers and unsafe behavior
Why some horses are cut loose early
Why walking away is part of responsible horsemanship
We also share real examples:
A horse that looked good on paper but didn?t hold up
A cheap horse that became expensive
A horse we walked away from ? and why
A horse that surprised us in a good way
If you buy, sell, or work with horses ? or want to avoid expensive mistakes ? this episode lays out how we think long before training ever begins.
No shortcuts. No justifying bad purchases. Just honest decision-making that protects horses and people.
? Email: [email protected]
Horses aren?t made by single rides ? they?re made by how they?re handled every day.
In this episode, we explain why most good (and bad) habits are built long before anyone swings a leg over a saddle. Buyers often judge training by how a horse looks under saddle, but the truth shows up in the barn, in the pens, on the lead rope, and in daily routines. This episode breaks down the standards, consistency, and expectations we use at Black Knuckle Ranch ? not just the highlight moments.
We also recap a real week on the ranch, including equipment failures, broken fences, cold-weather projects, and the kind of problems that come with running a place where work doesn?t stop just because plans change.
This episode covers:
Why handling starts before riding ever does
Catching horses quietly and consistently
Respect on the lead rope and standing tied without babysitting
How small habits compound ? for better or worse
Why consistency matters more than talent
How mixed signals ruin good horses faster than bad training
Why ground manners are a safety issue, not a preference
Feeding time, gate manners, and loading habits
What horses learn when people are rushed or frustrated
How we handle bad days without forcing ?wins?
Why we prioritize calm endings over breakthroughs
How daily handling shows up when we sell horses
Why our horses don?t feel ?new? to buyers
Why we choose honesty and long-term soundness over short-term polish
This episode is for anyone who works with horses, buys horses, or wants to understand why some horses feel easy everywhere they go ? and others don?t.
No shortcuts. No excuses. Just the daily work that actually makes horses.
? Email: [email protected]
Good horses don?t just happen ? they?re built every single day by the people handling them.
In this episode, we pull the curtain back on what ?good help? actually looks like on a working ranch. From long days, broken ribs, and problem horses to the quiet wins no one sees online, we talk about why consistency matters more than talent, why some people last and others don?t, and how the help on the ground directly shapes the horses in the arena.
We cover:
What a real good week on the ranch looks like
The daily rhythm no one posts about
Wins that don?t make social media
Problems you learn to accept as normal
Why good help stays ? and bad help always leaves
If you?re in horses, agriculture, or any business that depends on people showing up and doing it right every day, this episode is for you.
This is the unfiltered side of ranch life ? no highlight reels, just the truth.
?? Welcome to Episode 1.
Email: [email protected]