Peanut, Make It Do, came by his nickname honestly. When he
was unloaded at the Bay Meadows Track in 1966 for training, he was a scraggy
two-year old, much smaller than the other Quarter Horses coming into the barn.
He was owned by well-known horseman, Judd Morse, who predicted the 850 pound
midget would win more races than any of his stable mates. He was a well-built
colt, but was, “no bigger than a peanut,” said jockey, Jack Robinson.
Little Make It Do made do. He left the starting gate like a
scared jackrabbit and won his first race easily. He kept doing that, and size
never mattered. “They said this little shrimp is the best,” boasted Stan Immenschuh,
the trainer who
was delivering horses to the track. He was raced as a two and three year old,
and won six of twenty-two starts.
The gelding was traded to rodeo cowboy Bob Barnes who turned
him into a steer wrestling horse. With his quick move out of the box and speed,
he was perfect for the event. He became the hazing side of CR Jones team in
1978 and moved to the other side a year later. He quickly became a star.
Aboard Peanuts, Tom Ferguson of Miami, Oklahoma, won six
Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association all-around titles and three steer
wrestling titles. Frank Shepperson and Bob Marshall both won world
championships in steer wrestling, and C.R., Larry Ferguson, Dave Brock, Paul
Tierney, Fred Larsen, Larry Dawson, Pat Nogle, Casper Schaefer, Paul Hughes and
Darrel Sewell all rode the bay gelding at the National Finals Rodeo.
Peanuts the steer wrestling average at the Calgary Stampede
five years in a row. Even better, he won the world championship in steer
wrestling four years in a row (1976-1979). He went to the NFR every year from
1973-1980, and each year, at least five of the top 15 cowboys rode him.
He was
inducted into the ProRodeo Hall of Fame in Colorado Springs, Colorado, the
Pendleton Rodeo Museum in Pendleton, Oregon, the Rodeo Hall of Fame in The
National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City and the AQHA Hall of Fame.
When Peanuts
was retired in 1981, cowboys had won more than a million dollars on his back. He
was turned out in a small acreage at C.R.’s home near Lakeside, California, and
was euthanized April 27, 1995, at the age of 31 due to complications from a
twisted gut.
Of an
estimated 450 Finals runs, cowboys wrestled 225 consecutive steers from Make It
Do's back before ever missing one. I guess nobody ever told Peanut he couldn’t
do it, or maybe, he just didn’t listen.
Love your blog! I like reading the back ground on horses that have done well and seeing the old pictures. So neat!!
ReplyDeleteFJ, thanks for stopping by. I like hearing about the great ones, too.
ReplyDeleteOh he lived such a long life! Too bad he was a gelding. What a champion!
ReplyDeleteHe was an amazing horse, wasn't he?
ReplyDeleteLove Peanut!
ReplyDeleteThanks for stopping by, DeAnn. Horses are very special animals, and rodeo horses, especially.
ReplyDelete