YA HOOOO...........
Stampede Park, pancake breakfasts, and the world famous chuckwagon races are highlights of the Calgary Stampede festivities.
The entire city of Calgary celebrates its western heritage during 10 days at the start of July each year. Calgary comes alive with Wild West Stampede fever. In 1998, approximately 4,000 people and 800 animals joined together to make up lively floats, bands, dancing troops, and livestock displays for a cheering crowd of 300,000.
A good mood grips the city as everyone joins in the party. Residents and tourists alike catch Stampede fever. Square dancing, hat stomping contests, gun fight demonstrations and country music are daily attractions on the downtown Stephen Avenue Mall. The smell of bacon and flapjacks fills the air as volunteers man chuckwagons and cook up free breakfasts for all. Not a lot of work gets done during Stampede week and for many its a week-long paid opportunity to greet visitors from around the world. In Calgary, people still smile and greet strangers on the street.
Following the rodeo each day are chuckwagon races in the Rangeland Derby. Drivers perched precariously on the spring-loaded wooden benches of their chuckwagons urge teams of four horses at breakneck speeds around the dirt track. After the outriders have loaded their chucks with a stove and tent poles, the drivers cut their rigs in a sharp figure-eight around the barrels, which must remain standing to avoid penalties. From then on its a mad dash to reach the coveted inside rail position as they head towards the finish line with 25,000 screaming spectators urging on their favorites.
At the end of it all, when Stampede winds down, Calgarians regretfully trade in their duds for suits and return to their daily affairs. But they never forget to say "Hello!" to strangers.
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