Barrel Racing Saddle
Warranty Information
Barrel Racing Saddle
Tree: Armor-Tex, Connie Combs All-Around.
Seat: 14” or 15” Chocolate suede.
Horn: 3”, Dally with Rawhide binder.
Cantle: 4”, Cheyenne roll with Rawhide binder, Stainless lacing and tooled overlay.
Rigging: Full forward Stainless steel dees with rear slots.
Finish: Natural gold with roughout seat jockey and fenders and rope border. Hand carved ENTZ panel tooling with hand stamped petite Basket filler.
Trim: Hand engraved Silver conchos.
Stirrups: 2” Rawhide Bell, hand laced.
Weight: 35 lbs.
Also check out our Barrel Racing Spurs for that next competetive event!
The Connie Combs Basket ENTZ endorsed by Connie Combs--one of the most successful Barrel Racers in history--features this beautiful combination Roper-Barrel Racer with hand stamped Basket tooling and hand carved ENTZ panel tooling, roughout seat jockey and fenders, Stainless laced Rawhide cantle and hand laced Rawhide Bell stirrups.
Barrel Racing Saddle
Barrel racing is about cooperation between horse and rider. Because of the competition and money involved, finding a good horse is very important to the competitors. A top of the line barrel horse can cost up to $50,000.
For the barrel racing event, the arena is cleared and three barrels are set up at different marked locations. The riders then enter the arena at full speed, quickly rounding each barrel in a cloverleaf pattern and then exiting where they entered. A stopwatch or timer is used registering down to a hundredth of a second.
Ships next day on Barrel Racing Saddle
Barrel Racing Saddle
Also check out our Barrel Racing Spurs for that next competetive event!
The Connie Combs Basket ENTZ endorsed by Connie Combs--one of the most successful Barrel Racers in history--features this beautiful combination Roper-Barrel Racer with hand stamped Basket tooling and hand carved ENTZ panel tooling, roughout seat jockey and fenders, Stainless laced Rawhide cantle and hand laced Rawhide Bell stirrups.
Barrel Racing Saddle
Barrel racing is about cooperation between horse and rider. Because of the competition and money involved, finding a good horse is very important to the competitors. A top of the line barrel horse can cost up to $50,000.
For the barrel racing event, the arena is cleared and three barrels are set up at different marked locations. The riders then enter the arena at full speed, quickly rounding each barrel in a cloverleaf pattern and then exiting where they entered. A stopwatch or timer is used registering down to a hundredth of a second.
Ships next day on Barrel Racing Saddle