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Yellowstone Meets 1883 for the
Careity Foundation Celebrity Cutting

By Pepper Stewart
If you were not in Fort Worth, Texas, for the Careity Foundation celebrity cutting you missed a great show. For many years now, the Careity Foundation has been raising money for their Direct Patent Services providing for cancer patients and their families.
Take a minute and drop by www.Careity.org if you are not familiar with the foundation.
Taylor and Nicole Sheridan are honorary chairs for the annual event, but both have competed in the event as well. Along with Taylor being a television show creating genius, the Sheridans are avid horse people who raise performance horses and compete in many different disciplines in the horse world.
The Careity Foundation is a very special cause to them, and they invited cast members of Sheridan’s TV shows to volunteer their time to come to Texas and compete in the celebrity cutting event.
To read more, pick up a copy of the February issue of NTFR Magazine. To subscribe call 940-872-5922.
Attractions
Dixie House Cafe: Home of the Big Buns

By Donna Long
If you are hankerin’ for home cooking just like grandma used to make with fresh ingredients, then look no further than Dixie House Cafe with locations in Fort Worth, Saginaw, and Euless. Dixie House, which was originally named Theresa’s Cafe after its owner, opened its first restaurant in 1983.
In the early days, it was just Theresa and one employee that ran the cafe. Between the two of them, they created mouth-watering meals from scratch using tried and true recipes. Dixie House is where the nostalgic vibe of a 60’s diner meets the charm of Southern hospitality and cooking. The portions are substantial, and the flavor is reminiscent of a time when meals were slow-cooked with families gathered in the kitchen and not hurriedly microwaved.
To read more, pick up a copy of the March issue of NTFR Magazine. To subscribe call 940-872-5922.
Equine
No Winter Blues in Rodeo

By Phillip Kitts
With most of America fighting off the winter blues and setting their sights on the warmth of spring, the rodeo world is already heating up. It is often common chatter about how the rodeo world really does not have an off season. In October when the regular season wraps up, it is not even a week before rodeo athletes start running to fall rodeos so they can start building up money toward the next year’s finals. It is true that fall rodeos do not have big payouts, but many athletes take the every dollar counts approach and throw several of them on the calendar.
November and December may be the slowest months of the rodeo year, but believe it or not, there are still plenty of places rodeo athletes can go and earn a small check. Traditionally the number of rodeos in the winter months is lower, but the few events that do happen tend to have big payouts. Pretty much every rodeo fan knows all about places like Denver, Fort Worth, San Antonio, and Rapid City. These are all big scale events with huge payouts.
To read more, pick up a copy of the March issue of NTFR Magazine. To subscribe call 940-872-5922.
Farm & Ranch
Ag Elsewhere: Montana

By Lindsey Monk
Calving season is in full swing, which means branding is next!
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