Some of the most amazing rides at the Cheyenne Frontier Days rodeo donât involve a bull or a bucking bronc.
Instead, members of the elite Navy parachute team known as the Leap Frogs drop into the 700-by-200-foot Cheyenne Frontier Days Arena from heights between 4,000 and 6,000 feet.
Itâs a piece of cake for these guys, who had to demonstrate they can land in a much smaller, 20-by-40-foot box 10 times in a row just to be on the team. But their trick is fun no matter what time of day, and it never fails to draw cheers from the 19,000-strong crowd.
Itâs particularly impressive at night, with a fountain of flashy pyrotechnics blazing from their heels as they fall from the sky in highly maneuverable parachutes.
The result resembles a fancy, live-action fireworks show â one that has uncanny longevity and precision, because the âfireworksâ are attached to a small group of people who are as elite at what they do as the professional cowboys who compete in the Daddy of âem All.
âThis is all a very carefully choreographed event,â said Lt. Nick Obletz, the officer in charge of the Leap Frog team at Cheyenne Frontier Days this year. âA lot of it has to do with the winds and the weather. From when and where we position the aircraft to where the jumpmaster is directing the exit of all the parachutes from the aircraft.
âAll that is carefully planned and choreographed and rehearsed, so that we end up in the right place.â
The team knows all kinds of cool-looking formations they have practiced and practiced again that they can perform on the way down.
âWe can stack three or four canopies in a row on top of each other and then have a giant flag below it,â he said. âWe can have people locking (their) legs (together) and going 60 mph toward the ground at the stadium and then breaking at about 300 feet and bringing it in.â
Cheyenne A Must Every Year
All the special trick maneuvers that are performed for the public are practiced the first three months of every year, Obletz said. Each member of the team also jumps at least 300 to 400 times a year.
âThe average experience level on the team is about 1,000 jumps per person,â Obletz said. âSo, this is all we do for three years, and we really enjoy it. Itâs very special to be able to do it in front of a crowd, especially a crowd like the one we have here in Cheyenne.â
Cheyenne, in fact, is a âmust circleâ on the calendar, Obletz said, because of how âamazing the folks are here, and how good they are to folks in the military.â
Obletz hasnât been to Cheyenne Frontier Days before, so he wasnât sure the event could really live up to all the hype he was hearing. But he has not been disappointed so far.
âThe caliber of the bull riders and the whole organization, from the Cheyenne Military Committee to the overall organization, Iâm just in awe of how professional the organization is,â Obletz said. âWeâre just lucky to be part of this, and weâre happy to have been invited.â
After three years of service on the Leap Frogs, Obletz will return to the SEAL team he was previously with, where he will share the skills he has learned, helping train others and spreading these precision air capabilities around.
That three-year limit on membership in the Leap Frogs doesnât mean Obletz wonât jump any more with the team.
âWe always invite folks who have been on the team back to jump with us,â he said. âTheyâve developed the unique skill set that we have to have on the team.â
Obletz wanted to join the Leap Frogs because itâs fun traveling across the country to show what the team can do.
One of the highlights this year was jumping into the airshow at the AFC championship football game in Baltimore, Maryland.
âThroughout the year weâll jump into air shows, football games, soccer games,â Obletz said. âAny kind of entertainment event that we can safely jump into in front of a lot of folks, to really show the public a glimpse, a peek behind the curtain of the SEAL community and of Naval Special Warfare.â
But itâs not just that the Leap Frogs are fun. Obletz also really likes the attitude of the Leap Frog team members, too.
âI was really inspired by how they carried themselves, and was very interested in joining a group of people who are able to keep very calm in very high, high stress, very public situations.â
Cowboy Culture Blends Well With Military
A secondary reason that the Leap Frogs like coming to Cheyenne Frontier Days is the cowboy culture, Chief Nick Anaya told Cowboy State Daily.
âWeâre looking for qualified candidates who, you know, fit the mold to go through these difficult pipelines,â he said. âPeople who come to these things, they work on farms, theyâre strong, they love their country, theyâre raised right. So, this is a good demographic of people to try to find the next generation of war fighters.â
Obletz, meanwhile, said he likes the grit that he sees out there in the arena.
âWhat you see in the cowboy culture with the grit, and just generally soft-spoken folks who have a strong heart â those are the things, those are the characteristics and values that I want on my team, if weâre ever asked to go do very high risk things overseas on behalf of the country,â Obletz said. âThose are the people, those are the values, those are the folks I know I can rely on. So, thatâs really why weâre here, to talk to folks just like that, and see if they are interested in joining our community.â
Obletz said heâs had more than one cowboy come up to him and say they could never do what he does.
âAnd I tell them, âMan, we need to get you up in the sky,ââ Obletz said. âBecause if you can do what I just saw you do, youâre gonna have no problem in the air, working with us.â
Thatâs an assessment Anaya shares.
âThey have a lot of unknown risk,â he said. âWeâre actually quite a bit safer than I think a bull rider is on a 1,500-pound animal. They donât know what that animal is going to do.â
Anaya said heâd love to recruit more bull riders, but one challenge with that is sometimes a cowboy has too much âhardwareâ in their body, from breaking bones in past rodeo events. Itâs not an automatic deal-breaker though. Itâs on a case-by-case basis.
âThey have everything else that it would take to be successful,â Anaya said. âWith bull riding, you have to find a center, a balance. Thatâs the same thing (for us), we have to get stable in the air and get control.â
Renée Jean can be reached at renee@cowboystatedaily.com.