CHEYENNE â People die, and sometimes their traditions fall away with them.
In the case of Cheyenneâs beloved Santa Go Pokes Christmas decoration, the lighted Santa riding a bucking Wyoming bronc will continue to illuminate the starry December nights.
Thousands of people in rodeo-loving Cheyenne come out to see the lighted decoration at 7111 Legacy Parkway each year, which was proudly owned by the late Mary Meyer, who died earlier this year.
Meyer took particular pride in the holiday decoration, which she felt helped spread neighborhood cheer across Wyomingâs capital city.Â
Her sons, Vince and Warren Meyer, have decided that the tradition must continue.
âWe made it a priority to get it up in front of momâs on Thanksgiving weekend, just like we have before,â Vince Meyer told Cowboy State Daily. âBecause we know, and weâve even heard a couple of people wondering about it. Weâre committed to ... we want it to remain a fixture in Cheyenne.â
The decoration lights up every night starting at 4:15 p.m. and stays lit until midnight. That will continue through Jan. 1, as in past years.
âWe will see what happens next year,â Meyer said. âBut we, like mom has said, think of ourselves as a steward of it. Itâs beloved, and weâve done the upkeep for it. We want it to remain something people can enjoy.â
Next yearâs plan is yet to be determined, Meyer said, but whatever the outcome, heâs confident it will include continuing this 25-year tradition for decades to come.
âThis was gifted to us, and our family has always looked at it as weâre just stewards of something fun to share,â Vince said. âSo, Iâd like to look for someone â a family friend or a good steward in Cheyenne â to find somewhere it can be enjoyed like it is.â

For The Love Of Christmas
Meyer particularly loved Christmas and often decorated for the holiday season.Â
Some years, she put out more decorations than others, but no matter how many or how few, the one that had to be displayed every year was Santa Claus on the Wyoming bucking bronc.
âIâve had people stop by if we donât get it up early enough,â Meyer told Cowboy State Daily in a 2023 interview. âItâs mostly people I know asking, âWhen will you get that Santa horse up there?â (People) love driving by and looking at it.â
Some love it so much, theyâve even asked Meyer why she didn't put it up during Cheyenne Frontier Days.Â
âThey see the bucking horse and donât even look close enough to say, âWait a minute, thatâs Santa,ââ Meyer said.Â
While Meyer never put the decoration out for Cheyenne Frontier Days, she did leave it out an extra-long time when incoming Gov. Mark Gordon asked her to so that his family could all see it.Â
âThat just tells you this is something people really do love,â she said. âWe all love our horse and all of us say, âI do more than you.â Well, itâs true. Everyone loves it more than anybody else.â
The construction of the decoration is quite sturdy, making it impossible to separate Santa from the bucking horse. In fact, vandals tried one year but were foiled.
âThere was only one set of footprints in the snow,â Meyer said. âAnd they bent it, so they must have had some pliers or, I donât know, it had to be something heavy.â
A welding company repaired the damage and no one has bothered it since.
Having so many people come by to see Santa Go Pokes always made Meyer feel better during the holidays.Â
She loved to watch the cars coming around the corner, then slowing down as they saw the bucking horse all lit up or, in some cases, doing an actual U-turn to come back for a second look.
Itâs part of how she knew she was helping spread the Christmas spirit of faith, hope and love all around.
Vince often joined her in that activity and liked it just as much.
âOne of momâs favorite things was just being able to look outside and see the number of people who would stop in front of the house or go through the cul-de-sac,â Vince said. âAnd thatâs something I enjoyed doing with her, too, and I just want that to continue.â

Whatâs In A Name?
At first, the family was going to call their lighted Santa on a bucking horse "Claus Christmas." But as fate would have it, there was a much better name for the decoration.
It came from the son of one of Vince's coworkers whose family had made it a Christmas tradition to drive by at least once every year.Â
When the family was late getting that done one year, the young man informed his parents it was past time for a hot chocolate-laden journey to see the Santa Go Pokes decoration.
Vince told his parents about that, and everyone in the family agreed it was adorable. No other name for the decoration was possible after that. Itâs been known as Santa Go Pokes since.
âThat was a neighborhood kid at the time, and Iâm sure heâs an adult now,â Vince said.Â
No one is sure anymore where that person is, or whether he remembers naming Cheyenneâs legendary bucking horse Christmas decoration. But heâs nonetheless part of helping to build a legend, one that Vince and his brother Warren hope will continue.Â
âItâs representative of the state, but also of friendship,â Warren said. âAnd also of my parents and the legacy that they carried on having that.Â
"Itâs just such a cool, unique thing, and itâs just comforting to know that itâs still out there and people can still enjoy it.â

Nothing Else Like It
The bucking horse Christmas decoration is one of a kind.Â
Part of that is because Wyoming has trademarked its bucking horse and people who want to use it must gain permission and pay a fee to do so.
The family acquired the decoration from the late Brooks Mitchell, who was a business professor at the University of Wyoming.Â
He had moved to Colorado and was storing the decoration in a shed, fearing that if he put it out in University of Wyoming rival Colorado State Universityâs territory, it might disappear or get vandalized.
Because he didnât dare show such a clearly Pokes-oriented decoration in rival territory, he offered it to the Meyers after Mary asked about it, believing the family would take good care of it and ensure lots of people could enjoy it.Â
Mitchell couldnât have known then just how right he really was.Â
Not only did the Meyers take good care of the decoration for the last 25 years, now a new generation is stepping up to continue the Santa Go Pokes Christmas legend in Cheyenne, for the sake of thousands who have made this visual treat part of their own holiday traditions.
The importance of tradition is sometimes hard to put into words, but as the character Tevye said in the musical "Fiddler on the Roof," without our traditions, our lives become as shaky as the fiddler on the roof.
Tevye understood that a beautiful tradition can be a true gift in an ever-changing world. Itâs something people can count on, in a world where there are often so few things to count on.
âPeople in Cheyenne have grown to love this because itâs so unique, and itâs so big,â Vince said. âAnd we enjoy ⊠the responsibility of getting that (out) every year and making it visible so that people can enjoy it.Â
"Itâs just something else in Cheyenne that makes us unique and we can share that Christmas spirit that combines both Christmas and go WYO.â
Renée Jean can be reached at renee@cowboystatedaily.com.





