By the time her sleepy-eyed classmates roll out of bed and into their 8:30 Intro to Marketing class, she’ll have completed an hour of rider agility and strength workouts, fed and watered her five horses at the UW rodeo team barn, and spent another hour roping steers or circling barrels with her teammates.
After a day of classes in communications, marketing and finance, she’ll head back to the arena to work with her other horses, each specializing in one of her three rodeo events: barrel racing, team roping, and her specialty, breakaway roping. Although she sacrifices a normal college social life to her horses and the sport of rodeo, Hailey wouldn’t have it any other way. “This lifestyle is a lot of work; it’s hard work,” she says. “But it’s also some of the best people you’ll ever meet. I love the community and atmosphere that rodeo offers. It’s a different way of life … that’s pretty amazing.”
The unique cowboy way of life runs in Hailey’s blood — from her family’s original homestead in Kelly to the family ranch in Wilson where she learned to rope and ride at the age of 4. Not only is the sport of rodeo integral to the Hardeman family identity — both her grandma and dad also competed on the UW rodeo team — but Hailey says without the unwavering support from her family she would never have achieved her level of success in rodeo.
“Every single one of them has helped me get to where I want to be,” she says, brimming with gratitude. “Most people go to college and don’t talk to their parents. I talk to my parents at least four times a day when I’m at school. It’s something with my horses, or how to fix the water, or my trailer tire is low and the jack won’t go down.”