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Rex Eugene Bugbee

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Rex Eugene Bugbee

Birth
Emporia, Lyon County, Kansas, USA
Death
25 Aug 2020 (aged 65)
Lubbock, Lubbock County, Texas, USA
Burial
Medicine Lodge, Barber County, Kansas, USA GPS-Latitude: 37.2930611, Longitude: -98.5899056
Memorial ID
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Rex Bugbee, 65 year old Medicine Lodge resident, passed away Tuesday, August 25, 2020 in Lubbock, Texas. Funeral services will be held at 2:00 pm Thursday, September 3, 2020 at the Medicine Lodge Rodeo Arena. A visitation will be held from 12:00 pm until 2:00 pm prior to the funeral service at the arena. Burial will follow at the Highland Cemetery with the Billings Funeral Home in charge of the arrangements. There will also be a visitation on Wednesday, September 2, 2020 from 9:00 am until 8:00 pm at the Billings Funeral Home in Woodward, Oklahoma.

Rex Eugene Bugbee was born on November 8, 1954 in Emporia, Kansas to William Ervin and Marla Eileen (Pendergraft) Bugbee. He was reared in Emporia and graduated from Emporia High School in 1973. He then attended Flint Hills Technical College.

He was united in marriage to Teri Ann Neighbors on October 17, 1981 in Pawhuska, Oklahoma. The couple made their home in Medicine Lodge, Kansas.

Rex worked for the Emporia Livestock Company, JC Rodeo Company, Wheelock Ranch, Chain Ranch for twenty years as well as the Frontier Rodeo Company for fifteen years.

He enjoyed playing pitch, leather work, coyote hunting and snow skiing. He loved spending time with his family and friends. He always enjoyed the first beer after a rodeo or working cattle. He was a member of the PRCA, WRCA, Medicine Lodge Ranch Rodeo and the Medicine Lodge Peace Treaty as well as the Sardis Congregational Church in Emporia.

Rex is survived by his wife, Teri of the home; sons, Josh Bugbee and wife Kimberlie of Manhattan, Kansas and Jay Bugbee and fiance Ashley of Goddard, Kansas; 2 grandchildren, Ila and Tripp; sisters Linda Burton and husband Pat of Windsor, Colorado and Karen Ambrust and husband John of Manhattan, Kansas; brother-in-law Don Neighbors and wife Raelene of Orlando, Oklahoma; numerous nieces, nephews, other family and friends.

He was preceded in death by his parents.

In lieu of flowers memorial contributions may be made to the Rex Bugbee Memorial with the Billings Funeral Home, 1621 Downs Avenue, Woodward, OK. 73801 accepting the donations.Special to The Emporia Gazette, 26 Aug 2020

Emporia native, veteran pickup man Rex Bugbee dies after rodeo accident

Rex Bugbee, Emporia native and veteran pickup man who worked some of the biggest rodeos of the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association (PRCA), passed away August. 25. He was 65.

Bugbee, who worked as a pickup man for Frontier Rodeo Company since 2005, was serving as a pickup man with two-time National Finals Rodeo pickup man Shawn "Too Tall" Calhoun during a non-PRCA sanctioned bronc match in Guymon, Oklahoma, August. 20.

During the event, Bugbee and Calhoun were involved in an accident in the arena. While Calhoun walked away with injuries, Bugbee was seriously injured. Bugbee was transported to the trauma unit for treatment in Lubbock, Texas, where he passed away Tuesday.

"Rex was a heck of a hand and a great friend," Calhoun said Wednesday. "If you ever met Rex, he was a friend for life. He didn't meet a stranger and never had something bad to say about anybody. You knew where you stood with him because if he said it, he meant what he said."

Bugbee was selected to pick up at some of ProRodeo's major events such as Cheyenne, Wyoming, Frontier Days twice and RFD-TV's The American in Arlington, Texas. He also worked the Prairie Circuit Finals Rodeo multiple times.

He served as the arena usher at the 2019 Clem McSpadden National Finals Steer Roping in Mulvane, Kansas.

When he was selected to work the NFSR, he told the PRCA Media Department that the friendships he's made through work and getting to attend a lot of great rodeos are what he loves most about his job.

"The best thing about the NFSR is that I don't have to travel far, it's not far from my house," Bugbee said. "I'm going to try and stay on top of my game and do the best job that I can at the event."

At Frontier Rodeo Company, Bugbee also helped on the company's ranch in Freedom, Oklahoma. Rex and his wife, Teri, made their home in Medicine Lodge, Kansas. They have two sons, Josh and Jay. Josh, who was a Farm Bureau agent at Herington in the past, and his wife, Kim, have a daughter, Ila, and a son, Tripp, making Rex and Teri grandparents.
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Jerry Nelson, the owner of Frontier Rodeo Company, talked about Bugbee.

"Rex started rodeoing when he was 12," Nelson said "He rode bulls and (tie-down) roped growing up. Rex was just a cowboy. He liked riding horses.

"Rex used to tell me that he had the best job in the rodeo business because he could sit out in the rodeo arena and watch the horses buck. It's a tragic deal. I've never thought of a pickup man like that; I've always worried about the bull riders or bronc riders getting thrown off, but you never think about the pickup man. It's a dangerous job. They don't get enough credit for what they do.

"If I could say anything about Rex Bugbee, I would say he was probably the best all-around cowboy I ever knew, and Rex Bugbee died doing what he wanted to do."

Nelson's Frontier Rodeo Company made the following post August. 26 on its Facebook page:

"Rex 'Bugs' Bugbee was cowboy to the core, he was respected by all who met him. He was one of the toughest men God ever gave breath, with a heart of gold. Rex worked for Frontier Rodeo Company for 15 years as a pickup-man and any other task that needed a set of hands.

"He wasn't just an employee, he was family. To his many friends that he had all over the world, please find peace and comfort in knowing that he left this earth doing what he loved and lived for....being a cowboy. The tack trailer gatherings will never be the same, but every time it hits Highway 50 rolling out of Freedom, Oklahoma, we know you'll be riding shotgun.

"We ask that you keep his devoted wife, Teri, their sons Josh (wife Kim), Jay (Ashley) and grandchildren Ila and Tripp in your prayers in the coming days ahead. There will be a Memorial service, once it's finalized, details will be posted."

*********************************
Rex Bugbee
by Jennifer Stultz, Pratt Tribune, 09/02/20

Rex Bugbee, a well-known cowboy and rodeo pickup man with many south-central Kansas friends and relatives died Tuesday, August 25, 2020 as a result of injuries incurred in a horseback collision last week during the Guymon Pioneer Days Rodeo in Guymon, Okla. He will be laid to rest after funeral services at the Medicine Lodge Rodeo Arena, 2 p.m. on Thursday, September 3.

During the Bronc Match on Aug. 20, Frontier Rodeo Company pickup man Rex Bugbee collided hard with fellow pickup man Shawn 'Too Tall' Calhoun. While Calhoun walked away sore but unscathed, Bugbee had to be transported to the trauma unit in Lubbock, Texas, for treatment of multiple serious injuries, including broken ribs, face bones and a shoulder blade; collapsed lungs; and several brain bleeds.

Rodeo fans from across the nation offered support and prayers for Bugbee and his family after the accident through hundreds of tweets, Facebook and YouTube posts.

*********************************
Obituary

Rex Bugbee, 65 year old Medicine Lodge resident, passed away Tuesday, August 25, 2020 in Lubbock, Texas. Funeral services will be held at 2:00 pm Thursday, September 3, 2020 at the Medicine Lodge Rodeo Arena. A visitation will be held from 12:00 pm until 2:00 pm prior to the funeral service at the arena. Burial will follow at the Highland Cemetery with the Billings Funeral Home in charge of the arrangements. There will also be a visitation on Wednesday, September 2, 2020 from 9:00 am until 8:00 pm at the Billings Funeral Home in Woodward, Oklahoma.

Rex Eugene Bugbee was born on November 8, 1954 in Emporia, Kansas to William Ervin and Marla Eileen (Pendergraft) Bugbee. He was reared in Emporia and graduated from Emporia High School in 1973. He then attended Flint Hills Technical College.

He was united in marriage to Teri Ann Neighbors on October 17, 1981 in Pawhuska, Oklahoma. The couple made their home in Medicine Lodge, Kansas.

Rex worked for the Emporia Livestock Company, JC Rodeo Company, Wheelock Ranch, Chain Ranch for twenty years as well as the Frontier Rodeo Company for fifteen years.

He enjoyed playing pitch, leather work, coyote hunting and snow skiing. He loved spending time with his family and friends. He always enjoyed the first beer after a rodeo or working cattle. He was a member of the PRCA, WRCA, Medicine Lodge Ranch Rodeo and the Medicine Lodge Peace Treaty as well as the Sardis Congregational Church in Emporia.

Rex is survived by his wife, Teri of the home; sons, Josh Bugbee and wife Kimberlie of Manhattan, Kansas and Jay Bugbee and fiance Ashley of Goddard, Kansas; 2 grandchildren, Ila and Tripp; sisters Linda Burton and husband Pat of Windsor, Colorado and Karen Ambrust and husband John of Manhattan, Kansas; brother-in-law Don Neighbors and wife Raelene of Orlando, Oklahoma; numerous nieces, nephews, other family and friends.

He was preceded in death by his parents.

In lieu of flowers memorial contributions may be made to the Rex Bugbee Memorial with the Billings Funeral Home, 1621 Downs Avenue, Woodward, OK. 73801 accepting the donations.

*********************************
The Emporia Gazette, 28 Jun 2020

EMPORIA NATIVE EMBRACES RODEO LIFE

"I love my job. I love everything about being a rodeo pickup man."
Rex Bugbee's excitement for his most essential profession in the rodeo arena shines through his voice.
Perhaps sadly sometimes considered "behind the scene" part of rodeo, pickup men are truly front and center for the action.
Spectators often take for granted even pay little attention to the cowboys saving champions after making award winning bronc rides.
Yet, those bucking horse riders know and appreciate abilities of pickup men getting them off broncs safe onto the ground. They'll get the applause, but proficient work of the pickup men mounted on outstanding horses is vital to their success.
"I was forever enthralled by work of the pickup men at every rodeo I attended while growing up," Bugbee insisted.
"Foremost, I was going to be a cowboy, and I liked everything about rodeo," the Medicine Lodge cowboy continued. "Of course I was anxious to compete in rodeos, but I studied the work of the pickup men. That's what I knew I wanted to be."
Recognized as one of the best in the business, Bugbee has fulfilled his youthful cowboy initiative. He is a heavily demanded fulltime professional rodeo pickup man working the biggest and best rodeos throughout the United States.
"This year's the exception, but I'm on the road most of the time, up to 100 performances annually nationwide," Bugbee said. "There've been a lot of rodeos canceled or postponed, but it's opening up again. I'm headed to Cody, Wyoming, for a rodeo this weekend."
His calendar is booked throughout the remaining summer months coast to coast border to border north and south. From Cody, he'll head to Utah then back to Dodge City in late July before returning to rodeos in Utah.
"We were at a rodeo in south Florida when the virus shut us down. It'll be so good to be back on the circuit again," Bugbee insisted.
Growing up at Emporia, Bugbee said, "The Flint Hills cowboys were my heroes. I wanted to be like them. Then attending the annual Flint Hills Rodeo at Strong City just made me want the cowboy life all the more."
He became friends with renowned rodeo contractor Emmett Roberts, father of rodeo world champions.
"Mr. Roberts was an outstanding pickup man himself in his earlier years and had great stories to tell," Bugbee said. "I got to know pickup men Dee Fink and Andy Olson who worked Roberts Rodeos and the Flint Hills Rodeo. They all continued inspiring me to be a pickup man."
Riding in Lyon County and regional horse activities as a youngster, Bugbee started rodeo bull riding as a teenager.
"I won money at rodeos throughout the Midwest," he noted. "However, as importantly, I became acquainted and starting working with rodeo contractor Jimmy Crowther at Roxbury."
Competing in Crowther's JC Rodeo Company events, Bugbee also began serving as a pickup man at those rodeos. "I owe a lot to Jimmy for helping me get started as a pickup man and working major rodeos," Bugbee credited.
Following his cowboy profession, Bugbee moved to Medicine Lodge in 1977 working for area ranches more than 30 years. "I've assisted in large cow-calf operations as well as yearling and grazing programs," he said.
Married to his wife Teri, Bugbee has two grown sons, Josh and Jay, and granddaughter Ila and grandson Tripp. "They've been supportive in all of my cowboy endeavors and especially when being gone so much to rodeos," Bugbee recognized.
From picking up for Crowther at JC Rodeos, then New Frontier Rodeo, Bugbee now works mostly for Frontier Rodeo Company.
"Jerry Nelson owns Frontier, headquartered at Freedom, Oklahoma, just an hour south of here," Bugbee said. "Heath Stewart is the rodeo company manager who I work with quite closely.
"Frontier Rodeo Company has been honored as the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association Stock Contractor of the Year many times.
"Their broncs and bulls have also annually been voted by rodeo cowboys for prestigious yearend awards," the pickup man said.
"I have the best seat in the house," Bugbee contended. "I'm close up for the rodeo action of the livestock and the cowboys. Being a pickup man is the best job in rodeo. How could life be any better?"
Not nearly every cowboy has the desire or abilities to be a rodeo pickup man. "It's not as easy as others might think," Bugbee confirmed. "You have to be on the ball all the time.
"Picking up is a two cowboy job. You can't do it alone. Fortunately, I've worked with several top pickup men," Bugbee credited. "The action is fast, but it's really important to go slow sometimes especially when getting started as a pickup man."
Horsepower is an essential ingredient of a top pickup man. "It takes a special horse. Many horses just don't make it." Bugbee declared. "I've been through a lot of the horses over the years and really have a good set of horses today."
A pickup horse must be "brave, stout and have gas when needed," Bugbee described. "They don't have to be so big really. Just know how to move out, take the jerks, and have a natural instinct to read livestock."
Admitting today's horses are "so much better" than half a century ago, Bugbee's pickup mounts are "pretty much cow bred."
Bugbee rides pickup horses that he owns personally and ones owned by the rodeo company. "We partner on some horses and also ride horses for a breeder who has a sale in Wyoming," Bugbee said.
Six pickup horses are typically ridden at every rodeo the pickup man works. "I use two in the bareback riding, two in bronc riding, one for roping bulls, and an extra," he explained. "It takes a lot of horsepower in today's big arenas."
In the hundreds of horses Bugbee has used, two stand out above the others.
"A grade gray mare we called Elvira was the best pickup horse ever. She had a huge heart always wanting to do the job," Bugbee credited. "Elvira was a grade mare Jimmy Crowther's dad Ronnie and I bought at the South Hutchinson sale barn. I picked up on her at a team rodeo the next night and then she went to work fulltime"
After Elvira was retired, she produced several foals which also made top using horses. "Elvira was one of a kind," Bugbee smiled.
A sorrel with socks and bald face called Rosie also stands out among Bugbee's favorite pickup horses. "Rosie was truly a natural, really tough," he acknowledged.
"Mares often work as well as geldings for picking up, but I only use geldings nowadays," Bugbee said. "They don't necessarily have more ability, but are easier to turn in and get along with other horses."
Widely recognized for his abilities, Bugbee has been selected to serve as pickup man at a number of major rodeos. These include the Prairie Circuit Finals, multiple times; The Daddy of them All, Cheyenne Frontier Days, Cheyenne, Wyoming, twice: and RFD-TV's The American, Dallas, Texas.
"Cheyenne is a big arena but one of the easiest rodeos to work because there are six pickup men. I only have to pick up every third bronc," Bugbee said.
Little time off in his demanded profession, when Bugbee is home he does day work for area ranchers. "I have a leather shop and that keeps me out of trouble too," he added.
Future for the sport of rodeo is bright, according to Bugbee. "Rodeo has changed a lot since I was a kid," he said. "The cowboys and the livestock are better than ever, prize money keeps growing and spectator attendance has never been greater. Rodeo will continually get even better."
Retirement age, Bugbee has no plans to stop serving rodeo as a pickup man. "Why would I ever want to quit doing what I love so much?"

******************************
Rex Bugbee, 65 year old Medicine Lodge resident, passed away Tuesday, August 25, 2020 in Lubbock, Texas. Funeral services will be held at 2:00 pm Thursday, September 3, 2020 at the Medicine Lodge Rodeo Arena. A visitation will be held from 12:00 pm until 2:00 pm prior to the funeral service at the arena. Burial will follow at the Highland Cemetery with the Billings Funeral Home in charge of the arrangements. There will also be a visitation on Wednesday, September 2, 2020 from 9:00 am until 8:00 pm at the Billings Funeral Home in Woodward, Oklahoma.

Rex Eugene Bugbee was born on November 8, 1954 in Emporia, Kansas to William Ervin and Marla Eileen (Pendergraft) Bugbee. He was reared in Emporia and graduated from Emporia High School in 1973. He then attended Flint Hills Technical College.

He was united in marriage to Teri Ann Neighbors on October 17, 1981 in Pawhuska, Oklahoma. The couple made their home in Medicine Lodge, Kansas.

Rex worked for the Emporia Livestock Company, JC Rodeo Company, Wheelock Ranch, Chain Ranch for twenty years as well as the Frontier Rodeo Company for fifteen years.

He enjoyed playing pitch, leather work, coyote hunting and snow skiing. He loved spending time with his family and friends. He always enjoyed the first beer after a rodeo or working cattle. He was a member of the PRCA, WRCA, Medicine Lodge Ranch Rodeo and the Medicine Lodge Peace Treaty as well as the Sardis Congregational Church in Emporia.

Rex is survived by his wife, Teri of the home; sons, Josh Bugbee and wife Kimberlie of Manhattan, Kansas and Jay Bugbee and fiance Ashley of Goddard, Kansas; 2 grandchildren, Ila and Tripp; sisters Linda Burton and husband Pat of Windsor, Colorado and Karen Ambrust and husband John of Manhattan, Kansas; brother-in-law Don Neighbors and wife Raelene of Orlando, Oklahoma; numerous nieces, nephews, other family and friends.

He was preceded in death by his parents.

In lieu of flowers memorial contributions may be made to the Rex Bugbee Memorial with the Billings Funeral Home, 1621 Downs Avenue, Woodward, OK. 73801 accepting the donations.Special to The Emporia Gazette, 26 Aug 2020

Emporia native, veteran pickup man Rex Bugbee dies after rodeo accident

Rex Bugbee, Emporia native and veteran pickup man who worked some of the biggest rodeos of the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association (PRCA), passed away August. 25. He was 65.

Bugbee, who worked as a pickup man for Frontier Rodeo Company since 2005, was serving as a pickup man with two-time National Finals Rodeo pickup man Shawn "Too Tall" Calhoun during a non-PRCA sanctioned bronc match in Guymon, Oklahoma, August. 20.

During the event, Bugbee and Calhoun were involved in an accident in the arena. While Calhoun walked away with injuries, Bugbee was seriously injured. Bugbee was transported to the trauma unit for treatment in Lubbock, Texas, where he passed away Tuesday.

"Rex was a heck of a hand and a great friend," Calhoun said Wednesday. "If you ever met Rex, he was a friend for life. He didn't meet a stranger and never had something bad to say about anybody. You knew where you stood with him because if he said it, he meant what he said."

Bugbee was selected to pick up at some of ProRodeo's major events such as Cheyenne, Wyoming, Frontier Days twice and RFD-TV's The American in Arlington, Texas. He also worked the Prairie Circuit Finals Rodeo multiple times.

He served as the arena usher at the 2019 Clem McSpadden National Finals Steer Roping in Mulvane, Kansas.

When he was selected to work the NFSR, he told the PRCA Media Department that the friendships he's made through work and getting to attend a lot of great rodeos are what he loves most about his job.

"The best thing about the NFSR is that I don't have to travel far, it's not far from my house," Bugbee said. "I'm going to try and stay on top of my game and do the best job that I can at the event."

At Frontier Rodeo Company, Bugbee also helped on the company's ranch in Freedom, Oklahoma. Rex and his wife, Teri, made their home in Medicine Lodge, Kansas. They have two sons, Josh and Jay. Josh, who was a Farm Bureau agent at Herington in the past, and his wife, Kim, have a daughter, Ila, and a son, Tripp, making Rex and Teri grandparents.
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Jerry Nelson, the owner of Frontier Rodeo Company, talked about Bugbee.

"Rex started rodeoing when he was 12," Nelson said "He rode bulls and (tie-down) roped growing up. Rex was just a cowboy. He liked riding horses.

"Rex used to tell me that he had the best job in the rodeo business because he could sit out in the rodeo arena and watch the horses buck. It's a tragic deal. I've never thought of a pickup man like that; I've always worried about the bull riders or bronc riders getting thrown off, but you never think about the pickup man. It's a dangerous job. They don't get enough credit for what they do.

"If I could say anything about Rex Bugbee, I would say he was probably the best all-around cowboy I ever knew, and Rex Bugbee died doing what he wanted to do."

Nelson's Frontier Rodeo Company made the following post August. 26 on its Facebook page:

"Rex 'Bugs' Bugbee was cowboy to the core, he was respected by all who met him. He was one of the toughest men God ever gave breath, with a heart of gold. Rex worked for Frontier Rodeo Company for 15 years as a pickup-man and any other task that needed a set of hands.

"He wasn't just an employee, he was family. To his many friends that he had all over the world, please find peace and comfort in knowing that he left this earth doing what he loved and lived for....being a cowboy. The tack trailer gatherings will never be the same, but every time it hits Highway 50 rolling out of Freedom, Oklahoma, we know you'll be riding shotgun.

"We ask that you keep his devoted wife, Teri, their sons Josh (wife Kim), Jay (Ashley) and grandchildren Ila and Tripp in your prayers in the coming days ahead. There will be a Memorial service, once it's finalized, details will be posted."

*********************************
Rex Bugbee
by Jennifer Stultz, Pratt Tribune, 09/02/20

Rex Bugbee, a well-known cowboy and rodeo pickup man with many south-central Kansas friends and relatives died Tuesday, August 25, 2020 as a result of injuries incurred in a horseback collision last week during the Guymon Pioneer Days Rodeo in Guymon, Okla. He will be laid to rest after funeral services at the Medicine Lodge Rodeo Arena, 2 p.m. on Thursday, September 3.

During the Bronc Match on Aug. 20, Frontier Rodeo Company pickup man Rex Bugbee collided hard with fellow pickup man Shawn 'Too Tall' Calhoun. While Calhoun walked away sore but unscathed, Bugbee had to be transported to the trauma unit in Lubbock, Texas, for treatment of multiple serious injuries, including broken ribs, face bones and a shoulder blade; collapsed lungs; and several brain bleeds.

Rodeo fans from across the nation offered support and prayers for Bugbee and his family after the accident through hundreds of tweets, Facebook and YouTube posts.

*********************************
Obituary

Rex Bugbee, 65 year old Medicine Lodge resident, passed away Tuesday, August 25, 2020 in Lubbock, Texas. Funeral services will be held at 2:00 pm Thursday, September 3, 2020 at the Medicine Lodge Rodeo Arena. A visitation will be held from 12:00 pm until 2:00 pm prior to the funeral service at the arena. Burial will follow at the Highland Cemetery with the Billings Funeral Home in charge of the arrangements. There will also be a visitation on Wednesday, September 2, 2020 from 9:00 am until 8:00 pm at the Billings Funeral Home in Woodward, Oklahoma.

Rex Eugene Bugbee was born on November 8, 1954 in Emporia, Kansas to William Ervin and Marla Eileen (Pendergraft) Bugbee. He was reared in Emporia and graduated from Emporia High School in 1973. He then attended Flint Hills Technical College.

He was united in marriage to Teri Ann Neighbors on October 17, 1981 in Pawhuska, Oklahoma. The couple made their home in Medicine Lodge, Kansas.

Rex worked for the Emporia Livestock Company, JC Rodeo Company, Wheelock Ranch, Chain Ranch for twenty years as well as the Frontier Rodeo Company for fifteen years.

He enjoyed playing pitch, leather work, coyote hunting and snow skiing. He loved spending time with his family and friends. He always enjoyed the first beer after a rodeo or working cattle. He was a member of the PRCA, WRCA, Medicine Lodge Ranch Rodeo and the Medicine Lodge Peace Treaty as well as the Sardis Congregational Church in Emporia.

Rex is survived by his wife, Teri of the home; sons, Josh Bugbee and wife Kimberlie of Manhattan, Kansas and Jay Bugbee and fiance Ashley of Goddard, Kansas; 2 grandchildren, Ila and Tripp; sisters Linda Burton and husband Pat of Windsor, Colorado and Karen Ambrust and husband John of Manhattan, Kansas; brother-in-law Don Neighbors and wife Raelene of Orlando, Oklahoma; numerous nieces, nephews, other family and friends.

He was preceded in death by his parents.

In lieu of flowers memorial contributions may be made to the Rex Bugbee Memorial with the Billings Funeral Home, 1621 Downs Avenue, Woodward, OK. 73801 accepting the donations.

*********************************
The Emporia Gazette, 28 Jun 2020

EMPORIA NATIVE EMBRACES RODEO LIFE

"I love my job. I love everything about being a rodeo pickup man."
Rex Bugbee's excitement for his most essential profession in the rodeo arena shines through his voice.
Perhaps sadly sometimes considered "behind the scene" part of rodeo, pickup men are truly front and center for the action.
Spectators often take for granted even pay little attention to the cowboys saving champions after making award winning bronc rides.
Yet, those bucking horse riders know and appreciate abilities of pickup men getting them off broncs safe onto the ground. They'll get the applause, but proficient work of the pickup men mounted on outstanding horses is vital to their success.
"I was forever enthralled by work of the pickup men at every rodeo I attended while growing up," Bugbee insisted.
"Foremost, I was going to be a cowboy, and I liked everything about rodeo," the Medicine Lodge cowboy continued. "Of course I was anxious to compete in rodeos, but I studied the work of the pickup men. That's what I knew I wanted to be."
Recognized as one of the best in the business, Bugbee has fulfilled his youthful cowboy initiative. He is a heavily demanded fulltime professional rodeo pickup man working the biggest and best rodeos throughout the United States.
"This year's the exception, but I'm on the road most of the time, up to 100 performances annually nationwide," Bugbee said. "There've been a lot of rodeos canceled or postponed, but it's opening up again. I'm headed to Cody, Wyoming, for a rodeo this weekend."
His calendar is booked throughout the remaining summer months coast to coast border to border north and south. From Cody, he'll head to Utah then back to Dodge City in late July before returning to rodeos in Utah.
"We were at a rodeo in south Florida when the virus shut us down. It'll be so good to be back on the circuit again," Bugbee insisted.
Growing up at Emporia, Bugbee said, "The Flint Hills cowboys were my heroes. I wanted to be like them. Then attending the annual Flint Hills Rodeo at Strong City just made me want the cowboy life all the more."
He became friends with renowned rodeo contractor Emmett Roberts, father of rodeo world champions.
"Mr. Roberts was an outstanding pickup man himself in his earlier years and had great stories to tell," Bugbee said. "I got to know pickup men Dee Fink and Andy Olson who worked Roberts Rodeos and the Flint Hills Rodeo. They all continued inspiring me to be a pickup man."
Riding in Lyon County and regional horse activities as a youngster, Bugbee started rodeo bull riding as a teenager.
"I won money at rodeos throughout the Midwest," he noted. "However, as importantly, I became acquainted and starting working with rodeo contractor Jimmy Crowther at Roxbury."
Competing in Crowther's JC Rodeo Company events, Bugbee also began serving as a pickup man at those rodeos. "I owe a lot to Jimmy for helping me get started as a pickup man and working major rodeos," Bugbee credited.
Following his cowboy profession, Bugbee moved to Medicine Lodge in 1977 working for area ranches more than 30 years. "I've assisted in large cow-calf operations as well as yearling and grazing programs," he said.
Married to his wife Teri, Bugbee has two grown sons, Josh and Jay, and granddaughter Ila and grandson Tripp. "They've been supportive in all of my cowboy endeavors and especially when being gone so much to rodeos," Bugbee recognized.
From picking up for Crowther at JC Rodeos, then New Frontier Rodeo, Bugbee now works mostly for Frontier Rodeo Company.
"Jerry Nelson owns Frontier, headquartered at Freedom, Oklahoma, just an hour south of here," Bugbee said. "Heath Stewart is the rodeo company manager who I work with quite closely.
"Frontier Rodeo Company has been honored as the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association Stock Contractor of the Year many times.
"Their broncs and bulls have also annually been voted by rodeo cowboys for prestigious yearend awards," the pickup man said.
"I have the best seat in the house," Bugbee contended. "I'm close up for the rodeo action of the livestock and the cowboys. Being a pickup man is the best job in rodeo. How could life be any better?"
Not nearly every cowboy has the desire or abilities to be a rodeo pickup man. "It's not as easy as others might think," Bugbee confirmed. "You have to be on the ball all the time.
"Picking up is a two cowboy job. You can't do it alone. Fortunately, I've worked with several top pickup men," Bugbee credited. "The action is fast, but it's really important to go slow sometimes especially when getting started as a pickup man."
Horsepower is an essential ingredient of a top pickup man. "It takes a special horse. Many horses just don't make it." Bugbee declared. "I've been through a lot of the horses over the years and really have a good set of horses today."
A pickup horse must be "brave, stout and have gas when needed," Bugbee described. "They don't have to be so big really. Just know how to move out, take the jerks, and have a natural instinct to read livestock."
Admitting today's horses are "so much better" than half a century ago, Bugbee's pickup mounts are "pretty much cow bred."
Bugbee rides pickup horses that he owns personally and ones owned by the rodeo company. "We partner on some horses and also ride horses for a breeder who has a sale in Wyoming," Bugbee said.
Six pickup horses are typically ridden at every rodeo the pickup man works. "I use two in the bareback riding, two in bronc riding, one for roping bulls, and an extra," he explained. "It takes a lot of horsepower in today's big arenas."
In the hundreds of horses Bugbee has used, two stand out above the others.
"A grade gray mare we called Elvira was the best pickup horse ever. She had a huge heart always wanting to do the job," Bugbee credited. "Elvira was a grade mare Jimmy Crowther's dad Ronnie and I bought at the South Hutchinson sale barn. I picked up on her at a team rodeo the next night and then she went to work fulltime"
After Elvira was retired, she produced several foals which also made top using horses. "Elvira was one of a kind," Bugbee smiled.
A sorrel with socks and bald face called Rosie also stands out among Bugbee's favorite pickup horses. "Rosie was truly a natural, really tough," he acknowledged.
"Mares often work as well as geldings for picking up, but I only use geldings nowadays," Bugbee said. "They don't necessarily have more ability, but are easier to turn in and get along with other horses."
Widely recognized for his abilities, Bugbee has been selected to serve as pickup man at a number of major rodeos. These include the Prairie Circuit Finals, multiple times; The Daddy of them All, Cheyenne Frontier Days, Cheyenne, Wyoming, twice: and RFD-TV's The American, Dallas, Texas.
"Cheyenne is a big arena but one of the easiest rodeos to work because there are six pickup men. I only have to pick up every third bronc," Bugbee said.
Little time off in his demanded profession, when Bugbee is home he does day work for area ranchers. "I have a leather shop and that keeps me out of trouble too," he added.
Future for the sport of rodeo is bright, according to Bugbee. "Rodeo has changed a lot since I was a kid," he said. "The cowboys and the livestock are better than ever, prize money keeps growing and spectator attendance has never been greater. Rodeo will continually get even better."
Retirement age, Bugbee has no plans to stop serving rodeo as a pickup man. "Why would I ever want to quit doing what I love so much?"

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