my native american grandpa grew up working on a mexican cowboy ranch he that’s where he learn how to speak spanish make saddles, herd cattle’s great men as he said remember them..
The Spaniards first introduced the hacienda system in South, Central and North America. In Northern Mexico, people of mixed European (Spanish) and Native origins (often called Mestizios) created a unique culture of haciendas and open ranching, wich included specialized outfits, gear and horses. This became a basis for the archtype "Cowboy" of the wild west. European settlers who later arrived in Texas extensively traded and lived alongside these "Vaqueros" and adopted their way of life and even their clothing. The typical Texas Cowboy wouldn't exist without the vaquero traditions and legacy
The Southern Drovers actually blended with Vaqueros to create the Texas Cowboy. In California Cowboy culture was more purely adopted from Vaqueros. Vaquero culture was the predominant bases for most US Cowboy culture and the more Southern Anglo contribution remained stronger in the South. But it was generally spread and diluted leading to today's mostly but not solely Vaquero derived cattle herding culture throughout the US.
@lucinq`1` ial Interesting! It is such a beautiful and uneque landscape there, with a deep rooted uneque culture too! You can definitely here the polka influence in the Ranchero, Conjunto and and red dert (Texas And Oklahoma) Country music. All are related and sometimes overlapping forms of folk music of the borderlands.
Soy de Guanajuato, mi papá de rancho y yo de ciudad pero siempre ahí quedaba, con los caballos con el maíz. Orgullo es ser mexicano. Privilegio es tener nuestra cultura. Por eso me pongo el sombrero, y cuando alguien me pregunta les digo “porque a si me enseño mi abuelito”.
@@giorgiomartinni2529 con tan poco respeto, de que puta esta hablando? Dije que soy de ciudad porque yo nací en Léon pendejo. Vergüenza me da cada vez que visito y ustedes están tan pendejos que dejan que la ideología de los americanos los aguan disminuir con toda la estupidez de latinX. Yo me ponía el sombrero de mi abuelo cuando iba a aguas calientes y me lo quitaba en la iglesia de San Miguel de Allende. Y ahora con todo respeto se me va a la verga pinche viejo pendejo. Ooooo pooo favoooo, pregunte antes de comentar.
What a beautiful documentary about hard work and total self sufficiency. Such a rewarding lifestyle. I wish the younger generation would watch this video.
Really like your video,may GOD bless you and your people I love Mexican people and their culture.lm black by the way.would really like to visit. Stay strong mexico.
Gregory Evans black people are welcome Come down and see the black Mexicans that live in Veracruz and fisherman from Guerrero. It’s a small black community
Dios los bendiga Linda familia y que bonito es las tierras mexicanas llenas de amor, humildad , quisiera conocer esos lindos lugares, saludos desde USA
Gente chingona. My Dad from la Sierra en San Luis Potosi . He told me he didn't get to see a TV until he was 11 yrs or 1971 . My grandpa had over 250 head of cattle and 40 horses . Had over 12 kids so they were always killing a becerros, borregos, chivos, marranos . They straight lived of the land. Many people still do . Pretty much made thier own everything,
SOY DEL ESTADO DE JALISCO Y DESDE MI NACIMIENTO SOY UN RANCHERO AHORA VIVO EN LA CIUDAD DE MENFIS TENNESSEE PERO TODOS LOS AÑOS VOY A JALISCO Y TE ASEGURO QUE LA SANGRE DE RANCHERO NUNCA SE LE QUITA UNO
soy norteňo hasta los huesos de Tamaulipas nací y crecí como estos hombres hoy vivo en la ciudad de México y extraňo en puňar mi rifle y un buen trozo de carne seca ser ranchero la mejor vida que pueda haber
ThNks for sharing this brings joy to my heart! Reminds me of my farther that lives in Mexico and the way of living. Cowboy culture will never die out!!!!
Estoy enamorado con esta estilo de vida, no se porque. Es una vida muy humilde. Respeto a las vaqueros firmes desde los EEUU ✌️ makes me wanna take a vacation to rural México haha
La verdad es que es un sueño mio de aprender Charreria. No espero ser profesional pero si quiere saber lo basico. Aver como lo consigo en un futuro no muy lejano. Vivo en Arizona.
Of course they're not the last ones a lot of people in zacatecas lie my family ..we all do that ..take care of cows all day long no day off .we built our own saddles and ...my mom makes cheese out of the milk and all of that ...it has been like that forever ..
The point this documentary is trying to get across is that the vaqueros of Baja California are the closest you’re going to get to the original californiano vaquero from the lifestyle to the way they managed cattle and even the blood lines, on my fathers side my family is from the highlands of Jalisco which is influenced by the charro culture which is completely different from the vaquero from the horsemanship to way of handling cattle, on my mother’s side, my family is from Baja California and we descend from the original californianos and I can reassure you that baja is a little different from mainland mexico or let’s say was because now it’s a melting pot of recent migration of people from different parts of México. Baja was unique because it was isolated from central mexico for more than 200 years, the only people on the peninsula were the soldiers who came to protect the missions, native Americans and a few Irish, english, german whalers that decided to stay or were stranded, the soldiers brought their vaquero style from their homelands of Sonora and Sinaloa then with generations of living on the peninsula they had to modify the style to adapt to the rugged terrain. The children, grandchildren and great grandchildren of the original soldiers/vaqueros of baja are the original settlers of San Diego, Los Angeles, Santa Barbara, San Francisco, San Jose and Monterrey. Who inherited this style of vaqueriada and who influenced old California, The purpose of this documentary is to inform the audience that there are still people in rugged isolated areas of baja that still live and practice la vaqueriada the same way the Californios of old did which is pretty accurate. I appreciate this documentary because the Californio culture is dying even in baja its disappearing outside influences and recent migration has made an impact.
Pero no es la culpa de el como se vista si no en mexico que se encargo de mamdar ala chinga la ropa vaquera con ropa Duranguese no se que tantas pendeja dijo un vaquero el vaquero no es mora es como es traje charro que le metas cosas que nada que ver de ja de ser lo que es asi la ropa vaquera que la mandaron ala chingada y las botas ni se digan saludo buena noches y bendiciones
The Spanish brought cattle here. But all of the culture on how to raise, breed, feed, use the reata, work cattle from horseback, everything related to the cattle industry in Mexico and then the USA is from the Mexicans. As he said, the cowboy culture is right from Mexico. No Mexican vaquero = no cowboys in this country.
Constantinopla the Spaniards bring the culture that create the cowboys but the only cowboys are Mexicans and Americans,they are the only ones Whit the hat,boots,tie and more,
Love seeing this, I'am a descendant of the 16 families of Canary islanders that settled San Antonio ,The original Voqeuros that brought cattle here. I'am in my early 40's and witnessed this life in a slightly different culture in Southwest Louisiana as a kid. Times have changed here it's really really cool to see people still living the old way.
My grandparents had a ranch in Mexico and life was not much different that what you see the video except they had a stream on the property. I loved visiting there and to this day miss the lifestyle.
Thanks for this insight into the lifestyle of this unique community and sharing it with the world. I hope they're able to maintain their unique way of living without succumbing to 'modern' traits.
One of the speakers talks about a different sense of mission, from that of the American West, one of partnership with family, other people, the land, and the animals. Really beautiful and seems very accurate from my experience living in a poor rural central american community. "I think it's a culture that takes great pride in the dignity of their self restraint."
soy del desierto sonorense pero baja California es mi otro estado q me gusta es igual a Sonora tengo familia cachanilla y el calor y su Sierra nos une aunque esten separadas
Saludos, el Baja Californiano, el Sonorense y el Sinaloense venimos de la misma rama, el que es baja californiano y viene de una familia original de la Baja deciende de soldado de cuera traídos a la baja durante el tiempo de la misiones a cuidar los padres, esos soldados eran de Sonora y de Sinaloa por eso nuestro acento, gastronomía y el estilo de la vaqueriada es muy similar nomas que en la baja estamos mixtiados con sangre indígena de la península guayacura, cochimi, kiliwa, pai pai, kumia y cucupa y tambien con unos ingleses y irlandéses que llegaron de piratas 😂 pero semos primos de los sonorenses y sinaloenses asta los mismos apellidos Meza, carillo, Verdugo, Ceseña, Ozuna, Arce, lugo y etc
I was born in 1982 and got to taste this life in the tarahumara mountains of chihuahua 100% off grid Hand made tortilla surpassed any 5 star rating restaurants anytime
God bless you all. Im going to school now for horticulture and irrigation/propagation and i one day hope to live amongst people that are this good and help cultivate the land and bring water to the people. My dream is to one day find these people somehow and learn from them and their way of life. I pray one day i can have a life similar and i believe anything is possible through christ. One day i will be with a community as beautiful as this. Thank you may we meet someday somehow.
The Cowboy👢🐴 culture has its origin in northern Mexico 🇲🇽 The creators of this art were the Mexicans, (not the US-Americans) the modern Cowboy was born in the Mexican state of Chihuahua, then the Mexicans raised cattle in the current area of Texas, when it was Mexican territory, before the annexation to the United States , the lifestyle, work, clothing, dance, were immediately imitated by the Americans, after the annexation of the territory of Texas. California also had skilled men on horseback, according to Richard Henry Dana, who wrote a book about that region in 1840 when it still belonged to Mexico. As described: When they make long trips, they ride one horse until they get tired and grab another, go over the support and bridle and, after running off the animal, take a third and so on until the end of the trip. There are no better cowboys like the Mexicans in the world.
To clear up who started the cowboy lifestyle and its heritage is both Spainish and the natives of Mexico. Eventually becoming the way of life of the West. Spain brought the Clothes and the animals. Both mentalities contributed to the lifestyle. The Mexicanos cultivated the way of living to a point then eventually passing it down to the Anglos.
Mexicans were Spanish at that time. The clothing, the tools, the animals and the wisdom to care for and herd them are Spanish. We love you very much, Mexicans, but you must not go overboard. You learned from us, period. Creo que lo he escrito bien en Inglés y además sois muy inteligentes, como nosotros, seguro que lo entendéis perfectamente.
@@martinmarquez.669 A ver, ¿tú eres un poco bobo, no?. ¿De dónde salieron los caballos de vuestros vaqueros y rodeos, eh?. ¿Antes de llegar nosotros cómo lo hacíais?. ¿montando en lagartijas?. Es que .... lo que hay que leer.
@@jcarlosglera3647 jamás dije que los caballos son nativos de América te cuesta entender lo único que dije que en Europa no hay vaqueros es como en Europa no había tomates como hacían la pizza y digo pizza por qué es lo único bueno de comida europea
@@martinmarquez.669 Y seguimos con la traca ... ¿En Europa no hay vaqueros?. Me dan ganas de traerte, montarte en un caballo español y me enseñas a ver qué tal lo haces con un toro bravo también español. ¿Qué te parece?. ¿Cómo crees que manejamos a los toros bravos?. ¿De dónde crees que salieron las botas camperas?. ¿Y todos los instrumentos: las sillas de montar, las cuerdas y su manejo, las espuelas, las cabezadas y etc.etc.etc.?. ¿De los aztecas?. ¿De dónde salieron las vacas, eh?. ¿Y los toros?. ¿De dónde salieron los caballos mustang?. Os regalamos todo eso para empezar. Más todo lo demás: la lengua, las guitarras, la música ... ¿Quieres que siga?. Las pizzas italianas todas para ti, nos sobra comida española mucho más antigua y muchísimo mejor. Que seguro que también coméis por allí. ¿Te suena el turrón, el mazapán, el mismo pan, el aceite de oliva, el vino?. Supongo que eran mayas y robamos las fórmulas, ¿no?. Los espirituales y pacíficos mayas iguales que los aztecas. Sí, como hay Dios. Hasta eso os dejamos: Dios, la Virgen de Guadalupe (sabes que tenemos otra Virgen de Guadalupe mucho más antigua?. Os quiero mucho, me gustó mucho vuestro país (no las zonas turísticas, si no los pueblitos y su gente). Pero a veces me sacáis de quicio, la verdad.
Most northerners are not mixed with native americans, simply because there weren’t many native americans in the north. Most of the northern population is european
The precursors of the American cowboy were the Mexicans who raised cattle in the area of present-day Texas, when it was Mexican territory, before the annexation to the United States, their lifestyle and work was inherited from Mexicans who lived in the current Texan territory . California also had skilled men on horseback, according to Richard Henry Dana who wrote a book about that region in 1840 when it still belonged to Mexico. As described: When they go on long journeys, they ride a horse until they tire and grab another, pull the mount and the bridle over it, and after exhausting the animal, they take a third, and so on until the end of the trip. There are no better riders like Mexicans in the world. THE COWBOY IS MEXICAN.
My Tata Donaciano and Nana La Kica Montoya lived in Abeyta, Colorado and my Tata and Nana with their 20 children and my Grandma Nora being one out of the 20 lived this way at His El Rancho Grande! My Tata and his Papa and his Carnales were True Vaqueros Tambien! My Tata lived to be 102, and I believe he lived so long was because he and his Familia lived off the Land and we're Sheep Herders and Cattleman's!!!
Amazing documentary on the Spanish in the Baja. Many ranches operated this way very dependent on making a living off the land. Many family ranches were almost as sufficent as this. If electricity was out use kerosene. etc.
they are not spanish they are mexican the spanish only brought the methods of settlement but the lifestyle and the practice were born from the mexican culture that suffered from abuses by the spanish It was in Mexico where the Texan hat was given this so characteristic style of cowboy culture, as well as music, the Spanish brought the instruments, the Mexicans created the melodies.
Constantinopla you are a moron!!! Have you ever been in Spain??... I have and I have never seen a cowboy there, not even people wearing hats!!! You need to travel it would open your tiny brain
How can I get the DVD??? History from my family roots came from the Sierra de San Francisco , even the family spread all upper California, is so up lifting to see this wonderful Documental!!!
The Spaniards spread this vaquero culture all around Hispano America, In mexico it has been conserved the most but it isn’t exclusive to Mexico. Head over to Baja Verapaz, Salamá, Guatemala and see how strong the vaquero culture is and then tell me this is just Mexican. My ancestors lived as one with the land and mastered this Vaquero culture. Saludos desde Guatemala y ¡¡¡Viva los Ranchos!!!
As I told you before the North American Cowboy tradition evolved in Mexico and spread both North and South. From the Spanish Horseman first came the Charro and then the chinaco. Later came the vaquero who was the student as the charro was the teacher. The vaquero spread North further evolving in the state of Chihuahua. The style of working with cattle would later influence other countries in Central America
Braulio Marinez my main point is not that the origin isn’t in Mexico. My point is that the exact thing we see in this video can also be found in other parts of the Americas for example in Guatemala where I come from. If you’re observation is that Guatemalans got their customs from Mexico, so be it, we share the same lifestyle
Braulio Marinez funny thing as well is that the rancheras that these men sing, my grandfather sung as well. My mother caught me watching this video and starting singing along with the video and teared up as it reminded her of where she came from
@@JBCarrera54 the songs are of Mexican origin family started the singing I don't know, but you also have to take into account that Guatemalan environment is very different to the Mexican one. End up in the heat of northern Mexico its word develop
Vaqueros originated in Mexico city thats where the conquista occurred Spaniards buried Teotihuacan and establish la nueva espana all around mexico city there were haciendas where the cattle grew enormously and the indians took care of the herds late on Spaniards families move on up north and every where. At the beginning Indias where no allowed to ride horses.
This is what modern conservation of lands looks like, sustainable use through humans that preserves the land and its ecosystem services. It's not about setting a part an island of conservation where no people live
En el minuto 14:58 sale una foto de las blancas, sería interesante saber quiénes son los vaqueros de las fotos, muy bonito lugar, dichosos los que conocemos esa zona
A little correction is needed here in video. ! There is many other places that are still very similar to this way of life ! I grew up like this guys and and there many mile in between Baja California and the place where I am from
Mi respeto para esa gente bonita trabajadora, no cualquier gente aguanta esas chingas, la vida es bonita pero vivir en los ranchos es trabajar, mi respeto que dios los bendiga
That white lady is dividing this culture like if it’s not a part of Mexico this is northern Mexico culture all the way towardsTamaulipas esto prácticamente es la vida norteña nomás que las cosas evolucionaron diferente en los otros pueblos crecieron pero este video define todo el norte de Mexico. 🇲🇽
www.ebay.com/itm/NEW-Corazon-Vaquero-The-Heart-of-the-Cowboy-SEALED/274597937352?hash=item3fef5000c8:g:Lo8AAOSw9TRfxzAj If you can't follow the link you can go to ebay and type the title of this video in. I think it's the same, only the full version. My dad has it and he watches it again and again.
I'm a 17 year old cowboy in Australia and i have witnessed first hand what people think of cowboys cause they don't understand the true meaning and heart of a cowboy and the fact our government just takes the wild land and the land and farms form people and just destroys it and dose not care what happens to the animals and only care about the money they get. I have been dealing with this for a long time and I'm feed up with it people don't get what animals mean there was even people down here that punched a police horse that was patrolling the streets its time that I will be standing up and showing people what the true meaning of a cowboy is and what animals mean to us I encourage people to stand up and show people that what they are doing is not right and I know that if I can find the courage to get up in front of millions of people and stand up for the cowboys and cowgirls out there and the animals that you can to
my native american grandpa grew up working on a mexican cowboy ranch he that’s where he learn how to speak spanish make saddles, herd cattle’s great men as he said remember them..
Cool! In what mexican state was the ranch?
Dope! We are indiginous brothers! Your ppl just learned english and protestant and our ppl learned spanish and catholicism... much love
Your grandpa is very lucky I wish I was raised in a ranch
Indigenous north to south We are one ♥️
THAT NEVER HAPPENED STOP LOOKING FOR ATTENTION.
The Spaniards first introduced the hacienda system in South, Central and North America. In Northern Mexico, people of mixed European (Spanish) and Native origins (often called Mestizios) created a unique culture of haciendas and open ranching, wich included specialized outfits, gear and horses. This became a basis for the archtype "Cowboy" of the wild west. European settlers who later arrived in Texas extensively traded and lived alongside these "Vaqueros" and adopted their way of life and even their clothing. The typical Texas Cowboy wouldn't exist without the vaquero traditions and legacy
You need to learn more history about Mexico
The Southern Drovers actually blended with Vaqueros to create the Texas Cowboy. In California Cowboy culture was more purely adopted from Vaqueros. Vaquero culture was the predominant bases for most US Cowboy culture and the more Southern Anglo contribution remained stronger in the South. But it was generally spread and diluted leading to today's mostly but not solely Vaquero derived cattle herding culture throughout the US.
@lucinq`1` ial Interesting! It is such a beautiful and uneque landscape there, with a deep rooted uneque culture too! You can definitely here the polka influence in the Ranchero, Conjunto and and red dert (Texas And Oklahoma) Country music. All are related and sometimes overlapping forms of folk music of the borderlands.
@lucinq`1` ial 😁👍
And that's the truth
Soy de Guanajuato, mi papá de rancho y yo de ciudad pero siempre ahí quedaba, con los caballos con el maíz. Orgullo es ser mexicano. Privilegio es tener nuestra cultura. Por eso me pongo el sombrero, y cuando alguien me pregunta les digo “porque a si me enseño mi abuelito”.
Ayyy pooo favooo! 😂😂 Están en mex y les da vergüenza o..g.T's llegan a US y ahhh mucho orgullo si como no ..😂😂😂 chupenla tacuaches
@@giorgiomartinni2529 con tan poco respeto, de que puta esta hablando? Dije que soy de ciudad porque yo nací en Léon pendejo. Vergüenza me da cada vez que visito y ustedes están tan pendejos que dejan que la ideología de los americanos los aguan disminuir con toda la estupidez de latinX. Yo me ponía el sombrero de mi abuelo cuando iba a aguas calientes y me lo quitaba en la iglesia de San Miguel de Allende. Y ahora con todo respeto se me va a la verga pinche viejo pendejo. Ooooo pooo favoooo, pregunte antes de comentar.
God bless and keep these people and people like them. This world needs them now more than ever.
Muy felicitações para hosteres cowboys del México, grandicimo abraço de Brazilian 👍
VIVA MEXICO 🌵🌵M X
What a beautiful documentary about hard work and total self sufficiency. Such a rewarding lifestyle. I wish the younger generation would watch this video.
11:51 indeed
Brings back memories when I was in queretaro as a morrito, viva Mexico 🇲🇽
Me too! My parents are from Qrtro, Sierra Gorda💪🏼
Really like your video,may GOD bless you and your people I love Mexican people and their culture.lm black by the way.would really like to visit. Stay strong mexico.
Antonio Urrutia you are absolutely right .thank you fior responding may the father bless you and your family.
Gregory Evans you are a awesome human because of your gratitud of life,, gracias greg
Gregory Evans May God bless you. We need more people like you in this world
Gregory Evans black people are welcome Come down and see the black Mexicans that live in Veracruz and fisherman from Guerrero. It’s a small black community
Dios los bendiga Linda familia y que bonito es las tierras mexicanas llenas de amor, humildad , quisiera conocer esos lindos lugares, saludos desde USA
So proud to see this my dad lived this exact old vaquero lifestyle the original cowboy
Me too My dad is a Real Cowboy Down In Zacatecas In his day. I'm Proud that I have the heart of the Cowboy in my blood
Sportshead9508 same bro in durango mexico viva El rancho
Gente chingona. My Dad from la Sierra en San Luis Potosi . He told me he didn't get to see a TV until he was 11 yrs or 1971 . My grandpa had over 250 head of cattle and 40 horses . Had over 12 kids so they were always killing a becerros, borregos, chivos, marranos . They straight lived of the land. Many people still do . Pretty much made thier own everything,
Justo Torres por q no hablan español
I wish them another 300 years.
and more
👍😍❤️saludos a los rancheros de la península de Baja California
Suuuuuuuurrrr como dijera el Carmelo.
SOY DEL ESTADO DE JALISCO Y DESDE MI NACIMIENTO SOY UN RANCHERO AHORA VIVO EN LA CIUDAD DE MENFIS TENNESSEE PERO TODOS LOS AÑOS VOY A JALISCO Y TE ASEGURO QUE LA SANGRE DE RANCHERO NUNCA SE LE QUITA UNO
Allá son charros, aquí en el norte de México son vaqueros.
soy norteňo hasta los huesos de Tamaulipas nací y crecí como estos hombres hoy vivo en la ciudad de México y extraňo en puňar mi rifle y un buen trozo de carne seca ser ranchero la mejor vida que pueda haber
Jorge Antonio Almaraz fierrro
Jorge Antonio Almaraz
Carne recien matada
Huevos recien capados
Queso recien hecho...
Lo bueno que salió de ahí si no se hubiera hecho Zeta
Y porque no regresas si lo extrañas? 👀
@@reylunaleon7157 jajajaja
ThNks for sharing this brings joy to my heart! Reminds me of my farther that lives in Mexico and the way of living. Cowboy culture will never die out!!!!
the Best Documentary. I live in Baja, greetings from La Paz, Baja California Sur México.
Estoy enamorado con esta estilo de vida, no se porque. Es una vida muy humilde. Respeto a las vaqueros firmes desde los EEUU ✌️ makes me wanna take a vacation to rural México haha
Come to Sonora! You won’t regret it
La verdad es que es un sueño mio de aprender Charreria. No espero ser profesional pero si quiere saber lo basico. Aver como lo consigo en un futuro no muy lejano. Vivo en Arizona.
I feel that same way
Of course they're not the last ones a lot of people in zacatecas lie my family ..we all do that ..take care of cows all day long no day off .we built our own saddles and ...my mom makes cheese out of the milk and all of that ...it has been like that forever ..
The point this documentary is trying to get across is that the vaqueros of Baja California are the closest you’re going to get to the original californiano vaquero from the lifestyle to the way they managed cattle and even the blood lines, on my fathers side my family is from the highlands of Jalisco which is influenced by the charro culture which is completely different from the vaquero from the horsemanship to way of handling cattle, on my mother’s side, my family is from Baja California and we descend from the original californianos and I can reassure you that baja is a little different from mainland mexico or let’s say was because now it’s a melting pot of recent migration of people from different parts of México. Baja was unique because it was isolated from central mexico for more than 200 years, the only people on the peninsula were the soldiers who came to protect the missions, native Americans and a few Irish, english, german whalers that decided to stay or were stranded, the soldiers brought their vaquero style from their homelands of Sonora and Sinaloa then with generations of living on the peninsula they had to modify the style to adapt to the rugged terrain. The children, grandchildren and great grandchildren of the original soldiers/vaqueros of baja are the original settlers of San Diego, Los Angeles, Santa Barbara, San Francisco, San Jose and Monterrey. Who inherited this style of vaqueriada and who influenced old California, The purpose of this documentary is to inform the audience that there are still people in rugged isolated areas of baja that still live and practice la vaqueriada the same way the Californios of old did which is pretty accurate. I appreciate this documentary because the Californio culture is dying even in baja its disappearing outside influences and recent migration has made an impact.
Gracias por darle importancia a mi estado
Tu estatus ya es importante para Dios, quien no te olvidó.
Most people from Zacatecas are cowboys,my dad and his family lived the exact same life style as these bajas do.
Sorry for bad english
_agua_de_horchata_ _ saludos a jerez
Yeah, my family is from Jimenez del teul Zacatecas. Nothing but ranches and rural living.
My family is southern Zacatecas. Moyahua de Estrada to be exact. They too lived very rural lives on ranches raising cattle. Saludos !
My mom is from Zacatecas
Arriva sombrerete
Working people!
But most important they are HAPPY PEOPLE!
Greetings
Y que viva la familia!!
Soy horgullosamente de Chihuahua. El estado mas grande de Mexico y donde ser Vaquero viene en nuestra sangre y corazon...
Angel Loya nisikiera tu sombrero es vaquero
Haha lacra ni su estilo de bailar es vaquero parese que tienen artritis
Tu loque eres un pinche fantoche hehehe vaquero de donde compa
Pero no es la culpa de el como se vista si no en mexico que se encargo de mamdar ala chinga la ropa vaquera con ropa Duranguese no se que tantas pendeja dijo un vaquero el vaquero no es mora es como es traje charro que le metas cosas que nada que ver de ja de ser lo que es asi la ropa vaquera que la mandaron ala chingada y las botas ni se digan saludo buena noches y bendiciones
Arriba mi Chihuahua el estado de grandes vaqueros. Saludos
God that's exactly how I spent my childhood in Zacatecas Mexico
Curious. How did you spend your adulthood?
@Rio Grande, did you have someone to go get clothes and things?
JO JO IN VT 💕😄
He knows
Hermoso documental,,ya voy a empezar a usar mi sombrero,y arriva Durango y Los estados unidos de America.
Q bonito agradesco este video saludos zacatecanos atodo mexico gente trabajadora
I'm from the state of Puebla Mexico and that's all I know. Beautiful but really hard life.
The cowboy culture is a Mexican heritage
The Spanish brought cattle here. But all of the culture on how to raise, breed, feed, use the reata, work cattle from horseback, everything related to the cattle industry in Mexico and then the USA is from the Mexicans. As he said, the cowboy culture is right from Mexico. No Mexican vaquero = no cowboys in this country.
Constantinopla the Spaniards bring the culture that create the cowboys but the only cowboys are Mexicans and Americans,they are the only ones Whit the hat,boots,tie and more,
I agree. Now stop sneaking into America. There is a procedure,follow it and you are welcome.
@Constantinopla that's pretty stupid. How can we be considered "Spanish" because of our DNA but not native if that is part of us as well?
@ConstantinoplaThey're Mexicans that come from Spanish bloodlines, but they are still Mexican.
This is my real mexico 🇲🇽 wi are good people 👍
jose12410 we love y’all in America
jose12410 we
Love seeing this, I'am a descendant of the 16 families of Canary islanders that settled San Antonio ,The original Voqeuros that brought cattle here. I'am in my early 40's and witnessed this life in a slightly different culture in Southwest Louisiana as a kid. Times have changed here it's really really cool to see people still living the old way.
Gran Canaria islander here. Nice to know a descendant of those families of isleños.
Good point! So true! Cows were brought over to the Americas! They were not indigenous to our two continents.
This video is a treasure. Thank you.
My grandparents had a ranch in Mexico and life was not much different that what you see the video except they had a stream on the property. I loved visiting there and to this day miss the lifestyle.
Por eso y muchas cosas mas, amo a mi tierra!! LP bcs
Amén pariente y vámonos para San Bartolo a la machaca de res (burros dirán los envidiosos)
Y que vivan los Estados Unidos Mexicanos 🇲🇽🇲🇽🇲🇽🇲🇽🇲🇽🇲🇽🇲🇽🇲🇽🇲🇽🇲🇽🇲🇽🇲🇽🇲🇽🇲🇽🇲🇽🇲🇽🇲🇽🇲🇽🌵🤠🐎 gretings desde Puebla Estado.
Thanks for this insight into the lifestyle of this unique community and sharing it with the world. I hope they're able to maintain their unique way of living without succumbing to 'modern' traits.
I wish I had the knowledge to live that way
One of the speakers talks about a different sense of mission, from that of the American West, one of partnership with family, other people, the land, and the animals. Really beautiful and seems very accurate from my experience living in a poor rural central american community.
"I think it's a culture that takes great pride in the dignity of their self restraint."
Vaqueros de verdad
Bonita mi Bajá California
The first cowboys in history were Mexican. There’s asciendas in Puebla Mexico and chihuahua that date back to the 1670.
Dustin Heath read up on Mexican history my friend you’d be suprised is a lot older than what you think.
Vaqueros: the original cowboys.
soy del desierto sonorense pero baja California es mi otro estado q me gusta es igual a Sonora tengo familia cachanilla y el calor y su Sierra nos une aunque esten separadas
Saludos, el Baja Californiano, el Sonorense y el Sinaloense venimos de la misma rama, el que es baja californiano y viene de una familia original de la Baja deciende de soldado de cuera traídos a la baja durante el tiempo de la misiones a cuidar los padres, esos soldados eran de Sonora y de Sinaloa por eso nuestro acento, gastronomía y el estilo de la vaqueriada es muy similar nomas que en la baja estamos mixtiados con sangre indígena de la península guayacura, cochimi, kiliwa, pai pai, kumia y cucupa y tambien con unos ingleses y irlandéses que llegaron de piratas 😂 pero semos primos de los sonorenses y sinaloenses asta los mismos apellidos Meza, carillo, Verdugo, Ceseña, Ozuna, Arce, lugo y etc
In any of the rural areas of northern mexico ull find this lifestyle. My dad was from durango and grew up exactly like this
I was born in 1982 and got to taste this life in the tarahumara mountains of chihuahua
100% off grid
Hand made tortilla surpassed any 5 star rating restaurants anytime
even taco-bell?
Fantastic film, loved it.🤠😇
My Friend, thank you so much for this. God Bless You
SONORA MEX, have a great amaizing VAQUEROS
Especialmente el rio de Sonora.
a huevo puro magdalena sonora 😛
Real mexican , no pinches charros monta perros falsos
cierto, aquí es normal ver vaqueros.
THANK YOU FOR THIS DOCUMENTARY 🙏🏽☺️
Great Documentary . I'm feeling proud. Thx
Mis respetos para todos los vaqueros de USA Y MEXICO !!!
Good video, shows a lot of truth not like traditional story books that bend the truth.
Man that is Awesome the way it was from the begining of the Vaquero and Cowboy Nice Video
God bless you all. Im going to school now for horticulture and irrigation/propagation and i one day hope to live amongst people that are this good and help cultivate the land and bring water to the people. My dream is to one day find these people somehow and learn from them and their way of life. I pray one day i can have a life similar and i believe anything is possible through christ. One day i will be with a community as beautiful as this. Thank you may we meet someday somehow.
It’s not hard at all to find these people. You just need to know someone that owns a ranch (a lot of us do) and go to the ranch. Greetings from Sonora
The Cowboy👢🐴 culture has its origin in northern Mexico 🇲🇽
The creators of this art were the Mexicans, (not the US-Americans) the modern Cowboy was born in the Mexican state of Chihuahua, then the Mexicans raised cattle in the current area of Texas, when it was Mexican territory, before the annexation to the United States , the lifestyle, work, clothing, dance, were immediately imitated by the Americans, after the annexation of the territory of Texas.
California also had skilled men on horseback, according to Richard Henry Dana, who wrote a book about that region in 1840 when it still belonged to Mexico. As described:
When they make long trips, they ride one horse until they get tired and grab another, go over the support and bridle and, after running off the animal, take a third and so on until the end of the trip. There are no better cowboys like the Mexicans in the world.
Excellent documentary. Thank you.
Great documentary, thank you for posting it;)
To clear up who started the cowboy lifestyle and its heritage is both Spainish and the natives of Mexico. Eventually becoming the way of life of the West. Spain brought the Clothes and the animals. Both mentalities contributed to the lifestyle. The Mexicanos cultivated the way of living to a point then eventually passing it down to the Anglos.
Mexicans were Spanish at that time. The clothing, the tools, the animals and the wisdom to care for and herd them are Spanish. We love you very much, Mexicans, but you must not go overboard. You learned from us, period. Creo que lo he escrito bien en Inglés y además sois muy inteligentes, como nosotros, seguro que lo entendéis perfectamente.
@@jcarlosglera3647 yup that's why in Europe you guys have cowboys and rodeos. 🙄
@@martinmarquez.669 A ver, ¿tú eres un poco bobo, no?. ¿De dónde salieron los caballos de vuestros vaqueros y rodeos, eh?. ¿Antes de llegar nosotros cómo lo hacíais?. ¿montando en lagartijas?. Es que .... lo que hay que leer.
@@jcarlosglera3647 jamás dije que los caballos son nativos de América te cuesta entender lo único que dije que en Europa no hay vaqueros es como en Europa no había tomates como hacían la pizza y digo pizza por qué es lo único bueno de comida europea
@@martinmarquez.669 Y seguimos con la traca ... ¿En Europa no hay vaqueros?. Me dan ganas de traerte, montarte en un caballo español y me enseñas a ver qué tal lo haces con un toro bravo también español. ¿Qué te parece?. ¿Cómo crees que manejamos a los toros bravos?. ¿De dónde crees que salieron las botas camperas?. ¿Y todos los instrumentos: las sillas de montar, las cuerdas y su manejo, las espuelas, las cabezadas y etc.etc.etc.?. ¿De los aztecas?. ¿De dónde salieron las vacas, eh?. ¿Y los toros?. ¿De dónde salieron los caballos mustang?. Os regalamos todo eso para empezar. Más todo lo demás: la lengua, las guitarras, la música ... ¿Quieres que siga?. Las pizzas italianas todas para ti, nos sobra comida española mucho más antigua y muchísimo mejor. Que seguro que también coméis por allí. ¿Te suena el turrón, el mazapán, el mismo pan, el aceite de oliva, el vino?. Supongo que eran mayas y robamos las fórmulas, ¿no?. Los espirituales y pacíficos mayas iguales que los aztecas. Sí, como hay Dios. Hasta eso os dejamos: Dios, la Virgen de Guadalupe (sabes que tenemos otra Virgen de Guadalupe mucho más antigua?. Os quiero mucho, me gustó mucho vuestro país (no las zonas turísticas, si no los pueblitos y su gente). Pero a veces me sacáis de quicio, la verdad.
PS why all the bickering? ALL Cowboys are marvelous,period. Feel blessed people still make a living from the back of a horse.
A lot of us are just native americans mixed with basques in north mexico like baja and chihuahua. And just varying levels of the two, we old people
Basque people? Like basque people from Spain and France ?
Most northerners are not mixed with native americans, simply because there weren’t many native americans in the north. Most of the northern population is european
The first cowboys in history were Mexican. There’s asciendas in Puebla Mexico and chihuahua that date back to the 1670. Not the 1800.
The precursors of the American cowboy were the Mexicans who raised cattle in the area of present-day Texas, when it was Mexican territory, before the annexation to the United States, their lifestyle and work was inherited from Mexicans who lived in the current Texan territory .
California also had skilled men on horseback, according to Richard Henry Dana who wrote a book about that region in 1840 when it still belonged to Mexico. As described:
When they go on long journeys, they ride a horse until they tire and grab another, pull the mount and the bridle over it, and after exhausting the animal, they take a third, and so on until the end of the trip. There are no better riders like Mexicans in the world.
THE COWBOY IS MEXICAN.
Very interesting. Thank you for sharing.
interesting to see and experience simple life in the other side of the USA.
My Tata Donaciano and Nana La Kica Montoya lived in Abeyta, Colorado and my Tata and Nana with their 20 children and my Grandma Nora being one out of the 20 lived this way at His El Rancho Grande! My Tata and his Papa and his Carnales were True Vaqueros Tambien! My Tata lived to be 102, and I believe he lived so long was because he and his Familia lived off the Land and we're Sheep Herders and Cattleman's!!!
I am granddaughter of Miguel Angel Ojeda, he was a great man, we miss him a lot.
VIVA MEXICO!
Chingon el video y la musica ni se diga
Cowboy is an anglo word for Hollywood movies anglos are Hollywood cowboys. For mexicans its a way of life
Not mexicans as a whole. It’s a way of life for people living in rural areas, predominantly in northern México.
Be there soon. I hope.
Where can I watch the rest of the video?!
Esa era mi vida antes
at the drive in...zzznor
Amazing documentary on the Spanish in the Baja. Many ranches operated this way very dependent on making a living off the land. Many family ranches were almost as sufficent as this. If electricity was out use kerosene. etc.
they are not spanish they are mexican the spanish only brought the methods of settlement but the lifestyle and the practice were born from the mexican culture that suffered from abuses by the spanish It was in Mexico where the Texan hat was given this so characteristic style of cowboy culture, as well as music, the Spanish brought the instruments, the Mexicans created the melodies.
They will always survive.
No matter what.
don't underestimate the natives they we're here surviving here for centuries respecting the earth
Constantinopla you are a moron!!! Have you ever been in Spain??... I have and I have never seen a cowboy there, not even people wearing hats!!! You need to travel it would open your tiny brain
@@johnsilver5903 because cowboys never existed in Spain, it was only Spaniards living Mexico
@AF cuales mestizos. mirame a mi viviendo la misma vida que vivian mis antecedentes. puro criollo🤠 blanco
How can I get the DVD??? History from my family roots came from the Sierra de San Francisco , even the family spread all upper California, is so up lifting to see this wonderful Documental!!!
squareup.com/store/discover-baja/item/corazon-vaquero-the-heart-of-the-cowboy
The Spaniards spread this vaquero culture all around Hispano America, In mexico it has been conserved the most but it isn’t exclusive to Mexico. Head over to Baja Verapaz, Salamá, Guatemala and see how strong the vaquero culture is and then tell me this is just Mexican. My ancestors lived as one with the land and mastered this Vaquero culture. Saludos desde Guatemala y ¡¡¡Viva los Ranchos!!!
As I told you before the North American Cowboy tradition evolved in Mexico and spread both North and South. From the Spanish Horseman first came the Charro and then the chinaco. Later came the vaquero who was the student as the charro was the teacher. The vaquero spread North further evolving in the state of Chihuahua. The style of working with cattle would later influence other countries in Central America
Braulio Marinez my main point is not that the origin isn’t in Mexico. My point is that the exact thing we see in this video can also be found in other parts of the Americas for example in Guatemala where I come from. If you’re observation is that Guatemalans got their customs from Mexico, so be it, we share the same lifestyle
Braulio Marinez funny thing as well is that the rancheras that these men sing, my grandfather sung as well. My mother caught me watching this video and starting singing along with the video and teared up as it reminded her of where she came from
@@JBCarrera54 the songs are of Mexican origin family started the singing I don't know, but you also have to take into account that Guatemalan environment is very different to the Mexican one. End up in the heat of northern Mexico its word develop
Braulio Marinez Guatemala is not all the same environment, Salamá Baja Verapaz is very dry and you can see nopales in the southern part of Salamá
Vaqueros originated in Mexico city thats where the conquista occurred Spaniards buried Teotihuacan and establish la nueva espana all around mexico city there were haciendas where the cattle grew enormously and the indians took care of the herds late on Spaniards families move on up north and every where.
At the beginning Indias where no allowed to ride horses.
This is what modern conservation of lands looks like, sustainable use through humans that preserves the land and its ecosystem services. It's not about setting a part an island of conservation where no people live
En el minuto 14:58 sale una foto de las blancas, sería interesante saber quiénes son los vaqueros de las fotos, muy bonito lugar, dichosos los que conocemos esa zona
This is a good video thanks for sharing good vidios
Man! I was all into it especially right when it cut off. What the heck people. Where is part 2?
One of my favorite videos .
Would love to watch the rest of this or get the dvd, The links are not helpful. Anyone know how to get a copy or the dvd?
(Not available at Amazon).
squareup.com/store/discover-baja/item/corazon-vaquero-the-heart-of-the-cowboy
I have the dvd but don't know how to put it on youtube
A little correction is needed here in video. ! There is many other places that are still very similar to this way of life ! I grew up like this guys and and there many mile in between Baja California and the place where I am from
Beautiful. Just beautiful 🔥😍❤🙏
These men , were real vaqueros !!! My people my blood ,, proud to be descendent of this culture !!
11:35
I'm kinda freaked the hell out but dying of laughter at the same time. Kinda makes you wonder where "whoopy cushions" came from 💀💀😂😂
thats exactly where whoopy cushions came from
My word... it's like going back in time!
There'd he no cowboys if there weren't vaqueros.
This was fantastic. I wish I could see the end! The video cut short and I can’t seem to find the rest….
Proud to be Mexicano.
@Ye Olde Horsemanship Channel I've seen your comments on others videos, it looks like your very jealous.
Y sí así nace y se cria uno en el monte mis mejores años López Mateos Mpio de llera Tamaulipas recuerdos pronto los volveré a ver
Mi respeto para esa gente bonita trabajadora, no cualquier gente aguanta esas chingas, la vida es bonita pero vivir en los ranchos es trabajar, mi respeto que dios los bendiga
They are real cowboy from more 200 years ago
That white lady is dividing this culture like if it’s not a part of Mexico this is northern Mexico culture all the way towardsTamaulipas esto prácticamente es la vida norteña nomás que las cosas evolucionaron diferente en los otros pueblos crecieron pero este video define todo el norte de Mexico. 🇲🇽
Awesome documentary
Our culture is everything we keep it old school thats why we still use molcajete and make tortillas buy hand.
I was enjoying this video and it’s story so much that I was shocked when it ended! Where can I find the rest of this story my friends?
www.ebay.com/itm/NEW-Corazon-Vaquero-The-Heart-of-the-Cowboy-SEALED/274597937352?hash=item3fef5000c8:g:Lo8AAOSw9TRfxzAj
If you can't follow the link you can go to ebay and type the title of this video in. I think it's the same, only the full version. My dad has it and he watches it again and again.
Awesome!
Minuto 11:30 no mames pelate Baltazar esto ya valio madres 🤣😎😎😎saludos desde Tecate Baja California ATTE. TKT-2727 😁✌
Estos tiempos son los que yo extraňo y no los encontrare en ningun lugar
Very amazing people wouldn’t it be wonderful to live with no sense of possession
Good video
que bonito es lo bonito
muy interesante
Yo soy de de baja california sur de ejido Alfredo. devonfyl
I'm a 17 year old cowboy in Australia and i have witnessed first hand what people think of cowboys cause they don't understand the true meaning and heart of a cowboy and the fact our government just takes the wild land and the land and farms form people and just destroys it and dose not care what happens to the animals and only care about the money they get. I have been dealing with this for a long time and I'm feed up with it people don't get what animals mean there was even people down here that punched a police horse that was patrolling the streets its time that I will be standing up and showing people what the true meaning of a cowboy is and what animals mean to us I encourage people to stand up and show people that what they are doing is not right and I know that if I can find the courage to get up in front of millions of people and stand up for the cowboys and cowgirls out there and the animals that you can to