Thirteen-year-old Kathy Hollmann has
become something of a phenomenon in the
world of mounted shooting in the three years
she has been at it. Already an accomplished
rider when she took up mounted shooting at
the age of 10-Kathy's been climbing on horses
since she was three years old-she also already
had three years of competitive target shooting
under her gunbelt as a member of the Single
Action Shooting Society (SASS), where her
alias is Morning Dove.
Kathy took second place in the junior mounted shooting
class at the SASS End of Trail world championships
last June. The SASS junior division is for boys and girls
aged 12 to 15. She took top honors for Mounted Costume
in the junior girls' division at End of Trail. She was the
2006 SASS New Mexico mounted shooting champion
for women. She had the highest overall score for mounted
shooting at the New Mexico championships, besting
all the men at that match.
Last year she was also the
high point junior mounted
shooting competitor for the
Cowboy Mounted Shooting
Association in New Mexico.
Last year was also the first year
she could compete with real
pistols. Shooters under 12 use
toy guns in the SASS and
CMSA matches.
Six-shot single-action .45-
caliber revolvers are required
for mounted shooting matches.
Match officials provide certified blanks for shooters to use in
their guns. Burning embers from
black powder emitted from a fired
revolver cause balloon targets
mounted on poles to pop. Riders
carry two pistols for each pattern or
stage. A typical match will include
four to six stages.
The legendary Single Action
Army Revolver, popularly known as
the Colt 45 Peacemaker, is the
favorite pistol among mounted
shooters. Kathy's father, Jim
Hollmann, has authentic Colts, but
he bought Kathy a pair of what he
calls "Colt clones," manufactured
in Italy. "I was not eager to have a little
girl drop my Colts in the dirt," he
deadpans. "So I got the less-expensive
clones for her, and she hasn't
dropped them yet."
Cocking a three-pound, singleaction
revolver sized for an adult's
hand from the back of a galloping
horse involves some contortion by
the diminutive Kathy. "She can't
keep her arm extended and her hand
still while she works it because her
hand's just not big enough, yet," Jim
notes. "She has to bend her elbow
and flip her wrist a little bit to get the
job done, but she does it okay."
Kathy's involvement in the sport
began when a local chapter of the
Cowboy Mounted Shooting
Association was started up in
Roswell, N.M., a few miles from
where she lives with Jim and her
mother, Chaleeporn Hollmann.
Kathy and her dad, a career law
enforcement professional and
firearms instructor, were among
the founding members of the
Roswell CMSA chapter.
A perpetual honor roll student
at the middle school in nearby
Hagerman (N.M.), Kathy is
required to keep her grades up to
participate in mounted shooting
matches. The Hollmanns live on a
small ranch where they have an
arena for practicing mounted
shooting.
Kathy and Jim work cattle on
local ranches to hone their riding
skills. "She's really quite a good
hand," Jose Chavez says of Kathy.
Chavez is one of several neighbors
and friends who recruit the
Hollmanns to to cowboy for them.
Chavez marvels at her willingness
to try just about anything. "She
has no fear of ranch work and even at
barely five feet and under 100
pounds she can hold a little calf
down," he says. What amazes him
even more is how well she pays
attention and takes direction. Kathy
was born with a hearing impairment
that requires her to wear hearing
aids. She turns them off when she's
out working cattle because the wind
blows and makes them pretty much
useless. "We just use hand signals
when we're out there," Chavez says.
"She does just fine."