At their annual family meeting, the Lucas parents ask their five kids: Are you still game for rodeo?
The four sisters and brother, between 10 and 21 years old, say yes every time.
The siblings' dedication to riding horses shows in scholarships, traveling and glass cases displaying belt buckles in their Jordan home. They waste no time, as their carpeted living room floor is smattered with plastic pony toys and barns to occupy the youngest.
This July, three of the four sisters, McKayla, 19, Jacqueline, 16, and Lydia, 10, won at the National Little Britches Rodeo Association World Championships in Oklahoma. Their mother, Laura, started the first Little Britches franchise in Minnesota five years ago to build a community of riders closer to home.
Little Britches is a national nonprofit for riders between 5 and 18. Founded in 1952, the youth organization sanctions rodeos across the country, and the Lucas sisters defeated more than 160 competitors in each of their winning categories.
The sisters, clad in denim, cowgirl hats and button-down shirts, each placed in separate categories. McKayla and Lydia placed for pole bending, or snaking around six poles on horseback. Barrel racing is more Jacqueline's speed; she raced a cloverleaf pattern around preset barrels.
Rodeo — more popular in Southern states, like Texas — might seem an unlikely fit for a state more cut out for cross-country skiing.
"Being from Minnesota, they think we don't even know what side of the horse to get on," said paternal grandmother Nikki Lucas, who shares the 40-acre property in Jordan with her son's family.