Toronto Star

Calgary Stampede’s parade marshal — with no stampede

For Filipe Masetti Leite, the ‘biggest honour’ of his life became a rodeo of emotions

- SPECIAL TO THE STAR

FILIPE MASETTI LEITE

We want to celebrate with you, and I can’t think of a better way than by having you lead the 2020 Calgary Stampede Parade,” said Dana Peers, president of the Calgary Stampede, while riding with me for the day in Teslin, Yukon, last July.

I quite honestly never saw it coming. Nor could I believe it.

A few months earlier, before driving to Alaska to begin my last Long Ride, I met Peers in Calgary. I asked if he would allow me to finish my ride in the 2020 Calgary Stampede Rodeo.

“I just need you guys to leave the gate open,” I said, making him laugh out loud.

He said he would allow me into the Stampede Park at the end of my journey and promised to ride with me during my final leg.

Ayear before, when I launched my first book, “Long Ride Home,” at the Greatest Outdoor Show on Earth, I presented Peers with a signed copy and included in the dedication an invitation to ride with me. I never imagined he would take me up on it. And that he would award me the biggest honour of my life on the same day.

Walt Disney, Chris Hadfield, Pierre Trudeau and William Shatner are just some of the past Calgary Stampede parade marshals. I was ecstatic to have my name on a list next to so many legends. (The marshal leads the parade that opens the rodeo and is an ambassador for the Stampede. In a normal year, the marshal would give speeches at special events and participat­e in the rodeo’s grand entry.)

Then Peers told me I would have to keep the news a secret until June 2020. I am the worst person in the world when

it comes to secrets. But after signing a non-disclosure contract, I obviously got better.

Flash forward to April of this year, when we were set to make the big announceme­nt in front of Canadian media. I would finally get to tell the world my colossal secret. But due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the unveiling was cancelled. Then the Stampede was cancelled for the first time in nearly a century.

I wanted to cry. But I realized everyone in the world had their plans cancelled in 2020. There was no time to feel sorry for myself.

I kept working with my horses, Mac and Smokey, while I waited for Alberta to begin easing COVID-19 restrictio­ns. I was set on riding into Calgary the same way I left eight years ago — an unknown Long Rider. Then Peers called me one afternoon and said he was still going to announce the 2020 parade marshal, even with no parade to ride in.

“Your story needs to be shared, Filipe,” Peers said over the phone. “The world needs this message, now more than ever.” I felt blessed. Honoured. Relieved. We set the big day for Tuesday, June 2, and with Alberta’s parks opening again, I began the final portion of my cross-continenta­l ride on May 20 — 800 kilometres from Grande Prairie to Calgary.

After nearly two weeks on the road, having close encounters with bogs and bears and raising $170 for the Barretos Children’s Cancer Hospital in Brazil from three kind-hearted truck drivers, I rode into Old Entrance, a train station turned horse B&B. It was June 1 and my heart could hardly contain my excitement.

The following morning, we would announce on national television that I was this year’s marshal. I had interviews booked with Global News, CTV, Citytv, CBC Radio, CBC French and television stations in Brazil. Since the interviews started at 6 a.m., I went to bed early.

“Filipe, your phone is ringing.” Clara, my girlfriend and support driver for this final journey, woke me up at midnight, startled.

My only thought was “someone has died.”

I saw that it was Jason Coxford, director of corporate communicat­ions at the Stampede. I was so dazed, I had no idea what was happening. But I answered.

“Filipe, I know you are probably sleeping already … I’m so sorry but we can’t make the announceme­nt tomorrow,” he said in a low voice while I sat in silence on the other side.

The reason for postponing the announceme­nt, yet again, was the #blackouttu­esday movement started in the music industry to raise awareness about police brutality and systemic racism.

Set off by the death of George Floyd — a 46-year-old Black man who was pinned to the ground May 25 by a white Minneapoli­s police officer, now charged with murdering him — people were urged to use Tuesday, June 2, as a day to reflect on racism by not posting anything on social media.

As a supporter of the Black Lives Matter movement and someone who studied journalism and started this project to show others that we are all inherently the same regardless of our religion, nationalit­y or skin colour, in the hopes of inspiring a more just world, I completely agreed with Coxford.

My secret would have to wait one more day. But for a good reason.

Finally, on June 3, the world learned that I am the 2020 Calgary Stampede parade marshal.

I cannot wait to promote this extraordin­ary Canadian event and celebrate Western Heritage for the next month through my ride.

On July 3, after crossing 12 nations and travelling more than 25,000 kilometres, I will ride into Calgary with Mac and Smokey, and with Clara by my side. Ending my ride, my dream, where it all began.

Sometimes things do not happen when or the way we envision them. But that’s life.

As Jason Thomson, a champion Ontario cowboy and my high school roping coach, once told me: “Hope for the best. Plan for the worst. Take what comes.” Hold on to your dreams. You, too, will be back in the saddle in no time. We will ride again!

Filipe Masetti Leite is a Brazilian journalist/ cowboy/adventurer. His long rides raise funds for the Barretos Children’s Cancer Hospital. He is the best-selling author of “Long Ride Home.”

 ?? BILL GRAVELAND THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Filipe Masetti Leite rides out of the Stampede grounds in Calgary on July 8, 2012, to begin his epic journey across 12 nations and more than 25,000 kilometres.
BILL GRAVELAND THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Filipe Masetti Leite rides out of the Stampede grounds in Calgary on July 8, 2012, to begin his epic journey across 12 nations and more than 25,000 kilometres.
 ??  ?? Filipe Masetti Leite with Dana Peers in Teslin, Yukon last July. That’s when Peers, president of the Stampede, told him he would be this year’s parade marshal.
Filipe Masetti Leite with Dana Peers in Teslin, Yukon last July. That’s when Peers, president of the Stampede, told him he would be this year’s parade marshal.
 ??  ?? Below: Bundled up against the cold and wind, Masetti Leite rides on the road from El Calafate to La Esperanza in Argentina in 2017.
Below: Bundled up against the cold and wind, Masetti Leite rides on the road from El Calafate to La Esperanza in Argentina in 2017.
 ?? BARBARA NETTLETON FILE PHOTO ?? Masetti Leite finishes his first journey in 2017 at the Beagle Channel, a strait in Tierra del Fuego Archipelag­o on the extreme southern tip of South America.
BARBARA NETTLETON FILE PHOTO Masetti Leite finishes his first journey in 2017 at the Beagle Channel, a strait in Tierra del Fuego Archipelag­o on the extreme southern tip of South America.
 ??  ?? Left: Masetti Leite poses in 2017 for a stunning photo on Mount Fitz Roy in Patagonia with Laguna de los Tres in the background.
Left: Masetti Leite poses in 2017 for a stunning photo on Mount Fitz Roy in Patagonia with Laguna de los Tres in the background.

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