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200 cows take over downtown San Diego. ‘What could possibly go wrong?’

Cowboys try to get cattle that temporarily stalled under the Gaslamp Quarter sign to move north on 5th Avenue.
(Hayne Palmour IV / San Diego Union-Tribune)
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Under gray, misty skies in the Gaslamp Quarter Saturday morning, there were joggers, babies in strollers, tourists, homeless people, cops and cows. Lots and lots of cows.

Just after 7:30 a.m., a herd of 200 American Longhorn and Mexican Corriente cattle began making its way down Harbor Drive under the guidance of 48 cowpokes on horseback and a small but fast-moving fleet of herding dogs. The cattle drive, said to be first in 100 years in downtown San Diego, was organized by the San Diego County Fair, which opened its annual run Friday with a “Where the West is Fun” theme.

Thousands of delighted spectators lined the 2½-mile route, which began at Harbor Drive and Pacific Coast Highway. Moving at a rate of 3 to 4 mph, the cattle drive moved southeast past the San Diego Convention Center, then turned north on Fifth Avenue and west on Market Street before returning to its staging ground in Ruocco Park near Seaport Village.

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Moments before the drive began, Jim Marshall of San Diego stood near the starting point with his cellphone camera poised for action, just in case an unexpected stampede occurred.

A cattle drive moves past the San Diego Convention Center on Harbor Drive before going through the Gaslamp Quarter in the background.
(Hayne Palmour IV / San Diego Union-Tribune)

“Cows in downtown San Diego — what could possibly go wrong?” he said with a laugh.

Fortunately, the 45-minute drive came off mostly without a hitch. Early on, a cattle dog took off in the wrong direction down Harbor, but a woman on horseback brought him back. Then as the herd moved under the Gaslamp Quarter monument sign on Fifth Avenue, some cows got spooked and began turning in circles.

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Near the end of the drive, as the cattle prepared to cross the San Diego Trolley tracks from Market to Harbor, the trolley crossing gates unexpectedly came down in their path, causing some fear and confusion before they were routed around and under the obstacle and carried on.

Nearby watching the cow detour was Rhonda Ohnesorge of Solana Beach, who came down with her 10-year-old yellow Labrador retriever Beauregard. “Beau-y” had a yellow lariat-style bandanna tied around his neck and Ohnesorge was in cowboy boots and a black Stetson hat. A native of Wisconsin, she’s ridden horses all of her life but had never seen a cattle drive.

“It was exciting,” said Ohnesorge, who specializes in dressage riding. “What more could you ask for than cows, dogs and cowboys?”

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The cattle drive was organized by Newport Beach resident Doug Lofstrom, who retired in 2014 after 35 years in fair promotions. Since 1985, he has produced a combined 11 cattle drives for fairs in Hemet, Los Angeles, Costa Mesa and Huntington Beach. For Saturday’s event, he hand-picked all the riders, who came with their horses from as far as Riverside County and the high desert. The cattle — all rodeo-trained event stock that are accustomed to noise, crowds and distractions — were trucked in from the Inland Empire.

The horses walked in an upside-down U formation with the cattle inside the curve, and their path was cleared by a network of police and port authority staff. But Lofstrom said the “unsung heroes” of the drive were the eight trained cattle dogs who ran around the herd’s heels to keep them together and in motion.

The well-trained border collies and McNab shepherds were brought down by two real-life cattle ranchers, John Luiz of Modesto and Russ Fields of Castro Valley. Both men raise cattle on 30,000-acre ranches and said the fair-related events are the only opportunity they have to take part in the old-fashioned tradition of the cattle drive, which died out in the 1950s.

Kragen writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

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