2025 Betty Kunesh Legacy Award Recipient Floydena Garrison
Floydena Garrison was born June 16, 1941, to parents Floyd and Jessie McClennan. She started out with a pony and her love of horses grew from there. Floydena was involved in 4-H and got a wild horse she named Spike. He was gathered at Hells Canyon by Don and Brownie Smith and started by their son, Benny Reynolds. She would help local ranchers move cows, ran barrels, and worked for the Montana Livestock Auction as a penner. She was an avid rodeo athlete and ran barrels in the Montana Amateur Rodeo and High School Rodeos.
In 1960 she ran for Miss Rodeo Montana and won. She spent that year attending rodeos and advocating for the rodeo and cowboy way of life. She married her husband, Billy Garrison, in 1964 and have shared a life together with their love of quarter horses and Hereford cattle. Seeing a need for good working horses led them to building their own herds of both. Billy had the cows and Floydena raised the horses.
Floydena and Billy raised three sons, Todd, Tim, and Jim on the ranch. Being a mother and helping local youth became her life. Along with supporting her sons in their rodeo interest, they held a 4-H rodeo on the ranch for 35 years, giving many kids a place to start. Floydena supported her own kids and others through high school, college, and professional careers. She has spent countless weekends timing or being the secretary of rodeos. She has helped queen contestants through her support and guidance, as well as judging the contests. Much like Grandma Bett y Kunesh, Floydena is an artist and created numerous stained-glass pieces to donate to the University of Montana Western Rodeo team.
Floydena is known for her horse program. She has spent many years developing superb ranch horses and many have competed at a high level. Her bloodlines include Foundation horses such as Blue Valentine, King Fritz, as well as Leo and Driftwood. When asked what she looks for in a horse, Floydena says: “Disposition and confirmation.”
Floydena’s love of horses has benefitted others over the years. She has donated many colts to the University of Montana Western Colt Challenge and Sale. She is lovingly known as “Mother” by everyone who knows her. She is always cooking delicious meals, taking an extra kid or two to the rodeos with her family and helping them compete. She will greet you with a friendly smile and has a contagious laugh. Family and friends and ger four-legged pals are everything to her. She loves to see her baby colts, feed them grain, and get them to come up to her. She is also known for taking a cold calf in the house to warm him up and has had numerous dogs follow her all over the ranch.
Raising good horses and kids speak volumes about her integrity, leadership, and kind heart. She is passing that legacy down to her kids, grandkids, and friends. Billy and Floydena have managed their impressive ranch so that their kids, the fourth generation on the ranch, are blessed to raise the fifth generation on the same land that they’ve called home for years.
“I have never known a person who has a true passion for all things in the ranching lifestyle – horses, family, and friends – as Floydena. She is a person that will go the extra mile to help anyone, anytime. Her kindness, support, and generosity… make her a wonderful recipient of this special award. She has been an exemplary role model to so many of us.”
– Debbie Moran & Maria Garrison, Floydena’s nominators for the Betty Kunesh Legacy Award
—
About the Art of the Cowgirl Betty Kunesh Legacy Award
Betty Kunesh was not only the matriarch of her family, but also the true inspiration behind Art of the Cowgirl. As the grandmother of Tammy Pate, Founder of Art of the Cowgirl, Betty instilled a love of horses, art, and the western way of life in Tammy from a young age.
Betty grew up on horseback. She helped her father break horses to ride and drive from a young age and learned the duties of keeping the house and caring for her family. Her aptitude as a horsewoman was matched by her appreciation of t
he world around her and her ability to convey that in art. She became a talented artist, her main subjects being the animals and natural world of her beloved prairie.
In her 100 years, Betty influenced the lives of so many, from teaching all her girls to cook, sew, paint, and appreciate good horses, to doing the same for neighbors and friends, to spending countless days cooking for the community and being a confidant to the ones she holds close to her heart. In honor of Grandma Betty, the Betty Kunesh Legacy Award was established in 2022.
This award is to be given to a woman who has been nominated by someone they have influenced. It is intended to honor those special women who are not always in the limelight; the women who work hard their whole lives, leading by example, embracing fellowship and community. The past recipients include Norma Hapgood (2022), Judy Elam (2023), and Bonnie Huffstetler (2024).