get, the more you want. >> bill wright: she trained the older ones to help the younger ones. >> evelyn wright: but she-- >> evelyn wright: i'm like, "i cannot do this on my own. or else it's going to be bad, because mom's going to grow bear hair and you're not going to like it." >> home video: all right, quit it. >> whitaker: the wright kids were cowboys playing cowboys and were natural ranch hands. it kept them out of evelyn's hair, and out of trouble. the seven boys and six girls knew how to ride a horse before they could peddle a bike. some of the girls rodeo'd, too, but never went pro. >> evelyn wright: they learned how to break horses early, how to ride and tame horses and train them. i think you have to be a cowboy before you can be a rodeo cowboy. >> whitaker: the ranch was their training ground. the family has been working this land at the edge of zion national park for more than a century and a half. >> bill wright: i'm five generations, cody's six, rusty's seven, and his boy is eight. ( laughs ) generations. >> whitaker: bill, do you think the wright family will be ranching this lan