Arizona in the Saddle | Page 10

Veteran Cowboy Adam Rowland By Kimmie Dillon C ourage. Perseverance. Passion. These are just a few of the words used to describe Adam Rowland, Arizona’s ever-popular ranch sorter. We first introduced him to you in our March 2014 issue. Now a year later he is progressing in numerous ways. To a casual observer he’s just another rider sitting on a horse waiting for his turn in the sorting pen. But when his name is announced, that’s when an incredible moment is about to begin. “Rowland” is a veteran of the US Army. The 33 year-old comes from a family full of military servicemen. “Pretty much every man on both sides of my family has been in the military” he says. He then painfully shares with me how his life would change forever during his unit’s 2nd tour of Iraq. Located 35 miles northeast of Baghdad and near the Iran border, Rowland was stationed at FOB Warhorse. “The guys all called it Mortaritaville” he says with a bittersweet tone. It was here that Rowland suffered blunt force trauma to his head causing a brain injury and loss of vision in his right eye. After 30 grueling days in a military hospital inside of Iraq, he was sent home to heal and recover. But it was soon after being back on American soil that he would experience problems with his left eye. After a frustrating medical journey seeking help for unexplained symptoms, Rowland’s brain injury marched on and cost him the sight in his remaining eye. The devastation of now becoming completely blind was understandably overwhelming. His road to recovery would be a winding one as Rowland was facing many new obstacles. But the Cave Creek resident was determined to find hope and meaning in his new life. “I didn’t really know what I wanted or how I was going to get help but I knew I wasn’t going to go to some office and have a doctor lay me on a couch and tell me what was wrong with me.  I was going to do it a more natural way”. Rowland recalled t