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East Montgomery, TX May 2026

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The Women Who Shape Who We Become

As we celebrate our Women’s Issue this May, I find myself reflecting on the woman who shaped me, my mom. I would not be the woman, wife, mother, friend, or daughter I am today without her example. Her influence is not something that lives in the past. It is something I carry with me every single day in how I show up for my family, my community, and the people around me.

My mom is the greatest person I know, and without a doubt my very best friend. She taught me what it means to show up for the people you love. She showed me that doing the right thing matters, even when it isn’t easy. From a young age, she instilled in me the value of hard work, that the things worth having in life don’t simply appear; they are earned through dedication, persistence, and heart. She also taught me that respect is something you give freely, but also something you earn through the way you treat others. Those lessons have shaped not only how I live, but how I invest in the relationships and responsibilities in my life today.

For most of my life, she was my coach, on the field and off. Somehow, she balanced being a coach and my mom in a way that always made me feel supported, challenged, and loved all at the same time. She pushed me to be better while always reminding me she was in my corner. She gave everything she had in every role she stepped into, never halfway, always fully committed, and that example is something I strive to carry forward in my own life.

On the cover, Her Healthcare is committed to helping women. In this issue, Dermani Medspa helps women feel like themselves again, Project Prom gives the feeling of belonging and removing barriers for young women and men in our area, while the Kailee Mills Foundation reminds us that purpose can rise from loss.

Watching her love my children the same way she loved me has been one of the greatest gifts of my life. She, and the women in this issue, are a reminder that a woman’s love does not diminish in the face of life’s circumstances; it expands, carrying itself into every moment they touch. My mothers example reminds me every day of the kind of woman and mother I hope to be. If one day I can be even half the mom and grandmother that she is, I will consider that one of my life’s greatest accomplishments.

To the women who shape us,

@EASTMONTGOMERYCITYLIFESTYLE

May 2026

PUBLISHER

Nicole Cook | nicole.cook@citylifestyle.com

EDITOR

Rori Ortiz | rori.ortiz@citylifestyle.com

AREA DIRECTOR

Mike Cook | mike.cook@citylifestyle.com

PUBLICATION DIRECTOR

Kelsey Connell | kelsey.connell@citylifestyle.com

MARKET AREA COORDINATOR

Kelly Richard | kelly.richard@citylifestyle.com

ACCOUNT MANAGERS

Lagala Davis | lagala.davis@citylifestyle.com

Jamie Allgood | jamie.allgood@citylifestyle.com

CONTRIBUTING WRITER

Rori Ortiz | rori.ortiz@citylifestyle.com

CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS

Kelly Anne Style | Kelly Anne Style Photography

Brooke Madl | Brooke Madl Photography

Christa McCourt | Houston Studio

Jen Pisani | Jen Pisani Photography

Julie Luna | Julie Luna Images

Angela Hare | @poutmedspa

Cal Schouten | @dino.coffee.company

Jamie Henk & Molly Henk | @theboxnewcaney

Kelsey Connell | @kelsey_connell21

@eastmontgomerycitylifestyle

@lakehoustoncitylifestyle

Corporate Team

CEO Steven Schowengerdt

President Matthew Perry

COO David Stetler

CRO Jamie Pentz

CoS Janeane Thompson

AD DESIGNER Zach Miller

LAYOUT DESIGNER Jamie Housh

QUALITY CONTROL SPECIALIST Brandy Thomas

How

How

How

Kailee

city scene

2026 Kingwood Business Women’s Business & Brunch 1-7: The annual KBW Business & Brunch brought together an inspiring group of local professionals for a morning of connection, learning, and celebration. The event featured a dynamic panel discussion led by Ashley, the 2025 KBW Woman of the Year and Owner of Spartan Roofing. The event offered insights and encouragement to uplift every businesswoman in attendance. Guests enjoyed networking, sharing experiences, and celebrating achievements throughout the community. Highlights included a photo of Mandy Sampson, the newly awarded 2026 KBW Woman of the Year and Owner of The Spa at Salon M, symbolizing the ongoing tradition of excellence, leadership, and empowerment among our area’s business women.

Photography by Houston Studio

business monthly

A ROUNDUP OF NEWS FROM LOCAL BUSINESSES

Build strength and join the community at The

Box New Caney.

The Box in New Caney is a community-focused fitness gym dedicated to helping people of all levels build strength, confidence, and healthier lifestyles. With supportive coaching and high-energy workouts, members are encouraged to push their limits while training in a motivating environment. Whether you’re just starting your fitness journey or looking to level up your performance, The Box provides expert guidance, accountability, and a welcoming community that makes every workout count.

Scan to read more

Refresh your confidence with expert care at Pout MedSpa New Caney.

Pout MedSpa in New Caney offers personalized aesthetic treatments designed to help clients look and feel their best. From rejuvenating facials and advanced skincare to cosmetic injectables and body contouring, Pout MedSpa combines expertise with a relaxing, welcoming environment. Their team focuses on enhancing natural beauty while providing safe, effective, and customized services. Whether treating yourself for self-care or preparing for a special occasion, Pout MedSpa helps every client glow inside and out.

Scan to read more

Photography by @theboxnewcaney
Photography by @poutmedspa

RESTORING WOMEN’S TRUST in Healthcare

HOW HEALTH IN PROGRESS/HER HEALTHCARE ARE REDEFINING WOMEN’S HEALTHCARE

Women’s healthcare is often handled in pieces. One appointment, one issue, one ailment, one solution... It sounds efficient, but women’s issues rarely exist in a silo. We are all whole human beings, and seeing a person as a collection of parts doesn’t work. That is the part of Dr. Noel Boyd and Dr. Amy Plummer’s approach to their work that makes them special. They saw, after years of watching the same patterns repeat, that patients came in with fatigue, weight changes, hormonal imbalance, low energy, mood shifts, and confidence issues. Still, those underlying issues or concerns rarely existed in isolation. Over time, both doctors saw that treating each issue on its own often meant patients returned with a different version of the same problem.

Dr. Boyd met Dr. Plummer after she returned to the Houston area in 2002. Two years later, they were making a decision that would define the direction of both their careers. They left a practice and opened their own in 2004. The decision came down to differences in how they believed care should be delivered and how a practice should operate. Addressing each concern individually meant, over time, that patients who were seeking treatment were made to feel like they were in a never-ending cycle that felt like a revolving door of treatment. That concern became too prevalent for the pair to ignore, and something had to change. Building their own practice allowed both of them to align without compromise. Their partnership works because of their contrasts. Boyd is more inclined to move forward and explore new ideas. Plummer takes a more measured approach, evaluating risk and long-term impact before committing. That dynamic became especially important as they began looking beyond traditional OB-GYN care.

Dr. Louise Mann
Dr. Amy Plummer
Dr. Noel Boyd

The biggest turning point in how they practice today came after attending a conference on hormone therapy. Dr. Boyd immediately saw its potential. Dr. Plummer approached it with caution. After further discussion and evaluation, they reached the same conclusion. Once they agreed, the decision was made. They would expand their approach, but only under a clear standard: anything offered had to be safe, evidence-based, and something they would be comfortable using themselves. What followed was not a reinvention, but an expansion. Her Healthcare continued to provide gynecology and surgical care, while Health in Progress was developed to address the factors that repeatedly surfaced in patient visits.

are approached. The visit does not stop at the reasons listed on the schedule. Conversations often move into what is happening outside the exam room: stress, daily routines, interpersonal relationships, emotional strain, and the day-to-day realities that shape health long before a symptom gets named. In a fast-growing area, that kind of continuity matters. It gives patients a way to access care close to home without feeling like they are a cog being moved through a system.

It is clear that many women are exhausted because they spend so much time caring for everyone else that they leave nothing for themselves at the end of the day. It is a pattern that many of the women who walk into their clinic every day exhibit. Their advice is practical and can be used by any

Dr. Noel Boyd and Dr. Amy Plummer

Her Healthcare, built on evidence-backed care, where they treat women’s health as a personal, interconnected journey worth prioritizing.

Hormones, weight, energy levels, and confidence were not separate concerns. They were connected. Treating them together produced different results than treating them in isolation.

As the practice has grown, they have added Dr. Louise Mann, allowing the team to maintain consistency while serving a larger patient population. Access to care is expanding in our growing area. Her Healthcare is working to keep care both accessible and individualized to the person seeking care. What makes their model feel different is not just the service mix. It is the way appointments

woman at any stage of their life: refill and take care of your own bucket, or eventually there will be nothing left to give in your empty bucket covered in holes. That idea unifies both doctors’ work, not just treating what hurts once it becomes urgent, but helping women see themselves as a whole person and step into their clinic sooner, pay attention earlier to all parts because they matter equally, and recognize that their health does not come secondary to whatever life can throw at them. Health is foundational, and the results indicate that Her Healthcare treats women’s health as interconnected rather than segmented.

HOW ANDREA SCHLECHT BUILT DERMANI MEDSPA ON A MISSION TO CREATE A SAFE SPACE

NEVER ABOUT BEAUTY

Andrea Schlecht came from business, not aesthetics. With an MBA and spent years stepping into struggling restaurants to rebuild their systems. At home, that balance continues. Her husband, Matthias, brings structure to her ideas. Where Andrea sees possibility, he brings focus. Together, they have built a partnership with a vision that goes beyond services.

ARTICLE BY RORI ORTIZ | PHOTOGRAPHY BY CHRISTA MCCOURT & JEN PISANI

When Andrea entered the aesthetic industry, she didn't know her research would lead her to build her own clinic over time. When she looked into becoming a customer at other med spas, she learned she didn't enjoy the lack of transparency about prices and the products used in treatment. Those interactions set her on a new path, as she approached other med spas in the industry the same way, in asking about offerings, her background started to help her see what was broken and what needed to change. But more importantly, she believed it didn't have to be this way and decided she could build it through the lens of a woman who knew what it felt like to walk in, unsure, only to encounter a lack of transparency that was too unsettling to ignore.

The early vision lived on a simple vision board. It was not about creating something flashy, but on that original board lived something honest to create a place where pricing made sense, providers were transparent about products used, and every woman felt welcome the moment she walked in, something she never felt at other medspas. That vision strengthened when she found Dermani, their model, which allowed her to offer fair, consistent pricing backed by strong partnerships built for product verification. For Andrea, accessibility and safety were not marketing tools. It was the right way to do business in aesthetics.

Andrea did not fit the traditional image of a med spa owner, and early on, that affected her confidence both as a client and as a business owner. She had to redefine what it meant to belong, to lead, and to try for success. Her leadership reflects inclusion, learning from the personal journey of her daughter, Sophie. She builds her team by recognizing that people with disabilities and neurodiversity are valuable, and that everyone, regardless of who they are, works best when not forced into a one-size-fits-all mold. It requires more effort, more listening, and more intention, but it creates a stronger, more connected team, something that she has been a champion committed to providing a place where all her team members feel seen. Andrea curated her team around that belief as well. Technical skill matters, but empathy matters more. For every team member a consultation starts by understanding what a client sees when they look in the mirror, because confidence is not universal.

One client’s journey that stays with Andrea. After the client lost more than 160 pounds, Dermani helped her reconnect with herself. A process that was slow and intentional; it focused on restoring balance while the weight was lost rather than rushing to achieve the final results right away. Over time, she began to recognize the person in the mirror again, the dips in her cheeks went away, and the face she remembered returned in the ways that mattered. For Andrea, those moments are what Dermani is all about: transformation that returns you to who you want to be.

Because behind every appointment is a person, not just a procedure. Things shift with life, with motherhood, with weight changes, and with the quiet insecurities that creep in mentally as we age, that are not always spoken out loud. Andrea imagines Dermani becoming a third space, a place where women can simply come in, sit down, and exist in community. Because her goal is to create places where women feel safe, understood, and are able to see themselves clearly in themselves and in others.

Trust takes time, a lesson she learned from both the internal and external world when opening her own clinic. You can have all the right intentions, but clients and team members will still arrive guarded after poor past experiences. Years of inconsistent practices across the industry have left many unsure of what is safe, what is real, whom to believe, and whether they will be welcomed. Andrea saw it in conversations, in hesitation, and in clients seeking to fix work that should have never been done in the first place. Instead of working around those realities, she leaned into them.

Dermani MedSpa has become a place where saying no is okay, and it is done in a safe, welcoming space by offering clients better alternatives that support their long-term happiness rather than just short-term goals. Clients often come in with inspirational photos and expectations shaped by social media and models with facial structures different from their own. Andrea and her team listen first, then guide. Sometimes that means explaining why something is not the right choice. Sometimes it means helping the client through their own image issues that go deeper than what is seen at the surface. Andrea and her team know that what they say is not always what clients want to hear, but they do so out of care and concern for clients' overall well-being.

How Project Prom Is Using Neighbors’ Closets to Remove Barriers for Teens By Giving Them a Prom Night to Remember

More Than Formal Wear

ARTICLE BY RORI ORTIZ
PHOTOGRAPHY BY JEN PISANI

Prom is supposed to feel like magic. The dress, the suit, the moment you step into a room and feel like you belong there. But for many teens, that moment can feel just out of reach. At the R.B. Tullis Library in New Caney, Project Prom is quietly rewriting that story one hanger, one rack, one student at a time.

What began as a small program has grown under the leadership of Young Adult Librarian, Kristen Meaux. When she stepped into Project Prom three years ago, it served around 40 teens. "It's something that I think is super beneficial for the community," Kristen states. "We have people from all over asking about the program, year after year, because it's needed." From her first year leading Project Prom to now, attendance has jumped from around 40 teens to nearly 400, signaling just how wide the need truly is. Today, it reaches hundreds across Montgomery County, continuing to draw families from Conroe, Willis, Humble, Cleveland, and beyond, all searching for the chance to participate.

Each March, the library transforms, and racks of dresses and suits are arranged by size and color like a pop-up boutique. Tables display shoes, jewelry, handbags, ties, and cufflinks. Fitting areas are set up. But it isn't your normal pop-up shop; everything is donated. With another caveat, everything is free. Located just steps or a short drive from local high schools, the program removes barriers seamlessly. Students can come after school, browse, and leave with something they love without money or a parent present. For those navigating financial hardship or instability, the student's reaction is initially surprise, which then turns into a sense of belonging. Project Prom steps up to create a cycle that takes previously loved items sitting unused in community members' closets and gives them a second life in the hands of someone else, contributing to their story at a milestone moment in their life.

Kristen is not doing this all alone. "We cannot do anything at the library without the Friends of the Library," Kristen states. Their support is not occasional; it is critical. Friends of the Library. play a role in keeping programs like Project Prom running year after year. These volunteers are stepping in to seek out donations and provide hands-on

help during the two-week pop-up experience. Their presence keeps the program moving, and their help keeps the program tidy to be able to reach more students each year. Project Prom thrives because of the community behind it for the students and families who may need this kind of support. The program was designed so students can walk in and leave with something they feel confident in at no cost.

Often, students return with dresses and the suits they once took home the next year. "The fact that these students are giving back after utilizing the program just continues the cycle of goodwill and gives these items that would just sit in a closet a new life. Our community is really making a difference," Kristen states. In New Caney and surrounding areas, many students are navigating financial challenges, and some are experiencing housing instability. For these students, Project Prom is not about fashion. It is about access to an event experience they might have otherwise missed entirely.

Donations of formalwear are accepted year-round at any Montgomery County Memorial Library branch, including dresses, suits, shoes, handbags, and accessories. Partnerships are something the group is seeking, and they encourage any business or community member to get involved however they can. Craftspeople, seamstresses, local businesses, boutiques, and especially those who can provide on-site alterations or tailoring are greatly needed to help elevate the program and better serve area students. Kristen shares that they are always looking for individuals willing to contribute their time, skills, or resources to play a meaningful role in expanding what Project Prom can offer. Those interested in partnering, supporting, or volunteering can reach out directly to the R.B. Tullis Library to explore opportunities to grow the program.

EVERY SINGLE DAY

KAILEE MILLS, REMINDING US THAT SOMEONE LOVES YOU WITH THE INTENTION OF KEEPING OTHERS SAFE AND HOW A SINGLE CHOICE CAN CHANGE EVERYTHING

Kailee Mills was the kind of person who made you feel seen and important. Her parents, David and Wendy Mills, describe her simply as magnetic. She was the girl who made people feel like they mattered. She laughed loudly, the kind of laugh that didn't just fill space, but invited others into it. She was affectionate, always the one reaching for a hug, always aware of what someone else needed. She loved people deeply. That is the version of Kailee that her parents hold onto. The joy. The way she moved through the world.

The Kallie Mills Foundation did not begin with a blueprint. It began the way many things born from grief do. There wasn't a plan, just a process of getting to the next day. Donations began to come in, and with them came the question of what do we do with this? So they created something. A bank account. Then paperwork. Then, slowly, something began to take shape. Things became clearer in a moment that felt almost heaven sent. While going through Kailee's room, Wendy and her sister, Briana, came across Kailee's journal. Inside, written in her own handwriting, surrounded by flowers, was a single verse, a reminder that there can still be meaning, even in loss, something can grow with purpose.

"We know that all things work for good for those who love God, who are called according to his purpose." - Romans 8:28.

And in many ways, that is exactly what her legacy continues to do today, carrying her story into the lives of students across Texas and hopefully one day nationwide. What started as an idea is now a growing movement centered on seatbelt safety. A small decision that feels routine until the moment it isn't. Through school programs in multiple states and, hopefully, nationwide in the future, and through partnerships with first responders and law

enforcement, the foundation continues to place Kailee's story directly in front of those who need the gentle reminder...

"Buckle up, someone loves you."

It is not just a slogan. It is a reminder that has transformed into a mission. That mission is now also being cared for by the newly announced Executive Director, Michelle Sacks. Her role marks a new chapter for the foundation, one that builds on the heart of what David and Wendy established for its next phase of growth. With a background rooted in safety and in working in/alongside law enforcement, Michelle brings structure and understanding to help grow the organization's impact while keeping Kailee at the center of it all.

Kailee once dreamed of becoming a doctor. She wanted to heal, to care for people, and in a way, it feels that legacy of care lives on through the

foundation, through the families that support it, through the students who hear her story, and through every reminder billboard or bumper sticker that encourages someone to make it home safely. Her purpose did not stop when she left this world; it just found a different way to continue beyond her time here on earth.

Now, through the foundation, families are being supported in the aftermath of tragedy. Parents who have walked a similar path to the Mills find one another. Grief, as Wendy describes, is not a straight line. It comes in waves. It returns when you least expect it. And often, the most meaningful thing someone can offer is not words, but simply sitting with one another and saying, "I'm here." For David and Wendy Mills, strength was never something they imagined they would need in this way. And yet, it found them.

Kailee remains present. In conversations. In laughter. In the way her parents now speak about her, just now with less tears and more smiles. Because her memory is creating good in the world, and through the foundation, they get to make new memories with their daughter. Because in every story shared with students, Kailee is at the center. And she is who they see in those moments, a remarkable daughter whose name is still spoken, and she continues to let her

light shine for the world to see. Where her memory and her favorite verse, Romans 8:28, speak to the good that comes even within grief.

Her parents hold on to the idea that their child's legacy is meaningfully impacting the lives of so many. They see the way her life continues to reach people she never had the chance to meet. When asked what they hope the world remembers most about Kailee, the answer is that life is precious, that people matter, and that we should be intentional with how we love one another. Because there is no promise on how long all this lasts, but we can choose how deeply we love others. So let's show a little more love, just like Kailee Mills.

Buckle up, someone loves you. So, Choose Love. Every single day.

PHOTOGRAPHY PROVIDED

BECKY HILLYARD

From Side Hustle to Style Empire

The power of taste, trust, and the courage to “just start.”

She didn’t have a business plan, a media budget, or even a name anyone could pronounce. What Becky Hillyard had was taste, a young family, and the instinct to just start. Today, her lifestyle brand Cella Jane commands an audience the size of Vogue’s, she’s nine collections strong with Splendid, and she’s built it all while raising three kids — refusing to sacrifice one for the other. In an exclusive conversation for the Share the Lifestyle podcast, Becky shares what it really takes to build a brand, a career, and a life you love. Read the highlights below, then scan the QR code for the full conversation.

Q: WHEN DID YOU KNOW CELLA JANE WAS MORE THAN A HOBBY?

A: Two moments. Women started emailing me saying they bought something I recommended and felt amazing — asking me to help them find a dress for a wedding. That felt incredible. Then I looked at my affiliate numbers for one month and realized I could cover our mortgage. I thought, I can actually do this. I never set out to build a business. I started it because I genuinely loved it.

Becky in Splendid x @CellaJaneBlog Spring 2026 Collection

Q: WHAT WAS THE BIGGEST RISK YOU EVER TOOK WITH THE BRAND?

A: Designing my own collection. It’s easy to point at items on a website and say I love these. But to create something from scratch, put your name on it, and wait to see if people connect with it — that’s terrifying. I had an incredible partner in Splendid, and women loved the pieces. It was the biggest risk and the biggest accomplishment.

Q: HOW HAS INFLUENCER MARKETING CHANGED SINCE YOU STARTED?

A: When I started, brands didn’t know whether to take it seriously. Now it’s a legitimate line item in their marketing budgets — sometimes bigger than TV. Because what we’ve built is trust. People trust a real recommendation from someone they follow far more than a commercial. There’s no question about it now.

Q: YOU’RE A MOM OF THREE RUNNING A FULL BRAND. WHAT DOES YOUR DAY ACTUALLY LOOK LIKE?

A: I try to get up at five and not hit snooze — that first hour before the house wakes up is the most productive, most peaceful hour of my day. Then it’s all hands on deck with the kids and school drop-off. After that I work — planning content, connecting with my team, editing. After pickup, the day shifts completely and it’s all about them. I’ve learned to protect both halves fiercely, because both matter.

Q: WHAT WOULD YOU TELL SOMEONE WHO WANTS TO BUILD SOMETHING OF THEIR OWN BUT KEEPS WAITING?

A: Don’t wait. Don’t wait for the perfect camera, the right strategy, or enough followers. We find every excuse to stay comfortable. Just start, be consistent, and be authentically yourself. The right people will find you — and they’ll stay.

This conversation is just the beginning. Becky goes deeper on the risks that almost stopped her, the design process behind her latest Splendid collection, and what she’d tell her 2012 self today. Scan the QR code for the full, exclusive City Lifestyle interview on the Share the Lifestyle Podcast.

“Trust is the only metric that actually compounds.”
— Becky Hillyard
FEATURING BECKY HILLYARD

2026

A SELECTION OF UPCOMING LOCAL EVENTS

MAY 2ND

Rev your engines and race into excitement at this Grand Prix!

Speedsportz Race Park | New Caney, TX | 11:00 AM

The Annual Grand Prix takes place May 2, 2026, from 11:00 A.M. to 2:30 P.M. at Speedsportz Racing Park. This high-energy, team-based go-kart racing event delivers fast-paced fun for participants and spectators alike. Guests can enjoy lunch, live music, raffles, and awards, making it a lively community gathering that combines friendly competition with entertainment for all ages.

MAY 3RD

Shop local treasures at New Caney Community Market this May!

Valley Ranch Town Center | New Caney, TX | 11:00 AM

The New Caney Community Market will be held on May 3, 2026, from 11:00 A.M. to 3:00 P.M. at Valley Ranch Town Center. This vibrant outdoor market features local vendors, artisan goods, and food trucks, offering everything from fresh produce to handmade treasures. Families and friends can enjoy shopping, sampling delicious foods, and connect with the community in a festive atmosphere.

MAY 9TH

Protect your identity and safely shred documents at this event!

The Atrium Center | New Caney, TX | 8:00 AM

Shred It EMC takes place May 9, 2026, from 8:00 A.M. to 12:00 P.M. at The

Bold Pages. Brave Voices.

These aren’t just journals- they’re powerful tools for growth, confidence, and connection. Dare to Dream helps girls find their voice and believe in their worth, while the Mama Manual guides moms to reflect, heal, and build deeper bonds. Together, they spark conversations that matter and create space for both generations to grow- side by side.

Atrium Center. This community-focused event offers a convenient and secure way to dispose of sensitive documents while supporting responsible recycling. Residents can declutter, protect their personal information, and contribute to a cleaner environment in a simple, drive-up format designed for ease and efficiency.

MAY 17TH

Celebrate community and fun at Party in the Cove!

The Highlands | New Caney, TX | 1:00 PM Party in the Cove, The Highlands Celebration takes place on May 17, 2026, from 1:00 P.M. to 4:00 P.M. at The Highlands. This lively community event features live music, model home tours, food trucks, games, giveaways, and family-friendly activities. Attendees can enjoy a festive afternoon connecting with neighbors, exploring the area, and celebrating local culture and fun.

MAY 21ST

Saddle up and master rodeo skills at Sankey Rodeo School!

A.V. ‘Bull’ Sallas Park | New Caney, TX | 8:00 AM Sankey Rodeo School returns May 21–23, 2026, in the New Caney area, offering a hands-on rodeo training experience for all skill levels. Participants will learn bull riding, bronc events, and essential rodeo techniques under expert guidance. This multi-day event combines skill-building, excitement, and camaraderie, giving attendees an unforgettable taste of authentic rodeo action.

Your Houston Methodist primary care physician takes the time to get to know you and your unique goals. That’s how we personalize your health care at one of more than 40 clinics throughout the Greater Houston area. And with same-day appointments, you can get the care you need, when you need it.

That’s the difference between practicing medicine and leading it. For you.

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