NMS Jan 2023

Page 12

The Magazine for Western Life

JANUARY 2023
Floyd Brangus Lack-Morrison Brangus Parker Brangus Townsend Brangus Brown Brothers Ranch 32nd Ann ual Roswe ll Bran gu s Bu ll & F emale S ale and S ou th we st Ran ch Horse S ale Saturday February 25, 2023 Females sell at 11am — Bulls sell at 1pm—Horses sell immediately after the bulls Roswell Livestock Auction 900 N. Garden St. Roswell, NM 50 Registered Brangus and Ultrablack Bulls 200 + Bred and Open Commercial Females 10 Super Select Ranch Horses For a sale catalog or more information please contact: Bill Morrison at 575-760-7263 Accommodations Hampton Inn & Suites - 575 - 623 - 5151 3607 N. Main Roswell, NM 88201 Mention the Roswell Brangus Sale for special rates!! Southwest Ranch Horse Offering www.xithorsesales.com Contact: Kade Wooton (575) -914- 1283 Online Bidding Now Available!! www.xitwesternproductions.com Lot # 21 Lot # 18
3 JANUARY 2023 JANUARY 2023 3 Bull Sale At the Ranch, Nara Visa, New Mexico February 28, 2023 | 1 PM (MT) 120 Registered Hereford & Angus Bulls Yearling & 18-Month-Old Bulls Michael Pérez 575-403-7970 Kyle Pérez 575-403-7971 PerezCattleCo.com Scan for a catalog or call today! Sons Sell of PCC Maverick 0183, PCC Kuper 9372, KR QR Endure 18072, SITZ Barricade 632F, and SITZ Verdict 744H On shipping day, pounds pay the bills! SITZ Barricade 632F SITZ Verdict 744H PCC Maverick 0183 PCC Kuper 9372 Perez CATTLE COMPANY

NEW MEXICO STOCKMAN

P.O. Box 7127, Albuquerque, NM 87194 505-243-9515 Fax: 505-349-3060

E-mail: caren@aaalivestock.com

Official publication of ...

n New Mexico Cattle Growers’ Association

Email: nmwgi@nmagriculture.org 2231 Rio Grande NW, P.O. Box 7517, Albuquerque, NM 87194 505-247-0584, Fax: 505-842-1766

President, Loren Patterson n New Mexico Wool Growers, Inc. P.O. Box 7520, Albuquerque, NM 87194 505-247-0584

President James Duffy

EDITORIAL & ADVERTISING

Publisher: Caren Cowan

Publisher Emeritus: Chuck Stocks

Advertising Representatives: Chris Martinez Melinda Martinez

Contributing Editors: Carol Wilson Callie Gnatkowski-Gibson Howard Hutchinson Lee Pitts

PRODUCTION

Production Coordinator: Carol Pendleton

Editorial & Advertising Design: Kristy Hinds

ADVERTISING SALES

Chris Martinez at 505-243-9515 or chris@aaalivestock.com

New Mexico Stockman (USPS 381-580)

is published monthly by Caren Cowan, 2231 Rio Grande, NW, Albuquerque, NM 87104-2529

Subscription price: 1 year - $30 / 2 years - $40 Single issue price $10, Directory price $30 Subscriptions are non-refundable

POSTMASTER: Send address changes to New Mexico Stockman, P.O. Box 7127, Albuquerque, NM 87194. Periodicals Postage paid at Albuquerque, New Mexico, and additional mailing offices. Copyright© 2015 by New Mexico Stockman. Material may not be used without permission of the publisher. Deadline for editorial and advertising copy, changes and cancellations is the 10th of the month preceding publication. Advertising rates on request.

DEPARTMENTS

10 NMCGA President’s Message by Loren Patterson 12 Just the Facts ... and Then Some by Caren Cowan, Publisher New Mexico Stockman 16 New Mexico CowBelles Jingle Jangle 33 New Mexico Beef Council Bullhorn 36 News Update: Wolves & Coyotes, Livestock Haulers, Lamb 42 New Mexico’s Old Times & Old Timers by Don Bullis 46 Riding Herd by Lee Pitts 50 Food & Fodder by Deanna Dickinson McCall 52 View From the Backside by Barry Denton 54 New Mexico Federal Lands Council News by Frank DuBois 64 Collectors Corner by Jim Olson 72 In Memoriam 77 Beef It’s What’s for Dinner Recipe 83 Marketplace 85 Seedstock Guide 88 Real Estate Guide 98 In the Arena by Sage Faulkner 104 Advertisers’ Index

FEATURES

13 Salazar Honored by New Mexico Federal Lands Council 18 Black Walnut Cattle Farm Named American Gelbvieh Association 2022 Breeder of the Year 20 Underwood Joins American Gelbvieh Association 20 Landowner Hunting (EPLUS) in New Mexico Explained by Travis Driscoll, Beaverhead Ranch Group

24 NMSU to Co-Host Southwest Beef Symposium February 8 & 9 in Lubbock

26 Report: EPA Quadruples its Carbon “Social Cost” Claim by Bob Unruh, WND News

28 Governor Abbott Calls for Investigation of NGOs Aiding Illegal Crossings

30 Cobank Forecasts Mild US Recession, Protein Slowdown by Susan Kelly, meatingplace.com

35 NMDA to Hold Specialty Crop Grant Workshops in January

38 New Mexico Water Use Beyond Drought by Gail Goodman, EdD.

44 No, America Does Not Owe the World Climate “Reparations” by Stephen Moore, heartlanddailynews.com

45 EPA Holding January Hearings Pushing for More Energy Regulations by John Block, Pinon Post

47 Inflation’s Impacts on Meat Industry Expansion by Peter Thomas Ricci, meatingplace.com

48 Range Improvement Annual Meeting Award by Jerry Schickedanz

58 Three New Mexico Artists Receive Rounders Award

67 2023 Cattleman of the Year

68 2022 King Service Award

68 2022 Green From the Ground Up Ward

69 NMCGA Ayudando Siempre Alli Award

69 2022 Inspector of the Year Award

70 Westerman Blasts USFS for Pushing Electric Vehicle Transition by Thomas Catenacci | Fox News

78 Google’s Carbon-Free Energy Compact Source: Protect the Harvest

82 “Proforestation” Separates People from Forest by Nick Smith, Healthy Forest Healthy Communities

103 46th Annual Indian National Finals Rodeo 2022

103 Cowboy New Year’s Resolutions by Bob Welch, courtesy Working Ranch Cowboys Association

on the cover

JANUARY 2023

Blue River Muley by Tim Cox depicts some of the great game in the Southwest. For this and other works by Tim Cox please contact Tim Cox Fine Art, Phone: 505.632.8080 Fax 505.632.5850, 891 Road 4990, Bloomfield NM 87410. timcoxfineart@timcox.com

4 JANUARY 2023
VOL 89, No. 1
381-580
USPS
18 Gelbvieh Feature
5 JANUARY 2023 JANUARY 2023 5 19th Annual Elite Cut Female Sale March 31st March 31st- April1st, 2023 RED BULL SALE April 1st Bosque, New Mexico Emilio Sanchez 505.507.7781 Scooter Sanchez 505.980.5093 REDDOCFARM.COM SPRING RUNOFF SALE April 1st FOLLOWING RHBS SELLING 150 SANTA GERTRUDIS & GERT INFLUENCED BULLS TRANSPORTATION AVAILABLE TO CENTRALIZED LOCATIONS RED DOC 1576 REA 16.33|IMF 7.86|BF 0.3|WW 656|YW 1425|FS 5.5|ADG 5.27|F:G 5.4
For Sale Private Treaty Bred Cows - Heifers - Bulls Give us a call to schedule a visit! Bill King: (505)220-9909 Tom Spindle: (505)321-8808 Moriarty, New Mexico 2022 Seedstock 100 Producer -Beef Magazine Hereford - Angus - Charolais BillKingRanch.com Facebook.com/billkingranch If you’re looking for cattle with powerful genetics and phenominal phenotypes like these, be the first to take your pick! We’re offering Registered & Commerical Bred Cows, Bred Heifers, and Yearling Females for sale private treaty. Along with Two-Year Old and Yearling Bulls. Herd Sires include: Loewen Genesis G16 ET BR Belle Air 6011 C CJC Belle Heir ET CRR 5280 Connealy Black Granite Connealy Power Surge 3115 CAG CC SIDELINE 7063E LT Patriot 4004 PLD LT Horizon and more!
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your
Quincy Carlton You don’t wait for day to start
workday.

Loren Patterson President Corona

Bronson Corn President-Elect Roswell

Dave Kenneke

NW Vice President Cimarron

Cliff Copeland

NE Vice President Nara Visa

Jeff Decker

SE Vice President Lovington

Roy Farr

SW Vice President Datil

Joe Culbertson Vice President at Large Amistad

Shacey Sullivan Secretary / Treasurer Peralta

Randell Major Immediate Past President Magadalena

Tom Sidwell Past President Quay

A Renewed Spirit!

That is what it takes to be involved in Agriculture year in and year out. What is great about ranching here in New Mexico is that opportunities to revive your soul and renew your spirit come fairly regular. We experience it when we see those new born calves, the first shoots of green in the grass, thunderheads lighting up the evening skies, big fat calves following their mothers into the shipping pens, or that group of replacement heifers you picked to carry forward the future of the ranch.

My spirit was also renewed at the Joint Stockmen’s Convention. I witnessed some great presentations, visited with people I haven’t seen in a couple of years, welcomed new friends and legislators to our group, and heard the giggles and laughs of our replacements running up and down the hallways. I appreciate the support and dedication of so many this year.

To tell you of all the challenges we faced in this letter would be redundant from all the letters over the year. We have had some wins, some losses and a few draws. What has been the greatest achievement is the team we have in the office going into the New Year! I’m excited to see how they will perform and know the representation we have across the state is filled with the same spoken integrity our members expect.

Heidi Humphries, our Membership Committee Chair, challenged each one of us to bring one new member to New Mexico Cattle Growers’ Association. Imagine the world of difference we could make if we brought more people together in our communities, conventions and conversations. I hope that as you make your New Year’s resolutions, this one challenge will be among them. We all know a person or family that should be members. Hand them a membership form or email them a link to our website. I know of no other organization in the state with the representation we give our members. If you know of someone, call your regional Vice Presidents and we will call them. Let’s move forward into the New Year with new members and new enthusiasm to reach this goal!

One of the greatest parts of the Joint Stockmen’s Convention is the opportunity to say thank you to the sponsors that support our Association. From the Legacy Awards Dinner to the raffle and all the booths in our trade show, thank you to all of our sponsors and allied members. We know we are all in this together and the support you show our members is overwhelming. We appreciate the contributions! Just as a reminder, our Allied Members are not immune to Heidi’s challenge! Please bring new members to our association because we represent those businesses, families and services that make up this ranching community also!

Lastly, I want to say thank you to the members, Board of Directors and Past Presidents that have supported me over the last year. I have experienced many things I would have never otherwise had the opportunity to without this position.

I can honestly say that our Association makes a difference to people! There isn’t a week that goes by that I haven’t received a letter, email or “Thank You” call expressing the difference we have made for someone; whether that be through loads of hay sent to burn scarred areas, assistance with burned infrastructure, calls and mediation to State Agencies on behalf of a producer, or sometimes letting someone know we care when a tragedy befalls on them. I have seen first-hand the difference New Mexico Cattle Growers has made. Thank you for the opportunity to be President.

Pray your neighbor gets rain… then talk to them about our Association,

10 JANUARY 2023
Loren N. Patterson
11 JANUARY 2023 JANUARY 2023 11 Contact your CKP Trusted Risk Advisor today. The USDA Risk Management Agency helps protect your Pasture, Rangeland, and Forage 877-CKP-INS1 (877-257-4671) ckpinsurance.com Let CKP Help You Protect Your PRF Our trusted risk advisors are trained to help you analyze complicated insurance data so you: • Protect your land and livelihood against potential losses during times of drought. • Make the most informed decision for your business. • Never purchase unnecessary coverage and pay more than you need. Why now? • Very affordable –Government subsidized • Premiums are not due until October 1 • No adjusters needed • No record-keeping • Protects your cash flow “Anyone can sell you a policy. But CKP invests the time to understand your individual needs and develop a strategy that will produce the best coverage results.” Cover More Ground with CKP

JUST THE FACTS ... & THEN SOME

Still Time to Stop the Slaughter

Comments are due on January 9, 2023 on the proposal for the US Forest Service and USDA Wildlife Service to use aerial snipers to gun down feral livestock in the Gila Wilderness.

See the New Mexico Stockman Facebook page or email caren@aaalivestock for draft comments

Comments should include: 1. Name, address, phone number, and organization represented, if any;

2. Title of the project “Gila Wilderness Livestock Removal” on which the comment is being submitted; and

3. Specific facts and supporting information for the responsible official to consider.

Commenter names, addresses, and email addresses will become part of the public record.

Written comments may be delivered in person or by mail to:

Gila National Forest, Attn: Planning Program

3005 E. Camino del Bosque Silver City NM 88061.

Office hours are 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday – Friday.

Comments may also be submitted by email to: comments-southwesterngila@usda.gov. For additional information, contact the Forest Service at (575)388-8201.

This situation has more to do with politics than it does livestock.

Then there is keeping warm and cooking

For most Americans natural gas is a clean and affordable fuel they use to cook, heat their water, and provide warmth in the winter. Millions of Americans appreciate its benefits, even if they don’t think about them very often, according to Paul Guessing, the Rio Grande Foundation.

U.S. Senator Martin Heinrich wants to eliminate it. He wrote in the New York Times that “working to electrify our vehicles, homes and businesses is a critical part of achieving economy-wide net-zero emissions.”

Of course the electricity for this zero emissions must come from wind and solar. With nationwide blackouts this winter, it is clear that this option is not ready for prime time.

And, no one is talking about the cost of green energy. Utility prices are already sky high. The shame is it is the poor that suffer the worst consequences of this rush to renewable.      ▫

12 JANUARY 2023

Salazar Honored by NM Federal Lands Council

Carlos Salazar was born into a ranching family that goes back to his ancestors that homesteaded in the Canones area. The family started with sheep then transitioned to cattle over time. Carlos is actively involved in the family ranch as well as his own.

Carlos has always had a passion and fight for the rights of ranchers. His work to keep ranchers on federal and state trust lands goes back at least 30 years.

One notable action on his part came in 2002 when he and a group of ranchers headed to Washington, D.C. after the US Forest Service (USFS) attempted to remove all the livestock off the Santa Fe National Forest over the 4th of July.

With the help of Senator Domenici the crisis was averted. The New Mexico State University Range Improvement Task Force was called in to monitor the Forest. In the end only a few allotments required destocking.

Brazos Says let'sgo brandin

JANUARY 2023 13
PAID ADVERTISEMENT
The entire Salazar family came off the mountain to be present for the Bud’s Contract Award presentation.

Carlos is a tireless leader serving on numerous boards and associations. He is currently president of the Northern New Mexico Stockman’s Association, president of the Acequia de Rio Chama, secretary of the Rio Chama Acequia Association, vice president of the New Mexico Federal Lands Council (NMFLC), has served on New Mexico Cattle Growers’ Association Board of Directors and as co-chairman of committees. Carlos is also active in his church functions.

He served in the U.S. Army, then attended NMSU, graduating with an Animal and Range Science Degree. Carlos worked for 30 years with the Bureau of Indian Affairs, serving in Shiprock on the Navajo Nation and then in Espanola with the eight Northern Pueblos.

Carlos has been married to his bride Rita for 47 years. They have two sons, Benjamin, wife Cathy; and Carlos, wife Tracie; and are blessed 11 grandchildren.

The Bud’s Contract Award was presented to Carlos by Mike Casabonne and Bebo Lee. The Award is presented in honor of Bud Eppers, the Roswell area rancher who became involved in federal lands grazing issues when a Bureau of Land Management district manager began to tell him how to

run his ranch.

Bud’s knowledge and commitment led him to representing ranchers in Santa Fe and Washington, D.C. He became a national authority and leader on natural resource and property rights issues.

Bud intended to present the award, a bronze handshake, to someone who was a friend of ranching. He wasn’t able to get it done before the Lord took him.

The NMFLC decided to make the award an annual presentation in honor of Bud’s memory. Jimmy Bason came up with the name.

The award has been presented to numerous champions of federal lands ranching.      ▫

14 JANUARY 2023
Call John 575-644-2900 or email john@conniffcattle.com CONNIFF CATTLE CO. LLC Selling 5 Bulls & 4 Heifers at the N.M. Angus Association Sale in Roswell, Monday, March 6 Some are sired by AI sire, TEX Playbook 537! John Conniff • Laura Mathers Conniff – 1500 Snow Road, Las Cruces, NM 88005 TEX Playbook 5437 ONLINE EQUIPMENT AUCTION February 18, 2023 @9:00am Items will be located throughout New Mexico and Colorado www.jandjauction.com 575-485-2508 AUCTIONEERS Featuring: Heavy Equipment, Farm Equipment, Trucks, Trailers, ATVs, Agricultural Equipment, Attachments, and much more. Joe (575) 447-2508 • John (505) 617-0799 • Roland (505) 617-5345 • Eric (505) 652-8832 Check out our website for more info and upcoming auctions! We are now accepting consignments for this auction. Contact one of our salesmen ... Plan advertisingyourfor the coming year! Editorial Calendar JANUARY — Wildlife; Gelbvieh; Joint Stockmen’s Convention Results FEBRUARY — Beefmasters; Texas Longhorns MARCH — Limousin; Santa Gertrudis APRIL — Dairy MAY — News of the Day JUNE — Sheepman of the Year JULY — Directory of Agriculture AUGUST — The Horse Industry SEPTEMBER — Charolais; Fairs Across the Southwest OCTOBER — Hereford; New Mexico State Fair Results NOVEMBER — Cattleman of the Year; Joint Stockmen’s Convention Preview; Angus, Brangus, Red Angus DECEMBER — Bull Buyers Guide If you would like to see your breed featured email caren@aaalivestock.com To Reserve Advertising Space email chris@aaalivestock.com or call Chris at 505.243.9515, ext. 2

2022 was a year full of revived energy, learning from each other and gaining ground. The officer team was strengthened with your encouragement and guidance. Our Annual Meeting was one of the best we have had in a long time.

It was well attended and our Past Presidents Reception was a huge success. Joan Kincaid wrote a beautiful installation for our incoming officers. We were deeply honored by her words. Thank you to all who came.

I want to also say a huge thank you to Farmers Business Network and Casey Spradley for sponsoring our breakfast meeting. And to NMCGA for partnering with us on the hotel and conference room.

We have two District Workshops planned and dates set so be watching for an announcement soon. 2023 is going to be a great year and we are looking forward to seeing you all soon!

– Vonda Frost, NMCB President ▫

Powderhorn

Christmas party. The group had a great time with sweet friends and wonderful food! Christmas cards were sent to friends unable to attend monthly. Instead of exchanging gifts, those attending brought items to send to the Hartly House for abused women and they will be delivered this week. January meeting will be announced by email. Happy New Year ! – Joan Key, secretary New Mexico CowBelles: Thank you to all who have submitted their news to Jingle Jangle. Please send minutes and/or newsletters to Jingle Jangle, Janet Witte, 1860 Foxboro Ct., Las Cruces, NM 88007 or email: janetwitte@msn.com by the 14th of every month.      ▫

WOTUS Rule Revives Decades-old

coined during the Reagan-era, updated to accommodate limits the Supreme Court has placed on federal jurisdiction during the intervening 36 years.

The latest definition is an effort by the Biden administration to find a “durable” solution for protecting wetlands and streams — an issue that has been hotly debated since the Clean Water Act’s passage in 1972. Through the years, the question has triggered regulatory back-and-forth, intense lobbying, and legal and political brawls among developers and agricultural and environmental groups.

EPA water chief Radhika Fox said the rule’s link to regulations dating back to the 1980s would be familiar to those seeking Clean Water Act permits.

“It’s grounded in our longstanding authority provided by Congress, and we really learned from the 45 years of implementation as we developed this final rule so [it] balances the needs for clean water protections with the needs of all water users,” she said in an interview. “I think we found that middle ground and that place with this rule.”

Clean Water Act.

The rule from EPA and the Army Corps of Engineers largely revives a definition of “waters of the United States,” or WOTUS,

Still, water policy observers and advocates anticipate a legal backlash from farmers, developers and businesses that will argue the regulation is inconsistent with the Clean Water Act.   ▫

16 JANUARY 2023
Cattlewomen met at the Daily Grind restaurant, Ft. Sumner for
Protections
T
he Biden administration has finalized its definition of which wetlands and waterways are protected by the
JINGLE JANGLE LIVESTOCK COMMISSION DEXTER *** Now Selling *** Packer Beef Cows & Bulls • Dairy Cows Accepting All Classes of Beef Cows & Bulls, Calves & Yearlings Cattle Received Sunday, Monday, & Tuesday — Call for Permits No feed charges for cattle delivered on Tuesday SALE EVERY TUESDAY — 11:00 a.m. Will Be Open Through the Holidays For load lots of 40,000 lbs or more, commission charge is $21/head plus fee • Commission 3% plus Insurance & Beef Checkoff • Trich Testing Available — $70 / Head 575.624.COWS www.dexterlivestockcommission.com Ted Nelson – 575.840.6351 Jerrod Harral – 575.910.3570 Dickie McIntosh — 575.626.5459 274 East Darby Road, Dexter, NM
Coming Soon to a Pasture Near You! Sons of These Great Herd Sires WESLEY GRAU • 575-760-7304 • WWW.GRAURANCH.COM Performance & Calving Ease GRAU RANCH GRAU RANCH 20 registered heifers for sale representing 57 years of rigid selecting for growth and calving ease.

Black Walnut Cattle Farm is the recipient of this year’s Breeder of the Year award. The honor was presented to the Morris family at the AGA National Convention in December 2022, in Louisville, Kentucky.

Black Walnut Cattle Farm is located in Batesville, Mississippi, and is owned and operated by Jason and his wife, Susan, along with their children, Sadie, Owen, Edye and Weston.

The Morris family has been very active members of the AGA since 2014. Their daughter, Sadie, currently serves on the American Gelbvieh Junior Association (AGJA) board of directors.

The Morris family is a key component in the Mississippi Gelbvieh Association and was very instrumental in the success of the 2021 AGJA Southern Hospitality Classic. The family is great advocates for youth in agriculture, supporting FFA, the AGJA, and area livestock shows in Mississippi.

A purchase of Balancer® bulls and a show heifer for their daughter, Sadie, began the AGA journey for the Morris family. The family started purchasing more Balancer heifers to grow their herd and start selling bulls to other producers. The family strongly

focuses on EPDs in their animals along with their phenotypes and production outputs. The production of their cattle must line up with the EPDs to stay successful.

“Working with several progressive breeders has allowed us to bring proven genetics into our herd and help us focus on the goal and speed up the process of raising good Gelbvieh and Balancer cattle that will work in the south,” explained Jason Morris.

Black Walnut Cattle Farm is a family affair. The kids spend the summers working with show cattle in the barn, Susan maintains the paperwork of the cattle, and Jason, along with his dad, works through the operation management of keeping the farm moving forward.

“Gelbvieh is a great breed and a great association to be involved in,” said Morris. “It’s very family-oriented with a lot of focus on family and kids. The kids are our future and will be in the AGA for years to come. It’s a

great group of people to be associated with and a great organization to raise your kids in while giving them leadership experience.”      ▫

18 JANUARY 2023
REGISTERED GELBVIEH CATTLE Reds • Blacks • BalanceRs® FEMALES PRIVATE TREATY “POT OF GOLD” BULL SALE Friday, February 24, 2023 DAVE & DAWN BOWMAN 55784 Holly Road Olathe, CO 81425 970-323-6833 www.bowkranch.com WILKINSON GELBVIEH RANCH PRIVATE TREATY BULL SALE KICKOFF SATURDAY, MARCH 25, 2023 Bill, Nancy & Sydney 23115 Co. Rd. 111.3, Model, CO 81059 Bill: (719) 680-0462 • Sydney: (719) 680-7910 bnwbulls@gmail.com • www.wilkinsongelbvieh.com The American Gelbvieh Association named Black Walnut Cattle Farm, Batesville, Mississippi, the AGA Breeder of the Year for 2022. Pictured above (left to right): Owen, Susan, Weston, Jason, Sadie, and Edye Morris.
Walnut Cattle Farm Named American Gelbvieh Association 2022 Breeder
Year
Black
of the
100 GELBVIEH & BALAN CER BULLS “Providing dependable genetics to commercial and purebred cattlemen for over 30 years.” February 24, 2023 32nd Annual Montrose, Colorado Mark Covington (970) 209-1956 Dave Bowman (970) 323-6833 For online catalog and videos visit: www.gelbviehbulls.net CALVING EASE EARLY MATURING HEAVY WEANING WEIGHTS MODERATE SIZE AT MATURITY QUIET DISPOSITION MATERNAL TRAITS RAISED AT HIGH ELEVATIONS WHY BUY POT OF GOLD BULLS?

Underwood Joins American Gelbvieh Association

The American Gelbvieh Association (AGA) is pleased to announce the addition of Megan Underwood to the AGA staff as the Communications Coordinator. In her role, Underwood will lead the communication efforts of the association, serve as editor and assist with advertising for the AGA’s monthly publications, and assist the marketing team in developing a national advertising campaign.

“Megan is a very talented young professional and has a wide range of skills in the field of agricultural communications,” says Megan Slater, AGA executive director. “We are excited to have her joining the AGA team and helping us grow the Gelbvieh and Balancer® message.”

Underwood was raised on her family’s Hereford seedstock operation in Campbellsville, Kentucky, and spent her summers showing cattle at the state and national levels. She received her bachelor’s degree in Animal Sciences and Industry with a minor in Mass Communications and Journalism and a Professional Strategic Selling certificate from Kansas State University.

She served as a College of Agriculture Ambassador, was a member of the 2020 National Western and Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo Meat Judging teams, and was recognized as the 2018-2019 Block and Bridle Rookie of the Year. She graduated from Kansas State University on December 9th with her master’s degree in Agricultural Education and Communication.

Her research focused on the uses and gratifications of beef cattle breed association magazines for United States beef cattle producers. She brings experience from her internships with many industry-leading beef organizations and breed associations.

“Having grown up in the beef industry, I knew I wanted a career that allowed me to focus on advancing the industry through communicating with innovative beef producers. I am excited to join the AGA and tell the Gelbvieh and Balancer story through print and digital communication platforms,” said Underwood. “I look forward to meeting AGA members and enhancing the AGA communication efforts.”      ▫

Landowner Hunting (EPLUS) in New Mexico Explained

New Mexico’s hunting opportunities are as abundant and diverse as its terrain and habitat. Throughout the vast landscapes you will find big game hunts for trophy bull elk, mule deer, pronghorn and more exotic species including ibex, oryx, and Barbary sheep. Elk hunting here is considered world-class with many bull elk harvested each year in the upper 300” and lower 400” classes.

It’s this diversity of game combined with breathtaking landscapes and friendly cost of ownership that make owning New Mexico hunting ranches attractive to so many savvy hunters and landowners.

Overview:

Here we are going to focus on how the New Mexico Department of Game & Fish (NMDGF) regulates elk hunting and private land elk authorizations (or permits). Private land permits for other large game species are oftentimes related to the guidelines of the elk permits but there are units within the state where rules for mule deer, antelope and other big game are more independent.

EPLUS is the system utilized by NMDGF and is an acronym for Elk Private Lands Use System. The EPLUS program was created as a means of compensation to landowners in recognition of the stresses and damage that elk can present to infrastructure and native feeds. The system leverages important benefits that private lands make to the elk populations and hunting opportunities in New Mexico. The program gives hunters and landowners a way to work together to effectively manage and hunt elk on private lands.

“Through EPLUS the New Mexico Department of Game and Fish distributes a portion of the State’s elk hunting opportunity to qualifying private landowners. Landowners receive private-land elk authorizations from the Department which can be used by hunters to buy private-land elk licenses” according to NMDGF.

How EPLUS Works:

The NMDGF, through years of study and data, has created three different types of management zones for elk within the state – Primary Zones, Secondary Zones and Special Management Zones.

Primary Zone: In these zones elk man-

agement is highly focused and private-land elk permits are issued to landowners through an acreage-based scoring formula, taking in consideration the quality of the local herd, the feed, cover and water available to the elk on that property.

The Department issues private-land elk authorizations to eligible landowners in the Primary and Special Management Zones through the EPLUS program. These authorizations can be bartered, sold, or traded to hunters. An authorization code is then used by hunters to buy a private-land elk license.

These authorizations can be set as Ranch Only (valid only on private land) or UnitWide (ability to hunt public lands within the unit). Unit-wide authorizations are not available in GMUs (elk hunting units) 4 and 5A; ranches in these units may only receive ranch-only authorizations. If a landowner chooses to apply for unit-wide authorizations, then he/she is obligated to let the public hunt their private lands in exchange.

The total number and type of authorizations available to landowners that are within the boundaries of a Primary Management Zone is determined by the percentage of public land to private land.

Once the number of authorizations available to private lands in a unit is determined, ranches will receive individual authorizations based on the percentage of the private land that ranch has within the unit. For example, if a ranch comprises 10 percent of the private land in the unit, it will receive approximately 10 percent of the authorizations available. Ranches able to receive at least one whole authorization through this formula are considered Base Ranches.

Small Contributing Ranches within Primary Zones:

When a property within a Primary Zone is not large enough to receive at least one whole authorization through the formula, it is considered a Small Contributing Ranch (SCR). SCRs compete for authorizations in a random draw weighted on the ranch’s ranch score.

The number of authorizations available to landowners in these zones is subject to change. Landowners cannot be guaranteed a specific number of authorizations per year. The acreage based formula used to issue authorizations is described in detail in the EPLUS rule (19.30.5 NMAC).

Secondary Zone: In these zones NMDGF has no specific elk management goals set and licenses are available over-the-counter for private land in unlimited numbers. Private-land elk licenses in these zones are available by means of a Ranch Code received

20 JANUARY 2023

from a landowner who is registered through the EPLUS program. These authorizations can be bartered, sold, or traded to hunters. Secondary Zone authorizations are ranch only permits.

Special Management Zone: In these zones, private-land elk authorizations are issued to private landowners by the department on a ranch-by-ranch basis. In these cases the landowner has the opportunity to request the number of permits that he or she feels like the property can support and negotiate final authorization numbers with NMDGF. In Special Management zones, the authorizations are ranch only, meaning that the animals can only be hunted on private land or, with permission of another landowner, on another private property. Landowner authorizations in these zones cannot be used as unit wide tags for hunting on public lands.

The NMDGF website states “Landowners wishing to participate in the EPLUS program must fill out the correct application and adhere to any related application deadlines. Properties which qualify for the EPLUS program and receive private-land elk authorizations may use, sell, barter or trade the elk authorizations to hunters. An elk authorization is then used by the hunter to purchase a private-land elk license.”

The Process:

When a buyer purchases an EPLUS-eligible property in New Mexico there is a simple process for registering for the system. Since the state is divided into three elk management zones, the application and qualifications will differ for landowners depending upon which management zone their ranch is located. So, step one in the process is to understand which one your property is located. An interactive map of the Management zones can be found at https://www.wildlife.state.nm.us/hunting/ maps/eplus/. Step two will be to fill and submit the appropriate application for your property, based on the zone it is located in.

Primary Zone – The Primary Zone application period runs from September through January 5 each year. If the Department determines that a property does not qualify to participate in the program, the landowner will be notified.

Non-qualifying landowners have the right to request a review of the NMGF’s decision. Qualifying ranches will be included in the authorization allocation process for the license year in which they applied. Authorizations in the Primary Zone are typically issued in late May.

Most properties we see within a Primary

JANUARY 2023 21
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Zone have already been enrolled in EPLUS if they are eligible. It is important to know and verify what a property has received from EPLUS historically if you are interested in owning the land for the purposes of hunting. NMGF will not guarantee the same number of permits to a new landowner that the previous owner has benefited from, but in our experience the transitions from one owner to the next have provided consistent results for landowner authorizations.

If you are considering a property within a Primary Zone that is not currently in EPLUS, and you are wanting the land for the purpose of hunting, we strongly urge you to

perform thorough due diligence before purchasing the land. For buyers working with Beaverhead Ranch Group, this is a process in which we can assist.

Secondary Zone – Landowners in a Secondary Zone can enter the EPLUS system at any time of the year, there is no set application period or deadline to submit applications for the Secondary Zone.

where your Secondary Management Zone Ranch Code can be accessed. The second step, once you have your CIN, is to complete the Secondary Management Zone Ranch Code Application and, after department approval, a Ranch Code will be assigned to the ranch in the Online Licensing System.

First step is to create a Customer Account through the Department’s Online Licensing System and obtain a Customer Identification Number (CIN). The CIN is required in the application and allows the Department to link

Ranch to your Online Account

Special Management Zone – There is no set deadline to submit applications for the Special Zone however applications received after June are not guaranteed to be processed prior to the start of the elk hunting season. The Department begins processing Special Zone applications in June in the order they are received.

The Special Zone includes all of GMUs 46 and 55A, and GMU 54 west of State Road 199. Accepted ranches will need to contact the NMGF’s Raton office to negotiate the number and type of authorizations for the ranch.

New Mexico’s EPLUS system has been recognized as one of the best game management programs in the country and has proven to create a balance between private landowners and public hunters. The system has been largely credited for enhancing overall genetics and abundance of trophy elk in the state, benefiting the private land hunter as well as the public land hunter as these elk move freely between public and private lands.      ▫

22 JANUARY 2023
38th Annual Production Sale President’s Day Monday, February 20, 2023 Over 63 years of selecting for Easy Calving, Carcass Quality & Disposition Name Birth Wt. CED BW WW YW Milk PAP $EN IMF REA Fat Circle L Gus 76# +13 -1.1 +61 +104 +19 38 +12 +.20 +.63 +.078 GDAR Heisman 1705 65# +16 -3.0 +49 +90 +18 NA -11 +.52 +.41 +.027 TC Thunder 805 76# +12 -1.6 +39 +77 +23 NA +11 +.59 +.36 +.004 Weavers Final Answer 3100 75# +10 -2.3 +30 +63 +23 39 +5 +.41 +.09 +.023 SELLING 65 REGISTERED COMING 2-YEAR-OLD BULLS Registered Black Angus PAP testing since 1991 at an elevation of 7500’ BVD, Fertility, PAP, Trich tested & Carcass Ultrasounded. Featuring Sons of These & Other Weaver Ranch Sires
your
23 JANUARY 2023 JANUARY 2023 23 Absolute Consensus 7229 PowerSource Clay Parsons: 520-444-7650 Susan Sanders: 520-403-8510 Online bidding through CATTLEUSA.COM Heifer Bulls • Growth Bulls • Carcass merit • Feed efficiency GAR Composure Absolute Consensus 7229 PowerSource Treasure Colman Charlo 0256 ARIZONA ANGUS INVITATIONAL SALE AT MARANA STOCKYARDS Saturday, March 4, 2023, 12 pm Viewing on Friday 3/3 & Saturday 3/4 until sale time. NEW BIDDER APPROVAL DEADLINE 3/2/23 NEW MSY CUSTOMERS, PLEASE CONTACT CLAY PARSONS NO LATER THAN NOON THURSDAY 3/2/23 TO MAKE ARRANGEMENTS TO BID. Offering range ready bulls and registered and commercial females, some bred to top Angus Bulls. Sire lines represented include the following: GB Fireball 672 Mead Magnitude SAV Rainfall 6846 SAV Cattlemaster 4873 WR Journey-1X74

USDA Report

Predicts Beef Exports to Fall in 2023

AUSDA’s Economic Research Service (ERS) Livestock, Dairy and Poultry Outlook forecasts beef exports to fall between 2022 and 2023.

The ERS shows 2023 beef exports to decline by 472 million pounds, or 13.3 percent.

The report references ongoing widespread drought and higher operation costs for beef cattle producers as the main cause for the shortage. In the first week of November, the U.S. Drought Monitor reported that 85 percent of the United States experienced some level of drought.

About 76 percent of the U.S. cattle herd is being raised in drought-stricken areas, which is an increase of 40 percent from a year ago.

A higher rate of slaughter and stronger demand raised the 2022 beef production 211 million lbs. However, the harsh conditions

in the U.S. means fewer cows are expected to be slaughtered next year, which lowers the projection by 90 million lbs. to 26.3 billion lbs., which is a decline of more than 7 percent from the 2022 projection.

However, the forecast for the total 2023 U.S. beef trade is unchanged, the report reads.

The ERS also shows beef imports slowed for the first half of 2022.

“Third-quarter imports were 798 million pounds, 14 percent less than last year and 8 percent below the 5-year average,” the report reads. “Imports for the quarter from most major suppliers decreased year over year, with the largest decrease from New Zealand, down nearly 41 percent.”

The year-to-date imports from New Zealand are down 22 percent from last year. While imports from New Zealand and Australia have declined, their exports to China increased.

Imports from Brazil decreased 28 percent, but year-to-date imports from Brazil remain elevated due to the spike in imports in the first quarter, but monthly imports from the country have been relatively consistent since June.      ▫

NMSU to Co-Host Southwest Beef Symposium February 8 & 9 in Lubbock

The New Mexico State University Cooperative Extension Service and Texas A&M University AgriLife Extension Service will co-host the annual Southwest Beef Symposium Wednesday, February 8 and Thursday, February 9 at the Overton Hotel and Convention Center, 2322 Mac Davies Lane, in Lubbock, Texas.

The two-day event focuses on the latest issues that impact cattle producers from New Mexico and west Texas.

“Herd reduction due to drought was widespread across the region,” said Marcy Ward, NMSU Extension livestock specialist. “Conditions have recently shifted to where producers may want to build back their herds. Therefore, the overall theme of this year’s symposium will be on herd expansion.”

First day topics include updates on weather and economic outlooks; the dairy beef sector; and the 30 x 30 conservation policies that could impact private landowners. The second day will focus on management regarding heifer replacement considerations; retained ownership; and health management.

Registration will be $75 per person if received by February 3, or $95 at the door. Checks should be made payable to Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service and mailed to Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service, Banking and Receivables Department, P.O. Box 10420, College Station, TX 77842. For more information or to register for the event, visit tamu.estore.flywire.com/ productssouthwest-beefsymposium-2023-77152

For additional information, contact Ward at maward@nmsu.edu or 575/644-3379 or Bruce Carpenter, AgriLife Extension livestock specialist, at bruce.carpenter@ag.tamu.edu or 432/336-8585.      ▫

24 JANUARY 2023
Villanueva • Call Bob, Kay or Mike Anderson BULLS & REPLACEMENT HEIFER CALVES FOR SALE Private Treaty Sales A Lazy 6 Angus at Blanco Canyon, HCR 72, Box 10, Ribera, NM 87560 Headquarters: 575/421-1809 Cells: 505/690-1191 • 505-690-2024 Email alazy6ranch@yahoo.com for catalog

Report: EPA Quadruples its Carbon ‘Social Cost’ Claim

Back in Barack Obama’s day, “green” agenda activists determined that the “social cost” of a ton of carbon emissions was $51.

Now, just a few years later, the Environmental Protection Agency insists that’s $190.

”The figure isn’t just hypothetical. If enacted, it could affect everything from the cost of methane regulations and tailpipe emissions to the ‘climate reparations’ that President Joe Biden has committed the United States to paying to poor countries in the future,” explains a report from Just the News.

The publication says the EPA’s maneuver to redefine the cost is creating “future impact for Americans’ wallets and a new headache

for the oil and gas industries.”

The report said the EPA proposed changing the impact number just weeks ago.

The “social cost” term was created in 2009 under Obama, and in a rulemaking notice, the EPA “said it had devised a new calculation that raises that damage estimate to $190 per metric ton by 2022 standards and as much as $410 by the year 2080.

Just the News said the EPA’s maneuver “has sent shockwaves through the energy industry and raised the stakes for ongoing litigation being brought by Republican attorneys general in states like Louisiana that are challenging the Biden administration Social Cost of Carbon rulemaking as unconstitutional.”

The change would hit consumers hard, increasing the prices of everything from dinner on the table to fuel to run a furnace.

“If you think about the fact that they would impose this damage factor, let’s say on farmers, because it applies to fertilizer,” Louisiana Solicitor General Liz Muiller told the John Solomon Reports podcast.

“Fertilizer emits nitrous oxide. So fertilizer is a big contributor. If every family farmer now is going to have to pay more to obtain fertilizer to fertilize crops that feed us, well, what’s that going to do to the price of food? If you’re industrial, if you use plastic products in anything that’s touched by petroleum, it’s going to increase the cost of producing those goods.”

Muiller said there’s evidence the numbers already are being used in the government’s regulatory processes, and the next event in a lawsuit is arguments in early December before the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

Obama’s original plan has been opposed by the energy industry and many states, but green groups like the Sierra Club claim it’s the only way the U.S. will “get a grip” on “our greenhouse gas problem.”

The report said eventually, the number, moving forward, will be used to raise costs on power plants, automobiles and all energy drilling, which will be passed on to consumers.

Tim Stewart, the president of the U.S. Oil and Gas Association, told Just the News that if the “price” is set at $340, which the EPA also has evaluated, there would be a $2.99 per gallon tax penalty on every gallon of gasoline pumped.

Based on fuel prices that already have been seen because of Joe Biden’s economic policies that have let inflation surge that could take the cost of a gallon of gasoline into the $10 range.      ▫

26 JANUARY 2023
4 0+YEARS of AI. Our Limousin have a Brown Swiss background that results in greater maternal ability, growth and good dispositions. Our mother cows are selected for their ability to work at high altitude and to wean a growthy calf under range conditions. 5 0YEARS OF PRODUCING HIGH QUALITY BULLS Lunch will be served at the Ranch. Sale Catalogs available on request. Airport only 14 miles from Ranch. Re y nolds Land & Cattle BULL SALE SATURDAY, MARCH 18, 2023 SANFORD, COLORADO · AT THE RANCH · 1pm Guest consignor: Cimarron Angus RODZ EXACT TIME 131E, Son of RODZ ABOUT TIME 126A, sold in a previous sale to John George. Many herd sires like Exact Time will sell. NEW SALE LOCATION IS: 17463 County Road 19 Sanford, Co 81151 NEW RANCH NAME: Reynolds Land and Cattle Rod Cell: (719) 588-1230 • Troy Cell: (719) 580-1308 WWW.REYNOLDSLANDANDCATTLE.COM reynolds_showcattle@yahoo.com Including: REGISTERED HIGH ALTITUDE LIMOUSIN, LIMFLEX, ANGUS, & SIMCROSS AND 10 REGISTERED YEARLING LIMOUSIN & LIMFLEX HEIFERS 70 BULLS Registered Performance Tested, High Altitude, PAP Tested Bulls TwoYear-Olds20 Yearlings 50 SELLING Bulls out of top A.I Sires in the Country 41st Annual We have semen available on a select group of our Herd Bulls. Contact us for semen pricing. “New Name, New Location, Same Faces, Still a Breed Apart” Sale will be available on DVAUCTION if you cannot attend

Governor Abbott Calls for Investigation of NGOs Aiding Illegal Crossings

Governor Greg Abbott has called for an investigation into the role non-governmental organizations (NGOs) may have in planning and assisting illegal border crossings into Texas. In a letter to Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, the Governor highlights the need for Texas’ vigilant response to President Biden’s border crisis, with the end of Title 42 just days away and record-high illegal border crossings along the Texas-Mexico border.

“There have been recent reports that non-governmental organizations may have assisted with illegal border crossings near El Paso,” reads the letter. “We further understand NGOs may be engaged in unlawfully orchestrating other border crossings through activities on both sides of the border, including in sectors other than El Paso.

“In light of these reports, I am calling on

the Texas Attorney General’s Office to initiate an investigation into the role of NGOs in planning and facilitating the illegal transportation of illegal immigrants across our borders. In addition, I stand ready to work with you to craft any sensible legislative solutions your office may propose that are aimed at solving the ongoing border crisis and the role that NGOs may play in encouraging it.”

The end of Title 42 in the coming weeks is expected to cause a dramatic increase in the number of illegal immigrants crossing America’s southern border beyond the alltime high levels currently reported. This past Sunday, more than 2,600 illegal immigrants crossed the border near El Paso and illegally entered Texas over a 24-hour timespan.

Governor Abbott has taken unprecedented action to secure the border in the wake of the federal government’s inaction, including:

Ї Securing $4 billion in funding for Texas’ border security efforts

Ї Launching Operation Lone Star and deploying thousands of Texas National Guard soldiers and Texas Department of Public Safety troopers

Ї Taking aggressive action to aid border

communities, including busing thousands of migrants to Washington, D.C., New York City, Chicago, and Philadelphia

Ї Designating Mexican drug cartels as terrorist organizations to keep Texans safe amid the growing national fentanyl crisis

Ї Arresting and jailing criminals trespassing or committing other state crimes along the southern border

Ї Issuing an executive order authorizing the Texas National Guard and Texas Department of Public Safety to return illegal immigrants to the border at ports of entry

Ї Allocating resources to acquire 1,700 unused steel panels to build the border wall in Texas

Ї Signing a law to make it easier to prosecute smugglers bringing people into Texas

Ї Signing 15 laws cracking down on human trafficking in Texas

Ї Signing a law enhancing penalties for the manufacturing and distribution of fentanyl

Ї Issuing a disaster declaration for the border crisis

Ї Issuing an executive order preventing non-governmental entities from transporting illegal immigrants

Ї Signing memoranda of understanding between the State of Texas and the States of Chihuahua, Coahuila, Nuevo León, and Tamaulipas to enhance border security measures in their states that will prevent illegal immigration from Mexico to Texas

Ї Activating the Joint Border Security Operations Center (JBSOC) and directing the Texas Department of Public Safety, Texas Military Department, and Texas Division of Emergency Management to coordinate Texas’ response to secure the border      ▫

28 JANUARY 2023
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Cobank Forecasts Mild U.S. Recession, Protein Slowdown

CoBank is predicting the U.S. will enter a brief recession next year, with consumer spending likely to slow on an uptick in the unemployment rate to as high

as five percent.

“As financial conditions continue to tighten, we expect the U.S. economy will steadily soften through the first half of 2023, ushering in a brief, modest recession,” said Dan Kowalski, CoBank vice president, in a new report. “Without this softening in the labor market and the associated slowing of wage gains and spending, it will be difficult to stabilize prices.”

U.S. businesses, which have enjoyed record profit margins despite high inflation, may be reluctant to lay off workers after

experiencing extreme staffing shortages over the past two years, the bank said. This could cushion the economy from the worst of a downturn in 2023.

In the agriculture sector, farm income and margins are likely to tighten as skyrocketing production costs, steeply higher interest rates and weakening demand take a toll. The ongoing drought and China’s efforts to minimize its dependence on U.S. imports add to the downside risk, according to the outlook.

In addition, a divided government reflecting unique midterm election results will muddy the path of the next farm bill, the bank said.

Protein production to moderate

CoBank expects slower U.S. animal protein production following a “phenomenal financial performance” in most industry segments over the past three years. “This era of broad profitability will likely come to an end in 2023,” the report said, as the high costs of feed, labor and construction support a cautionary attitude.

Animal feed demand is softening, reflecting flat overall growth in the domestic livestock sector, the report noted. On the demand side, consumers are reeling from rapidly declining real wages, a trend that’s likely to continue well into 2023, CoBank said.

“After reaching an all-time high of more than 226 pounds per capita (projected) in 2022, we expect U.S. meat and poultry consumption to be flat at best in 2023, with marginal gains in chicken and pork offsetting a decline in beef,” the CoBank analysts said.

Beef contraction

After eight years of growth, red meat production, especially beef, is set for a substantial contraction during 2023, down 2 billion pounds year over year, due to shrinking cattle supplies, the report projected. The decline reflects an estimated 5 percent annual reduction in total beef cow inventory and comes at a time when beef still has a tailwind of support from consumers. As a result, prices will remain historically strong, in both live cattle and beef markets.

While pork production is set for a moderate rebound in 2023, the hog breeding herd is at a five-year low, down 6.5 percent from the peak in 2020, suggesting minimal potential for supply growth. To partially offset the gap in red meat production, the U.S. may rely more on imports in the coming year, CoBank said.      ▫

30 JANUARY 2023
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Tucumcari Bull Test Sale — March 11, 2023

VALUE OF FEED EFFICIENCY ASSUMPTIONS:

• Assuming these bulls (actual data from 2021 test) were steers in feedlot, grown from 700 -1400 lbs (700# Gain)

• Cost of feed $185/ton, 62% DM, yardage at $0.25/head/day • Bull will sire 100 calves in lifetime, calf crop is 50% his genetics, 40% Heritability of FE • Assumes a bull at 80% ratio for FE does not add any value, other bulls compared to him • This does not include value of keeping females who are more feed efficient

Value of Feed Efficiency
fed Yardage Feed
Feed Cost Total cost $
B
C
$
$
D 3.63 9.10 193 $ 48.21 10,274.19 $ 950.36 $ 998.57 $ (73.27) $ (3,663.55) $ (1,465.42) E 2.84 8.27 246 $ 61.62 9,337.10 $ 863.68 $ 925.30 $ - $ - $For More Information — Marcy Ward, Test Director 575-644-3379 • MWard@nmsu.edu TucBullTest.nmsu.edu • DVAuction.com Don’t make a $10,981.06 Bull Buying mistake! This chart just shows the added value of keeping calves through the feedlot out of proven feed efficient sires. What would be the value of having replacement females that are more efficient in feed conversion? We believe you will see increased weaning weights, improved fertility, increased stocking rates, and lowered supplemental feed costs.
Bull ADG Feed:Gain Days
amount
saved 100 calves 40% Herit. Bull to get 700# gain compared to Bull E @50% dna from sire Effic. Value (BEV) A 4.25 3.91 165 $ 41.18 4,414.52 $ 408.34 $ 449.52 $ 475.78 $ 23,789.10 $ 9,515.64
3.54 5.31 198 $ 49.44 5,995.16 $ 554.55 $ 603.99 $ 321.31 $ 16,065.69 $ 6,426.27
3.67 7.27 191 $ 47.68 8,208.06
759.25 $ 806.93 $ 118.37 $ 5,918.56
2,367.43

JOINT STOCKMEN CONVENTION: INFO, FOOD, FUN AND AWARDS

The New Mexico Beef Council joined the Cattlegrowers and Woolgrowers at the Hotel Albuquerque last month for the annual Joint Stockmen Convention. Ranchers and farmers participated in programs and learning opportunities while enjoying fellowship with friends and family from across New Mexico. The annual Convention is also the time to recognize those who have served our industry.

NMBC sponsored the kickoff reception where Council members served up Beef Wellington, Beef Sliders and Beef Bruschetta. “Check In on the Checkoff” featured a panel of NMBC contractors who provide a variety of services to the Council including advertising, nutrition, education and Beef Quality Assurance programs. It was also time to thank two Council members. Zita Lopez, immediate past president of the NMBC, served for six years on the Council and will be missed. We also recognized the service of Matt Ferguson, also a past president of the Council, who served for six years. Each Council member was presented with the iconic framed photo of “New Mexico Beef is Great” that first appeared in National Geographic in 1991. 

33 JANUARY 2023 JANUARY 2023 33
JANUARY 2023 To
1209 Mountain Road Place NE, Suite C  Albuquerque, NM 87110  505-841-9407  www.NMBeef.com
learn more visit www.NMBeef.com

DR. HAGEVOORT IS 2022 BEEF BACKER

The Beef Backer Award is presented annually by the New Mexico Beef Council, for outstanding efforts to advance the New Mexico Beef industry through Promotion, Education and Research.

This year’s recipient, Dr. Robert Hagevoort, is no stranger to the New Mexico beef and dairy community. Joining New Mexico State University in November of 2005 as an Extension Dairy Specialist, he has been working closely with the dairy industry in New Mexico and across the West regarding many issues affecting the dairy and beef industry. A native of the Netherlands, Dr. Hagevoort received his Bachelor of Science Degree in Tropical Animal Production from the International Agricultural College in Deventer. He followed this up with a Master of Science Degree in Natural Resource and Grazing Management from Texas A&M University and finally his Doctor of Philosophy degree in Ruminant Nutrition, also from Texas A&M University.

Dairy cattle remain a significant contributor to the U.S. beef supply. In addition to dairy and beef crossbreds, dairy finished steers, cull cows and finished heifers all produce beef for the total supply. Since 2002, the percentage of dairy beef contribution to the total U.S. beef supply has ranged from 18 to 24 percent. Both the beef and dairy industries work together to create a successful beef marketplace. In an effort to rebuild a dairy education program and establish a minor degree in Dairy Science at NM State University, Dr. Hagevoort is a co-founder of the U.S. Dairy Education & Training Consortium (USDETC). The USDETC recently completed its 2022 six week dairy training program in Clovis, New Mexico. Fifty students attended and joined the

prestigious list of Consortium graduates.

To date, the dairy consortium’s attendance exceeds 600, hailing from 60 different universities across the country and North America. The program focuses on educating and training the next generation of dairy and allied industry professionals. The curriculum is keenly focused on the role beef plays in dairy, especially in today’s world of genomics. Both the National Dairy FARM Program and the Beef Quality Assurance (BQA) programs are a critical part of the curriculum.

Based on responses from former students now in the workplace, most of the students end up working in animal agriculture: 43 percent on a farm, 36 percent on a dairy farm, and 7 percent on a beef operation. Almost 80 percent of the students suggest that the program has been an extremely important part of career development. When students were asked what they would share with family and friends about the program, a participant responded, “This experience opened my mind to the transparency of the industry. It provided me with firsthand experience that has changed my perspective on welfare and husbandry standards. I am extremely appreciative for this opportunity that has impacted my life and my career as a future food animal veterinarian”. Dr. Hagevoort has played a key role in a variety of dairy, beef and dairy beef projects. He was the driver of a joint initiative between the Beef Quality Assurance Program and Dairy FARM Program’s development of a stockmanship video for National Cattlemen’s Beef Association in 2016. He has presented at various conferences and meetings on engaging farm/ranch employees including the NCBA virtual Stockmanship

& Stewardship in 2020, and several FARM Evaluator Conferences and the CCQA Caretaker Course in 2022. Additionally, he serves on the national FARM Workforce Development Task Force.

Robert has provided training on proper animal handling and welfare, including the use of antibiotics, and employee safety. Both have been adopted by National Milk Producers Federation as part of the Farmers Assuring Responsible Management Program.

NM Beef Council executive director, Dina Chacon Reitzel said, “Dr. Hagevoort has fostered a positive relationship with agribusiness, including the Beef Council. Over the years, Dr. Hagevoort participated in all of the council’s Gate-to-Plate tours, teaching attendees about dairy production in the state and also serving as an expert when crisis occurred in the industry. He generously provides the opportunity at the consortium for the council to teach the students about the Beef Checkoff and its importance to the beef and dairy industry. The Beef Council is proud to serve as long time sponsors of the consortium, realizing the benefit to our industry and all of U.S. agriculture. The New Mexico Beef Council is grateful to Dr. Hagevoort for a job well done!

NEW MEXICO BEEF COUNCIL 2022-2023 DIRECTORS
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR Dina Chacon-Reitzel 505-841-9407 CHAIRPERSON Cole Gardner (Producer) 575-910-8952 Sarah Fitzgerald (Feeder) 830-739-3450 John Heckendorn (Purebred Producer) 505-379-8212 Jim Hill (Feeder) 575-993-9950
BOARD DIRECTOR Boe Lopez (Feeder)
DIRECTOR Cole Gardner (Producer)
DIRECTOR
McKenzie
NMBC DIRECTORS: Nancy Phelps, (Producer) 575-740-0957 Kimberly Stone (Producer) 202-812-0219
Van Dam (Dairy Representative)
VICECHAIRPERSON Dan Bell (Producer) 575-799-0763 SECRETARY Marjorie Lantana (Producer) 505-860-5859 DIRECTORS
BEEF
505-469-9055 FEDERATION
575-910-8952 USMEF
Kenneth
(Producer) 575-760-3260
Joel
575-714-3244

NM Dept. of Ag to Hold Specialty Crop Grant Program Workshops in January

Over $500,000 in funding is available through the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) Specialty Crop Block Grant Program, and the New Mexico Department of Agriculture (NMDA) is holding virtual workshops in January in preparation for the Feb. 14 grant proposal deadline.

Outreach workshops for potential applicants to learn more and to gain a better understanding of the program will be held as follows:

Tuesday, Jan. 10 at 1 p.m.

Register in advance for this meeting at: nmsu.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJEkfCoqDMrHNaBbrAQH830wtPHdyb9UMfT

Friday, Jan. 13 at 7:30 a.m.

Register in advance for this meeting at: nmsu.zoom.us/meeting/register/ tJMldeGvpjwoHtYcdLo7h939XgCfHrHiFB2w

Tuesday, Jan. 17 at Noon

Register in advance for this meeting at: https://nmsu.zoom.us/meeting/register/ tJIscOGpqDsqGdLlUGLooqfeTTo0NlSe9E0k

After registering, individuals will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.

If someone is unable to attend any of the workshops, he or she may schedule a one-onone meeting by emailing specialtycrops@ nmda.nmsu.edu by Tuesday, Jan. 17. Emails must include the preferred date and time.

The USDA established the grant program to enhance the competitiveness of specialty crops, which are defined by the USDA as “fruits, vegetables, tree nuts, dried fruits, horticulture and nursery crops.” Through enhanced competitiveness of specialty crops, the goal is to improve food access in underserved communities and improve development of local and rural food systems.

The program is part of the Farm Bill, and the USDA allocates funding to state departments of agriculture. Interested individuals and non-federal entities (producer groups, non-profits, trade associations and colleges/ universities) are eligible to apply. Grant funds cannot be awarded to projects that solely benefit a particular commercial

product or provide a profit to a single organization, institution or an individual.

All project proposals must prioritize either marketing, training, certification, food safety, pest control or plant health for the benefit of specialty crops and must be submitted to NMDA for review by a panel of staff and experts by Tuesday, Feb. 14.

New Mexico Secretary of Agriculture Jeff Witte said his team at NMDA is here to help producers through the application process.

“I encourage anyone who is eligible to apply for this grant to take advantage of the free workshops we are offering, so our team may guide you along the way,” said Witte. “We don’t want anyone in the New Mexico agriculture community to miss out on this funding opportunity.”

Before applying, applicants should consider their eligibility for federal funds, types of expenses needed, infrastructure, timeframe, potential beneficiaries, possible partners, reimbursement of expenditures and other factors. Considering all of these factors beforehand can help determine the potential need for federal aid.

An animated video explaining this grant program may be viewed on NMDA’s YouTube channel or the ElevateNMag.com website. Questions should be directed to specialtycrops@nmda.nmsu.edu.      ▫

JANUARY 2023 35

ROSWELL LIVESTOCK AUCTION SALES, INC. & ROSWELL LIVESTOCK AUCTION TRUCKING,

INC.

Producers hauling cattle to Roswell Livestock New Mexico Receiving Stations need to call our toll-free number for a Transportation Permit number before leaving home. The Hauling Permit number 1-800-748-1541 is answered 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.

Roswell livestock Auction Receiving stAtions

LORDSBURG, NM

20 Bar Livestock Highway #90 at NM #3 – East side of highway. Receiving cattle for transport 2nd & 4th Sunday of each month. Truck leaves Lordsburg on Sunday at 2:00 p.m. (MST) Smiley Wooton, 575/622-5580 office, 575/6266253 cell.

PECOS, TX

Jason Heritage is now receiving cattle every Sunday. For information to unload contact Jason Heritage 575/8409544 or Smiley Wooton 575/626-6253. NO PRIOR PERMITS REQUIRED. Trucks leave Sunday at 4:00 p.m. (CST)

VAN HORN, TX

800 West 2nd, 5 blocks west of Courthouse. Bob Kinford, 432/284-1553. Trucks leave 1st & 3rd Sunday at 3:00 p.m. (CST)

MORIARTY, NM

Two blocks east and one block south of Tillery Chevrolet. Smiley Wooton 575/622-5580 office, 575/626-6253 mobile. Trucks leave Sunday at 3:00 p.m. (MST)

SAN ANTONIO, NM

River Cattle Co. Nine miles east of San Antonio on U.S. 380. Receiving cattle for transport 2nd & 4th Sunday of each month. Michael Taylor 575/418-7398. Trucks leave Sunday at 3:00 p.m. (MST)

Listing Coyotes as Endangered in Parts of AZ & NM

Groups Seek to Protect Mexican Wolves

In a formal “similarity of appearance” Endangered Species Act petition filed in early December, 14 radical environmental groups are urging the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service (FWS) to provide better federal protection for Mexican gray wolves by listing its look-alike species, the coyote, within the wolves’ recovery area.

Illegal wolf killing is the leading cause of death for Mexican gray wolves, and the similarity of appearance with coyotes is a common excuse for wolves being unlawfully killed.

The petition purports includes evidence that numerous Mexican wolves have been killed by people who believed, or claim to have believed, they were killing a coyote. This misidentification invokes a Department of Justice practice known as the “McKittrick policy” that effectively protects the killers from prosecution because it requires the government to prove that the defendants knew they were killing an endangered species when they pulled the trigger.      ▫

The U.S. Department of Transportation’s Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) has announced a decision to deny an application from the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association and other groups for an hours of service (HOS) rule exemption.

The request for an exemption, which FMCSA first published in February 2019, was made on behalf of drivers who transport livestock, insects and aquatic animals. The applicants requested approval for drivers, after 10 consecutive hours off duty, to drive through the 16th consecutive hour after coming on duty, and to drive a total of 15 hours during that 16-hour period. FMCSA said

36 JANUARY 2023
Rejects Livestock Haulers’ Hours of Service
USDOT
Exemption Request
900 North Garden · P.O. Box 2041 Roswell, New Mexico 88201 575/622-5580 www.roswelllivestockauction.com CATTLE SALES: MONDAYS HORSE SALES BENNY WOOTON CELL 575/626-4754 SMILEY
Trucks are available 7 days a week / 24 hours a day
it determined, after analyzing the application
WOOTON CELL 575/626-6253

and public comments, that the exemption would not achieve a level of safety equal to the level achieved without such an exemption.

The HOS rule limits truckers to 11 hours of driving time and 14 consecutive hours of on-duty time in any 24-hour period, and requires prescribed rest periods.

Waivers from the regulation were allowed during the COVID-19 pandemic.      ▫

Lamb Goes Live

Seeking to capitalize on consumers’ penchant for online activity, the American Lamb Board (ALB) is hosting a series of virtual classes to share information about the versatility and benefits of American lamb.

ALB cites research showing 85 percent of Americans say they go online daily. Of those, 31 percent go online almost constantly and 48 percent several times a day.

“Online learning is the norm, so educating

consumers about American Lamb through virtual programs is something ALB is excited to provide,” said Peter Camino, ALB chairman.

And, according to ALB consumer research conducted in 2021, consumers want and need more information about lamb cuts. Most consumers are only familiar with one or two cuts and recipes, and they are interested in expanding their lamb use.

ALB’s lamb cuts section on AmericanLamb.com is the second most frequently visited page after time and temperature guidelines.

Last month, ALB partnered with Kelly Kawachi from Blackbelly Market to do a virtual butchery demonstration highlighting American Lamb cuts and cooking methods. The live class sold out with 100 consumer attendees and is available for viewing on ALB’s consumer YouTube channel.      ▫

JANUARY 2023 37

New Mexico Water Use

Beyond Drought

Since my election in 2019 to the Valencia Soil and Water Conservation District Board of Supervisors, I’ve worked hard to gain a grasp of the issues facing the State of New Mexico in the areas of water, soil, agriculture, wildlife and habitat conservation and restoration. If there is any upside to the pandemic it’s the virtual meetings available to anyone interested. The following reflects my personal perspective only.

Of particular relevance here are the meetings of the New Mexico Interstate Stream Commission and New Mexico Tech Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources 50 Year Water Plan to meet Governor Lujan-Grisham’s request for an executive level plan that focuses on making New Mexico more resilient to climate change. The goal is to build a water plan that follows smart water management, sustainability, and equity.

A goal of this Water Plan research is “to learn what people are doing today to prepare

for a warmer and more variable water supply in the future and where gaps between supply and demand exist.” A focal point is the assessment of “resilience,” defined as the ability to anticipate, prepare for, and adapt to changing conditions and withstand, respond to, and recover rapidly from disruptions.

It’s not my goal, nor do I have the expertise, to summarize the several components of this complex plan. I can, however, draw attention to the fact that it may have a significant impact on future water supply and use state wide.

Conspicuously absent from the discussions at the water-meetings I’ve attended, with the exception of the New Water for New Mexico Conference in October, 2022, is any serious reference to the estimated 15 billion acre feet of brackish groundwater throughout our state or the saline produced water generated in the Permian and Delaware Basins in the southeast and the San Juan and Raton Basins in the north. There is also a large volume of surface water and agricultural return flows with elevated salinity levels. None of these non-traditional water assets is addressed as the potential water wealth they represent.

What are we doing currently to address

the drought? To deal with the warmer, dryer climate and reduced runoff, for the 20212022 irrigation season, one strategy of the Middle Rio Grande Conservancy District, whose job it is to deliver water to irrigators throughout the Middle Rio Grande valley, was to institute a voluntary fallowing program: growers are paid NOT to produce crops.

Water delivery to the migratory bird refuges along the river has also been reduced yet not addressed during the Water Plan meetings that I attended. The Rio Grande riparian corridor, less than two percent of the New Mexico land area, is used by 80 percent of the state’s vertebrate wildlife species. This river-forest corridor is a crucial link to bird survival. Birding is an especially important resource for rural New Mexico helping to generate part of the approximately $6.6 billion earned from tourism.

The Socorro based Festival of the Cranes is rated among the top three wildlife, birding and photography events in North America. The Bosque del Apache, the largest remaining wetlands complex in New Mexico, is one of the top five birding destinations in the world.

The current drought is forcing refuge managers to prioritize flooding between

38 JANUARY 2023
104 120 219 38 522 55 55 58 68 96 96 285 285 64 84 84 40 Debaca Torrance Guadalupe Bernalillo San Miguel Los Alamos Santa Fe Harding Sdoval Mora Colf Taos PecosR. Rio Grande RioGrande RioPuerco Canadian R. MoraR. RioChama GallinasR. Conchas L. E Abiquiu Res. L. Sumner Meadow Lake Valencia Peralta Isleta Pueblo South Valley Edgewood Sandia Heights North Valley P Paradise Hills Placitas San Felipe Pueblo Santa Ana Pueblo Eldorado at Santa Fe Santo Domingo Pueblo Zia Pueblo La Cienega Pena Blanca Cochiti Agua Fria Jemez Pueblo Tesuque White Rock Cuyamungue Nambe San Ildefonso Pueblo Santa Clara Pueblo Santa Cruz Chimayo San Juan Pueblo Alcalde Chamisal Penasco Vadito Ranchos de Taos Taos Pueblo s Trujillos Adelino Tome Gallinas h Ramon Gran Quivira Ricard Torrance Yeso Buchanan Largo Cardenas Joffre P Scholle Abo ker Broncho Silio Carnero Pedernal Negra Lucy Pastura McIntosh Chilili Escabosa Cuervo Isleta Newkirk Clines Corners Montoya S Palomas Pajarito Colonias Dahlia Armijo Dilia Stanley Anton Chico Sandia Park Villanueva Sena Conchas Sandia Pueblo Ribera Serafina San Jose Corazon Trementina Ilfeld Algodones Madrid Bell Ranch Santa Ana S Cerrillos Trujillo Rowe Lamy Romeroville Domingo Canoncito Sanchez Glorieta Sabinoso Onava El Porvenir Ponderosa Sapello San Ignacio Watrous Tererro Solano Valmora Cowles Tesuque Pueblo Optimo Gascon La Cueva Mora Cleveland Lucero Mills Holman Ojo Feliz Levy Ya Truchas Guadalupita Ojo Sarco Ocate La Jara Colmor Medanales Dixon Coyote Embudo Canones Abbott Youngsville Abiquiu Pilar Miami Carson El Rito La Madera French El Prado Canjilon Alire Ute Park Valdez Arroyo Hondo Colfax Canon Plaza Cebolla San Cristobal Tres Piedras H Koehler Tierra Amarilla ada Costilla M Garcia J Taos Ski Valley Corona Vaughn Willard Encino Tijeras San Ysidro Mosquero Jemez Springs Roy Wagon Mound Cuba Angel Fire Cimarron Maxwell Eagle Nest Red River Santa Rosa C Questa Mountainair Estancia Moriarty Pecos Springer Espanola Los Lunas Corrales Bernalillo Bosque Farms Taos Las Vegas Los Alamos Rio Rancho Albuquerque Santa Fe FEED MILLS n Manufacturers of a complete line of Livestock Feeds. n All feeds priced Mill to Feeder. n We deliver sacked & bulk range cubes. …isn’t it time you talked to Farmway? Call Toll Free in New Mexico 1-800/533-1580 Office & Mill: P.O. Box 370 Las Vegas, NM 87001 505/425-6775

food production units, wet meadow areas, and grasslands, all of which are critical to migratory birds, endangered species, and all refuge wildlife. For overall health, water must continuously flow through the refuge.

Often, as I sat at my desk, listening to experts and planners exploring and discussing our current water crisis, anticipating even more severe conditions, it sounded like New Mexico is in a time warp, with no one to learn from, no other agriculture producers in the world to study, no modern technology to adapt to our needs....nothing.....only our exhausted Rio Grande and our dirt ditches.

Yet ALL of the challenges that New Mexico is facing now, the even more severely water starved nation of Israel has faced and has developed multiple strategies to overcome. Israel, the land that went from water

starved to water surplus and willingly shares this technology with the world. Apparently, New Mexico 50 year water planners have never heard of that place.....or, they just don’t care to learn.

To remedy this curious situation I propose that a delegation of vested New Mexico water planners and users VISIT ISRAEL. Once they see with their own eyes what is being done in all sectors of water production, recycling, delivery, use, members of our delegation may be inspired and immediately recognize technologies, some very simple, that can be used to help solve New Mexico’s problems.

Why take a New Mexico Delegation to Israel?

Referenced here Israel: A Global Leader

in Water Management and Technology, State of Israel, Ministry of Foreign Affairs

Ї The ancient nation of Israel, over 60 percent desert, located in a semi-arid climate zone, has gone from water starved to water surplus. Israel is a world leader in all aspects of water management.

Ї To address the water shortage, Israel has developed a number of water related initiatives throughout the country including: storage solutions, water transfer by gravity and pumping stations, water drills, water quality inspection and control, waste water collection, and water and wastewater treatment.

Ї By 2015 the Israel water sector had succeeded in closing the significant

JANUARY 2023 39

gap between demand and the supply of renewable fresh natural water (RFNW) in the country. The gap was closed by 1) saving water, 2) reusing wastewater and 3) desalinating sea and brackish water. With the introduction of recycled and desalinated water, Israel no longer relies exclusively on RFNW.

Ї The high standard of wastewater treatment allows Israel to reuse effluents for unlimited irrigation in agriculture and in public and private gardens.

Ї Israel has constructed regional water grids providing recycled water. In 2005 desalinated water was introduced into the national grid.

Ї A centralized Sewage and Water Authority manages all water issues, including water utilities, water conservation, water reuse, water quotas, desalination, water technologies, hydrology, and pricing.

Ї Water technologies developed in Israel include: drip irrigation, advanced filtration, and advanced water leakage detection, rainwater collection and treatment systems, water security and smart-city technologies.

Ї In 1999 Israel initiated a long-term,

large-scale SWRO (Seawater Reverse Osmosis) desalination program. This has allowed Israel to close the gap between natural resources and demand, and to realize plans to maintain this sustainable consumption rate in the future.

Ї In addition to the five large seawater desalination plants, there are about 30 smaller facilities for desalinating brackish water from groundwater wells. Additional desalination facilities are planned for growing future demand. Unutilized desalinated water will be used to replenish Israel’s natural water systems.

Ї Municipal wastewater, a constant source of water throughout the year and not dependent on fluctuations in climate, is treated to a secondary or tertiary treatment, then sent to reservoirs, pumping stations and piping systems, and from there to the fields. By 2015 Israel was treating 86% of its wastewater for agricultural use. With upgrades to tertiary treatment, unlimited irrigation water will be available at reasonable cost.

Ї In recent decades Israeli farmers succeeded in doubling agricultural

yield for each cubic meter of water used for irrigation. One key to this success is the close collaboration and interaction between Israeli agricultural research institutes, farmers, and extension services (which facilitate the transfer of agricultural research and techniques to the field level).

Ї Israel is investing millions into cleaning contaminated rivers and streams across the land.

Ї Israel shares its knowledge and technology on water management with its neighbors. A tremendous regional project between Israel, Jordan, and the Palestinian Authority called “Red Sea–Dead Sea” includes the construction of an extensive pipeline from the Red Sea to the Dead Sea; a large desalination facility north of Aquaba, Jordan; piping systems to supply water from the facility throughout the region; and a hydro-electric power plant.

This reference document concludes: “In the past decades, Israel achieved a water miracle. By adopting a holistic approach to water consumption that encompasses good management, high tech development and public education, Israel transformed from a water parched nation to a global leader in the water sector.” Israel’s water journey is cited

40 JANUARY 2023
facebook.com/HudsonLivestockSupplements

only to share what is possible, not what is right for New Mexico’s future.

Our New Mexico–Israel delegation would not only see the national scale projects, but equally memorable the small, low-tech innovations occurring in all parts of the country. Projects range from the 14 kilometer tunnel and pumping units pushing desalinated water from the Mediterranean Sea up to Jerusalem, to the “magic fish pond” at the freshwater treatment plant in the Galil region where tilapia are the first line of defense to detect impurities in recycled water.

The Arava Valley, in the south, the land of endless summer, with nothing but brackish water and terrible soil, is viewed as the future of agriculture. Topsoil is being transported from soil rich regions, brackish water drilled and desalinated, green houses and net houses are used to protect the drip irrigated crops. Agriculture is flourishing.

A soil censor tool has been developed to assess field data: temperature, condition of the soil, moisture and salinity. The result of this assessment is a 10-20 percent yield increase.

In the 1950s a man-made lake was created in the Negev city of Yerucham. The lake water became polluted but in the 1990s a rehabilitation project restored Yerucham

Park. A water purification plant provides adequate water to irrigate the park and fill the lake, which has become one of Israel’s most popular bird-watching sites. The longgone blue cheeked bee-eater bird and the nearby canyon draw bikers and hikers to the area.

Though there are endless small scale innovative projects going on all over Israel, the last one I’ll mention is agriculture returning to the dry, scorching hot shores of the Dead Sea. Endangered biblical plants, “ the balm of Gilead”, frankincense and myrrh, are being grown in the salty soil using desalinated drip irrigation. The past is being brought back to life.

At first, Israel planned a few years ahead, now they are planning for decades ahead.

Sending a New Mexico delegation to Israel might encourage us to expand our own water planning perspectives, then we too can confidently meet the challenges of climate-change.      ▫

Ooops....

Sorry! In the December 22 Bull Buyers Guide Corn Ranches was omitted from the Bull Buyer Guide listing. That ad is on page 32.

Please accept our deepest apologies. And, go back and take another gander at the Bull Buyers Guide!      ▫

in the New Mexico Stockman. Call: 505/243-9515.

JANUARY 2023 41
DVERTISE

A Shooting Affray at Wallace, New Mexico

In the popular fiction of the Old West—first penny-dreadfuls, then movies and television—gunfights were the order of the day in many frontier towns, and they could occur for any number of reasons. There were bank, stagecoach and train robberies, of course, and cattle rustling, and other miscreant behavior as well. Sometimes the gunfights were a matter of honor, or contests to see who was fastest on the draw. Money, women, crooked card games and drunkenness also ranked high on the list of the causes of firearm violence.

None of those things had anything to do with a gunfight that claimed two lives in the New Mexico town of Wallace in 1889.

(Wallace—named in honor of Territorial Governor Lew. Wallace— was settled about 1884 and grew to a population of nearly 1,000. Over the years, the place was also called Annville, Thornton—in honor of another territorial governor, William T. Thornton— and finally Domingo Junction and then simply Domingo, for its proximity to the Santo Domingo Pueblo Reservation. The

town diminished in size gradually over the years until there was nothing left but a single trading post.)

This account of the Wallace affair is taken from several news items that appeared the Albuquerque Morning Democrat in July 1889. One of them was subtitled, “Full Particulars of the Shooting Affray by an Eye Witness.”

“The gunfight that took place at Wallace Friday was one of the liveliest while it lasted that ever occurred in New Mexico,” wrote a witness to the event.

As the story goes, a man identified as an Italian, coincidentally known only as Domingo, lived in the town, and he was afflicted with varioloid, a mild form of smallpox that was sometimes mistaken for measles. Another Italian named Joe Colcha took care of Domingo. The problem was that instead of staying at home and attending to the sick man, he insisted on “running around town.”

Local citizens had warned him to stay away from the businesses district and other public places. Townspeople correctly feared contagion.

On Friday morning, July 26, 1889, Joe appeared at the post office where fifteen or sixteen men had gathered. The witness didn’t say whether the men were there to consider how to deal with the problem of Joe Colcha, or were just there to get their mail. The former is probably the case since there was a lawman present. Joe stood beside one man who tried to run him off saying that he could give him smallpox. Another man threatened, “to smash him.” Joe took offense and left, but not for long. He soon returned to the post office with a Winchester rifle and opened fire, wounding a man by the name of Mitchell. Joe then ran into the street and fired three more shots into a nearby store where a crowd had gathered. Apparently, he didn’t hit anyone there.

The witness reported what happened next.

“The people of Wallace were poorly provided with arms and those who had guns at their houses started to find them. They gathered a few pistols and shotguns and started after Joe, who had taken to the hills. Two of the men were mounted on horses. Joe got into a small gully and commenced firing on the crowd. One of his shots struck a man named Moore who was mounted on a horse and passed through his kidneys [sic].”

In addition to the bullet wound to his body, his lower jaw was said to have been ‘shot away.’ The crowd reacted with unified anger and the reporting witness was quite succinct about what happened next:

“The Italian was riddled with bullets.”

The witness didn’t immediately mention that the fatally injured man was Warren Moore, a Bernalillo County deputy sheriff who had joined in the posse to help round up Joe after the initial shooting. [Sandoval County wasn’t created until 1903.] The correspondent added, though, “Moore is well known throughout Bernalillo County and his death causes intense sorrow in the community where he has resided during the past fifteen years.”

The witness wrote the final note: “A coroner’s inquest was immediately held and the verdict states that Moore came to his death by a gunshot wound caused by the Italian, who, the verdict states, killed himself.” [Emphasis added.]

No mention was made regarding the disposition of Joe Colcha’s remains, nor is mention made of what became of the afflicted Domingo.      ▫

42 JANUARY 2023
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No, America Does Not Owe the World Climate ‘Reparations’

I’ve made the case in previous columns that the climate change movement is mostly a climate change hustle. Let’s be real. None of this is about changing the temperature of the Earth. Even the most naive environmental activist can’t really believe that building windmills and driving Teslas is going to cool the planet.

This is all about money. Hundreds and hundreds of billions of dollars of government handouts.

That was never more blatantly transparent than at this year’s sham COP 27 climate conference in Egypt, which was attended by more than 20,000 delegates and activists from more than 100 countries. The only agreement that the delegates could reach was a hollow “commitment” from the rich Western nations—by that they mean the United States—to give “reparation” money to the poor nations of the world.

If you’ve never heard of this loony concept

before, the theory is that America owes the rest of the world money for burning fossil fuels over the last hundred or so years.

Huh? These were the fossil fuels that provided America with the energy to save humanity from fascism and communism during World War I, World War II and the Cold War. These energy sources are what have powered the industrial age, bringing light, heat and air conditioning. And they have powered our infrastructure, factories, an abundant food supply and a technology revolution. Add to that our drugs and vaccines, which have saved many hundreds of millions of lives globally.

payments. Not the other way around.

Oh, and did I mention that China and India skipped out on the conference this year? These are by far the two largest polluting nations, and they want no part of this global handshake “agreement.” This would be like celebrating that we have reached a peace agreement during World War II, except the bad news is that Germany and Japan aren’t on board.

It was the fossil fuel energy revolution of the last century that supplied America with the wealth and financial resources to provide some half a trillion dollars of disaster and foreign aid to seemingly every area of the rest of the world. And now, President Joe Biden’s dunces are agreeing with foreigners that we owe them money?

The sliver of good news here is that Republicans are about to run the House of Representatives, and one of their first policy declarations will be to declare we are not sending a penny of climate foreign aid to other nations when we have mammoth problems here to solve at home.

The climate change movement is really a climate change hustle that’s all about money”, columnist Stephen Moore says.

America should be getting reparation

It’s almost sinister that at a time when many thirdworld countries lack basic health care, adequate food production, clean water, affordable/ reliable electric power and basic schooling for the young (especially girls), the European and American delegation is giving sermons on the dangers of climate change.

With a fraction of the money the climate fanatics want to spend on green energy, the world could save millions of lives simply by ensuring the poor have access to clean drinking water and save millions of lives over the decades to come.

The Department of Animal & Range Sciences is part of the College of Agricultural, Consumer & Environmental Sciences

The Department also offers pre-veterinary studies –our graduates have a high acceptance rate into veterinary medicine programs. We offer graduate degrees at the Master of Science and Doctor of Philosophy levels. The M.S. or Ph.D. in Animal Science can emphasize nutrition or physiology, and offers a Ph.D. in Range Science to study range management, range ecology and watershed management.

• The Chihuahuan Desert Rangeland Research Center (The College Ranch) –64,000 acre ranch just outside of Las Cruces

• The Corona Range & Livestock Research Center – 28,000 acre ranch & facilities in Corona, NM

• Student organizations, including a Block & Bridle Club, Pre-Vet Club, Range Club, Horsemen’s Association, Therapeutic Riding Club, & Judging Teams

• Clayton Research Center hosts research on shipping protocols, particularly evaluating the health and performance of newly received cattle, and nutrition and management from feedlot to slaughter

What all of this means is that the U.S. is under no moral or legal obligation to pay reparations to any nation. The U.S. is running a $1.2 trillion budget deficit, so there is no extra money in the bank vaults to spend right now on foreign aid. Perhaps when we’ve balanced the budget and we have surpluses.

That would be around the third Wednesday of never.

Moore is a senior fellow at the Heritage Foundation and an economist with FreedomWorks. His latest book is “Govzilla: How the Relentless Growth of Government is Devouring our Economy.” ▫

44 JANUARY 2023
Stephen
Dr. Shanna Ivey – 575-646-2515 • Dr. John Campbell – 575-646-6180 http://aces.nmsu.edu/academics/anrs ANIMAL & RANGE SCIENCES The Department of Animal & Range Sciences is part of the College of Agricultural, Consumer & Environmental Sciences animal & range sCienCes Four on-campus animal facilities house: beeF CaTTle/horses/swine/sheep Students can major in Animal or Rangeland Resources and are provided with the very best of “hands on” academic instruction by our faculty. Fully equipped labs allow students access to cutting-edge
in: LIVESTOCKNUTRITION / GENETICS / PHYSIOLOGY / ENDOCRINOLOGY / MEATSCIENCE / WOOL / TOXICOLOGY / WATERSHED & RANGELANDECOLOGY / WEED & BRUSHCONTROL / PLANTSYSTEMATICS / GRAZINGMANAGEMENT
research
Dr. John Campbell –575/646-6180 / Dr. Dennis hallford –575-646-2515 http://aces.nmsu.edu/academics/anrs/
THE DEPARTMENT ALSO OPERATES

EPA Holding January Hearings Pushing for More Energy Regulations

On January 10th through the 12th, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) will be holding hearings to implement new policies aimed at “reducing emissions of methane and other … air pollution from both new and existing oil and gas operations” by “adding proposed requirements for sources not previously covered.”

New Mexico “climate change” supporters are lining up to testify in support of the anti-energy proposal, with claims that more regulation on private oil and gas will help save the planet.

“Melissa Hornbein, senior attorney with the Western Environmental Law Center, said to Kiowa County Press that the anti-energy rules will be “a step in improving a draft rule issued by the EPA last year.” Hornbein noted how the rules will be “primarily targeted at reducing venting and flaring.”

Four Corners-area resident Don Schreiber claimed in the report that “the extraction industry shouldn’t be allowed to continue self-reporting on its methane waste – which he described as the ‘fox guarding the henhouse,’ because the true value of royalties owed to the state remain unknown.”

The 288-page “emissions guidelines” text of the rule includes the word “emissions” 730 times.

The proposal would “limit the use of flares for eliminating venting of associated gas from oil wells. The supplemental proposal would require owners or operators to route associated gas to a sales line, use the gas for fuel or another beneficial purpose, or reinject it into a well for enhanced oil recovery.

While the November proposal also would have allowed owners and operators to route associated gas to a flare that reduces methane and VOC by 95 percent, the supplemental proposal would allow flaring of the gas only

if the owner or operator submits a demonstration, certified by a professional engineer or other qualified individual, that a sales line is not available and other beneficial uses are not feasible for technical or safety reasons.”

For more information visit: www.epa.gov/system/files/ documents/2022-11/EPA%27s%20Oil%20and%20 Natural%20Gas%20Supplemental%20Proposal. How%20to%20Comment.pdf      ▫

JANUARY 2023 45

Glittering Generalities

The best writing advice I ever got was to avoid “glittering generalities.” A good example is, “A dog is a man’s best friend.” It’s a generality, and not true in every instance. A wife may be a man’s best friend, or a bottle of whiskey, a mistress, a cat, or a Rhode Island Red rooster, as was the case of a neighbor I once had. What a loon!

I bet the person who first said that a dog is man’s best friend never owned a horse. Don’t get me wrong, I dearly love dogs, in fact, if I had to choose between living with a bunch of city folks, or a pack of wild dogs, I’d pick the mutts every time.

Speaking of city slickers, they’d have a tendency to choose a dog over a horse because there is a dog found in 75 percent of American households, while only 1 percent of Americans own a horse. What a shame. I’ve found that the love of a good horse is second only to the love of a good woman. (My wife will be glad to know I put her first.)

It’s no exaggeration to say that dogs and

horses have many things in common. Both can take you for a ride around a racetrack, can sleep any time night or day, go crazy in thunder and lightning, and both species have been known to occasionally bite the hand that feeds them.

I’ll admit that dogs do have their advantages. They’ll usually come when called, whereas I had to sneak up on my horse Gentleman to catch him. Dogs don’t buck very hard, are cheaper to feed, can’t kick you into the next county, and are easier to pick up after. Can you envision taking your horse for a walk like city folks do with their dogs, with those little plastic bags they use as a glove to pick up after their pooch? If it was a horse instead they’d need a ten gallon, triple-strength garbage bag to drag behind them.

Dogs are also a lot easier to get rid of than a horse.

Having said all that, I like the fact that you have to earn the respect and love of a horse, while the lifetime friendship of a dog can be bought with a few table scraps. That’s because a dog’s brain and his stomach are in the same place.

Your horse can’t sleep at the foot of your bed (without hogging all the covers) and you can’t cuddle and carry your horse around in your arms like you can a Chihuahua or Cockapoo, unless you’re heckuva lot stronger than I am. Your horse also can’t ride around in the cab of your pickup like your dog does without it getting a little crowded. And if the wife wants to go along for the ride you’re going to hurt one of their feelings by making one ride in the back. And I’ll admit that with

many dogs you can tell them to sit and roll over, whereas the last horse I had that could do that darn near died from a twisted gut.

Yes, a dog is about as close to perfection as an animal can get, and that’s no glittering generality. And yet... a dog is not a horse, if you know what I mean?

I recall that the very first time I ever climbed up on a horse I fell head over heels in love. Literally. When I got up and dusted myself off I immediately wanted to be a cowboy and spend the rest of my life in the saddle. Who can resist when a horse looks at you with those big brown eyes and nuzzles your hand looking for a treat?

Horses don’t watch TV like dogs do and they are more noble, intellectual and self-sufficient. They’re also capable of hauling you around all day with nary a complaint, whereas most dogs don’t like the sensation of 280 pounds of ugly, dead weight on their backs. That great American cowboy, Will Rogers, once said that, “A man that don’t love a horse, there is something the matter with him.”

And that, my friends, is no glittering generality.      ▫

46 JANUARY 2023
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Inflation’s Impacts on Meat Industry Expansion

At the beginning of 2022, meat processors were riding one of the strongest markets in recent memory. Recordhigh margins, surging demand and soaring exports made U.S. meat a booming industry, and processors responded with aggressive plans for expansion.

Between adding capacity to existing plants and constructing entirely new facilities, the meat industry was committing billions of dollars to its expansionary visions, with the cattle industry alone looking to add 9,500 head to its daily capacity.

As 2022 comes to a close, the situation could not be more different: The U.S. economy is now experiencing its highest rates of inflation in four decades; prices across all industries (particularly in construction and food) have posted double-digit jumps from last year; and the Federal Reserve, in response to that inflation, has pursued aggressive monetary action and driven interest rates to their steepest levels in 24 years.

It’s a dramatic change that has inspired some reflection among processors, as economic headwinds now fly in the face of their profitability and growth plans.

“The industry, as a whole, is reevaluating the situation,” says Jeff Millican, a senior vice president with Wells Fargo’s agribusiness division. “I think it ultimately comes back to if they delay a construction, is it delayed indefinitely until things recalibrate? Or are they canceled altogether?”

And the overall circumstances, says Samir Sonti, an assistant professor at the CUNY School of Labor and Urban Studies, present the meat industry with historic challenges.

“We haven’t seen anything like this in a long time,” Sonti says, describing both 2022’s inflation and the Fed’s aggressive response. “I’m not sure we’ve seen anything like this in a century, since the return of the gold standard after World War I. It’s unclear what could happen after decades of general monetary ease.”      ▫

Please call Colten Grau to arrange a visit. He’s working hard for our ag community and he’s eager to go to work for you! Give us a chance to compete for your land and operating loans!

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JANUARY 2023 47
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John Fowler December 14, 2022 RITF Annual Meeting, Albuquerque NM

Ihave been asked to say a few words about my good friend and colleague, John Fowler, the former coordinator of the Range Improvement Task force. I will not try to enumerate the many accomplishments of John’s time as coordinator of the Task Force, I will just relate a few words of how I like to remember John. These are words I intended to say at John’s life celebration and circumstances didn’t allow for me to speak. I gave them to Johnette and she asked if I would deliver them here.

John always had a peculiar way of greeting or introducing someone. You never knew what he was going to say, if you were described as a Bull, Stud, Stallion etc. He had a knack for remembering names and faces of people. At the task force advisory board annual meetings, he would introduce all of

those present around a large table setting and there might be 50 to 75 people sitting and he could go around and call each by name and where they worked with out any help. Something, I wish I could do as I can’t recall a person’s name that we have been sitting around and talking about.

I used to tease John that he used too many flowery words as he gave a talk or testimony. But that wasn’t always the case.

In probably one of the first times that the task force gave testimony at a major meeting was in 1980 or 1981 in the Socorro County Courthouse on the Draft BLM Environmental Impact statement. The court room was filled up to capacity and people were sitting in the jury box and everywhere.

We were talking from a podium on the judge’s bench. John was nervous as we all were and when it came time for him to speak, the TV camera crew was late and setting up in front of the podium as John began to speak. John had a death grip on both sides of the podium and his knuckles were white from the lack of blood flow. There were two ladies setting behind John and one said to the other, just look at his knees shaking, which made it worse for John.

From that beginning, John went on to

Cattlemens Livestock

NMSU Range Improvement Task Force back row (l to r) Casey Spackman, San Fernald, Chris Allison, Doug Cramm, and Nick Ashcroft. front row (l to r) Jon Boren, Marcey Ward, Johnette Fowler with John’s postumas Pioneer Award, Jerry Schickendanz and Sam Smallidge

become somewhat of an orator in giving talks or input into a meeting. But you could always tell when John had had enough of the proceedings when he would take off his glasses and toss them on the desk or table and begin with GENTLEMEN and proceed to tell them why that they were wrong.

I suspect that John’s kids have experienced the same event as he began to lecture them on their behavior.

John loved his children and family as he loved his students at the University. One of John’s proud moments for students was when we were setting up the conditions for at that, time the largest cash gift to the University. Mr. Tom Linebery, rancher who was giving the money was upset that the NMSU Foundation was going to take 4½ percent to manage the fund. John countered that we could have the Foundation, College and RITF each contribute 1½ percent for student scholarships and therefore nullify the management fee. Tom was happy and students were gaining three new scholarships.

I want to finish with how thankful I have been that John came to work for the RITF and spent his entire career at NMSU. When I was hiring new professors to fill the ranks of the task force, Dr. Jim Gray, NMSU Ranch Economist, and my go-to person in the early days of the task force. He said that he knew of the perfect person for the economist position for the task force, but he was still in school at Iowa State. Would I wait until he finished his PHD? John was a former student of Dr. Grays.

We waited until he finished and the rest is history.

Thanks for listening and this recognition which is a great honor to my friend the MIGHTY STALLION.

– Jerry G. Schickedanz

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It is a new year, and hope springs eternal for us. Hopes and prayers for more snow and rain, for the water table to somehow get back to where it should be. Hopes that the government might actually see things from our perspective. Hope for a great grass year, and a great market. Hopes and prayers will always be a big part of anyone making their living in agriculture. Without faith we won’t make it long.

Some of us may be fortunate enough to live in a rural area where old-fashioned New Year’s celebrations take place. The old ranch dance and covered dish event where kids finally give in to sleep swaddled in coats under a bench while their parents take advantage of a rare chance to dance. Celebrating with your neighbors of out with the old and in with the new.

Perhaps the biggest thing about January

is the “new” part. An opportunity for new things while we hang on to those good, traditional things. Trying new methods and new products is an opportunity to learn, and to grow. Whether it is trying out a new breed of bull, a new feed or supplement, a new technique or even a new method of keeping books. We won’t know if we don’t try. And we have to continue trying if we are going to keep our businesses thriving.

Many of us make resolutions. We plan on doing things better in the new year every time the calendar rolls around to January 1. On a personal level it may be to eat healthier, exercise more, lose weight, watch less television. On the business end it is more likely to be along the line of getting things done in a timely manner or cutting costs while producing a better product with less time and labor. I think those are things we all would like to do.

No matter what the circumstances are, we usually try to celebrate that a new year has arrived. Sometimes we celebrate that a dismal year is over, with hope that the next one will be better.

The recipe below is about celebrating and about change. It is not what would have been termed as traditional ranch food a few years back. It is a chance to try something new,

FIBERGLASS TANKS

however. Some folks put it on rice. I try to opt for the healthier version of serving stirfried veggies with it.

Honey Walnut Shrimp

1 lb. med. size cleaned deveined shrimp 1 c. water

1 c. granulated sugar

1 c. walnuts

Kosher salt

Freshly ground black pepper

2 large eggs, beaten ½ c. flour ½ c. cornstarch vegetable oil for frying 1/4 c. mayonnaise

2 Tbsp. honey

2 Tbsp. heavy cream or sweetened condensed milk

Bring water and sugar to a boil in a small saucepan. Add walnuts. Turn heat down to medium-low. Cook, stirring occasionally for 2 to 3 minutes.

Line a baking sheet with wax paper. Using a slotted spoon remove the walnuts and place them on the baking sheet, spreading them out. Let cool.

Mix mayonnaise, honey, cream or condensed milk together in a small bowl. You can add a dash of lemon juice if you like.

Pat shrimp dry with paper towels and season lightly with salt and pepper. Place eggs in a shallow bowl and flour/cornstarch in another shallow bowl, mixing the flour and cornstarch. Dip shrimp in eggs, then in flour mixture coating well.

Fry shrimp in about an inch of hot oil til golden brown.

Drain the shrimp, place on serving platter. Pour sauce over and sprinkle the walnuts over the top.      ▫

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Phonees & Phonies

One of the nicest aspects of living here at the ranch is that you get some slight feeling of isolationism. Since our ranch is located between two high mountains cell phone reception is almost nil.

Once in a while if the clouds are right and the birds are flying in the correct direction you might get a brief cell phone signal until

you take a step forward. Your other option is to climb our highest windmill on the highest spot on the ranch.

However, who in their right mind would voluntarily climb a windmill? Sometimes the young people that work for us enjoy getting a text during the day, which do come through on occasion.

Phones on horseback are never allowed. It seems to me if you are working a horse properly, how would you ever have time to answer a text? Besides horses are much more interesting than any texter.

Romance and nonsense can be taken care of after work hours quite easily. I always figure that I don’t need to hear 99 percent of the news and there is not much I can do about Ukraine or North Korea. On the ranch me and ole’Pard are free from the outside world. How sweet it is!

Since the election just ended let’s talk about Arizona a little bit. For some reason

there seems to be lots of shenanigans going on over here and it looks to me like the Republicans & Democrats are in bed together. Of course, as time passes, I’m thinking that we have a one-party system and we ranchers are going to get squeezed out by the city slickers eventually.

However, Arizona has a history of getting election results out promptly until the last few years after we got a Democrat Secretary Of State to oversee the elections. This year our Secretary Of State ran for Governor and never recused herself or resigned her position.

Since the election was certified, our present Republican Governor Ducey has welcomed the new Democrat Governor-Elect publicly with open arms. The odd thing is that our Republican Governor Ducey never once raised money nor campaigned for the Republican gubernatorial candidate or other Republican primary winners.

Besides, the Republican Minority Leader in the United States Senate Mitch McConnell pulled campaign monies from Arizona. Isn’t it interesting that the two driving Republican political forces backed the Democrat and wanted their own party to lose the Governor’s office.

That sounds like funny business to me. The race was very close, and probably a little party support would have won the governorship. I would suggest that both Arizona Governor Ducey and the Senate Minority Leader McConnell be thrown out of their own party as traitors. There is no chance that will happen as more than half the Republicans are in love with the Democrat party.

Like I said, it’s pretty much a one-party system.

If you stop and think about it, agriculture takes a beating every time a Democrat is in charge. The examples of that are getting cattle off federal lands in the West, shorting farmers of water for crops in California, and not owning up to federally created disasters such as out of control burns by the United States Forest Service and dumping dangerous mining chemicals into the Animas River in Colorado.

Now we have it once again in Arizona. I sure feel sorry for Arizona agriculture over the next four years. The trouble is it looks like New Mexico will suffer the same fate as they retained their Democrat Governor Grisham. Can anyone explain to me when it became fashionable to elect liberal old maids as governors of western states?

Why do we even bother to vote for two parties if they no longer exist? Happy New Year and good luck!      ▫

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Monuments, Endangered Species, a Tax on Water

In last month’s column I walked you through the mid-term elections and their potential for impacting livestock grazing.

I then predicted several items, using climate change as the action forcing event, that the progressive democrats and President Biden would implement, which were the following:

Ї increase funding for all their programs. with special emphasis on wildlife habitat and land acquisition

Ї designate more wilderness areas, wildlife refuges, national monuments, national parks, wild and scenic rivers and other land use designations

Ї place more emphasis on “lands with wilderness characteristics” and roadless areas during the planning

process, and Ї climate change will take a much more prominent place in all planning documents and decisions, including those on livestock grazing

I see I failed to mention water issues, especially those where control over water which would shift that control to the feds.

Let’s take a look at two of those: designate more “national monuments” and “wildlife habitat.”

President Biden has traveled to Colorado to designate the Camp Hale-Continental Divide National Monument.

According to fact sheet distributed by the White House, this designation represents his, “commitment to protect, conserve, and restore our country’s iconic outdoor spaces and historical sites for the benefit of future generations.”

It also announced that the Forest Service and the Department of Interior will bring forward a proposal to withdraw the Thompson Divide in western Colorado from all oil and gas leasing.

This was Biden’s first use of the Antiquities Act to designate a new national monument.

In addition, a group of enviros and tribes are pressing Biden to designate a 450,000 acre parcel in Nevada as the Ave Kwa Ame National Monument. In a recent speech Biden announced this area deserves a national monument.

This, apparently, will not satisfy their hunger for restrictive land use designations. One enviro has written, “It is hoped that the designation of Avi Kwa Ame as a national

monument will be only the beginning of his administration’s commitment to protecting 30 percent of the US land and waters by 2030.”

With respect to “wildlife habitat” we see what he has in store for New Mexico.

The Biden administration has issued two final rules to designate the lesser prairie chicken as an endangered species.

This has been done, according to the National Association of Counties, “despite ongoing efforts by federal, state and local partners to develop conservation initiatives, such as Candidate Conservation Agreements with Assurances (CCAA) and Habitat Conservation Plans (HCP), that have conserved millions of acres across the lesser prairie-chicken’s current range. Many of these conservation plans have been spearheaded by voluntary partnerships with farmers and ranchers.”

In other words, all that work to protect 9 million acres was not sufficient for the enviros or Biden.

We also have the jaguar in New Mexico and Arizona, which Biden has proposed for renewal to comply with a court order.

Further, 14 conservation groups have filed a petition”urging the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to provide better federal protection for Mexican gray wolves by listing its look-alike species, the coyote, within the wolves’ recovery area.”

Greta Anderson with the Western Watersheds project says, “If people are going to confuse Mexican wolves for coyotes, then it makes sense to stop killing coyotes in the areas where wolves are recovering.”

One final issue is on water. The Domestic Water Protection Act has been introduced by two Democrat congress members from Arizona (HR 9194). This legislation would impose an excise tax on the sale of any “water intensive” crop. How much? “The tax is 300 percent of the price for which the crop is sold and is paid by the manufacturer, producer, or importer of the crop.”

Whew! That’s all I can stand to write about this month.

Until next time, be a nuisance to the devil and don’t forget to check that cinch.

Frank DuBois was the NM Secretary of Agriculture from 1988 to 2003, is the author of a blog: The Westerner (www.thewesterner.blogspot.com) and is the founder of The DuBois Rodeo Scholarship and The DuBois Western Heritage Foundation ▫

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Three New Mexico Artists Receive Rounders Award

Anderson, Cox, Sundt celebrated for articulating Western way of life

New Mexico artists JaNeil Anderson, Tim Cox and Duke Sundt received the 2022 Rounders Award for their vivid artistic creations that tell the story of the Western way of life.

New Mexico Agriculture Secretary Jeff Witte presented the awards to Anderson, Cox and Sundt at the New Mexico Farm and Ranch Heritage Museum in Las Cruces.

The award was named after “The Rounders,” a classic Western novel that was written by Max Evans. Created in 1990 by former New Mexico Agriculture Secretary Frank DuBois, the purpose of the award is to honor those who live, promote and articulate the Western way of life.

Max Evans was the first-ever award recipient, and the Rounders tradition continues as this year’s recipients join 31 previous honorees.

Evans passed in 2020, however, the Rounders tradition lives on. Witte described these individuals as vivid creators of Western art that embody the tradition of the award.

“This year we have a remarkable trio of artists who each has his or her own unique method of telling a story through art, whether it’s through paintings or sculptures,” said Witte. “I am proud of the legacy Max has left in Western culture, and this year’s award recipients definitely live and articulate the Western way of life. Max would be proud.”

JaNeil Anderson

Anderson is a native Arizonan who currently ranches with her husband in Southern New Mexico. At the outset of her career, she worked in pencil, then moved to pastels and now works in oils. Working along with cowboys gives her the insight to accurately paint what she loves and knows. She strives to share a story in each painting, and that story is represented in the subjects’ gestures and expressions.

The attention to detail highlights the individualism in each person, animal or setting. Anderson studied under cowboy artist James Reynolds and R.S. Riddick. In 2020, she won a purchase prize award at the Women’s Group Show at the Booth Museum in Cartersville, Georgia, which now hangs in the permanent collection of the museum.

Anderson is also a signature member of American Women Artists and Oil Painters of America.

Tim Cox

Cox paints what he knows: vibrant cutting horses intent on holding that cow, cowponies covered in sweat after working a hard day or ranch horses sharing a wellearned drink at a glistening water trough. His cattle have authentic expressions, and frequent subjects include calves perhaps a little bewildered at a branding, bemused heifers waiting to be fed, a longhorn steer intent on leaving the country or a herd just shuffling along while being driven to better pastures. Ranchers, cutters, team ropers and cowhands all touch his heart.

He adds a striking landscape with dramatic skies that are clear blue with wispy pink clouds or spectacular thunderheads. His favorite times are being out on the ranches, absorbing every detail of what he and others are doing, so that he may go back to the studio and document the modern cowboy, as he has done for 47 years.

Cox is especially proud of his 2003 Prix de West Award and his two “Express Ranches Great American Cowboy Awards” from the National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum. He was admitted as a member of the prestigious Cowboy Artists of America in 2007. After serving on its board of directors and being a member for only a few years, he served as president in 2011, 2012 and 2016.

Duke Sundt

Sundt’s career as an artist started much differently than most. While his father was in the military, his family lived in a number of places; however, the last station of his father’s duty had the greatest influence on the young Sundt and his future career as a

sculptor. Between the ages of 9 and 13, his family lived in Copenhagen, Denmark. His exposure to museums, art galleries and outdoor monumental bronze sculptures in every city park left a lasting impression which led him to pursue a career as an artist specializing in bronze sculpture.

After moving to Las Cruces with his family and a seven-year stint on the rodeo circuit, Sundt received a Bachelor of Fine Arts with an emphasis in sculpture in 1971 from New Mexico State University. After working as a ranch hand, he determined that he wanted to illustrate the contemporary American cowboy in a realistically detailed, representational style.

Throughout his 50-year career, he has been fortunate to receive a number of monumental commissions, larger than life-size subjects ranging from Southwestern to military-themed sculptures. Primarily, though, he has been dedicated to portraying the American cowboy and the wildlife of the Southwest in smaller limited-edition bronzes in his own unique way.      ▫

58 JANUARY 2023
(l to r) Tim Cox, JaNeil Anderson, Duke Sundt, and New Mexico Secretary of Agriculture Jeff Witte.
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Trends for ‘23: FoodMix

Joining the year-end chorus, Chicago-based food marketing firm, FoodMix Marketing Communications, released its prognostications for trends in the food space for 2023.

They include: More-specific sustainability. Consumers are expected to be more engaged in the how and why a company is offering a sustainable

product, asking exactly how their purchase affects the planet.

More purpose. A company’s vision, mission and values are more meaningful than ever to audiences, and, the younger the generation, the more important they are. Focus on the “why.”

Don’t count on the late-night daypart. Younger generations seem less interested in staying out as late as their older counterparts did at the same age. Fears of continued food inflation and possible recession have piqued their interest in discounts.

But consumers are going out. Across the board consumers still are feeling the need to connect in-person after so many months in isolation, although they may economize their orders to save money.

Mushrooms come out of the dark. A

favorite partner of animal proteins, mushrooms will solidify their place in the culinary space in 2023.

Social media is still the ticket. While many apps are taking it on the chin in the public discourse, consumers will continue to rely on digital influences to lead them to new recipes, restaurants and other food-related trends.

Mocktails get more creative. Mocktails are adding produce and new flavors, keeping it fancy without alcohol. (Which goes along with hitting the hay earlier.)

Metaverse — maybe, maybe not. Making a splash in the virtual world is not proving as easy, or as inexpensive, as it did a few years ago. Generating actual revenue from investments still matters.      ▫

60 JANUARY 2023
LYSSY & ECKEL feeds Since 1945 905 White Mill Road Roswell, New Mexico 88203 All-Natural Alfalfa Based Feeds “In the Tradition of New Mexico” (575) 622-3260 www.lefeeds.com
2022 A P
Pecos Valley Alfalfa Since

2101 PB 9130 01/02/22 78 750 675 101 2.76 1.5 61 105 27

2109 R 8171 01/09/22 75 685 608 91 2.58 0.7 41 73 24 na 2110 535 8166 01/10/22 80 800 690 112 3.03 1.6 51 77 25 50 2114 75 5203 01/11/22 74 700 584 95 2.66 1.6 48 82 32 56 2118 R 8219 01/12/22 76 715 634 103 2.75 0.0 49 87 22 na 2123 52 9137 01/15/22 82 720 645 105 2.78 3.7 48 82 18 43 2130 R 7015 01/17/22 82 750 656 98 2.92 1.1 56 99 24 na 2137 920 9125 01/18/22 76 600 541 88 2.34 -0.1 47 72 25 49 2138 PB 9148 01/18/22 78 745 689 103 2.91 2.3 68 117 26 na 2140 88 9146 01/20/22 76 580 526 85 2.28 1.1 46 78 26 49 2143 535 7118 01/20/22 84 700 608 99 2.76 2.3 53 79 23 49 2144 535 3114 01/21/22 86 715 619 100 2.82 2.2 53 78 21 47 2150 18 0105 01/22/22 75 660 651 97 2.62 1.6 71 129 23 na 2152 03 0152 01/22/22 79 695 677 110 2.76 2.9 50 82 24 49 2156 18 0147 01/23/22 76 705 692 103 2.81 2.3 66 122 25 na 2164 75 8216 01/27/22 94 710 642 104 2.87 4.0 51 88 32 57 2169 03 0155 01/31/22 85 680 678 110 2.80 4.8 57 93 20 49 2201 18 0115 02/02/22 73 685 687 109 2.80 2.1 69 128 24 na 2202 52 5113 02/02/22 86 585 518 84 2.39 -1.4 42 61 21 42 2203 535 9117 02/03/22 79 760 716 116 3.17 2.1 52 76 29 55 2204 88 9115 02/05/22 90 570 540 88 2.39 5.4 59 101 33 63 2205 03 0401 02/06/22 71 525 541 88 2.22 1.3 47 75 21 44 2206 R 4226 02/09/22 78 610 562 89 2.61 -0.1 40 73 23 na 2210 PB 4203 02/11/22 79 645 597 95 2.78 2.5 68 116 25 na 2213 18 0167 02/13/22 74 565 594 94 2.46 2.4 72 132 22 na 2218 PB 4147 02/16/22 82 655 615 98 2.88 0.6 55 93 29 na 2220 75 5217 02/20/22 88 605 565 92 2.69 3.6 53 86 23 49 2221 535 8112 02/22/22 87 645 626 101 2.89 2.4 53 82 27 53 2224 88 8159 02/25/22 84 540 529 86 2.45 4.4 56 93 30 58 2305 18 0151 03/10/22 87 525 594 100 2.54 1.6 70 124 24 na 2306 535 6149 03/10/22 89 640 634 103 3.09 2.3 54 83 31 58 2308 75 8168 03/24/22 88 530 564 100 2.75 1.9 43 73 22 44 2309 52 8301 03/24/22 100 530 566 100 2.75 6.4 52 91 19 45

61 JANUARY 2023 JANUARY 2023 61 Cattle Bred for Performance OPTIMUM GENETIC POLLED HEREFORDS BLACK ANGUS HORNED HEREFORDS www.hoopercattlecompany.com STEVE & DEBBIE HOOPER · 575/773-4535 · FAX 575/773-4583 · 276 HOOPER RANCH RD., QUEMADO, NM 87829 — Registered Herefords & Black Angus — Hooper Cattle ompany OFFERING: Black Angus Polled & Horned Herefords EPDs & TPR Records available on all cattle. Range-raised, rugged, rock-footed at over 7,600 ft. elevation. Bulls & Open & Bred Females For Sale at Private Treaty at the Ranch GUARANTEED SOUND & FERTILE Bulls EPDs 9/30/22 205 D. W.W. TAG # SIRE DAM B.DATE B.W. W.W. ADJ.WT RATIO W.D.A. B.W. W.W. Y.W. MILK M&G
Private
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*ANGUS *POLLED HEREFORD *HORNED HEREFORD WE HAVE MORE BULLS FOR SALE. JUST GIVE US A CALL. Offering at
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THANKS FOR A BLESSED YEAR!

2022 was a banner year for the Cattlegrowers Foundation Inc. and we have YOU to thank for it! An extremely generous donation from the estate of Susan Spencer Frost and a 50 percent match of numerous other donations throughout the year have put the Foundation on footing that could only be imagined in the past. The production of the Ranch Raised Kids books is well on its way. There are so many great photos and stories that we have added 16 pages to the publication. There is still time to donate to this project!

62 JANUARY 2023
$70 each _______ x $70
$50 each ________ x $50
____ quantity TOTAL _________
Or, you can pre-order your Ranch Raised Kids book! BOOKS WILL BE AVAILABLE BY DECEMBER 2023 Hard Cover Books
= ___ quantity Soft Cover Books
=
Make checks payable to Cattlegrowers Foundation Inc. Orders may be mailed to P.O. Box 7035, Albuquerque NM 87194 or emailed to cattlegrowersfoundationinc@gmail.com. Orders and credit card payments may be made at www.cattlegrowersfoundation.org
Angus Cattle Ingenity Profile for BW, Maternal, & Carcass Traits Rick & Maggie Hubbell 505/469-1215 Mark Hubbell 575/773-4567 rick@hubbellranch.net P.O. Box 99, Quemado, NM 87829 OurBullAnnual Sale March 3, 2023, 1p.m. Cattlemens Livestock Auction, Belen, N.M. 35 - 40 Yearling Bulls featuring A.I. Sons of: Connealy Legendary 644L GAR Ashland Connealy Dry Valley Basin Payweight 1682 Connealy Maternal Made BUBS Southern Charm AA31

The Allure of Prison-Made

Many are drawn to collect items made by prisoners. Why is there such an allure with collecting these items? What makes them collectible? What is the story behind those who made them?

Prison-made items have been on collector’s lists for a very long time. For example, starting way back in the 1890s, Frank Conley, the warden at Deer Lodge, Montana created various programs in order to keep inmates busy. He believed it would keep them out of trouble. Deer Lodge Montana’s horsehair braiding program was one of the best known and popular inmate programs of its kind, and people collect bridles made at Deer Lodge (and many other prisons) to this day. Canon City, Colorado was another prison that had a bridle making program, except they were also one of the few prisons who had a metal shop. Consequently, they became know for making bits and spurs (along with horsehair bridles) and their bits and spurs are now some of the most prized possessions in many collector’s possession. Over the years, various prisons became known for producing different items.

But why collect them? One common reason heard is that folks are amazed at someone taking the time to build such an item by hand, using crude tools, and have it come out as good as it does. Since prisoners obviously have plenty of time on their hands, they tend to be very patient and take their time when making these crafts. Similar perhaps to what attracted us to Native American made crafts in the beginning. An appreciation for the time it takes and the fact that their tools and conditions may not have been the best, yet they were able to turn out a quality product, usually of much better quality than a mass produced piece of similar use.

Other reasons given range from being charitable (supporting someone who may not be in the best of circumstances) to the allure of it being made by an individual who

does not conform to normal societal standards, yet has an artistic side about them. I once heard a guy say while holding a pair of prison made spurs, “Just imagine, the S.O.B. who made these spurs also killed someone.”

One thing is for certain though, by buying the crafts, it helps to fund a portion of their rehabilitation.

So what makes them collectible?

The same thing that makes anything collectible, I suppose. Desirability, rarity and condition.

Somebody wants them, they are in limited supply and remain in good condition after all these years. That is what makes anything collectible when you get right down to it, but prison-made items seem to reach a whole other category of collectors. I know several people who collect nothing but prison-made bits or spurs, etc. Who knows why this is? The reasons are likely as varied as the collectors themselves.

Perhaps it is the intrigue about the men who made them? At some time or another, we have all probably known someone who spent time in prison. A lot of them may have even seemed like pretty good folks. Others who are incarcerated are just down right scary and we’re glad they are there. Maybe it’s the fact that this person who obviously had enough troubles to be locked up, also has an artistic side to them and can create works of art without the aide of using the best tools or having the best situation. Even a great Native Warrior like Geronimo turned to making trinkets once locked up by the Government. People flocked to buy something he had made. I guess the contrast between being a fierce warrior and an artist was intriguing.

Besides the quality and intrigue, could it be the brand? I know guys who will not drive anything but a Ford, for no other reason than that is what their daddy drove and their daddy’s daddy drove, etc. There are folks out there who will just buy certain items because

it is a brand they are familiar with. Maybe they were told when they were young that a prison made horsehair bridle is the best money can buy and they won’t buy anything else to this day, as a result of that thought taking hold in their mind. Other reasons might be monetary. Prison-made collectibles cover a wide range of prices that can fit most collector’s budgets.

But as mentioned, the reasons vary greatly as to why we collect prison-made items. Perhaps you have your own reason? We would love to hear from you. Happy collecting!      ▫

64 JANUARY 2023
Walla Walla prison-made bridle COLLECTORS CORNER by Jim Olson

WHY STOCKMEN PREFER RANGE CHANGER

Range Changer is a mix of three different types of Forage Kochia, along with Russian Wild Rye and Vavilov Siberian Wheatgrass and soon to be added, a very drought tolerant Smooth Brome Arid. This is not your typical brome. It’s very drought tolerant down to a 8 inch yearly precipitation.

Range Changer is my personally designed range mix. It is fashioned for arid climates and will improve your worst rocky, clay, sandy, poor, dry range ground. It thrives in extreme heat, cold, and drought. In other words, sow it on your poorest, rocky ground and watch it produce some amazing cow feed; and that’s at 6-8 inches of precipitation. Plant it in better conditions and it will totally out-perform your expectations. — Shane Getz, Westfork LLC, Tremonton, Utah

Range Changer is an extremely drought resistant rangeland mix, with several types of Forage Kochia originating from the sandy soils of the Middle East. As an arid range ground shrub, it loves extreme heat and extreme cold. In addition, it also has two very drought tolerant coolseason grasses. This mix will compete with prickly pear, yucca and will even grow under junipers, where normally nothing will grow. And…it will never freeze out …it truly is a miracle plant. I call it the alfalfa of the desert. If you live in dry cowboy country where you deal with droughts and fires, you owe it to yourself to become educated about this shrub. — Connor Kent, Kent Cattle, Lehi, UT

Forage Kochia does very well in arid, dry regions. It is good, high protein feed for fall and winter. It will grow well in all kinds of soil: alkali, sandy, rocky and clay. I always like to have other grasses in with the Forage Kochia, making it a well-rounded range feed. Bob Adams, Salt Wells Cattle Company, Promotory, UT

Range Changer is a very good fall and winter feed. It is a mix of several Forage Kochias and two cool season, drought resistant types of grasses. The mix will crowd out cheat grass and other noxious weeds and will increase your dry arid rangeland by at least three-fold. Another plus …because of the high moisture content in the Forage Kochia, it provides excellent fire prevention. Just last summer, in 2016, we had a wild fire on our winter sheep range. The fire came, raged over the mountain and then stopped as it hit our Forage Kochia (see photo below). Best feed available down to a six inch yearly rain fall. — Cole Selman, Selman Ranch, Tremonton, Utah

Ask us for more information about Range Changer. Also able to discuss warm season grasses if you would like along with the Forage Kochia.

Forage Kochia puts fires out.

The forage Kochia will not burn any day of the year.

Shane Getz, Westfork LLC • Tremonton, Utah • 435 230-1359 • RangeChanger.com

Cattlemen of the Year Darrell Brown

Nominated by their peers, the Cattlemen of the Year not only work on the ranch but is also a known advocate for agriculture whether in the form of education, legislative issues or both. A person that is always there to lend a willing hand in any situation, and someone who is present in their communities serving civically, often being noted as prominent members and supporters.

Darrell Brown and his family have been involved with the New Mexico Cattle Growers’ Association since his dad served as Executive Secretary of the Association in 1969. Though he never owned a ranch of his own, he worked side by side with his mentor and grandfather on his grandfather’s ranch in Durango, Colorado; later taking care of the cattle when they were moved to Mt. Taylor, west of Albuquerque.

Darrell graduated from West Mesa High

School in Albuquerque then graduated from New Mexico State University in 1978 with a Bachelor’s of Science in Animal Science. He followed that with a Master’s degree in Ag Business from NMSU in 1983.

He met his wife, Michelle, at NMSU and the two were married in 1978 while he was employed at the College Ranch. After graduating, the couple took a position in White Lakes south of Santa Fe in 1983 where Darrell was employed building fences. That year, their first son was born; shortly thereafter, the young family moved to Sedalia, Colorado where Darrell traveled throughout the western United States showing Santa Gertrudis cattle for the Cherokee Ranch.

In 1985, Darrell moved his family to take a job in Artesia. He began working as the ranch manager for Yates Petroleum on the Four Dinkus Ranch, west of Artesia. Here, the family welcomed a daughter and another son. As his children grew up in the community, Darrell fostered a positive working relationship with the local school system, going into the schools to bring about a favorable image of agriculture to the second graders at each of the school district’s five elementary schools. The partnership began when his oldest son was in second grade and continued for approximately fifteen years.

Darrell’s dedication to children in the state didn’t end with the local school district. For several years, he co-chaired the successful Stockmen Care About Kids promotion

done in conjunction with KOB-TV, the University of New Mexico Children’s Hospital and Children’s Miracle Network Telethon. He has also been actively supportive of the popular Youth Ranch Management Camp, not only serving as an industry mentor to our youth attending the camp, but also securing scholarships for students who could not afford to attend the camps.

In 1999, after the death of his immediate boss, Darrell was promoted to the position of General Ranch Manager of all four of the ranches under the Yates Corporation. He spent many hours on the road, traveling to the Ojo Feliz, north of Las Vegas; the Atarque, west of Albuquerque; and the Cross D at Mayhill, while still running the Four Dinkus. He eventually relinquished his duties at the Cross D but continued as general manager of the other three ranches.

In 2020, after the dissolution of Yates Petroleum, Darrell was hired by Mr. Yates to exclusively manage the Cross D Ranch at Piñon; so, after 35 years in Artesia, he and his wife moved to the base of the Sacramento Mountains.

Some of Darrell’s achievements include: Ї 15 years as District Supervisor in the Peñasco and Central Valley Soil and Water Conservation District. Ї NM Wool Growers Amigo Award in 1994 Ї NMDA Pacesetter Award in 2009

CowBelle Man of the Year in 1996

NM Beef Council Director 2009-2015

NMCGA Outstanding Contribution Award 1994-1995

Beef Council Beef Backer Award in 2017

Darrell has been married to his wife, Michelle, for 44 years. Together they have three children, eight grandsons, and a granddaughter.      ▫

JANUARY 2023 67 2023
Ї
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Four generations of the Brown family gathered at the Joint Stockmen’s Convention to celebrate Darrell’s honor as cattleman of the year.

2022 King Service Award Patty Waid

worked with teams, local and international, on conferences in-state and out of state. Client events include two SolarPaces Conferences, National Governor’s Conference, American Culinary Federation-NM Chef’s Auction, NMSU Beef Culinary Trainings, Rotary Clubs, Presbyterian Rust Medical Center Grand Opening and Society of Vacuum Coaters, etc.

Patty is married to Earl “Tiny” Waid and they have two sons, and two loving daughters-in-law living in Parker, Colorado and O’Fallon, Missouri. Patty and Tiny are proud of their four grandsons. One is a Nuclear Scientist in Oakridge Tennessee, and another is an Electric Engineer in St. Louis Missouri. A third grandson is finishing up his senior year on a football scholarship at Ft. Lewis College in Durango, Colorado while a fourth is in his junior year at Missouri College of Science and Technology in Rolla, Missouri where he is working on an electric engineering degree.

New Mexico Cattle Growers’ Association is proud to annually recognize an individual or family with outstanding stewardship practices through the Green From Ground Up award. A commonality between every recipient of this award is a desire to leave the land better than they found it, keeping in mind the future generations. A thorough land steward is dedicated to land, water, livestock and wildlife.

The Wilson Family has a long-standing connection to New Mexico since the time their ancestors homesteaded the Carrizozo area, seven generations ago.

Operated by Kendal and Chelsea Wilson with daughters Kyanna, Jemma and Dagney; Wilson Beef is a small business that sells locally grown, pasture-raised, grain-finished beef. For years their family has connected New Mexico grown with ranching heritage and delivered it to your plate.

In 2009, New Mexico Cattle Growers’ Association founded the King Service Award to recognize the memory and accomplishments of former Governor Bill King and beloved wife Alice; that so many New Mexicans benefited from.

The King Service Award honors an individual whose talents and demeanor positively impacts communities in every corner of New Mexico and inspires those around them to take action, too.

For the last 20 years, our winner has worked for NMCGA in planning special themed events such as ‘Cowboy Christmas.” Her touches of fun and western inspiration give our membership an opportunity to enjoy the holiday season together during Joint Stockmen’s Convention.

Patty is the owner of Waid & Associates Event Planning and has been in business for over 20 years. She has worked on events ranging from conferences, fund-raisers and grand-openings to weddings, education initiatives, media promotions and everything in between. Her clients include those in private businesses, associations, veteran groups, health groups, government and agriculture industry organizations such as NMCGA, NM Beef Council, NM Farm & Livestock Bureau, Farm Credit of NM, NM State University and NM Junior Livestock Foundation, among others.

She has worked on events that range from one hundred guests to several thousand. A team player and skilled leader, she has

Patty is proud to have been a United States Marine Corps wife while Earl served many different duty stations before his retirement after 25 years. She was also raised as an “army brat”, traveling across the world with her family and committed Army soldier father.      ▫

2022 Green From Ground Up Award Winners Wilson Beef Kendal and Chelsea

Wilson Beef guarantees their cattle are treated humanely from birth to harvest and their retail cuts are certified USDA inspected for quality and safety. The couple reaches their customers through shared personal experiences and by marketing to local communities. When sharing their ag story they often tell of the landscape and resources such as water that has carried their family on from generation to generation. Sharing how livestock health and diverse ecosystems of all species are supported through conscious daily management decisions.

A powerful story of longevity on the land and the ability to offer USDA certified individual cuts to a diverse consumer base has set Wilson Beef apart, helping them to earn a reputation as young ranchers who provide top-shelf quality beef with the best flavor, so all their customers have to worry about is which recipe to choose.

A true family business, Kendal oversees the condition of the ranch’s land and cattle daily; while also working part-time for Bartz-Spencer Solar, LLC based out of Carrizozo. Chelsea is a busy mom of three girls who also handles the marketing and communication side of Wilson Beef.

NMCGA recognizes Kendal and Chelsea for their dedication to New Mexico, the beef industry and for raising a young family rooted in faith and agriculture.      ▫

68 JANUARY 2023
Patty Waid, (l) received the King Service Award from Loren Patterson, New Mexico Cattle Growers Association President. Jemma, Kyanna, Kendal, Chelsea and Dagney Wilson receiving the Green From The Ground Up Award from NMCGA President Loren Patterson

NMCGA 2022

Ayudando Siempre Alli Award

Each year, the New Mexico Cattle Growers’ Association has the privilege of presenting one of its highest awards

for the 7th Judicial District. For the past 16 years, he has served as the Catron County Wildlife Investigator.

As the Catron County Wildlife Investigator, Jess has been on the forefront for these many years helping cattle producers in Catron County deal with livestock depredations and in particular Mexican wolf depredations. Jess has conducted close to 1400 investigations. Of those, 1100 investigations related to Mexican wolf depredations. Over 200 related to investigations of wolves in close proximity to people. He has written extensively about wolf behavior. He has compiled statistics. The data he has collected and summarized holds radical wolf advocates at bay in their rantings. There is probably no one in the state of New Mexico who has more reality-based knowledge about Mexican wolf depredations on the ground than Jess Carey.

weather, storming or not. And you have selflessly served as Jess’ unpaid, professional incident coordinator throughout – a higher calling than many have ever achieved in their lives.

Jess, wolves are not only a Catron County phenomenon. They are also present in Grant, Sierra, and Socorro Counties. Regrettably, with the changes that the Fish and Wildlife Service has made recently, we will likely have Mexican wolves throughout much of our state. Jess has truly set the model for wildlife investigators in New Mexico to follow. Thank you, Jess, for your tireless service.      ▫

to an individual for his or her work in furthering and protecting ranchers. The Ayudando Siempre Alli – “You are Always There” – Award started in 1994. Governor Bruce and Alice King were the first recipients. Since then, individuals from all walks of life and nearly every calling imaginable have been honored. Sometimes these people are Cattle Growers’ members; sometimes they are not. The one thread running through the award recipients is that they care about ranchers and have put their time and often themselves on the line for us.

This year’s recipient of the Ayudando Siempre Alli Award is Jess Carey. Jess, would you please make your way forward to the stage.

Jess Carey has been hunting, fishing, running hounds and trapping most of his life. Out of high school, he served in the United States Marine Corp. He moved to Reserve 45 years ago. He has extensive background in forensic investigations. He has served as the Catron County Sheriff, and he served as the District Attorney Investigator

One of the ranchers who has called on Jess multiple times to investigate a livestock depredation told us, “Jess Carey is the person who has stood between us and the forces that want no wolf ever held accountable for a depredation. In fact, Jess is the guy who famously said, “The enviros never want a livestock kill confirmed unless the wolf confesses.” Over the years, Jess has called Wildlife Services about an investigation, has gone out with the Wildlife Service investigators on the investigation and, frankly, has trained many of the new ones about how to do their job. Jess doesn’t always find that a depredation is a wolf kill. Jess follows the science and common sense. Sometimes there isn’t enough of either to call a depredation a wolf kill and Jess is up front about that. Ranchers may not always be happy with his calls, but we know Jess is thorough, honest and fair.”

Cattle rancher, NMCGA Board member and Chair of the Catron County Commission, Anita Hand, says this about the work Jess has done: “Jess is truly an asset to Catron County and our livestock producers. Jess is thorough, meticulous to details and all investigations are done with integrity and honesty. I once told an agency that I would put Jess up against any agency wildlife biologist on a depredation investigation and Jess would run circles around them with his knowledge and expertise. Jess is vital to our industry, and I am honored to have been able to work with him and even more honored to call him my friend.”

Jess’ wife of 53 years, Lynne, is also with us this evening. Lynne, thank you for sharing Jess with ranchers. We know from experience that Jess has been there when called, on weekends, holidays and in any kind of

New Mexico Inspector of the Year David Trujillo

David was born and raised in Garfield, NM. He graduated High School in 1982 from Hatch, NM. Prior to coming to work for the NMLB he worked as a meat cutter/manager in Hatch. In 2001, David was hired by the NMLB as a Meat Inspector for the Meat Inspection Division.

In 2007, David transferred to the Livestock Inspection Division, assigned to District 21, the T or C area. David is always willing to help out in other districts that are short staffed, and has filled in for Districts 14, 22, 10 and 7. David has worked for the NMLB for 21 years and has done so with an attitude of service and dedication.

David and his wife, Denise, have three daughters, Krystal, Kassaundra, and Devry, and one son, David Jr. They also have six grandkids, four boys and two girls.      ▫

JANUARY 2023 69
Jess Carey, Catron County Wildlife Investigator, receives the Ayudando Award from NMCGA President Loren Patterson. 2022 Inspector of the Year David Trujillo (c) with Loren Patterson (l) and Troy Sauble, Sauble Ranch, sponsor of the award.

Westerman Blasts

USFS for Pushing Electric Vehicle Transition

The top GOP member of the House Natural Resources Committee slammed the U.S. Forest Service (USFS) for its plan to transition to an electrified vehicle fleet as part of the federal government’s climate agenda.

“I’ve always supported renewable energy solutions, but they have to actually work and not just virtue signal at the expense of the American taxpayer,” Presentative Bruce Westerman, R-Arkansas, told Fox News Digital. “The Forest Service turning to EVs is the perfect example of the latter.”

In December, the Forest Service – a Department of Agriculture sub-agency tasked with managing nearly 200 million acres of forests and grasslands – announced a pilot program to test three Ford F-150 Lightning electric trucks at three locations in Pennsylvania, Michigan and New Hampshire. The program was crafted to study whether the agency would be able to greenlight a broader transition to electric vehicles (EV) and reduce its carbon footprint.

While the pilot program will test how capable the EVs are for performing in areas where USFS personnel work, President Biden signed an executive order last year requiring that all new light-duty federal vehicle purchases are zero-emissions beginning in 2027.

Westerman, though, said the EV mandate was problematic because USFS vehicles are required to perform in extreme temperatures

and with heavy loads.

“EVs have made great strides in recent years, but they’re still built for highways and nowhere near capable of operating in extreme temperatures, navigating uneven terrain, towing heavy loads, or fulfilling any of the Forest Service’s other numerous responsibilities,” Westerman continued.

“This, coupled with the fact that no infrastructure exists to charge these vehicles in the field, makes this decision extremely shortsighted,” he added.

The F-150 Lightning is capable of towing a maximum 10,000 pounds and carrying a maximum payload of 2,000 pounds, according to CarsDirect. By comparison a traditional engine F-150 can tow 14,000 pounds and carry 3,325 pounds.

The F-150 Lightning also has a maximum range of between 240 and 320 miles compared to the traditional model’s range of up to 700 miles, according to Car and Driver Depending on the payload and towing load,

omenici

law firm. p.c. Oil and Gas Development Issues Water Rights/Water Quality/Water Disposal OCD Hearings Title/Boundary Disputes Easements/ Access issues Right-of-Way/Condemnation Permitting/ Leasing BLM, Forest Service, State Lands Mineral Development Business Dissolution/

a vehicle’s range can significantly decline.

And Ford recently hiked the price of the cheapest F-150 Lightning to $56,000 while the cheapest traditional model is about $34,000.

“This Forest Service is used to fielding new technology in remote and rugged locations,” the Forest Service spokesperson said. “This first ever study, using electric trucks on National Forests for field use is what the pilot program is all about – matching the right tool for the right job.”

“Since our operating conditions can vary a great deal, we stay flexible on the tools we use – to this day we still use pack animals and horses for project work when necessary,” the spokesperson added.

In addition, across its more than 170 locations, the Forest Service has just 32 charging ports for EVs. Just one is powered by a renewable energy source.

Westerman, who will chair the House Natural Resources Committee when Republicans take control of the House in January, argued that the agency should focus on improving the health of the nation’s forests and trees before spending taxpayer money on EVs.

The Arkansas Republican introduced bipartisan legislation in June that would prioritize “scientific forest management activities” to prevent massive wildfires.

“The Forest Service of all agencies should recognize that they already have nature’s most efficient carbon capture devices right at their fingertips: trees!” Westerman added.

“Instead of pandering to the left and spending taxpayer dollars on experimental vehicles, they should be focusing their resources on improving the health of American forests and mitigating catastrophic wildfires, which emit far more carbon than any truck ever could,” he said.      ▫

70 JANUARY 2023
Probate Ranch Sales/ Leases/ Purchases Wind & Solar Leases/ Pollution/ Environmental Gas Pete V. Domenici, Jr., Esq. 320 Gold Avenue SW – Suite 1000 Albuquerque, NM 87102 505/883-6250 • 505/884-3424 Fax www.DomeniciLaw.com Insure against declining prices. Protect your cattle, sheep and hogs with Livestock Risk Protection. Contact me today to learn more. Monte Anderson AgWise Certified 15 Oak, Clayton, NM 575.374.8933 921 E 21st Street Suite E Clovis NM 88101 575.762.4729 • 575.762.1774 fax ... FARM BUREAU ··-® FINANCIAL SERVICES It's your future. Let's protect it� Western Agricultural Insurance Company is an equal opportunity provider Securities & services offered through FBL Marketing Services, LLC: 5400 University Ave., West Des Moines, IA 50266, 877/860-2904, Member SIPC. Farm Bureau Property & Casualty Insurance Company,'* Western Agricultural Insurance Company,'* Farm Bureau Life Insurance Company'*/West Des Moines, IA. 'Affiliates. *Company providers of Farm Bureau Financial Services. PR-AG-C (4-21) LAZY S RANCH WILLCOX, LLC M S Susan Wilson-Sanders, DVM 520-403-8510 Ed McClure: 520-306-1574 lazysranchacct@gmail.com 13250 Ash Creek Road, Willcox, AZ 85643 Service-Age Bulls Available Private Treaty and at Sales at Marana, Prescott, AZ SM Registered Angus Since 2002

Why roll the dice?

Not all “Angus” bulls are

Don’t gamble on unproven genetics. There are a lot of Angus bulls on the market, but not all are backed by the Invest wisely in a registered Angus bull.

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John A. Yates passed away at age 93. Yates was raised in Artesia, and he and his two brothers founded Yates Petroleum in 1960. John held the office of Secretary-Treasurer for Yates Petroleum from 1960 to 1965. He held the office of Vice President for Yates Petroleum from 1965 to 1988.

While holding the office of Vice President, John founded ABO Petroleum Corporation in 1968. Yates then served as President of Yates Petroleum from 1988 - 2005 and again from 2008 – 2009.

Yates and his family became a force in New Mexico’s vital oil and gas industry. They played a major part in the exploration and growth of the oil and gas industry in Southeast New Mexico and West Texas, expanding into Colorado and Wyoming.

Yates served on the National Petroleum Council and was a member of the New Mexico Oil and Gas Association, Independent Petroleum Association of New Mexico, American Petroleum Institute and the Roswell Geological Society. He was a member of many other associations and councils.

Yates was appointed by five United States

Presidents, starting with President Reagan, to serve on the National Petroleum Council Advisory Committee. In 1996 he received the “Chief Roughneck of the Year” award from the Independent Petroleum Association of America, an award which John was most proud to receive due to this honor being bestowed annually to only one person in the United States.

He was the recipient of a number of other accolades for his successes in the oil and gas industry and received an honorary doctorate from New Mexico State University.

Yates also served with distinction on the Republican National Committee.

Florinda Chavez Encinias passed away on November 25, 2022. She was born on April 26, 1926 to Manuel and Teodorita Chavez in Galisteo, New Mexico.

She leaves behind her children, Raymond (Carmen) Encinias; Adan (Dollie) Encinias; Speedy (Karen) Encinias; Henrietta (Joe) Garcia; Erma Gonzales, Lucy (Anthony) Orio; Elena (Larry) Irvin; Dorothy Juanita (Jim) Pachta; and Tomasita Encinias; and her daughters-in-laws, Lucille Encinias and Lisa

Encinias ; and her sister, Celina Encinias.

She also leaves behind countless grandchildren, nieces, nephews, and primos.

In her younger years, she enjoyed watching her father tend the sheep and cattle for The Patron, Don Jose Ortiz y Pino as her father was the Mayordomo at the ranch.

Her mother was in charge of cooking three meals a day and washing clothes for the men that would come and work during the shearing season, and Florinda was right beside her helping out.

As hard as her parents tried to keep her away from these men, she would sneak away to get a glimpse of them through the window, only to get in trouble.

First and foremost, Florinda was a very faithful woman of Christ. Florinda was a devout Catholic and a strong believer in God and the saints, and prayed the rosary on a daily basis.

The power of prayer was the answer to many problems her and her family were faced with. She overcame extremely difficult challenges and heartache throughout her life with dignity, grace, strength, determination and faith in God.

Florinda was a very beautiful lady, inside and out, and no one was a stranger to her. If someone didn’t speak to her, she would respectfully introduce herself, and would remind them to speak to her next time because she might forget their names. Florinda would offer a stranger food from her table or her last dollar.

She would open her home to anyone in need. Florinda’s life could easily be described in The Beatitudes.

Despite the age gap of 24 years between Florinda and Segundo, she loved and respected him with all her being. He truly was the love of her life. She always shared how jealous Segundo was, and how she played into his jealousy.

She would dance with men and he would cut in and pull them away from her while dancing and he would continue dancing with her. He would tell her, “You are going to marry me”, but she adamantly would tell him, “No, I’m not”.

Well, as usual, he got his way. Florinda and Segundo were married on July 13, 1946, and quickly started their family of 12 in 1947 when their eldest, Frank Encinias, was born.

Segundo and Florinda spent the first

72 JANUARY 2023
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eight years of their marriage living at the ranch near Aurora, New Mexico. They later purchased the property where her home is now situated.

They moved to Moriarty in 1955. Even though she was raising her children, with her mother’s help, Florinda worked as a dishwasher at El Comedor and Blackies, a lot of times while pregnant.

She later worked as a cook at the Moriarty Schools where they made all the meals fresh and by scratch. Florinda made a lot of lifelong friends while working at the schools, from students to coworkers and was very proud that she made a difference in their lives.

remember those days and her for her generosity at the food line. Florinda was a very hard worker and instilled that work ethic onto her children and grandchildren. Florinda and Segundo taught their children to work at a very young age.

As she would remind her children, minutes after they were born, she ordered their social security cards so they could start working.

Florinda was a very simple woman with the biggest heart ever. Her house was very simple where she raised her children, she raised them not in riches, but raised them with love.

She loved her children and grandchildren

or shoulder to cry on.

You would never leave her house without being fed. She always had fresh tortillas, butter and green chili, and cookies on the table for her children, grandchildren and all of their friends from school, visitors, and neighborhood children.

Florinda enjoyed Sunday breakfasts and holidays when all her children and grandchildren would gather in her tiny house. She didn’t care if we were squashed like sardines in every inch of her house. She always made the room.

Florinda would be the first to say that her biggest accomplishment was raising her children. Her favorite saying, “I raised them from the same pot of beans and the same

JANUARY 2023 73

spoon”, I have no favorites.” Some would beg to differ, because each of them think they were her favorite. Florinda would say her and Segundo raised their children without asking for little to no help from others.

She lived a long and happy life,however, endured hardships. She was the life of the party with her sense of humor. Up until the time of her death she was cracking a joke, wanting to find a boyfriend or Sancho, and sharing memories of her life as a daughter, wife, mother and grandmother.

It was very apparent she made an impact on those she came in contact with. In her humble way, she expressed that with her warm hugs and beautiful smile. Her beautiful green eyes would light up a room.

Florinda touched many lives in our community and was loved by all.

Lon Neil Burcham (Neil), 81, Las Cruces, entered eternal rest on December 7, 2022. He was born in Siloam Springs, Arkansas on November 15, 1941, to Lon and Anna Burcham, but was raised on the family ranch

in Jay, Oklahoma.

He received his BA degree in Animal Husbandry from Oklahoma State, served in the US Army for two years, then got his graduate degree from Arkansas University.

He came to New Mexico State in 1969, to teach Animal Science & Swine Production in the Ag Department. He was the coach for the Judging Team for many years and was in charge of the breeding program for the college ranch until his retirement in December 2017.

He loved teaching and helped many students find jobs through the years, many of whom became close personal friends. In May of 1977, he married Marilyn Hess Berryman and inherited four grown children who then proceeded to make him “grandpa” over the years with 11 grandchildren and 18 great-grandchildren. He is survived by his brother Mike Burcham, Arkansas; brother Don Burcham, Oklahoma, step-daughter Fredda Blair and husband Rick, Las Cruces; step-son Doug Berryman and wife Rhonda, Las Cruces; step-son Dan Berryman and wife Rosanna, Ignacio, Colorado; and stepson-in-law Tim Jennings of Roswell.

Deanna Sue Black Eby passed away at home on December 17, 2022 at age 61 years. She was born on July 6, 1961 to Jolynn and Greg Black in Dayton, Ohio.

The Black family moved to New Mexico in 1971. Deanna considered New Mexico home. Deanna worked the fuel dock at the Kennecott Tyrone Mine and next worked at the APS Four Corners Power Plant in Farmington, NM.

Deanna had a passion for horseback riding and loved to barrel race. When she met Buddy Eby, they used to rodeo together in ribbon roping events. On February 1, 1983, she and Buddy married and worked side by side on the ranch. On September 10, 1994 they welcomed twin boys, Walker and Trent, raising them surrounded by the land and the importance of faith and family.

Deanna was an active member serving as Secretary and Treasurer for over 30 years on the Faywood Ditch Commission. She had a talent for creating stained glass artwork, painting and craft adventures. In the last years of her life, Deanna was known as “I” by her beloved grandchildren.

Many days were spent with Warren and Lyla playing on the family farm. She loved having her grandchildren close by and many nights were spent having sleepovers. They always looked forward to spending every possible moment at her house; filling the

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Free Listing Form. Mail, email or fax. EMAIL ADDRESS NAME OF RANCH OR BUSINESS CONTACT PERSON ADDRESS CITY, STATE, ZIP PHONE NUMBERS FAX NUMBER ❒ Check here if you would like info. on advertising in the Directory. * Previous listings must be re-entered! 200 character limit. NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL ERRORS DUE TO ILLEGIBLE HANDWRITING. aaalivestock.com/freelisting Go to aaalivestock.com/freelisting Get Your Name in the 2023 Directory of Southwest Agriculture! DEADLINE — JUNE 15, 2023 GET LISTED TODAY! ONLINE: aaalivestock.com/freelisting MAIL: New Mexico Stockman, P.O. Box 7127, Albuquerque, NM 87194 FAX: 505-998-6236 EMAIL: chris@aaalivestock.com PLEASE INDICATE YOUR BREEDS & SERVICES, & ENTER YOUR LISTING BELOW ... Cattle Breeds Service Category [Choose up to 3 categories] ❒ AI/Embryo/Semen ❒ Artists ❒ Associations/Organizations ❒ Auction Market ❒ Ag Lending ❒ Beef Packers ❒ Contractors ❒ Education ❒ Feed ❒ Feedlots ❒ Financial ❒ Horses ❒ Insurance ❒ Livestock Haulers ❒ Manufacturers ❒ Non-Profit ❒ Order Buyers/Commodities Brokers ❒ Real Estate ❒ Ranch Equipment/Suppliers ❒ Transportation ❒ Veterinarians/Supplies ❒ Other Your Listing

walls with love and laughter. She loved gathering people together and made them feel welcomed.

She always felt the need to be a caretaker to anyone who stopped in; nobody ever left her house hungry. We were blessed to spend this short time on earth with her and are thankful for having her in our lives. We will miss her greatly.

Deanna is survived by her husband, Buddy Eby, Faywood; son Walker Eby, Faywood; son Trent Eby and wife Lucille Eby and two grandchildren, Hurley; her mother Jolynn and father Greg Black, Sierra Vista, Arizona; sister Debbie Oliver, Carlsbad, Texas; brother Bobby and wife Laura Black, Prescott, Arizona; and many nieces and nephews.

John Leroy Falen, 85, Orovada, Nevada, passed away on December 17, 2022 surrounded in love by his wife of 63 years, Sharon Falen, and his children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

John was born on March 18, 1937 in Caldwell, Idaho, to Leslie and Letha Falen. He grew up on the L – F Ranch on Juniper Creek at the base of South Mountain, 40 miles southeast of Jordan Valley, Oregon.

John and his brothers Roger and Loyd rode their horses to school, and like other children in the area, school was coordinated around ranch work. John attended high school in Marsing, Idaho, batching near his uncle Earnest Falen’s home returning to the L – F Ranch to work when needed. He attended college at the University of Idaho in Moscow, Idaho receiving his Bachelor of Science degree in Animal Science in 1960.

During his junior year, he met his wife Sharon Franklin of Moscow, Idaho. Their first date was on her 17th birthday, 65 years ago last month. They were married in 1959.

John, in every way, was a cattleman. He and Sharon started their lives with John working in feedlots, buying cattle and eventually partnering with Clarence and Wayne Johnson operating a feedlot and livestock trading enterprise in Wilder, Idaho.

In 1977, he leased two ranches in northern Nevada, the “Home Ranch” near Orovada, Nevada and the “UC Ranch” near McDermitt, Nevada. The Home Ranch was where John and Sharon made their home.

It was at the Home Ranch where John and Sharon hosted numerous yearly “family and friends’ reunions” when family and friends from all over the country would join for a weekend of horse and wagon rides, good

two-step dancing music, great food and good fellowship.

It was also at the Home Ranch where the Newsweek magazine writers and photographers went to meet a man who would dawn the cover on that publication on September 30, 1991 and detail the story of a ranching family working in a place where the federal and state governments own 85 percent of the land and it is not possible for a ranch to survive without BLM and/or Forest Service grazing permits.

John, Sharon and family would eventually negotiate purchases for the Home Ranch and the UC Ranch so the ranches and the way of life could be passed down to their children and grandchildren.

The Home Ranch was also where John set forth on his pathway of servant leadership. Not being one to ever take a break, for 20 years John served the school children in Humboldt County, Nevada, as a member and chairman of the school board.

During this time he began his political career as an advocate for the ranching industry serving as Nevada Cattlemen’s Association President in 1997 to 1999, Nevada’s Public Lands Council Committee, the National Cattlemen’s Association Executive Board, the NCBA wild horse and burro com-

76 JANUARY 2023
Cell: 520-260-3283 Willcox, Arizona S K A A R E R B R A N G U S BRED FOR FERTILITY, DOCILITY, BIRTH WEIGHT & HIGH GROWTH You Don’t Have to Be The Biggest To Be The Best Chase & Justine Skaarer << cont from pg. 74 IN MEMORIAM

mittee and the National Public Lands Council President.

John was appointed by the Secretary of the Interior to serve on the National Wild Horse and Burro Advisory Council. Although there were no wild horses on the Home Ranch or UC Ranch, John’s understanding of the livestock industry and his compassion for wild horses suffering from drought and starvation made him the perfect advocate to work on solutions to remove excess horses from the range. Because of his work, he was one of the founding board members of the Mustang Heritage Foundation.

John’s passion for his family, his ranch and his community was evident in everything he did. The invention of the cell phone brought a whole new freedom to John in ways that searching for a pay phone could not.

John’s saddle horses would automatically stop when John’s cell phone would ring so John could take the call. As much as the phone would ring, that meant a lot of stopping. John was ever present on local parade days in Orovada, McDermitt and Winnemucca, driving his team and wagon.

Anyone who was within miles of the Home Ranch was encouraged to stop for a comfortable bed, a delicious meal, or a good visit with John sitting at his grey metal office desk with all the braided bridle reins and silver bits hanging behind him. Not just for his friends and family, but the passing of John leaves a huge hole in the public lands livestock industry.

John is survived by his wife, Sharon, his children Frank (wife Karen Budd-Falen), and daughters Judy (husband Hank Kershner) and Johnna (husband Tommy Bruhn), son-in law Loyd Sherburn and brother Loyd Falen. He had seven grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.

In lieu of flowers, please send donations to the Nevada Cattlemen’s Association; PO Box 310 Elko, NV 89803. They ask that you write in the Memo in Memory of John Falen and the donation will go to the scholarship fund.

Editor’s Note: Email caren@aaalivestock.com. Memorial donations may be sent to the Cattlegrowers’ Foundation, a 501(c)3, tax deductable charitable foundation serving the rights of ranch families and educating citizens on governmental actions, policies and practices. Cattlegrowers Foundation, Inc., P.O. Box 7517, Albuquerque, NM 87194. The New Mexico Stockman runs memorials as a courtesy to its readers. If families & friends would like to see more detail, verbatim pieces must be emailed to us, & may be printed at 10¢ per word.

PREPARATION

Step 1

Heat oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. When oil is hot, add diced onion and cook until light translucent.

Step 2

Add machaca to skillet and cook, stirring until heated through.

Step 3

Add eggs, stir to combine, and cook until eggs are fully cooked. Season with salt and spoon onto warm flour tortillas. Serve warm with salsa verde and sliced avocado.

Nutrition information per serving: 400 Calories; 176.64 Calories from fat; 19.75 g Total Fat (5.35 g Saturated Fat); 198.79 mg Cholesterol; 1612.17 mg Sodium; 22.6 g Total Carbohydrate; 0.2 g Dietary Fiber; 30.4 g Protein; 0.6 mg Iron; 63.2 mg Potassium; 0.3 mg Riboflavin; 1.3 mg Niacin; 0.1 mg Vitamin B6; 0.6 mcg Vitamin B12; 0.5 mg Zinc; 15.4 mcg Selenium; 146.9 mg Choline. This recipe is an excellent source of Protein, Vitamin B12, Selenium. It is a good source of Riboflavin.      ▫

JANUARY 2023 77
January 14, 2023 1:00 pm 1620 County Rd 14A Del Norte CO 81132 View Videos of Sale Bulls at mikefuchsherefords.com Selling 23 Bulls 13 with a PAP score under 35 and none over 40 PAP, Fert, Trich, PI-BVD Tested HIGH ALTITUDE BULL SALE MIKE SPRUNGER 719-657-2519 Catalog available for viewing or request — email mikefuchsherefords@gmail.com On the web at: mikefuchsherefords.com FUCHS RANCH
Breakfast Tacos
of:
Machacado
Recipe courtesy
Vianney Rodriguez, sweetlifebake.com
½
Time to cook: 10 minutes 6 tacos or 6 servings 8 ingredients INGREDIENTS 2 cups prepared machaca 3 Tbsp. olive oil
medium onion, diced 6 eggs 1 tsp. salt 6 flour tortillas
Optional toppings: Salsa verde Sliced avocado

Googles

February 8-9, 2023

Overton Hotel, Lubbock, Texas Starts 1pm CT on the 8th Early registration is $75 For more informaton visit animalscience.tamu.edu or contact Marcy Ward at 575-644-3379

An educational forum tailored for beef producers in the Southwest.

The Southwest Beef Symposium is a joint effort between the New Mexico Cooperative Extension Service and Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service, established to annually provide producers with timely information about current industry issues and practical management.

Source: Protect the Harvest

In today’s technology-driven society, Google is a household name. Since its founding in 1998, Google has become one of the most prominent technology companies in the world, ranking alongside Amazon, Apple, Meta (Facebook), and Microsoft. Google has even been referred to as the most powerful company in the world and has become more deeply enmeshed in day-today life than many people realize.

Information Control

Due to the many beneficial services Google provides, it might be easy to overlook the mind-boggling amount of influence the company carries, and more importantly, how they leverage it to actively shape society.

Search engines, such as Google, can prioritize and filter which links and information appear when any given search is performed, and therefore wield an undue amount of control over public opinion by choosing what information is most easily accessible. Unfortunately, Google is certainly not alone in the realm of Big Tech controlling information, as demonstrated by the recent revelation that Twitter suppressed news that would have affected the 2020 election.

The “Sustainable” Game

Google is now barging far beyond the digital shell game of promoting or stifling third-party information as they see fit and is blatantly telling people how to live “sustainably.” The Google Sustainability initiative is designed to directly advance the UN’s sinister green agenda, which we have written about extensively.

The term “sustainability” has become a buzzword of today’s green movement, largely due to the UN’s 1983 Commission on Environment and Development. In 1987, the commission issued a report titled “Our Common Future,” also known as the Brundtland Report. This report defined sustainable development as “meeting the needs of the

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present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.”

Jumping on the “Greenwagon”

Google has been on the green bandwagon for years, boasting about being the first major company to become carbon neutral in 2007. The company began purchasing so-called clean energy in 2010, and in 2017, was the first large company to match its energy use with 100 percent renewable energy.

Google Energy LLC, was created for the purpose of reducing energy consumption

and eventually producing and selling clean energy. Google’s plan for the company to reach net-zero emissions by 2030 has been called the most aggressive in the business world.

In Bed with the United Nations

In September 2021, Google launched the 24/7 Carbon-Free Energy Compact, with Sustainable Energy for All and the United Nations as partners. The goal of the compact is to fully decarbonize electricity systems, and Google has ominously stated that they are “more motivated than ever to do our part to accelerate the transition to a more sustainable future for all.” The current energy crisis

in Europe serves as a stark warning of how dangerous the decarbonization of energy systems is.

Google’s chief sustainability offer, Kate Brandt, stated in Fortune magazine, “We see individuals as a piece of the puzzle. If we can show them what are the most meaningful actions and make that an easy choice, a better choice, a cheaper choice, that is hugely beneficial…This was really, I think, our first visible step in thinking about how do we use technology to make the sustainable choice the easiest choice.”

“Your Plan, Your Planet” Seems to Be Eliminating “Your”

In 2018, the “Your Plan, Your Planet” interactive online tool was launched to offer tips on reducing waste. Since then, Google has been adding more options, such as fuel cost and eco-friendly route calculators.

Developers have even stated that non-sustainable options can be removed from search results entirely, which is of especially great concern because a tool to “help” consumers calculate the environmental impact of food choices is currently being created, with information sourced from the UN.

80 JANUARY 2023
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Propagating Disinformation and Ushering in

ESGs

Even though the green movement’s anti-agriculture narrative has been thoroughly and repeatedly debunked, it is plain that Google is propagating false and particularly insidious green globalist propaganda.

“We the people” starts with us

Deep down, Google’s Sustainability tools are a Trojan horse meant to help usher in personal ESG scores, much like the social credit system used in communist China. In such a system, a person’s ability to function in society is dictated by a governmental grading system. It isn’t much of a leap from simply advising consumers to avoid beef, for example, to punishing them outright for buying beef via a personal ESG score.

When viewed in this light, Kate Brandt’s statement about “using technology to make the sustainable choice the easiest choice” is revealed to be particularly ominous.

These global issues may seem overwhelming on how to combat them, but there are simple things each person can do to stop the madness. We all need to be involved in our local communities and local government. We should be staying informed on issues that will affect our nation’s food security. Furthermore, if we are doing both of those things, then we need to take that information and inform others in our communities and on social media. “We the people” starts with us and that is the only way we will ensure that we keep America free and fed.      ▫

JANUARY 2023 81
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‘Proforestation’ Separates People from Forests

“Proforestation” is a relatively new term in the environmental community. The Sierra Club defines it as: “extending protections so as to allow areas of previously-logged forest to mature, removing vast amounts of atmospheric carbon and recovering their ecological and carbon storage potential.”

Not only must we preserve untouched forests, proponents argue, but we must also walk away from previously-managed forests too. People should be entirely separate from forest ecology and succession.

Except humans have managed forests for millennia. In North America, Indigenous communities managed forests and sustained its resources for at least 8,000 years prior to European settlement. It is true people have not always managed forests sustainably. Forest practices of the late 19th century are a good example.

Forest management provides tools to correct past mistakes and restore ecosystems. But Proforestation even seems to reject forest restoration that helps return a forest to a healthy state, including controlling invasive species, maintaining tree diversity, returning forest composition and structure to a more natural state.

Proforestation is not just a philosophical exercise. The goal is to ban active forest management on public lands. It has real policy implications for the future management (or non-management) of forests and how we deal with wildfires, climate change and other disturbances.

We’ve written before about how this concept applies to so-called “carbon reserves.” Now, powerful and well-funded anti-forestry groups are pressuring the Biden Administration to set-aside national forests and other federally-owned lands under the guise of “protecting mature and old-growth” trees.

In its recent white paper on Proforestation, the Society of American Foresters writes that “preservation can be appropriate for unique protected areas, but it has not been demonstrated as a solution for carbon

storage or climate change across all forested landscapes.”

Proforestation doesn’t work when forests convert from carbon sinks into carbon sources. A United Nations report pointed out that at least 10 World Heritage sites – the places with the highest formal environmental protections on the planet – are net sources of carbon pollution. This includes the iconic Yosemite National Park.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) recognizes active forest management will yield the highest carbon benefits over the long term because of its ability to mitigate carbon emitting disturbance events and store carbon in harvested wood products. Beyond carbon, forest management ensures forests continue to provide assets like clean water, wildlife habitat, recreation, and economic activity.

Forest management offers strategies to manage forests for carbon sequestration and long-term storage. Proforestation rejects active stewardship that can not only help cool the planet, but help meet the needs of people, wildlife and ecosystems. You can expect to see this debate intensify in 2023. ▫

82 JANUARY 2023
▫ marketplace JANUARY 2023 83 SALES AND SERVICE, INC. Mixing / Feeding Systems Trucks / Trailers / Stationary Units WES O’BRIEN • Cell 806/231-1102 800/525-7470 • 806/364-7470 www.bjmsales.com 3925 U.S. HWY 60, Hereford, TX 79045 ♦ Truck Scales ♦ Livestock Scales ♦ Feed Truck Scales SALES, SERVICE & INSTALLATIONS 1-800/489-8354 602/258-5272 FAX 602/275-7582 www.desertscales.com DESERT SCALES & WEIGHING EQUIPMENT Weanlings & Yearlings FOR SALE TYLER RIVETTE O: 281/342-4703 • C: 832/494-8871 harrisonquarterhorses@yahoo.com www.harrisonquarterhorseranch.com Kaddatz Auctioneering & Farm Equipment Sales New & Used parts, Tractor & Farm Equipment. Salvage yard: Tractors, Combines, Hay & Farm Equipment Online auctions: We can sell your farm, ranch & construction equipment anywhere in the U.S. 254-221-9271 Order parts online at www.farmstore.com – 15% rebate www.kaddatzequipment.com A Monfette Construction Co. Drinking Water Storage Tanks Not Just a Little Better — A Lot High Specific Gravity, Heavy Weight Long Warranty Black NRCS Tanks Lifting Eyes — 24 Inch Manhole Please call for the BEST SERVICE & VALUE. Cloudcroft, NM • 1-800/603-8272 nmwatertanks.com 100 -11,000 Gallons In Stock NRCS Approved Veteran Owned ROBERTSON LIVESTOCK DONNIE ROBERTSON Certified Ultrasound Technician Registered, Commercial and Feedlot 4661 PR 4055, Normangee, TX 77871 Cell: 936/581-1844 Email: crober86@aol.com Verification Premium Opportunities Age and Source NHTC TT-AN3 TT-Grass Raised processedverified.usda.gov Complete Compliant Compatible John Sparks 602-989-8817 Agents Wanted www.technitrack.com Available for Metal, Composition Shingles or Tar Roofs. Long-lasting and easy to apply. We also manufacture Tank Coatings for Concrete, Rock, Steel, Galvanized & Mobile tanks. Call for our FREE CATALOGUE TANK COATINGS ROOF COATINGS VIRDEN PERMA-BILT CO. 806/352-2761 www.virdenproducts.com in the New Mexico Stockman. Call: 505/243-9515. A DVERTISE
marketplace ▫ RANCH RAISED MOUNTAIN RAISED WINSTON, NEW MEXICO Russell Freeman • Kelly Waide & Ryan Waide 575-743-6904 CANDY TRUJILLO Capitan, NM 575-354-2682 480-208-1410 Semen Sales AI Supplies AI Service McPHERSON HEIFER BULLS  ½ Corriente, ½ Angus bulls. All Solid Black Virgins ½ Corriente, ½ Angus Bred Heifers & Young Pairs Solid Black Matt • 806/292-1035 Steve • 806/292-1039 Lockney, Texas • Claude, Texas Columbus, New Mexico Sci-Agra, Inc. Cholla Livestock, LLC Gary Wilson Arizona & New Mexico 602-319-2538 • gwilsoncattle@gmail.com Conventional or all-natural feed options available. Located in northeast New Mexico Sowers Cattle Company Will (575)447-9455 Cattle Preconditioning & Backgrounding 150 GOOD QUALITY COWS BRED TO GOOD BULLS 325 234-2315 - Terry Hudson 325 234-6034 - Brad BULLS FOR SALE At Private Treaty Sheldon Wilson • 575/451-7469 cell: 580-651-6000 – leave message 575/835-1630 • Fax: 575/838-4536 Lemitar, N.M. • williamswindmill@live.com Williams Windmill, Inc. New Mexico Ranch Items and Service Specialist Since 1976 New Mexico Distributor for Aermotor Windmills MARKETPLACE TO LIST YOUR AD HERE CONTACT CHRIS@AAALIVESTOCK.COM OR 505-243-9515, x .28 84 JANUARY 2023 WANTED
in the New Mexico Stockman. Call: 505/243-9515. DVERTISE
Retired Couple Man to maintain houses, cut grass, general maintenance Woman to clean houses 2 Ranch Houses and Bunkhouse Included with job: Furnished house, utilities and a pickup to use on ranch Light drinker, prefer non-smoker Arabella, New Mexico 505.400.4905
▫ seedstock guide TO LIST YOUR HERD HERE CONTACT CHRIS@AAALIVESTOCK.COM OR 505-243-9515, JANUARY 2023 85 Thatcher, Arizona The Brand that Represents Quality Registered Black Brangus Bulls & Females 928-651-5120 • bjcmd58@gmail.com www.carterbrangus.com @Carter-Brangus John & Laura Conniff 1500 Snow Road, Las Cruces, NM 88005 575/644-2900 • john@conniffcattle.com www.conniffcattle.com • www.leveldale.com CONNIFF CATTLE CO., LLC ANGUS Bulls - Cows - Heifers for Sale February 23, 2023 harolais ranCh Performance Tested Since 1965 T. Lane Grau –575.760.6336 –tlgrau@hotmail.com Colten Grau –575.760.4510 –colten_g@hotmail.com 1680 CR 37 Grady, New Mexico 88120 harolais ranCh GRAU RANCH CHAROLAIS HEIFERS & BULLS FOR SALE 575-760-7304 WESLEY GRAU www.grauranch.com Lorenzo Lasater • San Angelo, TX 325.656.9126 • isabeefmasters.com Performance Beefmasters from the Founding Family 62nd Bull Sale—October 7, 2023 Private Treaty Females Semen & Embryos BEEFMASTERS Annual Bull Sale March 7, 2023 Maternal, Moderate Thick & Easy Fleshing Reliable Calving Ease THE GARDNER FAMILY Bill Gardner 505-705-2856 www.manzanoangus.com McPHERSON HEIFER BULLS  ½ Corriente, ½ Angus bulls. All Solid Black Virgins ½ Corriente, ½ Angus Bred Heifers & Young Pairs Solid Black Matt • 806/292-1035 Steve • 806/292-1039 Lockney, Texas • Claude, Texas Columbus, New Mexico STEVE & GINGER OLSON (806) 676-3556 Steve@olsoncattle.com www.olsoncattle.com SKAARER BRANGUS BRED FOR FERTILITY, DOCILITY, BIRTH WEIGHT, & HIGH GROWTH You Don’t Have To Be The Biggest To Be The Best Chase & Justine Skaarer 520-260-3283 Willcox, Arizona
86 JANUARY 2023 seedstock guide ▫ SEEDSTOCK GUIDE TO LIST YOUR HERD HERE CONTACT CHRIS@AAALIVESTOCK.COM OR 505-243-9515, x .28 Bradley 3
Bradley,
Cell:
Ranch-Raised ANGUS Bulls for Ranchers Since 1955 Annual Bull Sale February
2023 at the Ranch NE
TX SLATON, TEXAS CBar RANCH Charolais &BullsAngus TREY WOOD 806/789-7312 CLARK WOOD 806/828-6249 • 806/786-2078 Casey BEEFMASTERS seventy-PLUS years www.CaseyBeefmasters.com Watt, Jr. 325/668-1373 Watt50@sbcglobal.net Muscled Virgin Bulls-CSS Semen — 2nd Oldest Beefmaster Herd — — Highest IMF Herd in the Breed — — Most Fertile Herd in the Breed — — Closed Herd Since 1967 — VISITORS ALWAYS WELCOME! HENARD RANCH OSCAR · 575/398-6155 • 575/760-0814 BOX 975, TATUM, NEW MEXICO 88267 RUSTY · 575/760-0816 HEREFORD BULLS FOR SALE POLLED HEREFORDS Tom Robb Sons 719/456-1149 34125 Rd. 20, McClave, CO robbherefords@gmail.com Registered & Commercial & T R S Tom 719-688-2334 WIDNER ANGUS FARM Selling Registered Black Angus Bulls & Heifers Low Birth Weight Moderate Framed Thick Made Jamie Widner • 575-799-3348 Melrose, NM
Ranch Ltd. www.bradley3ranch.com M.L.
806/888-1062
940/585-6471
11,
of Estelline,
▫ seedstock guide JANUARY 2023 87 TO LIST YOUR HERD HERE CONTACT CHRIS@AAALIVESTOCK.COM OR 505-243-9515, x .28 David & Norma Brennand Piñon, NM 88344 575/687-2185 Born & Raised in the USA IDENTIFY YOUR CALVES USE PARENTAGE VERIFIED SIRES Blending Technology with Common Sense Ranch Raised Cattle that Work in the Real World Quality Registered Black Angus Cattle n Mountain-Raised, Rock-Footed n Range Calved, Ranch Raised n Powerful Performance Genetics n Docility Zoetis HD 50K 50,000 DNA Markers (Combined w/Angus EPDs provides the most accurate & complete picture of the animals genetic potential) DNA Sire Parentage Verified AGI Free From All Known Genetic Defects BVD FREE HERD Registered Angus Bulls Registered Angus Yearling Heifers Available Private Treaty Clark anvil ranCh CLINTON CLARK 32190 Co. Rd. S., Karval, CO 80823 719-446-5223 • 719-892-0160 Cell cathikclark@gmail.com www.ClarkAnvilRanch.com Reg. Herefords, Salers & Optimizers BULL SALE - APRIL 12, 2023 La Junta Livestock – La Junta, CO High Altitude Purebred & Fullblood Salers Raised the Commercial Man’s Way for 38 Years No Brisket • Rangeability • Longevity • More Pounds Private Treaty Bulls & Females DAM: FFS Miss Universe 762U Produced 2020 National Western Grand Champion Bull Gary & Gail Volk | P.O. Box 149, Eckert, CO Ph./Fx 970-835-3944 figure4cattle@gmail.com • www.figure4cattleco.com Bulls & Heifers 505-469-1215 Rick & Maggie Hubbell Mark Hubbell Angus Cattle Quemado, NM • rick@hubbellranch.net RED ANGUS 575-318-4086 2022 N. Turner, Hobbs, NM 88240 www.lazy-d-redangus.com Bulls & Replacement Heifers Registered Polled Herefords Bulls & Heifers FOR SALE AT THE FARM MANUEL SALAZAR 136 County Road 194 Cañones, NM 87516 usa.ranch@yahoo.com PHONE: 575-638-5434 in the New Mexico Stockman. Call: 505/243-9515. A DVERTISE

■ FLYING W MOUNTAIN RANCH: 345 AYL plus 5 horses located 6 miles east of Hachita, N.M. 39.60 +/- sections 25,347 +/- acres total, 1278 +/- acres of deeded land, 3152 +/- acres of state land, 20,917 acres of blm, 3960 +/acres of the allotment is within WSA, owned by the same family for over 100 years, 4 miles of newer fence, over 55,000 gallons of water storage, 17 +/- miles of pipeline less than 20 years old, 3 wells plus 1 domestic well, 4 pastures plus 3 traps, 7 dirt tanks, house, barns, corrals, semi load & livestock scales. Priced at $2,900,000

PHILLIPS RANCH/ COW SPRINGS LEASE

RANCH: located west of Deming, NM 397 AYL 52 Section cattle ranch located west of Deming, N.M. Road sign income!!! 33,323 +/- total acres comprising of 3,742 +/- acres of Private Land 11,243 +/- of New Mexico State Land 15,114 +/- of Bureau of Land Management, 3,224 +/- acres adverse land, 7 Wells, 3 sets of corrals, ranch includes two homes, metal barn, metal shop, pipe corrals, livestock scale, cattle chute & semi-load ramp. Priced at $3,100,000

■ CAMBRAY RANCH: 23 +/- section cattle ranch, west of Las Cruces, NM. 14,973± total acres, 2994± acres of deeded land ( w/ HWY 549 frontage), road sign income, 7284± acres of state land, 3934± acres BLM, 781± acres of uncontrolled land. Headquarters has a custom built 3089 sq. ft. home built in 2008, 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, and fireplace. 3 sets of corrals, five pastures. 114 AYL Priced at $2,225,000

Petroleum Building 14 e Beauregard Ave , Suit e 201 San Angelo, texas 76903-5831 ofc.: 325/655-3555

E R T I S E

REAL ESTATE GUIDE 88 JANUARY 2023 TO ADVERTISE CONTACT CHRIS@AAALIVESTOCK.COM OR 505-243-9515, x .28 Chip Cole
r A n c h B r o k e r
MAJOR RANCH REALTY P.O. Box 244 585 La Hinca Road Magdalena, NM 87825 Cell: 575-838-3016 Office: 575-854-2150 Fax: 575-854-2150 RANDELL MAJOR Qualifying Broker rmajor@majorranches.com www.majorranches.com Patronize Our Advertisers in the New Mexico Stockman. Call: 505/243-9515. D V
SERVING THE RANCHING INDUSTRY SINCE 1920 www.chassmiddleton.com 5016 122nd STREET LUBBOCK, TEXAS 79424 • 806-763-5331 Sam Middleton 817-304-0504 • Charlie Middleton 806-786-0313 Jim Welles 505-967-6562 • Dwain Nunez 505-263-7868 James Sammons III Texas, New Mexico, Arkansas, Oklahoma & Missouri Broker 214.701.1970 jamessammons.com jsammons@briggsfreeman.com 3131 Turtle Creek Blvd. | 4th Floor Dallas, Texas 75219 Ranch and Land Division

Scott McNally, Qualifying Broker Bar M Real Estate, LLC P.O. Box 428, Roswell, NM 88202 Office: 575-622-5867 Cell: 575-420-1237 Website: www.ranchesnm.com

PIE TOWN, Goat Ranch Road Access, South of Wild Horse Ranch Subdivision. 20 acres $12,000, 40 acres $24,000. Beautiful views. DATIL, Herrington Canyon Road, Two 40 acre tracts. $24,000 each

FENCE LAKE, 295 Pine Hill Road, 60 acres with over 2300 sq. ft. log home, corral, outbuildings. $240,000

Paul Stout, Broker 575-760-5461 cell 575-456-2000 office www.bigmesarealty.com

WANTED:

TO ADVERTISE CONTACT CHRIS@AAALIVESTOCK.COM OR
REAL ESTATE GUIDE JANUARY 2023 89
505-243-9515, x .28
SOLD EIGHT MILE DRAW LAND
± Acres
unimproved native grassland located four
of Roswell in the Six Mile Hill area with frontage along U.S.
sides
may
740
of
miles west
Highway 70/380. This parcel is fenced on three
and adjoins 120 acres of additional land that
be purchased. Great investment. $600 per acre.
Farms and Ranches — Broker has over 45 years experience working on and operating a family farm and has been a farm owner since 1988.
NMREL 17843
SAN MARCIAL, Willow Springs Ranch, Winchester Road. 432 acres at the foothills of Chupadera Mountains $325,000
MILAGRO, 0000 Pecos Spur, Portrillo Creek Ranch Subdivision. 164 acres wide open space. Distant mountain views. Close to I-40. $94,000
AG LAND LOANS As Low As 3.5% OPWKCAP 3.5% INTEREST RATES AS LOW AS 3.5% Payments Scheduled on 25 Years
Stubblefield & Associates
joes3@suddenlink.net
Perez
SAN ANTONIO, 1496 State Road 1, 11 irrigated acres with adobe home, well and community water $305,000
Joe
13830 Western St., Amarillo, TX 806/622-3482
cell 806/674-2062
Michael
Associates Nara Visa, NM • 575-403-7970
PAUL McGILLIARD Murney Associate Realtors
Cell: 417/839-5096 • 800/743-0336 Springfield, MO 65804 www.Paulmcgilliard.murney.com

REAL ESTATE GUIDE

ST. JOHNS OFFICE

P.O. Box 1980, St. Johns, Arizona 85936 Ph. 602-228-3494

Skully Creek Ranch: 94 AU with 1,440 deeded acres, state and federal leases in Greenlee County approximately 40 miles northeast of Safford, Arizona. The ranch is located just over four miles off the paved highway along and lies along Skully Creek. The headquarters includes an adobe, two-story rustic ranch house overlooking the cottonwood lined Skully Creek Canyon with amazing views of Hells Peak in the distance. This is a real nice “off-gride” property with private, solar powered well. The deeded land location and physical features provide privacy and mountain views. Price: $1,600,000

Indian Springs Ranch: 52 AU with 1,480 deeded acres, BLM grazing lease in Cochise County approximately 14 miles northeast of San Simon, Arizona. The ranch is located just over 12 miles off the paved highway at the end of Indian Springs Road in the Peloncillo Mountains. Headquarters improvements include two ranch houses and horse corrals with shades. The ranch is very private and secluded with lots of water. Livestock water is provided by numerous springs and three private wells. The water wells are pumped via solar with water levels all less than 100’. Private land controls access to thousands of acres in the Peloncillo Wilderness. Price: $1,400,000

Hunt Valley Farm: West of St. Johns in Apache County, Arizona, includes 891 deeded acres in total with 210 acres currently irrigated via center-pivot sprinkler and gated pipe flood irrigation. Shallow wells on land-line electricity with room to expand the irrigated acreage. Currently used as a grow yard/heifer development facility with corral/bunk space for approx. 950 head. Buildings include a remodeled mobile home in good condition, farm office and large metal shop with commodity storage under roof. This is a nice production farm located directly off the paved highway situated at 5,400’ elevation. Price: $1,500,000

SOLD ESCROW

CONTACT: ST. JOHNS OFFICE: TRAEGEN KNIGHT www.headquarterswest.com email: info@headquarterswest.com

DOUBLE BAR R RANCH, NOGALES, AZ — 110 deeded, w/12,224 NF Grazing land, runs 380 yearlong, Great improvements, high rain area. Priced at $3,500,000

RS RANCH GLENWOOD NM

— 44,233 total acres consisting of 119.6 deeded acres and 44,113 acres Gila National Forest Grazing Allotment. Ranch will run 650 head mother cows yearlong and 18 horses. San Francisco River Runs through the Ranch, great improvements. Priced at $4,900,000

SOLDTYLER RANCH/FARM — York Az, 544 deeded with 173 irrigated, along with 14,000 state and Blm lease land. 300 head mother cows yearlong. Priced @$2,300,000 If you are looking to

90 JANUARY 2023 TO ADVERTISE CONTACT CHRIS@AAALIVESTOCK.COM OR 505-243-9515, x .28 SCOTT MCNALLY www ranchesnm com
Sales & Appraisals Ba r M Real Es t a te
575/622-5867 575/420-1237 Ranch
FARM & RANCH REALTY, LLC Tom
6237 State Highway 209, Tucumcari, NM 88401 • 575-403-6903 tom@sidwellfarmandranch.com • www.sidwellfarmandranch.com Lifetime rancher who is familiar with federal land management policies Buyers are looking for a ranch. If you have a ranch to sell, give me a call.
Buy or Sell a Ranch or Farm in Southwestern NM or Southern AZ give us a call ... Sam Hubbell, Qualifying Broker 520-609-2546 SIDWELL
Sidwell, Qualifying Broker

MAJOR RANCH REALTY

RANDELL MAJOR Qualifying Broker

LEMITAR FARM: 36 acres of irrigated pasture, MRGCD water rights, 3,195-sf home. $780,000

MOELLER CROSS M RANCH: 27 acres of irrigated pasture, Texas longhorn cattle. 2,000 sf home, 2,400 sf shop with horse stalls in San Acacia, NM. $750,000

DATIL RANCHETTE: 98.7 scenic acres in Catron County, home to some of the biggest trophy elk hunting in the US. $296,000

MAGDALENA MOUNTAIN TOP: 65 acres original patented land located on top of the Magdalena Mountains. Has not been offered for sale in over 100 years. $877,500

COPPER CANYON: 39 acres of beautiful, patented land in the Magdalena mountains. Live creek water, spring,

well, electricity, and 15-acre ft water rights. $1,170,000

SOLD - Pitchfork Cattle Company LLC: 34,590 acres located in premier cattle country situated in De Baca, Guadalupe, and Lincoln Counties. $14,326,100

SOLD - Cerro Verde Ranch: 32,721 acres located 50 miles west of Albuquerque. This scenic and diverse ranch offers a great combination of hunting and cattle country. $2,750,000

SOLD - Tres Lagunas Ranch: 8,797 acres in Catron County. This ranch produces many different incomes with the hunting, cow/calf operation, and water sales. $9,000,000

SOLD - Elk Crossing Ranch: 5,585 acre all private prime elk, deer hunting and cattle ranch. Located in Catron County. $5,400,000

SOLD - Buck Horn Ranch: 27,905 acres located in Torrance County. $1,700,000

SOLD - Dinner Hill Ranch: 14,269 acres located in Otero County. $1,200,000

SOLD - 47 Hop Canyon: 88 acres and a historical home built in 1910. $680,000

SOLD - Rinconada Farm: 8.62 acres of irrigated pasture, home, and Pre-1907 Water Rights. Lemitar $680,000

SOLD - Maese Farm: 10 acres of irrigated pasture, Pre 1907 water rights and home. Socorro County. $420,000

For videos and other information go to www.majorranches.com Call Randell for additional information, a qualified showing, or to market your property!

Cell: 575-838-3016 rmajor@majorranches.com P.O. Box 244 • 585 La Hinca Road, Magdalena, NM 87825

NEW LISTING! Triangle C Ranch - Reserve, New Mexico

– **Great Opportunity** - Working cattle ranch located east of Reserve, New Mexico in prime grazing lands. This 625 CYL ranch is located in gentle, rolling grasslands consisting of 2,320 +/- deeded acres, a private lease and a 25,055 acre BLM grazing allotment. Many improvements including two homes, bunk house, hangar, air strip, large shops and working facilities. $5,750,000

NEW LISTING! Cottonwood Springs – RanchRed Rock, New Mexico – The Cottonwood Springs is a beautiful, high desert working cattle ranch located approximately 28 miles north of Lordsburg, New Mexico in Grant County. With a carrying capacity of +/-350 CYL, the ranch consists of a total of 13,605 acres which includes a combination of 1,629+/- deeded acres, 5,839+/- state lease acres, 3,400+/acres of BLM allotments and a 2,737+/- acre U.S. Forest Service allotment. The ranch is well improved with two homes, shop, corrals, interior and exterior fences, working cattle facilities and exceptional water improvements. $3,100,000

UNDER CONTRACT! Sliding Diamond, Kingman, AZ –

The Sliding Diamond Ranch is a working cattle ranch with good feed, excellent water and well-maintained improvements. +/- 15,680 acre state lease located in a checkerboard configuration providing an equal number of acres available for adverse grazing at no cost to the ranch. The state leased parcels are permitted for 231 CYL. With the adverse and an adjoining available private lease this ranch currently runs 460 CYL. The ranch is well watered with 11 wells and 28 natural springs. A must see! $2,400,000

UNDER CONTRACT! Kingman Farms - Kingman, AZ.

– The Kingman Farm is 1,920 acres (83,635,200 SF) of prime agricultural land located on a paved road north of Kingman, Arizona. With ±560 acres previously under drip irrigation and two sections fully fenced, this farm offers a perfect opportunity to grow a variety of cash crops. Historically planted with pistachio trees, the agricultural zoned property is located in Mohave County and offers unrestricted water production via its two irrigation wells. The property offers an excellent opportunity for pistachio growers, other deciduous trees, hay or a variety of cash crops. In addition, the site presents as an ideal location for a solar utility, land or water bank. Offered at $2,950,000

Tamra S. Kelly, Broker (928) 830-9127 tamra@aglandssw.com

www.aglandssw.com

REDUCED! Sierra Azul Ranch – Hatch, NM. – The Sierra Azul Ranch is located in Dona Ana County, New Mexico. This nice little ranch has been in the same family for over 50 years. The ranch runs 50 CYL and 2 horses on two sections of state land with over four sections of BLM and 520 deeded acres. The deeded land includes a beautiful 160 acre inholding with water and solitude. Good little ranch with good water, great feed throughout the rolling hills and canyons. With locked access and land-owner hunt permits, the ranch presents an excellent Mule Deer hunting opportunity. Offered at $650,000

NEW LISTING! Partridge Creek Ranch, Ash Fork, AZ–85,000+\- acres of strong grazing allowing for 800 animal units year round. 420 acres of deeded land, 480 Arizona state lease, remainder secured by deeded grazing rights. Newly remodeled 4 bedroom/3 bath owners home with wrap around porches top and bottom, great horse facilities at headquarters. Adequate ranch improvements and system of dirt tanks with reliable drainage. Low overhead, large animal unit ranch. $4,000,000

UNDER CONTRACT! Baker Property – Deming, NM.

– The historic Baker Property is located seven miles west of Deming, New Mexico north of I-10 and south of the prominent Black Mountain. This property consists of 2,666 +/- deeded acres. Full private access to every part of the ranch is made with ease due to its gentle terrain. This unique property lends itself to multiple uses with a unique setting for farming, an equine facility, and solar energy production. Close to the comforts of town, but secluded from town life. Offered at $1,999,500

SOLD! F Bar Farm - Taylor, AZ. – The F Bar Farm is a 330+/- acre parcel located on the outskirts of Taylor, Arizona in Navajo County. The parcel contains 2 irrigation wells and 3 stock water wells which have serviced 150 acres of irrigated land. Three phase electric power is at the well heads. With shallow water and good soil, this farm sitting at 5,700 feet in elevation provides a cost-effective opportunity for growing hemp, pasture grass, alfalfa, corn or other cash crops.Alternatively, its excellent building sites and proximity to town also make this the perfect opportunity for a beautiful gentleman’s ranch with irrigated pastures and great views. Offered at $1,296,000

TO ADVERTISE CONTACT CHRIS@AAALIVESTOCK.COM OR
.28 REAL
GUIDE JANUARY 2023 93
505-243-9515,
ESTATE

REAL ESTATE GUIDE

O’NEILL LAND, llc

CAPULIN -SIERRA GRAND VIEW, Union County. NM. 520 +/- deeded acres with HQ 1.5 miles off highway, 3 bedroom 2 bathroom home with landscaped yard and volcanic rock walls, nice outbuildings, 3 registered wells including 1 registered as an irrigation well and an excellent solar well. Close proximity to Des Moines, NM. $898,000

DES MOINES, 336.58 +/- Deeded Acres Union County NM – 3 bedroom 2 bath home, 32ft X 30ft metal building on slab. 62 ft X 12 ft metal barn, one big pasture off highway. Mixture of open grass range and trees. Less than two miles to town. $575,000

MAXWELL 45, Excellent irrigated pasture with utilities in back of property, including installed septic system, with private views of mountains. 40 irrigable acres and a domestic water meter installed. Great to put down home and bring horses. $249,000 $239,000

BAR LAZY 7 RANCH, Colfax County, Moreno Valley 594.38 +/- deeded acres, accessed off blacktop between Eagle Nest and Angel Fire. Historic

headquarters. Currently used as summer grazing, pond and trees accessed off county road on rear of property as well. Presented “ASIS” New Survey, $4,000,000 $3,800,000

UTE PARK RIVER PLACE 6.83 +/ACRES, 450 +/- feet of the Cimarron River and more than that of Ute Creek are the south and east boundaries of this unique one of a kind water property. 2 bedroom 1 bathroom cabin, year round access off Hwy 64. $589,000 $570,000

CIMARRON BUSINESS, Frontage opportunity, house, big shop and office buildings, easy view off Hwy 64. Formerly known as “The Porch.” $295,000

COLFAX TAVERN & DINER, Colfax County, NM. Aka “COLD BEER”, turn key legendry regional icon and destination, with anchor staff/team willing to stay on. Prime business on front range. $1,500,000

SPRINGER VIEW, 29.70 +/- deeded acres. Large house being remodeled, shop, trees, old irrigation pond. All back off highway with great southern aspect. 311 Hwy 56, Colfax County.

94 JANUARY 2023 TO ADVERTISE CONTACT CHRIS@AAALIVESTOCK.COM OR
x .28
505-243-9515,
P.O. Box 145, Cimarron,
land@swranches.com •
NM 87714
575/376-2341
Fax: 575/376-2347
www.swranches.com
SOLD JE Harris & Sons Ranch San
NM Laura Riley (505) 330-3984 www.verderealtors.com 4,616 deeded acres 4,400 +/- BLM acres 200 +/- NMSLO lease acres The
Harris & Sons
is a historical
in
The
tableland
shrub,
IN FARMS, RANCHES AND LUXURY
Juan County,
JE
Ranch
ranch located
premier wildlife habitat.
ranch lies in the Colorado Plateau, which encompasses rugged
topography. The ranch has grass,
and woodland-covered benches rising from the La Plata River valley to the Ute Mountain Reservations. MORE HUSTLE, LESS HASSLE SPECIALIZING
HOMES

www.scottlandcompany.com

Krystal M. Nelson – NM QB 800-933-9698 5:00 a.m./10:00 p.m.

RANCH & FARM REAL ESTATE

We need listings on all types of ag properties large or small!

■ KINNEY CO., TX – 802 ac. +/-. Brush country w/ some live oaks. Good Hunting!

■ COLFAX CO., NM – 491.55 ac. +/-, 371 shares of Antelope Valley Irr. Dist. water. 2 center pivot systems. 270 ac. +/- of pasture w/pens & corrals. Elk, deer & antelope are hunted in the area.

■ CASTRO CO., TX – 592 ac. +/- w/remodeled 4 bd./4 ½ bath home, 160 ac. under pivot. Balance is dryland & native grass.

■ CARSON CO., TX – 640 ac. +/- 5 mi. N of Panhandle on TX 207. 333 ac. +/- under 3 center pivot systems. One well produces 800 GPM. Permanent perimeter and cross fencing.

■ PECOS CO. – 637 ac., Big water, State Classified Minerals.

■ PRICE REDUCED! CEDARVALE, NM – 7,113-acre ranch (5,152 ac. +/- Deeded – 1,961 ac. +/- State Lease) well fenced & watered w/good pens, new barn.

■ COLFAX COUNTY NM GETAWAY – 1,482.90 ac.+/- grassland (1,193.59 ac. +/- Deeded, 289.31 ac. State Lease), great location near all types of mountain recreation.

■ PRICE REDUCED! UNION CO., NM – 2,091.72 ac. (1,771.72 Deeded, 320 ac. -/+ State Lease), well watered w/three wells, two sets of steel pens.

■ ANGUS, NM – 250 +/- acres with over a 1/2 mile of NM 48 frontage. Elevations from 6,800 to 7,200 feet. Two springs along a creek. Ideal for future development or build your own getaway home.

■ PALO DURO CREEK TREASURE - 941 acres +/in Randall Co. NW of Canyon, Tx. STUNNING VIEWS OVER LOOKING PALO DURO CREEK. Turn key cow/calf operation w development potential. Property includes: 3/3/3 ranch style home, 4 wells, large shop plus shed, enclosed livestock working facility w/hydraulic chute, livestock pens & shed, miles of 5 & 6 barbed wire fence & over 7000&#39; of pipe fence. YOU WILL NOT WANT TO MISS THIS! Canyon School District.

■ DEAF SMITH CO., TX. - 651 ac. +/-, 7 miles N of Dawn, Tx., 1 mile E of FM 809. 349 acres native grass with well-maintained fencing and 302 acres of cultivated dry land.

■ PRICE REDUCED! DALLAM CO, TX – 1,216.63 ac. +/- of CRP/ranchland w/irrigation, re-development potential, wells & pipelines already in place.

■ PRICE REDUCTION! TURN-KEY RESTAURANT –READY FOR BUSINESS! One of the best steak houses in the nation just out of Amarillo & Canyon at Umbarger, TX., state-of-the-art bldg., w/complete facilities.

RANCHES/FARMS

*NEW* 12.7+/- Irrigated Acres, Marana, AZ – Irrigated farmland in the heart of Marana, perfectly suited for development. Currently, planted in Alfalfa and at one time was planted to corn. Fields are fenced, flood irrigated from concrete ditches and gates from the Cortaro Irrigation District. Great location near Marana Stockyards for those interested in performance horse activities that involve livestock. $825,000

*NEW* 98+/- Deeded Acre Farm, Bonita, AZ – Great little farm in a picture-perfect setting!

Two small pivots with 35 acres of water rights. Nicely improved with a newer 3 BR, 2 BA Shultz doublewide mfg home; 3-sided hay/ machine shed, 1,560+/- s.f. shop with concrete floor and insulated ceiling, hay shed, Connex box, nice set of guardrail and steel corrals with crowding tub, squeeze and scale. 250 gpm irrigation well with 20 HP motor and 13,500+/- gallons of storage. Raise horses, finish out calves, small cow/calf operation or homestead. Runs about 40 head of cattle. $750,000

120 +/- Acres of Farm Ground, Willcox, AZ – Located NW of Willcox in a good groundwater area. 2 wells. Center pivot. $468,000 Call Harry Owens

2nd mfg home on deeded. 2 sets of good steel pipe corrals $1.9M

*SOLD* 2,373+/- Acre Farm, Animas, NM – Custom 2560 +/s.f. home built in 2008. 20-Acre pivot, 40’ x 60’ shop, 40’ x 50’ hay barn, fruit trees, chicken coop, garden area. Pivot produced 9.5 tons/ ac of alfalfa in 2020. 300 gpm well. 5 pastures with water piped to 2 storage tanks and drinkers in all pastures. Historically has run 40 head of cattle yearlong. $1.3M

*SOLD* 1,578 Acres of Land, McNeal, AZ – Currently used as grazing land for an adjacent ranch. Fenced with 2 wells. Seller will split. $500 per acre for all or $650 to $700 per acre for smaller parcels. located near the McNeal Farm we have listed above, and could be used as an additional pasture; purchase for investment or build your own ranchette.

*NEW* 0.14+/- Acre Building Lot, Maricopa, AZ – A great opportunity to own a corner lot in the desirable community of Tortosa. Ideal for a small builder or buyer wishing to build their dream custom home. One of only two lots available in the area, the other lot is adjoining this one. Utilities to the lot, back block wall in place. $110,000

HORSE PROPERTIES/LAND

SOLD

*SOLD* 200-300 Head Cattle Ranch, Marana, AZ – 112.8 +/Deeded ac; 150+/- ac of pasture, 3,700+/- ac of sub-lease, 14 +/ac of farm fields, HQ on State Land.

*SOLD* 5+/- Acre Country Estate, Dewey Humbolt, AZ –Charming 2 BR, 3 BA 2-story home. Beautiful, vaulted wood ceilings, loft, floor to ceiling windows in the great room with expansive valley views. Includes 2-car detached garage, 1,092+/- s.f. metal shop building, railroad car, small barn, fenced and cross fenced. Online Auction to start 12/1 and will end with a soft close on 12/10. Contact Paul Ramirez for details or check out our webpage coming soon.

SOLD SOLD SOLD SOLD

*SOLD* 40+/- Acre Last Stand B&B Guest Ranch, Sonoita, AZ –An exceptional property in the grasslands of Sonoita, presently operating as a successful wedding & equestrian event venue. The Territorial, twostory 4 BR, 4.5 BA main home has 4,110 s.f., & custom features throughout. $1,675,000

SOLD

*SOLD* 90+/- Acre HP Bar Ranch, Benson, AZ – Perfect gentlemen’s ranch or private get-away. Backs up to USFS for endless riding possibilities. Fully fenced for cattle. 2 BR, 1 BA home; garage; steel barn w/two horse stalls, tack room & large hay storage; corrals; workshop. Expansive views. $595,000

SOLD

*SOLD* 20+/- Acre Equestrian Property, Sonoita, AZ – Established horse training and boarding facility on +/-20-acres adjoining BLM land, panoramic mountain v iews. Two mfg homes, 36’ x 160’ horse barn, barn/shop, equipment shed, hay shed, 10 shades/loafing sheds with corrals, +/-70’ x 90’ dressage and 160’ x 170’ fenced arena. There are also RV spaces with septic, a fire pit and a well. $650,000

TO ADVERTISE CONTACT CHRIS@AAALIVESTOCK.COM OR 505-243-9515, x .28 REAL ESTATE GUIDE JANUARY 2023 95
Ben G. Scott – Broker Brad DeSpain 520-429-2806
Riding for the brand … is our time-honored tradition StockmensRealty.com I UCstockmensrealty.com *Each United Country Franchise office is independently owned and operated.
Paul Ramirez 520-241-3333

Mainstream Media Report Admits Minimum Wage Increase Harms Businesses, Workers

On January 1, New Mexico’s minimum wage increased to $12.00 per hour or 50 cents more than the current wage. The new wage will be mandated beginning the first day of the New Year. Despite progressives using increases in the minimum wage to claim it is for social justice reasons,

the increase will harm businesses and workers.

Mainstream TV station KOAT 7 even admits it, writing that the increase will result in “cut hours, automate tasks and demand more.”

The station interviewed an associate pro-

fessor of finance at the University of New Mexico, Reilly White, who said, “As rates increase, that does help a lot of people employed at the minimum wage.” He added, “But, on the other side of it, it does interesting things, particularly to businesses.”

Reilly White, an associate professor of finance at the University of New Mexico.

“White says it could also come at a cost to workers. He says some employers might reduce hours, demand more work out of their employees and automate some jobs like grocery store registers,” KOAT reported.

“It affects the types of people hired,” White said. “Another example is employers usually forgo hiring inexperienced workers like teenagers in favor of older, more experienced workers, making it harder for younger people to get a start in the market. So, it’s an interesting dynamic that affects a lot of different things across the workforce.”

New Mexico Senate Finance Chairman George Muñoz (D-Gallup), a business owner, criticized the wage increase, saying that despite him already paying his workers above the $12 new minimum wage, he is “worried about the future.”

“What’s the next thing? What are they going to tell us?” he said. “So they’re going to say, ‘Well, you know what, we need to do some price controls. We’re going to tell you how much you should charge for your burrito.’”

According to the IZA World of Labor, “minimum wages reduce employment among low-wage, low-skill workers. Second, minimum wages do a bad job of targeting poor and low-income families. Minimum wage laws mandate high wages for low-wage workers rather than higher earnings for low-income families.”

More companies are automating tasks and cutting staff due to increases in minimum wages, which decrease available jobs and force employers to cut back on critical investments in their businesses.      ▫

96 JANUARY 2023
FOCUS Dues are 5 cents per AUM, with a $50 minimum. Name_________________________________________ Address_______________________________________ City______________________State ____ Zip________ Please mail to NMFLC, P.O. Box 149, Alamogordo, NM 88310 newmexciofederallandscouncil@gmail.com Join Today F E D ERAL LAN DSCOUN C I L On Federal & State Trust Lands! The New Mexico Federal Lands is first on the front lines in addressing federal and state trust lands issues from new BLM Regs to water rights and the New Mexico State Trust Lands
46th Annual www.willcoxlivestockauction.com Monday, February 27, 2023 12:30 p.m. All bulls will be semen & trichomoniasis tested. 12 to 36 Months Old 125 Good, Young English, Black and Black Baldy Bred Cows & Pairs 50 to 75 Registered Bulls View sale live at www.dvauction.com For more information call Office 520-384-2206 Sonny 520-507-2134 Dean 520-988-8009 Kayla 520-895-2019 Fax 520/384-3955 1020 N. HASKELL AVE. WILLCOX, AZ P.O. BOX 1117 WILLCOX, AZ 85644 All Breed BULL SALE

New Mexico Youth Shine in Vegas

ike most rodeo families, our family tunes into the National Finals Rodeo in Las Vegas and we completely turn into sports fans for the first two weeks in early December.

We watched all the social media outlets and sat down each night with our favorites and our fantasy scorecards, ready to watch rodeo’s best fight it out over the grueling ten days of entertainment. Equally as exciting was the news coming in of the various youth competitions.

I watched updates from family friends and stayed connected to the Junior NFR event that our son competed at in 2020. I started trying to keep up with all the youth contestants and realized quickly that New Mexico sent a bunch of our best youth contestants out to Las Vegas.

Because there are different events from different sponsors and not all of those use social media or websites, we decided to try and build our own list of New Mexico contestants so that we could showcase their efforts.

Siblings Myles and Jorgia Nixon both qualified for several events and are repeat contestants in Las Vegas. The children of

Mikael and Jamie Nixon, Jorgia is 15 and Myles is 14. The family resides in Nara Visa, New Mexico, but competes in Texas for the high school rodeo season.

They both qualified for the Junior World Finals and the Vegas Tuffest events. While getting to rodeo in Las Vegas is fun, both kids enjoyed the sights and sounds, especially the Stratosphere.

LMyles tells me, “I am so lucky to go to Vegas with my sister and get to watch her. It is so fun. I probably get more nervous when she goes than when I go!” Jorgia says, “Competing in Vegas is different than any rodeos at home, they have lots of big bright lights and music, and one roping is even on top of a building!”

Jacob Martinez, the 16-year-old son of Tommy and Jessica Casados is from Tierra

Amarilla, New Mexico. Jacob qualified in the Junior World Finals in bull riding in the 14-15 year old age group.

He says, “I really enjoy this event and I like how it gives us younger guys the opportunity to ride and compete for a world title.” He also says that the environment is different at the finals. “They are strict on who is behind the chutes assisting the rider and that helps out a ton when it’s not so crowded.”

Avery Ledesma, Las Cruces, and the daughter of Jerry and Angela Ledesma, had a great trip to Las Vegas this year. She brought home a healthy paycheck and even more appreciation for her horses, Hop, Splash and Stone.

continued on page 100 >>

98 JANUARY 2023
Rodeo Roundup
(above) Paislee Foster in Las Vegas (below) Channing Robinson pole bending in Las Vegas (below left) Teagan and Wacey Trujillo in Las Vegas
BRANGUS ANGUS RED ANGUS RanchLocation 1818 ArabelaRoad Arabela , NM LowBirthWeight ModerateFrame RaisedinRoughCountry ReadytoWor Tate Pruett , Manager 575 - 365 - 6356 Ray Karen Westall , Owner 575 - 361 - 2071

Rodeo Roundup

She says her barrel horse “Hop” helped her earn a much of her winnings this trip. She competed in the Mike and Sherrylynn Vegas Tuffest Jr World Championship events that were held at the Expo at World Market Center in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Cutter Pareo is the 15-year-old son of Calvin and Darcie Pareo and started the trip to Las Vegas with pick-up trouble, which he says was stressful. Add high fuel prices and the long drive and it was a rough start.

However, the four-time competitor managed to finish second in the average in both the Vegas Tuffest and the Rising Starts events. Cutter tells me he learned a lot. “I learned to keep my head up even if I get a bad calf or don’t make the run that I want. I love the tough competition and how hard you have to push yourself at this level. We are very fortunate to be able to rope for such large amounts of money and prizes at my age.”

Channing Robinson, a 13-year-old from Las Cruces, and the daughter of Garrett and Sara Robinson was a second time qualifier. She competed in 2021 in barrel racing and this year was competing in pole bending during the Junior World Finals/KK Run for

(upper left) Jorgia and Myles Nixon in Las Vegas (upper right) Taylor Armenta in Las Vegas (lower left) Kyan Wlhite in Las Vegas (lower right) Ava Packouz in Las Vegas

Vegas event.

She rides a 15-year-old quarter horse that she calls Cisco. She rides every day after school, and that kept him in shape and helped them to prepare for Vegas. She tells me, “My family members are my mentors. We are a rodeo family and have been for several generations. Each family member has taught me something about the sport.” Channing and Cisco had the fastest time of the week, winning the short round and finishing third in the average.

13-year-old Ava Packouz, the daughter of Brandon and Stephanie Packouz, Silver City, competed for the first time in the Vegas Tuffest event. She says, “I was happiest competing in the goat tying which is my favorite because I get to run down on my horse as fast as we can, dismount, and try not to fall!”

She also says that even though she spent hours and hours of time practicing and preparing, “things don’t always go my way, but I don’t let that discourage me!” She qualified for the goat tying finals in Tularosa and for barrels in Hobbs. “The best part was getting to compete against top competitors from

across the United States.” She placed 4th in the first round in goat tying and finished 13th in the average.

See the list below for a compiled list of New Mexico youth rodeo athletes competing at the Las Vegas events:

Note, this list is compiled by hand is and not guaranteed to be correct. If anyone was left off, please let us know and we will be happy to include in the next edition of In the Arena.

Thank you to all the rodeo families for helping us gather this information.

Finally, congratulations to all the youth contestants, we are proud of all your efforts!

All In Barrel Race

Taylor Armenta, 11 (21st out of 635 entries)

Louann Pareo, 8

Joscelyn Trujillo, 14 Breakaway

Kai Presley, 12

Carli Pacheco, 17 Chris Neals – Vegas Stars

Open Tie Down Kyan Wilhite, 16 (Reserve Champion)

LJ Jenkins Bull Riding Tour

Wacey Schalla, 16 (3rd and 5th)

Junior World Finals

15U Breakaway

Addison Kinser, 16 (3rd in round one)

Jorgia Nixon, 15 (4th in average)

19U Breakaway

Kat Hooper, Addison Kinser, 16 Jorgia Nixon, 15 Quincy Sullivan, 15U Tie Down

Rank Herrera, Myles Nixon, 14

Cutter Pareo, 15 Reno Scribner, 15 Kyan Wilhite, 16

19U Tie Down

Cash Hooper, (7th in average)

Cutter Pareo, 15

Dontae Pacheco, (5th in average)

Kyan Wilhite, 16 (1st in round two, 2nd in short round)

Team Roping

Kutter Babb (10th in average)

Cole Northcutt (16th in average)

Jesus Pendragon (15th in average)

100 JANUARY 2023
continued on page 102 >>
<<
cont from pg 98 IN THE ARENA
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Saddle Bronc

Novice

Mitchell Story,18 (tied for 1st in second round, 2nd in short, 4th in average)

Jones Allen, 17 Senior

Jack Chase, 16 (7th in average)

Hardy Osborn, 15 Rookie Brody Bisetti

KK Run for Vegas

Barrel Race

Junior Taylor Armenta, 11 (2nd in first round)

Raley May Valdez, 12 Pole Bending

Channing Robinson, 13 (3rd in average, 1st short round)

Cody Lynn Meisner, (3rd in first round)

Leal’s Bull Riding

10-11 Bull Riding

Jace Wild Green, 10 (13th in average)

Lane Valenzuela, 10

12-13 Bull Riding

RJ Esparza, 12

Samuel Sanchez, 14-15 Bull Riding

Xavier Antez, 15 Evan Lucero

Jacob Martinez,16 (3rd round one, 10th in average)

16-18 Bull Riding Elias Lucero David Sanchez

Rylee Grace Abel, 17

Taylor Armenta, 11

Landree Bennett, 13

Clair Beibelle, 13 (16th in average)

Avery Ledesma (5th in first round, 4th in short, 3rd in hot round, 3rd in average)

Jorgia Nixon, 15

Caydence Roberts, 15 (1st in round one, 6th in average)

Cylee Jo Roberts, 12 (11th in average) 10U Breakaway

Paislee Foster, 10 Reiner McConnel, 9 Lane Peralta, 10 12U Breakaway

Anistyn Abel, 12 Paislee Foster, 10 Trip Saulsberry, 13

15U Breakaway

Landree Bennett, 13

Addison Kinser, 16

Lucky Lotto Barrel Race

10U

Louann Pareo, 8 (1st in 3D average)

Patriot World Champion Barrel Race

Rylee Strickland, 16 (2nd)

Rising Stars Events: 15U Breakaway

Jorgia Nixon, 15 (3rd round one)

15U Tie Down

Myles Nixon, 14 (3rd in average)

Cutter Pareo, 15 (2nd in average)

19U Tie Down

Dontae Pacheco, (Champion) Pecos Tatum, (2nd in average)

Open Tie Down Pecos Tatum, (Champion)

Rope for the Crown

Last Chance Qualifier Teagan Miller, 17

Mike & Sherrylynn Johnson’s Vegas Tuffest Jr World Championship

12U Barrels

Anistyn Abel, 12

Taylor Armenta, 11

Amy Biebelle, 10

Clair Beibelle, 13 (4th in average, 1st in short go, 9th in hot round)

Paislee Foster, 10

Jessi Higgins, 11

Reiner McConnel, 9 (10th in average)

Ava Packouz, 12 (25th in average)

Cylee Jo Roberts, 12 (17th in average)

Raley Valdez, 12

19U Barrels

Jorgia Nixon, 15 Caydence Roberts, 14 Rylee Strickland, 16 Riley Ybarra, 15 19U Breakaway

Rylee Grace Abel, 17 Landree Bennett, 13

Katlyn Hooper, (7th in average)

Addison Kinser, 16

Avery Ledesma, 19 (14th in average) Teagan Miller, 17

Caydence Roberts, 14 Rylee Strickland, 16

12U Goat Tying

Anistyn Abel, 12 (1st in round one, 5th in hot round, 8th in average)

Ava Packouz, 12, (4th in first round, 5th is short round, 13th in average)

Teagan Trujillo, 10 (8th in average)

Tammy Moon, 13 (27th in average)

15U Goat Tying

Jorgia Nixon, 15 (12th in average)

Caydence Roberts, 14

Wacey Trujillo, 14 (4th in average, 4th in Hot Round)

19U Goat Tying

Rylee Grace Abel, 17 (5th in hot round, 8th in average)

Avery Ledsema, 19 (2nd in short, 4th average)

Caydence Roberts, 14

12U Tie-Down

Trip Saulsberry, 13 (11th in average)

15U Tie Down

Braxton McKinley, 15

Myles Nixon, 14

Cutter Pareo, 15 (2nd in average)

Rance Rathgen, 15

Reno Scribner, 15

Hayden Strickland, 15

102 JANUARY 2023
Lane Valenzuela in Las Vegas Raley Mae Valdez in Las Vegas << cont from pg. 100
Rodeo Roundup
IN THE ARENA

Kyan Wilhite, 16 19U Tie Down

Cash Hooper, (3rd in short go, tuff money in average)

Braxton McKinley, 15 Cutter Pareo

Shane Smith,18 (2nd in second round, 3rd in hot round)

Kyan Wilhite, 16 (won round 1)      ▫

Rodeo Roundup

46th Annual Indian National

Cowboy New Year’s Resolutions

ometimes the first of the year is the best time to reset your habits. For cowboys, though, there are usually different sets of priorities. A gym membership, for example, probably doesn’t fit into many working ranch hands’ routines. And as far as eating healthy? We all eat beef so we’re good there. With that in mind, we’ve come up with a cowboy New Year’s Resolution list. Some are serious, some are not.

1. Keep all knives sharpened and guns

cleaned.

2. Rope the dummy for at least 20 minutes each day live cattle aren’t used.

3. No death loss on calves between branding and weaning.

4. Shed a few pounds and get in shape (round is not a shape that counts!).

5. Finally get the FILL IN THE BLANK PIECE OF BROKEN-DOWN MACHINERY running.

6. Have my 2-year-olds riding like 3-year-olds before they’re 4-year-olds.

7. Read at least one industry-related article per day—online or in print.

8. Read at least one book each month.

9. Have all fence up before yearlings are turned out.

10. Think about and care for others as much as I think about and care for myself. ▫

Rodeo is our life.

Baca Rodeo Co. is a third-generation stock contracting rodeo production company of the Baca Family. The 1970’s brought you the “Baca Bros” rodeo company, in 1982 it became the Casper Baca Rodeo Company, making a huge impact on the rodeo world in general. Top tier animal athletes and a new production unlike anything ever seen before established the company as a leader in rodeo production. The company is now in the hands of CJ Baca, Casper’s only son, who through many miles behind the wheel going to rodeos with his father, learned the craft and artistry that Baca productions is known for today. CJ continues to push the limits and raise the bar with one of a kind opening ceremonies, awards and breakthrough Renegade Rodeo tours. Maintaining the history and legacy of his father’s namesake events has the company on a track for success for years to come. A rich rodeo legacy was left behind, picked up and carried on by the Baca family ensuring the preservation of rodeo in New Mexico for generations to come. This has become the mission and focus of the company.

As a sponsor, or potential sponsor to the company, I’d like to extend a huge thank you for being an instrumental part of making possible this rodeo heritage. Without great partners such as you, the growth of this company and rodeo in New Mexico and the southwest alike, would not be possible.

Thank you,

C.J. Baca

BACA RODEO CO

JANUARY 2023 103

ad index

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American Angus Association 71

American Gelbvieh Assoc 18, 86

American Heritage Bank / Colten Grau 47

Angus Invitational Bull Sale 23

Bar G Feedyard 37

Bar M Real Estate 89, 90

Beaverhead Outdoors 91

Big Mesa Realty 89

Bill King Ranch 6

BJM Sales & Service Inc 83

Black Angus

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Border Tank Resources 83

Bow K Ranch 18

Bradley 3 Ranch, Ltd 86, 106

Brazos 13

Brennand Ranch 87

Brinks Brangus / Westall Ranch, 84, 87, 99

Brownfield Ranch & Farm Properties 88

C Bar Ranch 86

Carter Brangus 85

Carter’s Custom Cuts 104

Casey Beefmasters 86

Casper Baca Rodeo 103

Cattle Guards / Priddy Construction 80

Cattlegrowers Foundation 62

Cattlemen’s Livestock Auction Co 48

Caviness Packing Co , Inc 45

Chas S Middleton & Son 88

Chip Cole Ranch Real Estate 88

Citizens Bank of ClovisMoriarty 72

CKP Insurance 11

Clark Anvil Ranch 87

Clovis Livestock Auction 39

Coba Select Sires 86

Conniff Cattle Co , LLC 14, 85

Cornerstone Ranch 25

Cox Ranch Herefords 84

DEFGH

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Desert Scales & Weighing Equipment 83

Dexter Livestock Commission 16

Diamond Seven Angus 51, 85

Domenici Law Firm, PC 70

Environmental Science U S 55

Express Scales Services 30

Fallon-Cortese Land 88

Farm Credit of New Mexico 9

Farmway Feed Mill 38

FBFS / Larry Marshall 80

FBFS / Monte Anderson 70

Figure 4 Cattle Co 87

Five States Livestock Auction, 74

4 Rivers Equipment 15

Fuchs Ranch Herefords 77

Genex / Candy Trujillo 84

Grau Charolais 57, 85

Grau Ranch 17, 85

Harrison Quarter Horses 83

Hartzog Angus Ranch 59, 85

Headquarters West / Traegen Knight 90

Headquarters West Ltd / Sam Hubbell 90

Heartstone Angus, LLC 42

Henard Ranch 86

Hi-Pro Feeds / Sendero 7

Hooper Cattle Company 61

Hubbell Ranch 64, 87

Hudson Livestock Supplements 40

Hutchison Western 105

IJKM

Innovative Solar Systems, LLC 29 Insurance Services of New Mexico 49

Isa Beefmasters 85 J & J Auctioneers 14

J-C Angus Ranch 72

James Sammons III 88

Joe Stubblefield & Associates 89

Kaddatz Auctioneering & Farm Equipment 83 L & H Manufacturing 79

Lazy D Ranch Red Angus 87

Lazy S Ranch Willcox LLC 70

Livestock Nutrition Center 65

Lonestar Stockyards, LLC 81

Lyssy & Eckel Feeds 60

Major Ranch Realty 88, 92

Manzano Angus 27, 85

McKenzie Land & Livestock 12

McPherson Heifer Bulls 84, 85

Mesa Tractor, Inc 41, 83

Monfette Construction Co 83

Motley Mill & Cube Corporation 52

NOPQR

National Animal Interest Alliance 82

NMCGA Cattlegrowers Foundation 75

NM Federal Lands Council 96

NM Premier Ranch Properties 94

NM Purina Dealers 108

NMSU Animal & Range Sciences 35, 44

O’Neill Land 94

Olson Land and Cattle 81, 85

Paul McGillard / Murney Associates 89

Perez Cattle Company 3, 84

Pot Of Gold Gelbvieh Assn 19

Pratt Farms 86

Punchy Cattle Company 74 Range Changer 66

Red Doc Farm 5

Republic Ranches, LLC 89

Reynolds Farm & Ranch 53

Reynolds Land & Cattle 26

Rio Grande Scales & Equipment 83

Robertson Livestock 83

ROD Ranch 80

Roswell Brangus Breeders Co-Op 107

Roswell Brangus Bull & Female Sale 2

Roswell Livestock Auction Co 36

Santa Fe Guiding Co 21, 79

Santa Rita Ranch 85

Sci-Agra Inc 84

Scott Land 95

Sidwell Farm & Ranch Realty, LL90

Skaarer Brangus 76, 85

Southwest Beef Symposium 78 Sowers 84

Suther Feeds 8

T & S Manufacturing 101

TechniTrack, LLC 83

Terry Hudson 84

The Ranches 35

Thompson Ranch 28, 86, 87

Troy Floyd 78

Tucumcari Bull Test 31

2 Bar Angus 84

United Country

Real Estate 90, 95

United Fiberglass, Inc 50 USA Ranch 87

Utah Beef Day 56

Verde Real Estate 94

Virden Perma Bilt Co 83

Vitalix, Inc 73

WXYZ

W&W Fiberglass Tank Co 79

Waypath 43

Weaver Ranch 22

West Star Herefords 84

Widner Angus Farm 86

Wilkinson Gelbvieh Ranch 18

Willcox Livestock Auction 97

Williams Ranch Supply 32

Williams Windmill, Inc 78, 84

WW - Paul Scales 76

Zia Real Estate 94

104 JANUARY 2023
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Custom Slaughtering & Custom Processing Thatcher, Arizona • 928-428-0556 • Call for info & scheduling carterscustomcuts.com www.facebook.com/Carterbeef
JANUARY 2023 105 © 2015 All rights reserved. BE SET IN YOUR WAYS OR SET ON IMPROVING THEM. There’s no escaping change. Especially when you’re trying to keep pace with a growing nation. So when the time comes to buy new equipment, purchase land or expand your operation, Ag New Mexico Farm Credit will be there. We give rural New Mexico access to the financial support it needs to never stop growing. A g N e w M e x i c o c o m | 8 0 0 3 5 7 3 5 4 5 C l o v i s • A l b u q u e r q u e • L a s C r u c e s • R o s w e l l NMLS 810370
65 years of ranch raised, performance selected bulls. Mary Lou Bradley-Henderson, (940) 585-6471 James Henderson, (940) 585-6171 www.bradley3ranch.com ANNUAL BULL SALE Saturday, February 11, 2023 12 Noon at the ranch east of Estelline, Texas 200+ Angus Bulls 90+ Charolais Bulls 60 Angus Females • Complete Performance Data • 15-18 month old Registered Bulls • All Bulls have BSE, DNA tested, PAP EPDs for Angus Bulls Call for your catalog!
50 Registered Brangus and Ultrablack 200 + Bred and Open Commercial Females CONTACT ROSWELL BRANGUS BREEDERS CO-OP FOR BRANGUS BULLS & FEMALES Floyd Brangus :: Troy & Terri Floyd :: 575-734-7005 Floyd Brangus TROY FLOYD P.O. Box 133 Roswell, NM 88201 Phone: 575-734 -7005 Cell: 575-626-4062 Lack-Morrison Brangus JOE PAUL & ROSIE LACK P.O. Box 274, Hatch, NM 87937 Phone: 575-267-1016 • Fax: 575-267-1234 Racheal Carpenter 575-644-1311 BILL MORRISON 411 CR 10, Clovis, NM 88101 Phone: 575-760-7263 Email: bvmorrison@yucca.net lackmorrisonbrangus.com Parker Brangus LARRY & ELAINE PARKER P.O. Box 146, 1700 N. Parker Road San Simon, AZ 85632 Larry’s Cell: 520-508-3505 Diane’s Cell: 520-403-1967 Business – 520-845-2411 Residence – 520-845-2315 Email: jddiane@vtc.net or parker_brangus@yahoo.com Townsend Brangus PATTI TOWNSEND P.O. Box 278 Milburn, Oklahoma 73450 Home: 580-443-5777 STEVEN & TYLER TOWNSEND 580-380-1968 PHILIP TOWNSEND 580-465-7487 Saturday, February 25, 2023 Females Sell at 10 a.m. — Bulls Sell at 1 p.m. – Horses Sell Immediately After Bulls Roswell Livestock Auction, 900 N. Garden St. Roswell, NM Lot 18 Lot 21 50 Registered Brangus and Ultrablack Bulls • 200 + Bred and Open Commercial Females • 10 Super Select Ranch Horses Online Bidding Now Available — www.xitwesternproductions.com ROSWELL BRANGUS BULL & FEMALE SALE AND SOUTHWEST RANCH HORSE SALE The 32nd Annual Southwest Ranch Horse Offering www.xithorsesales.com Contact: Kade Wooton (575)-914-1283 For a sale catalog or more information please contact: Bill Morrison at 575-760-7263 ACCOMMODATIONS Hampton Inn & Suites - 575-623-5151 – 3607 N. Main Roswell, NM 88201 Mention the Roswell Brangus Sale for special rates!!
108 JANUARY 2023 JANUARY 2023 108 A part of Purina’s Sustained® Nutrition program, Wind and Rain® Storm® Cattle Mineral is built on research-proven intake consistency and unsurpassed weather resistance, making it the best option to support health and enhance reproduction and growth performance in your cattle. ©2015 Purina Animal Nutrition LLC. All rights reserved. Contact your Purina Animal Nutrition dealer or visit purinamills.com/cattle to learn more. ® Bunks Feed Hobbs, NM Jim Selman • 575-397-1228 Case & Co. Tucumcari, NM Luke Haller • 575-403-8566 Cowboy’s Corner Lovington, NM Wayne Banks • 575-396-5663 Creighton’s at The Fort Fort Sumner, NM Garland Creighton • 575-760-6149 Creighton’s Town & Country Portales, NM Garland Creighton • 575-356-3665 Double D Animal Nutrition Artesia, NM Don Spearman • 575-302-9280 Guadalupe Mountain Farm, Ranch & Show Supplies Carlsbad, NM Amber Hughes • 575-988-3508 One Stop Feed, Inc. Clovis, NM Austin Hale • 575-762-3997 Purina Animal Nutrition Eastern NM Steve Swift • 575-760-3112 Purina Animal Nutrition Western NM Joram Robbs • 520-576-8011 Roswell Livestock & Farm Supply Roswell, NM 575-622-9164 Williams Ranch Supply Quemado, NM Jimbo & Trisha Williams 505-238-4656

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