NMS Oct 2013

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WG RIBEYE SUPREME A60 DOB 3/9/2011 ADJ 205 WT.784

GR EASE G100 / DOB 3/29/2008 / ADJ WW. 638 / BW. #56 SIRE OF AICA TRAIT LEADER FOR CALVING EASE A59

GR SUPREME WIND K106 / DOB 4/20/2012 / ADJ 205 WT. 825

BULLS, HEIFERS & BRED HEIFERS FOR SALE COME COME LOOK LOOK ~~ Call Call 575 575 760-7304 760-7304 •• Wesley Wesley @ @ GRAU GRAU RANCH RANCH 2

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TAKE ADVANTAGE OF HETEROSIS WITH A PROVEN BULL PROGRAM Three Ways to Increase Your P Look for these outstanding Thriller Heifers for Sale at the Western Nugget Hereford Sale in Reno Saturday, December 7!

BK Miss Thriller 3074 ET Reg. #43409994 BW WW YW Milk M&G +5.1 +53 +83 +22 +49

BK Miss Thriller 3123 ET Reg. #43409995 BW WW YW Milk M&G +5.1 +53 +83 +22 +49

rofits

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or over 40 years you’ve known us for our outstanding Hereford cattle. We have also been producing top quality Angus and Charolais cattle for 17 years. All of our breeding programs are built on the top genetics in their respective breeds. We provide proven crossbreeding components that will add pounds to your calves and work in your environment. For maternal traits, beef quality, muscle and durability, we have the options. We use these cattle in our own commercial program and finish them in the feedlot. We know what they will do for you. Proven Crossbreeding Components New Mexico’s Largest 1 Iron Seedstock Producer!

Sitz OnWard

Selling 100 Angus Bulls Other sires include UpWard, Thunder, GridIron, TC Rito 696, X Factor, & Sitz OnWard

LT Bluegrass

Selling 100 Charolais Bulls Other sires include LT Bluegrass, TR Firewater, LT Easy Pro 3151, LT Mighty Blend 6297, LT Bravo Star 5151, & Western Edge

C Harland Too ET

150 Hereford, 100 Angus & 100 Charolais Bulls For Sale Private Treaty at the Ranch

Selling a Select Group of Registered Hereford, Angus & Charolais Heifers at the Ranch

Selling 150 Hereford Bulls

Hereford • Angus • Charolais

Other sires include Harland Too, C Maui Jim, C Pure Gold 4215, C New Era ET, CL1 Domino 6136S, & Ribeye 88X

Bill King • 505/220-9909 Tom Spindle • 505/321-8808 • 505/832-0926 P.O. Box 2670, Moriarty, NM 87035 — Located 40 miles east of Albuquerque

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Since 1893

Hereford Ranch JIM, SUE, JEEP, MEGHAN & JAKE DARNELL TEXAS/NEW MEXICO RANCH: 5 Paseo de Paz Lane, El Paso, TX 79932 (H) 915/877-2535 – (O) 915/532-2442 – (F) 915/877-2057 JIM (C) 915/479-5299 – SUE (C) 915/549-2534 OKLAHOMA RANCH: Woods County, Oklahoma E-mail: barjbarherefords@aol.com

“Texas’s Only Hereford Operation West of the Rio Grande.”

Se Habla Español THE DARNELLS CONTINUE A 120-YEAR-OLD FAMILY TRADITION OF RAISING GOOD-DOING HEREFORD CATTLE

LI DOMINO 0700 4

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Our annual low stress, no hassle bull sale will be in April 2014. Please feel free to call about this approach to buying bulls. OCTOBER 2013 5unique

Clifford, Cliff & Matt Copeland Nara Visa, New Mexico 575.633.2251 - Clifford 575.633.2800 - Cliff 580.336.82O8C4T O-B Matt ER 2013 5


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WITH THE NEW HI-PRO EQUINE LINE OF FEED YOU DON’T HAVE TO SETTLE FOR THE OLD-FASHIONED APPROACH OF GENERIC HORSE FEED; NOW YOU TAKE CONTROL OF EXACTLY WHAT YOUR HORSE NEEDS IN PROTEIN, FAT AND ADDED NUTRIENTS AT EVERY STAGE OF COMPETITION, BREEDING OR GROWTH.

Added vitamins and minerals for improved hoof health and proper skeletal development

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)RUWL¿HG QXWULWLRQ WKDW LQFUHDVHV digestion, supports immune function, and aids in overall health. Added products that aid in the reduction of pathogenic bacteria and excess ammonia in the gut

Added products to aid in decreasing LQÀDPPDWLRQ ZKLOH VXSSRUWLQJ MRLQW and skeletal health

QUALITY FEED, NUTRITION EXPERTISE, HANDS-ON SUPPORT. &RQWDFW \RXU ORFDO +L 3UR 'HDOHU WRGD\ ‡ ZZZ +L3UR)HHGV FRP OCTOBER 2013

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Gail Armstrong, Member Since 2009 Lynn Major, Member Since 2000

Farming and ranching are family businesses. And it’s not just the men who get their hands dirty. We’ve been farmer and rancher owned since 1916. Since then, we’ve provided loans, insurance and other financial services to New Mexicans from all walks of life. We know where you’re coming from. And where you want to go. Call 1-800-451-5997 or visit www.FarmCreditNM.com

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OCTOBER 2013

VOL 79, No. 10

USPS 381-580

TABLE OF CONTENTS NEW MEXICO STOCKMAN Write or call: P.O. Box 7127 Albuquerque, New Mexico 87194 Fax: 505/998-6236 505/243-9515 E-mail: caren@aaalivestock.com Official publication of: ■

New Mexico Cattle Growers’ Association Email: nmcga@nmagriculture.org; 2231 Rio Grande NW, P.O. Box 7517, Albuquerque, NM 87194, 505/247-0584, Fax: 505/842-1766; President, Rex Wilson Executive Director, Caren Cowan Deputy Director, Zach Riley Asst. Executive Director, Michelle Frost New Mexico Wool Growers, Inc. P.O. Box 7520, Albuquerque, NM 87194, 505/247-0584 President, Marc Kincaid Executive Director, Caren Cowan Asst. Executive Director, Michelle Frost ■

F E AT U R E S by Caren Cowan

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The Hide That Binds – HEREFORD

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New Mexico State Fair Hereford Show

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New Mexico State Fair AOB Show

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New Mexico State Fair Ranch & Farm Families of the Year

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Managing Fertility in Cows by Manny Encinas, PhD, NMSU Extension Animal Sciences & Natural Resources Department New Mexico State Fair Angus & Longhorn Shows

63

New Mexico State Fair Judging Contest

71

New Mexico State Fair Lowline, Mini Hereford & NMCGA Showmanship Contest

74

New Mexico State Fair New Mexico Bred Show

76

New Mexico State Fair Junior Heifer Show

75

FOOD Takes Water

77

New Mexico State Fair Junior Steer Show

by Jeff Witte, Director/Secretary, New Mexico Deparment of Agriculture

D E PA R T M E N T S by Rex Wilson, President

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N.M. Cattle Growers’ Association President’s Letter

24

News Update

EDITORIAL & ADVERTISING

26

N.M. Federal Lands Council News

Publisher: Caren Cowan Publisher Emeritus: Chuck Stocks Office Manager: Marguerite Vensel Advertising Reps.: Chris Martinez, Melinda Martinez Contributing Editors: Carol Wilson Callie Gnatkowski-Gibson, William S. , Lee Pitts Photographer: Dee Bridgers

30 33

Farm Bureau Minute - NEW THIS MONTH! by Matt Rush, Executive Vice President, New Mexico Farm & Livestock Bureau N.M. CowBelles Jingle Jangle

40

On The Edge of Common Sense

by Frank DuBois

by Baxter Black

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NMBC Bullhorn

44

New Mexico’s Old Times and Old Timers

48

Cowboy Heroes

PRODUCTION

50

In Memoriam

Production Coordinator: Carol Pendleton Editorial & Advertising Design: Kristy Hinds

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Market Place

53

Seedstock Guide

56

Real Estate Guide

ADVERTISING SALES

64

Chris Martinez at 505/243-9515, ext. 28 or chris@aaalivestock.com

Estrays

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New Mexico Livestock Board Update

New Mexico Stockman (USPS 381-580) is published monthly by Caren Cowan, 2231 Rio Grande, NW, Albuquerque, NM 87104-2529. Subscription price: 1 year - $19.95 /2 years - $29.95. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to New Mexico Stockman, P.O. Box 7127, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87194. Periodicals Postage paid at Albuquerque, New Mexico and additional mailing offices. Copyright 2008 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.

by Don Bullis

by Jim Olson

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Scatterin’ The Drive

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To The Point

73

Ad Index

by Curtis Fort

by Caren Cowan

ON THE COVER . . . “Into the Shadows” by JaNeil Anderson is a fitting cover for following the great rains New Mexico has enjoyed the last month. For information on this and other prints and originals, contact JaNeil at 263 Anderson Road, Red Rock, NM 88033, 575-542-9752, janeil.anderson56@gmail.com or visit her website at www.janeilanderson.com

www.aaalivestock.com OCTOBER 2013

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G

R

OC

C A TT L E

IATION

W MEXICO NE

O

S W E R S' A S

b y Rex Wil son NMCGA PRESIDENT

ESSAGE

Dear Fellow Cattlemen, hile our ranching families and their cow herds are not out of the woods yet in terms of the health of the landscape, it sure does the heart good to drive almost anywhere in New Mexico these days. The green may be short, but it is green and is the emotional boost that we all need to charge forward.

W

We will continue to pray for moisture this winter and next spring. We also pray for the folks who have suffered the floods in some places that has brought the green up. Unfortunately, catastrophic flooding was inevitable given the catastrophic fires we have suffered over the past several years. We will continue to fight for better federal land management in the hopes of mitigating all of these tragedies in the future. I am also struck by the positive outlook the media has developed regarding ranching and ranch families. I hope you have noticed the several positive stories that have been run, especially on television, about us. Those stories are well deserved because they are portraying who and what we are as well as our care for the land. Having the public acknowledgement of us lends truth to the theory that we have not historically told our own story. It is easy to feel unappreciated when we are facing excessive, if not oppressive, regulations at the federal level forcing predators on us and seeing private property move into government hands or control. But as we have always known, standing up for what is right is the right thing to do and people find us credible. These and many other issues will be thoroughly discussed at the region meetings this fall and at the Joint Stockmen’s Convention December 5 though 8 at the Albuquerque Marriott Pyramid North. The reservation block is now open. Tentative schedules will be available in the next few weeks. Please plan on attending and making your voice heard. There was a good turnout for the first New Mexico State University (NMSU) Ag Degree Days in early September. I enjoyed the classes I participated in and learned some new things as well. Our business is so dynamic and the new information from research is exciting. Look at the efficiencies we have obtained in the last couple of decades yet the best is yet to come. Most professionals are required to have continuing education credits. We are really fortunate to have NMSU for our education opportunities. Hats off to New Mexico Department of Agriculture Director / Secretary Jeff Witte and his crew as well as all of the ag organizations for the great Ag Day at the Aggie Football game. We look forward to these events in the years to come. If you are not already a member of the New Mexico Cattle Growers’ Association, now is the time to join. We are just a few short of meeting our membership goal — YOU could be the one that pushes us over the top. Please contact the office at 505/247-0584 or visit the website atwww.nmagriculture.org. Safe travels and I hope to see you in December if not before. Sincerely,

Rex Wilson

www.nmagriculture.org NEW MEXICO CATTLE GROWERS’ ASSOCIATION OFFICERS Rex Wilson President Carrizozo

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Jose Varela Lopez President-Elect La Cieneguilla

OCTOBER 2013

Lane Grau Vice-President At Large, Grady

Ty Bays Ernie Torrez Pat Boone SW Vice-President NW Vice-President SE Vice-President Silver City La Jara Elida

Blair Clavel Shacey Sullivan NE Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer Roy Bosque Farms

Bert Ancell Past President Springer

Caren Cowan Executive Director Albuquerque


T& S

MANUFACTURING

TRIP HOPPER

Range Cattle Feeders " " ! # Call Jim 940/342-2005

¡ Clayton, NM ¡ 575/374-2723 ¡ Roswell, NM ¡ 575/622-9164 ¡ Ft. Sumner, NM ¡ 575/355-2271 ¡ Amarillo, TX ¡ 806/622-2992 ¡ McLean, TX ¡ 806/681-4534 $ ¡ Dalhart, TX ¡ 806/249-5602 / Boise City, OK ¡ 580/544-2460

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All feeders will feed in piles or steady trail feed, whichever you choose. You set the feeder to put out the number of pounds of feed per pile you want. Counter inside truck counts feed for you.

OCTOBER 2013

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HEREFORD T he Hide T hat Binds

O

By CAREN COWAN

nce dubbed the “King of the Range Out West” the Hereford breed of cattle has about a 170-year history in the United States. The breed rooted in the country around 1840, long after the first importation of the cattle in 1742 from Herefordshire, England where the country was tougher and the cattle had to be as well. The American Hereford Association (AHA) was established in 1880 and the Association was the first to own their own building in Kansas City, Missouri. Between 1881 and 1960 there were over 10 million head of cattle registered by the AHA. The peak year for registrations was 1953 when 560,794 head were papered. Over the years, according to New Mex-

ico Hereford breeder Phil Harvey, B & H Herefords, Mesilla, the breed has taken somewhat different shapes, but always maintained the ability to produce beef and marbling from grass for a high quality beef eating experience. “From the beginning, the Herefords crossed well on the native cattle and they were extremely feed efficient and adaptable to the climate and terrain,” he noted. During World War II and the need to produce nitro glycerin for the war effort, cattle got smaller and compressed, Harvey explained. That led to genetic issues with dwarfism. By the late 1960s the cattle were moving to a longer, leaner body type to match U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) grading standards.

In 1969 the Type Conference determined the need to drive to larger genetics. “But that led to a frame race,” Harvey remembers, “where cattle got too big and outgrew what their ranges could provide for them. They also didn’t “fit the box” for packers.” In the mid 1990s breeders once again began to match the Hereford to their range and what could be efficiently distributed through the marketing change. That led the drive to more USDA Choice feed through the use of expected progeny differences (EPDs) – the prediction of how future progeny of each animal are expected to perform relative to the progeny of other animals listed in a database. The use of EPDs allows breeders to select for a variety of traits, rather than any single trait selection and has resulted in a moderate cow size today, says Harvey. Cattle in the 1,000 pound range do better than 1,600 pound models. “The drought we have been through over the past several years has told us that moderate sized cows are the ones that will keep us in business,” he said. Through this transition in the cattle themselves, the AHA has continued to be a continued on page 13

ROY, N.M.

Clavel Herefords RANGE RAISED HEREFORD BULLS

FOR SALE Joe – 575/485-2591 Blair - 575/485-0046 12

OCTOBER 2013


Hide That Binds continued from page <None>

leader with their Total Performance Records (TPRs) that include EPDs in pedigrees and introducing EPDs to the show ring. “As we have strived for efficiency in our cattle,” Harvey said, “we have had to become more efficient in our business as well.” Harvey was Chairman of the Merger Committee that brought the Horned and Polled Herefords under one roof, which took place in 1995. It was that same year that the AHA had its branded beef study and the sale of the first Certified Hereford Beef (CHB). New Mexico and West Texas are primary markets for CHB grocery suppliers and markets making the product available from Amarillo to Deming including the John Brooks Markets that serve Albuquerque and other areas of the state, according to Harvey. By 2005 CHB had sold it first millions of pounds of beef and the market has done nothing but grow since then, he said. But the cattle themselves didn’t create all of this advancement. It took men and women with the intelligence, expertise and desire to lead the AHA as well as many other cattle based organizations. New Mexico has had much to be proud of in that arena. Names that fill New Mexico history are also names that are found often in AHA history. Albert Mitchell, who managed the Bell Ranch and whose descendants are today leaders in the New Mexico and Western ranching communities on the CS Ranch and the Tequesquite Ranch was twice president of the AHA. You haven’t made a trip to Washington, D.C. until you go with his daughter Linda Davis. She can tell you the history contained within the artwork that adorns the offices in congressional office buildings from the artist to location of pasture or creek in the painting. And of course, there are many Hereford and Hereford cross cattle in them. There was Marshall Sellman from Watrous and his son Tom, who now lives in Nebraska, who both led the AHA. Harvey credits the elder Sellman as a mentor. Sellman considered mentoring as part of the duty of a registered cattleman. Harvey remembers stories of Sellman traveling to Kansas City for AHA conventions. The train went through Watrous a little before dinner time. Mr. Sellman, with all of his Hereford related reading material in paper

form, would board the train. He would have dinner on the train, think about and plan the upcoming meetings and issues, sleep, have breakfast and get off the train in Kansas City ready to do the necessary business. He used the return trip in the same manner, Harvey said. There isn’t time enough today for that kind thoughtfulness, he laments. Harvey himself served as AHA President in 1994, along with years on the Board of Directors and several committee chairmanships. And that list has continued. In 2009 Bill King, King Herefords (now

Bill King Ranch) in Stanley was AHA President. King credits his involvement with the Hereford breed to the desire to model himself after Albert Mitchell, who at one time was the largest Hereford breeder in the United States. As a youth, King went to meetings with his father, two time New Mexico Governor Bruce King. He got to rub shoulders with the likes of Mitchell who also served as president of the American Quarter Horse Association, the National Cattlemen’s Association, the Production Credit Association and countless continued on page 14

In Loving Memory of LaMoyne “Granddaddy " Peters (1920-2013)

Visit our our website! Ranch history & updates are available at

WWW.CORNERSTONERANCH.NET We have 2-year-old & yearling Hereford & Angus bulls for sale. We also have a few yearling heifers for sale Grand Champion Hereford Bull NMSF 2013

CORNERSTONE RANCH INC. 575-355-6621 • 575-355-2803 cornerstone@plateautel.net acornerstone@plateautel.net www.cornerstoneranch.net

OCTOBER 2013

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Hide That Binds continued from page 13

other groups. But Marshall Sellman had profound impact as well. The Kings started buying Hereford bulls in the mid 1940s when Bruce was in the Army stationed near a Hereford Ranch. When Bill was a junior in High School he purchase three heifers from the Sellmans. He took them home and turned them out. They promptly got out into an alfalfa field, where two bloated and died. When Mr. Sellman inquired about how the heifers were doing, Bill had

to report the sad story. Sellman insisted that Bill come to his next sale where he would have a credit to purchase two more heifers. King was also an active member of the New Mexico Junior Hereford Association which was shepherded by Helen Sellman, Marshall’s sister-in-law. Those were the days of the big Hereford Field Days that brought youth from around the state for fun, fellowship and leadership development. The Hereford history in the King Family is being handed down through the generations. Becky King Spindle served as a

Available in Texas, New Mexico and Oklahoma

PASTURE, RANGE & FORAGE INSURANCE FOR HAY & RANGELAND Sales Closing – November 15, 2013 Coverage Starts January 1, 2014 Sales Agents — Call 24/7 JP SENTER 806-215-5155 • shoestring@wildblue.net Or contact any of the agents below and they will be glad to give you more information:

Mark Matlock 206 N. Austin Lamesa, TX 800-588-5449

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OCTOBER 2013

Becky Offutt 607 A N. 1st East Haskell, TX 800-588-3055

Sam Matlock 602 N. Wells Edna, TX 800-588-3206

Michael Matlock Barbara Block 842 S. U.S. Hwy 87 San Angelo, TX 866-651-1722

director of the national Hereford Junior Association. Her children are participants in the National Hereford Junior Show and rumor has it that daughter Jordan is aspiring to more activities on the national level. Cliff Copeland, Copeland & Sons Herefords, Nara Visa, is currently serving as AHA President. He also served as president the American Junior Hereford Association in the mid 1970s and was president of the New Mexico Hereford Association. His bride, Pat, was the executive secretary of the New Mexico Association for more than 15 years. Cliff and Pat and his parents Clifford and Barbara all served as advisors to the New Mexico junior association over the years. The Copelands too have a strong Hereford history dating back to Cliff’s great grandfather and forward to his son Matt. These families have been supported by many, many other New Mexico Hereford breeders who have made history in their own right. One might ask how a relatively small state like New Mexico has produced so many leaders. The answer is self evident. These men all have the qualities that have taken them to the top leadership positions in most everything they do. They and their families have all been behind the New Mexico Cattle Growers’ Association. â–

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OCTOBER 2013

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Hereford Show 2013

EXCELLENT SELECTION OF BULL CALVES AVAILABLE IN NOVEMBER SEE OUR HORSES IN THE CLOVIS HORSE SALE NOVEMBER 22 - 24 NICE SELECTION OF YOUNGER HORSES

Grand Champion Hereford Bull & New Mexico Champion Hereford Bull TRL Gen Rancher ZR13 Shown by Cornerstone Ranch, Ft. Sumner, N.M.

SEVEN NICE BROOD MARES FOR SALE

www.ninecrossranch.com P.O. Box 310, Eager, AZ 85925 fred@ninecrossranch.com Fred Moore (602) 380-4716 • Daric Knight (520) 521- 9897 Grand Champion Hereford Heifer New Mexico Champion Hereford Heifer BK Miss 88x Ribeye 2114 Shown by Jordan Spindle, Stanley, N.M.

Doug Hall & Family Registered Herefords Sell Bulls at Private Treaty Selling Bulls at the 1634 M. Road, Fruita, CO 81521 U.B.I.A. PERFORMANCE (970) 985-2938 BULL TEST SALE E-mail: dmchall6O@aol.com in Salina, Utah, the 3rd Saturday in March!

Performance Testing Since 1978

Females for sale at the Ranch 16

OCTOBER 2013

Reserve Grand Champion Hereford Heifer BK Miss Thriller 3074 ET. Owned by King Herefords, Stanley, N.M.

Champion Hereford Herdsman Rhett Grant, Ft. Sumner, (c) pictured with Hereford Princess Kenzie Bequette (l) and Hereford Queen Abby Spindle.


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AANFORD NFORD

CaĂąones Route P.O. Abiquiu, N.M. 87510 MANUEL SALAZAR P.O. Box 867 EspaĂąola, N.M. 87532

Phone: 575/638-5434

PPRIVATE RIVATE TREATY TREATY

C A T T L E

ANGUS • BRAHMAN BRAHMAN ANGUS HEREFORDS • F1s F1s • HEREFORDS F1 & M ontana influenced influenced F1 Montana Angus CCattle attle Angus

O

GGARY ARY MANFORD MANFORD 5505/508-2399 05/508-2399 – 505/414-7558 505/414-7558

U R A D V E RT I S E R S make this magazine possible. Please patronize them, and mention that you saw their ad in ...

Leadership in quality Herefords 1873

CS

505/243-9515

2013 “Out in God’s country�

Your Cows + Our Bulls = TOTAL SUCCESS

SHELDON WILSON • 575-451-7469

cell 580-651-6000 leave message

140 Years of Raising Quality Cattle & Horses When in Colfax County visit Cimarron & the Aztec Mill Museum.

Semen • Embryos • Bulls • Females For Sale

CS Cattle Co.

Cimarron, New Mexico

575/376-2827 OCTOBER 2013

17


New App Offers Horse Owners Equine Health Information “Horse Side� n today’s economy, it’s even more important to make good decisions about the care of our horses. The more you know about horse health, the better. But where do we draw the line between making our own decisions on our horses’ health and soliciting the advice of a veteri-

I

Coyote Ridge Ranch Herefords

Total Performance Based on a Strong Foundation of Working Mothers

18300 Weld County Rd. 43, LaSalle, CO 80645 Jane Evans Cornelius • 970/284-6878 Hampton & Kay Cornelius • 970/396-2935 www.coyoteridgeherefords.com

HEREFORD BULLS FOR SALE VISITORS ALWAYS WELCOME!

HENARD RANCHES OSCAR ¡ 575/398-6155 BOX 975, TATUM, NEW MEXICO 88267 MRS. PAT ¡ PLAINS, TX MRS. ROBERT ¡ LOVINGTON, NM 18

OCTOBER 2013

narian? This is where Horse Side Vet GuideTM comes in. Horse Side Vet Guide is a brand new app for iPhone users (Android versions will be released soon) that is designed to help caretakers of horses (and other equines) make better health-care decisions for their horses. Importantly, HSVG is observationbased. It is all about what you actually see, not what you assume you see. It is about making you the best observer you can be, and then guiding you as to what to do once you have made those observations. The app is powered by an extensive and ever-growing knowledge base on everything from common problems to rare diseases: lists of observations, skills, how-to videos, veterinary diagnostics, diagnoses, treatments, and so much more- available to you “Horse-Side�. “As we all know, the downturn in the economy and contraction of the horse industry, combined with drought conditions and the cost of hay, have placed great strains on many of us,� said Doug Thal, DVM, Dipl. ABVP, a lifelong horseman, veterinarian and creator of Horse Side Vet Guide. “Horse ownership and veterinary care have become increasingly expensive and there is no relief in sight.� “Understandably, horse owners are turning to the Internet more and more for information about horse health, sometimes instead of calling the veterinarian,� said Thal. “Sometimes this works, and sometimes it doesn’t. Too often, this approach results in a delayed diagnosis and ultimately increased cost to the horse owner.� “It occurred to me that there might be

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a way to educate my clients via a smartphone application that provides credible equine health information “Horse-Side� – literally while standing in the stall and looking at your horse,� Thal continued. Horse Side Vet Guide was made with the horse owner in mind. Here is what HSVG can do for you: Assist. In any situation in which you notice a problem with a horse, you can input the words that describe your perception of the problem. HSVG shows you relevant observations, provides a summary of the observation, and lists what other observations to look for. It tells the user how concerned they should be, the factors that determine how urgent the situation is, what to do until the veterinarian arrives, and much, much more. Starting with your observation, HSVG gets you oriented and educated. Educate. HSVG provides an ability to continued on page 20


We are thankful for

Green Grass

&

Fat Cattle!

APRIL 19 BULL CALF 0144 x 3590

MARCH 2 HEIFER CALF ICON x 5216

* 1050 is Available! * April 2011 Two-Year-Old 827 x 3590 L1 Cow * Moderate 84 lb. Birthweight, Awesome *

BH 827 MONUMENT 1050

Performance! Tremendously Long, Muscular, & Eye Appealing!

* For Sale – A Few Select, 2012 Spring Yearling Bulls * Weaned Bull Calves by 827, 0144, Vision, & Icon * Don’t Wait!! They Won’t Last Long!!

5216 COW WITH APRIL 0144 HEIFER CALF AT SIDE

B&H Herefords REGISTERED HEREFORDS

Phil Harvey Jr. P.O. Box 40 • Mesilla, NM 88046 575-524-9316 • Cell 575-644-6925 philharveyjr@comcast.net • www.bhherefords.com

19

OCTOBER 2013

Jim Bob Burnett 205 E. Cottonwood Road Lake Arthur, NM 88253 Cell 575-365-8291 • jbb@pvtnetworks.net OCTOBER 2013

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BULL SALE SPRING 2014 Michael & Connie Perez 575/403-7970 Kyle Perez – 575/403-7971 Nara Visa, NM www.CandMHerefords.com

Ranch Function...Championship Form Hereford Bulls - Hereford Females - Baldy Females

RANCH RAISED

MOUNTAIN RAISED

WINSTON, NEW MEXICO Russell and Trudy Freeman

575/743-6904

Mountain View Ranch Heifers and Bulls For Sale Year Round Grace & Michael Wystrach 520/456-9052 HC1 Box 788 Elgin, Arizona 85611

Producers of Quality & Performance Tested Brahman Bulls & Heifers “Beef-type American Gray Brahmans, Herefords, Gelbvieh and F-1s.” Available at All Times Loren & Joanne Pratt 44996 W. Papago Road Maricopa, AZ 85139 520 / 568-2811 20

OCTOBER 2013

New App continued from page 18

explore the world of equine healthcare from an aerial perspective. You can browse any of the database tables for concise descriptions of hundreds of: Horse Owner Observations, Vet Diagnostics, Vet Diagnoses, Vet Treatments, Horse Owner Skills, or Horse Owner Supplies. Again, HSVG’s unique relational structure allows you to see the big picture – how one thing relates to another- like no other resource ever developed. Develop Skills. HSVG can teach you and your students and staff how to become competent partners in the health care of the horse. Users will always have access to 114 carefully selected skills on their phones. This is done through the use of short, concise descriptions, photos, diagrams and videos. 20 high quality “Quick Reference” videos, dozens of anatomical drawings, and the whole database itself is resident on the phone without an Internet connection. HSVG improves communication between users and their local veterinarian. The “My Vets” feature puts important vet contact information at your fingertips and encourages the dialog. Customize the Content: Use the “notes” feature in which you can attach your own personalized notes to any individual record within the database. This allows you to customize the database with information from other sources, especially content provided by veterinarians and other reliable sources. Share function – You can quickly and easily share (through e-mail, Twitter and

Facebook) a topic from within HSVG. Quick Reference features 20 high quality videos demonstrating key examination and treatment skills. Also included is a group of anatomical drawings created especially for horse owners and equine professionals. These images were created by Dr. Thal, and then a professional artist cleaned them up and formatted them. Quiz – Take the quiz to get a sense of what you know. In the future there will be more quizzes. Horse Side Vet Guide is not structured as a simple decision tree that takes you down a singular path based on your input. It is not a substitute for your local equine veterinarian. It does not, and cannot, anticipate and address all of the subtle variations and unique circumstances associated with your horse’s health. That is your veterinarian’s job. Horse Side Vet Guide is intended to increase the quality of communication between you and your equine veterinarian – for the benefit of your horse. To download the application for iPhone or for further information, please visit itunes.apple.com/app/id663353024 www.horsesidevetguide.com. Follow us at www.facebook.com/horsesidevetguide and twitter.com/horsesidevet. Doug Thal has been a horseman his entire life. His father was a steeplechase rider & polo player. He grew up on a family cattle & horse ranch & has been riding & training horses since early childhood. He has been an equine veterinarian for over 20 years, working on a mix of performance & pleasure horses. Special interests are lameness & surgery, & he is board certified by the American Board of Veterinary Practitioners in Equine Practice. He continues to manage his equine veterinary practice, Thal Equine, in Santa Fe, NM. More about his veterinary practice at www.thalequine.com.

HEREFORDS & QUARTER HORSES

Breeders & Ranchers Performance Sale Horses & Bred Hereford Heifers: Nov. 8, 2013 Hereford Bulls: Feb. 21, 2014 785/754-3639 • 785/650-9639 2271 Co. Rd. 74 • Quinter, KS 67752 www.jamisonranch.com


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New Mexico Angus & Hereford Bull Sale March 1, 2014 Roswell Livestock Auction OCTOBER 2013

21


AOB 2013

Grand Champion AOB Bull KR Bluegrass 3136 (Charolais) Shown by Cash Spindle, Stanley, New Mexico

Grand Champion AOB Heifer KR Miss Firewater 3085 (Charolais) Owned by King Herefords, Stanley, New Mexico

Cholla Livestock, LLC Gary Wilson Arizona & New Mexico 602-319-2538 928-422-4172 Brook Beerman 575-703-4872

www.SweetPro.com 22

OCTOBER 2013

Reserve Grand Champion AOB Heifer Miss Shaggy (Chimaine) Owned by Mia Encinas, Clayton, New Mexico Mia was also the Champion AOB Herdsman

Nikolyn Williams (c) picture with (l to r) Radale Tiner, Richard Stotts and son Brazos.


2013 State Fair Honors Ag Families (l to r) Jerry Franzoy, Lt. Gov. John Sanchez, Maria Medina (wife of ABQ Mayor Richard Berry), Barbara, Ollie, Amanda and Shayne Franzoy, New Mexico State Fair Commission Chairman Larry Kennedy, New Mexico Department of Agriculture Director/Secretary Jeff Witte, New Mexico Farm & Livestock Bureau Executive Vice President Matt Rush.

2013 NMSF Farm Family of the Year

Chile River, Inc Work hard and love the land. So goes one piece of wisdom that has long sustained the Franzoys behind Chile River, Inc., in Hatch, who have been named the 2013 N.M. State Fair Farm Family of the Year. The award was presented during the N.M. State Fair Junior Livestock Sale. Don’t let the name fool you: Chile River, Inc., not only grows green chile but also onions, corn, pinto beans, and alfalfa. Chile River, Inc., is owned and operated by Jerry and Barbara Franzoy and their son Shayne and his wife Amanda. Jerry and Shayne are third- and fourth-generation farmers. The Franzoy family has strong roots in the Hatch Valley; they homesteaded there in 1917. Jerry grew up farming alongside his dad and has continued the tradition with his son Shayne. Jerry and Shayne run the business, which is truly a family affair. Shayne’s wife Amanda oversees food safety and manages the onion packing facility; daughter Michelle along with her husband Manny and sons Markus and Stephone manage the chile harvest; son-in-law Richard manages the newly added composting operation; and grandchildren Arianna and Kyle also help out on the farm. Cousin Victoria manages the farm’s office, and her daughters, Lexi and Jessica, help out in the onion shed. Shayne’s children Ollie, Axten, and Joah also work on the farm and will someday take over, continuing the family farming tradition. Both Jerry and Shayne are active in several civic and farming organizations. They are members of the N.M. Chile Association and the Hatch Chile Growers’ Association. They enjoy working to keep N.M.’s chile industry strong and growing. They are also involved in protecting the water rights of farmers. Jerry has been on the Elephant Butte Irrigation District Water Board since

1979 and is very involved in the operation and water rights issues on the Lower Rio Grande. Shayne is president of the Southern Rio Grande Diversified Crop Farmers Association, a group that was instrumental in settling the water duty in the Lower Rio Grande. The Franzoys take great pride in being stewards of the land, which they make evident by conserving water via drip irrigation and by using organic fertilizers such as compost. The family strives to always work hard, love the land, and keep the Franzoy farming tradition going strong. 2013 NMSF Ranch Family of the Year

The Roland Sanchez Family Each year the N.M. State Fair honors a ranching family who not only supports the Fair, but is also a leader in the agricultural community as well has their local communities. Usually these families are steeped in generations of agriculture – the Roland Sanchez Family from Belen does all that and then some. The family ties to N.M. agriculture date back to Oñate and the first Spaniards in the Rio Grande Valley over 400 years ago. A family member was an aide to Oñate himself. Roland and Elia Sanchez have carried on and expanded that respect and love of the land to include registered Santa Gertrudis cattle. They have reared six children who are all involved in the family farming and ranching business – and a whole lot more. Roland is a medical doctor as is son, Adolpho, and daughter Jessica; son Roland is a dentist; son Florian is a veterinarian; daughter Alicia is owns an insurance business and son Emilio graduated from Texas Tech in animal science and works full time on the ranch. The Sanchez’ Red Doc Farm has become a force in the Santa Gertrudis

world with family members serving on the Santa Gertrudis Breeders International Board and the Rocky Mountain Santa Gertrudis Association. The Farm has shown cattle from Albuquerque to Houston and has fostered countless youth in showing the breed and starting their own herds. Sanchez cattle and semen have been sold the world over, with strong markets in Mexico and Latin America. The Red Doc Annual Bull sale each April brings buyers from across the US and Mexico, yet still provides bulls for the commercial cattleman at a reasonable price. The family also sells their great beef to local buyers. The Sanchez’ also understand the need to become involved in the leadership and political arenas. Alicia is secretary/treasurer of the N.M. Beef Council. Alicia and Roland DDS are committee leaders in the N.M. Cattle Growers’ Association. Jessica once drove a tractor to an US House of Representatives endangered species hearing and presented her testimony in Spanish. The entire Sanchez family is awaiting the birth of the first member of the next generation late this year to the home of Roland DDS and his wife Valerie. Baby Sanchez will undoubtedly arrive ready to work cows – he or she already has done plenty of that in utero. This year marks the 25th year the Sanchez’ has been a part of the N.M. State ■ Fair.

(l to r) Matt Rush, NM Farm & Livestock Bureau; Lt. Governor John Sanchez; Jessica, Alicia, Elia and Dr. Roland Sanchez M.D.; Mayor Richard Berry; Warren Harris; NM State Fair Queen Stephanie Bailey; Larry Kennedy, NM State Fair Commission Chairman; Jeff Witte, NM Department of Agriculture Director/Secretary; Caren Cowan, NM Cattle Growers’ Association. Not pictured Dr. Adolpho Sanchez M.D.; Dr. Roland Sanchez DDS; Dr. Florian Sanchez, DVM; & Emilio Sanchez (some folks stayed home to work). OCTOBER 2013

23


ROSWELL LIVESTOCK AUCTION SALES, INC. & ROSWELL LIVESTOCK AUCTION TRUCKING, INC. Walkin’ ‘N Circles Trainers’ Challenge 900 North Garden · P.O. Box 2041 Roswell, New Mexico 88201 575/622-5580 www.roswelllivestockauction.com CATTLE SALES: MONDAYS HORSE SALES: APRIL, JUNE, SEPTEMBER and DECEMBER BENNY WOOTON RES 575/625-0071, CELL 575/626-4754 SMILEY WOOTON CELL 575/626-6253 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. Trucks are available 7 days a week / 24 hours a day

ROSWELL LIVESTOCK AUCTION RECEIVING STATIONS LORDSBURG, NM 20 Bar Livestock Highway #90 at NM #3 – East side of highway. Receiving cattle for transport 2nd and 4th Sunday of each month. Truck leaves Lordsburg at 2:00 p.m. Sunday. Smiley Wooton, 575/622-5580 office, 575/626-6253 cell. PECOS, TX Hwy. 80 across from Town & Country Motel. Jason Heritage is now receiving cattle every Sunday. For information to unload contact Jason Heritage 575-840-9544 or Smiley Wooton 575-626-6253. NO PRIOR PERMITS REQUIRED. Trucks leave Sunday at 4:00 p.m. (CT) VAN HORN, TX 800 West 2nd, 5 blocks west of Courthouse. Pancho Romero, 432/207-0324. Trucks leave 1st & 3rd Sunday at 3:00 p.m. CT. 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. MT. SAN ANTONIO, NM River Cattle Co. Nine miles east of San Antonio on U.S. 380. Receiving cattle for transport 2nd and 4th Sunday of each month. Gary Johnson 575/838-1834. Trucks leave Sunday at 3:00 p.m. MT. 24

OCTOBER 2013

ew Mexico Horse Rescue at Walkin N Circles Ranch, Inc. (WNCR) has issued a challenge to New Mexico Horse trainers. Trainers who participate will be given a choice of horses from WNCR to train. The horses involved are all rescued horses, most of which have not been ridden and in some cases have not been handled. The trainers will take the horses they choose to their own training facility to get them trained under saddle. On November 2, 2013 the trainers will bring the trained horses to participate in one of two classes at a competition at the New Mexico State Fair (NMSF) Horse Arena. The 2013 WNCR Trainer of the Year will be announced by the qualified judges and prizes will be awarded at the WNCR Masked Cowboy Ball. The Ball will be held at the Youth Center at the NMSF Grounds starting at 8:30 p.m. on November 2. The trainers (who will be honored WNCR guests at the Ball) and pre-approved adopters will be allowed to bid on any or all of the competing horses. WNCR normal adoption rules will be in effect. These include facilities and potential adopters screening and approval by the WNCR Adoption Team. Full ownership will not be transferred for one (1) year during which time the facility and horse are subject to inspection. This is an excellent way to introduce the public to what WNCR does as well as providing more horses the opportunity to find loving, forever homes and new productive lives, which otherwise may not have been available to these horses, according to Charles Graham, WNCR executive director. This will also provide an excellent forum for trainers to exhibit and advertise their horse training and handling skills, he says. Tickets for the Trainers Challenge and the Masked Cowboy Ball can be purchased through WNCR on their website at www.wncr.org, by mail at P.O. Box 626, Edgewood, NM 87015, or by phone at 505/286-0779.

N

New Arizona National Livestock Show Steer & Heifer Jackpot Show he Arizona National Livestock Show is pleased to announce the addition of a Steer and Heifer Jackpot Show set for December 31, 2013. This event will take place during the 66th annual Arizona National Livestock Show which will be held December 27-31, 2013 at the Arizona State Fairgrounds in Phoenix. The Jackpot Show is open to all youth exhibitors from any state and will also be sanctioned by Southern Arizona International Livestock Association (SAILA). “Our vision is to create an elite jackpot show for beef exhibitors which gives young people an opportunity to showcase their animals,” Dean Fish, President-Elect and Co-Chair of the Jackpot Show shared.

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include a short informational presentation. The Albuquerque hearing will be a combined hearing on the gray wolf delisting proposal and the proposal to revise the existing nonessential experimental population designation of the Mexican wolf. The hearings are part of the Service’s continuing efforts to provide an open and compre-

Exhibitors may enter upon arrival and cattle that are purchased in the Show’s Feeder Steer and Heifer Sale are also eligible to participate. Weigh-in begins at 8 a.m. on December 31 and cattle will be released after the Show is completed. â–

FWS Extends Comment Period for Gray Wolf Proposals Announces Public Hearings to Solicit Additional Stakeholder Input

hensive public process for the two wolf rules and will afford members of the public a forum by which to register their views. To learn more about the proposed rules, the details of the public hearings, and for links to submit comments to the public record, visit www.fws.gov/graywolâ– frecovery062013.html.

he U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service (FWS) has extended the public comment period until October 28 on two proposed rules to remove the gray wolf (Canis lupus) from the List of Threatened and Endangered Species, while maintaining protection and expanding recovery efforts for the Mexican wolf (Canis lupus baileyi) in the Southwest, where it remains endangered. The Service also announced a series of public hearings to ensure all stakeholders have an opportunity to comment. The first public hearing will be held in Washington, DC, on September 30, followed closely by hearings in Sacramento, CA, on October 2, and Albuquerque, NM, on October 4. Each public hearing will

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NEW MEXICO

BY FRANK DUBOIS

Federal

Lands News My column this month covers the ESA, healthy forests legislation, an unhealthy FWS, and socialist toilet paper.

Is the ESA alive and well? ave you been told the Endangered Species Act (ESA) has not been reauthorized, and it is only enforced because Congress appropriates money for that purpose each year? If some yahoo (like me) told you that they were wrong. Technically wrong anyway. The Congressional Research Service explains most legislation has two parts. First there is the statutory authority to carry out an action. In addition, there is a section which authorizes appropriations. The ESA has both statutory authority and a section authorizing appropriations, and it’s the section authorizing appropriations

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which expired with FY 1992. The statutory authority contained within the ESA (to list, delist, designate critical habitat, etc.) has not expired. So how can Congress appropriate money when the authority for appropriations has expired? By sleight of hand, of course. Both the Senate and the House have rules against this, but each year they waive that rule to be able to fund the ESA. In other words, they have to go out of their way and violate their own rules to fund this act which has caused such harm across the West. Why don’t they reauthorize the appropriations section? Because that would be an amendment to the ESA and would open the entire act up for amendment and they don’t want to do that. Don’t we have a hero from the West who

will stand up and object to waiving the rule that would prohibit the funding of the ESA? Apparently not. They remember Richard Pombo, a Republican from California who chaired the House Resources Committee. Pombo was first elected in 1992, and handily won reelection every two years until 2006. Pombo had decided to push hard to amend the ESA and the enviros didn’t like it. The Defenders of Wildlife spent over $1 million on the election, the Sierra Club sent 300 volunteers and organizers to help his opponent, the League of Conservation Voters ran ads, and they defeated his reelection bid. Since then, there have been no serious attempts to amend the ESA or jeopardize its funding. continued on page 28

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The Department also offers preveterinary 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.

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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

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A ctive buyers buyers on on all all cclasses lasses of of cattle. cattle. Stocker Stocker Active d emand within within eexcellent xcellent wheat wheat p asture aand nd demand pasture of v accination ggrass rass d emand. Supporters Supporters of demand. vaccination active packer packer p rogram o our choice. choice. F our active program off yyour Four on these these b uyers, supported supported by by area area feedlots feedlots on buyers, feeder ccattle. attle. R eceiving sstation tation available. available. feeder Receiving Sheep sale sale 2nd 2nd ttoo llast ast W ednesday eevery very month! month! Sheep Wednesday We b We believe elieve that that customers, customers, large large and and small, small, should should rreceive eceive the the h highest ighest q quality uality sservice ervice aavailable. Our vailable. O ur b buyers uyers and our and sellers sellers are are o ur biggest biggest asset asset and and we we aare re d edicated to ur ttop o dedicated to sserving erving yyour our n needs. eeds. O Our op priority priority is is tto gget et yyou ou tthe he best best p possible ossible p price rice ffor or your your cattle. cattle. O Operating perating iin n Union Union C County ounty since since the the 1950s, 1950s, K Kenny enny D ellinger h as been been m anaging tthe he sale sale b arn and and Dellinger has managing barn community since sserving erving tthe he ssurrounding urrrounding community since that that ffirst irst ssale ale 2 1 yyears ears ago. ago. 21

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NMFLC continued from page 26

Tuggle Stiffs Conservation Districts The U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service intends to prepare an Environmental Impact Statement on proposed changes to the Mexican wolf recovery program, and invited state and local governments in Az. & NM to be cooperating agencies in that effort. The DoĂąa Ana and other Soil & Water Conservation Districts requested cooperating status but were turned down

by the FWS. Doùa Ana then filed a request for reconsideration and never received a response. Instead, FWS Regional Director Benjamin Tuggle wrote to each conservation district and invited them to provide input . . . just like any member of the general public. The conservation districts have statutory authority and a duly elected board, but are being told by the FWS they have no more standing than a guy on the street. You’d think with all the problems the feds are having in selling this program, they’d be smart enough to utilize the expertise of these local governments.

Proverbs 16-3

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Making Unhealthy Forests Healthy H.R. 1526, the Restoring Healthy Forests for Healthy Communities Act just passed the House of Representatives. In passing the bill, a majority in that body recognized the deplorable condition of our forests today. The sponsors of the bill made the following points: ■Forests today are in many cases several times more dense than at the turn of the 20th century – for example, ponderosa pine forests throughout the Rocky Mountain West that used to contain 25 trees per acre may now have over 1,000. Failure to thin these forests has resulted in millions of acres of smaller, weaker trees that are prone to disease, insect infestation, and drought as evidenced by the current bark beetle epidemic that has infested over 40 million acres of National Forest land since 1996. ■Despite the fact that National Forests are currently adding volume at a net rate of 33 percent annually, timber harvests have declined over 80 percent over the last 30 years. Current harvest levels only remove 10 percent of annual growth, and 16 percent of annual mortality. Total standing timber volume across the National Forest System is currently 1.4 trillion board feet – 700 times current harvest levels. ■Currently, the Forest Service, an agency that once managed millions of acres and averaged over one billion dollars in revenues annually, now spends $2 for every $1 it produces and spends half of its appropriated budget on wildfire suppression. ■A significant factor in declining federal forest health is a lack of long-term and affordable timber harvest access caused by litigation. This is, in large part, due to preservationist organizations using federal statutes like the Endangered Species Act (ESA) and the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) as tools to litigate timber harvesting. Litigation and fear of litigation directly impacts how the Forest Service handles timber operations. ■Beginning in the early 1990s, administrative appeals and litigation slowed Forest Service decision-making, increased timber program unit costs and reduced contract outputs (smaller, less economically viable contracts). Activist groups have become extremely adept at using the administrative process provided by NEPA continued on page 29

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OCTOBER 2013


sense changes to the administrative and legal requirements that are preventing active management of our forests. One section of the bill I really like would allow a Governor to designate high-risk areas of federal land for treatment and another section states, “Domestic livestock grazing may be used in a hazardous fuel reduction project or a forest health project to reduce surface fuel loads and to recover burned areas. Utilization standards shall not apply when domestic livestock grazing is used in such a project.” The bill passed the House by a vote of 244-173. Rep. Steve Pearce voted for the bill, while Reps. Ben Ray Lujan and Michelle Lujan Grisham voted against the bill.

NMFLC continued from page 28

and other laws to object to projects on both procedural and substantive grounds. During an oversight hearing this year in the Subcommittee on Public Lands and Environmental Regulation, a witness from the Obama Administration admitted that litigation in the northern Rockies has ‘virtually shut things down on the national forests.’ The sad result of these lawsuits are forests that go unmanaged, and valuable timber that could support American jobs left to burn in wildfires, which kills species and destroys the forest environment, at times burning so hot that lands are sterilized. The bill then makes some common

Socialism & Toilet Paper

of toilet paper in Venezuela, resulting in “panic buying” and other worrisome actions by the public. The Socialist government there, rather than recognizing their price and currency controls are the culprit, instead blame “hoarding” by the ricos. They’re not squeezing their Charmin, they’re hiding it. And this makes me ask: Are you looking forward to what Obamacare will bring us? Till next time, be a nuisance to the devil, don’t forget to check that cinch and you best keep a little toilet paper in your saddle bags. Frank DuBois was the N.M. 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 (www.nmsu.edu/~duboisrodeo).

Perhaps you’ve read there is a shortage

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CHARLIE ROGERS 575/762-4422

RYAN FIGG 575/760-9301

DARYL HAWKINS 575/760-9300

STEVE FRISKUP 806/786-7539

RUSTIN ROWLEY 575/760-6164

WAYNE KINMAN 575/760-3173

For weekend hauling permits, call 575/762-4422 or 575/760-9300 or any market representative

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Farm Bureau Minute

Words of Wisdom from the New Mexico Farm & Livestock Bureau by Matt Rush, Executive Vice President

t was my junior year of High School and I won a statewide public speaking contest and the chance to compete at the national competition, which was to be held that year, in Orlando, FL. I was

I

excited! For a Farm Boy from Dora, NM . . . this was BIG! I mean, I grew up living in THE COUNTRY! We lived so far out in the country that we were told the sun set in between our house and town! Going to

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school at Dora was considered small even by small standards. It is a true story when I say that I was one of SIX in my class. You know you are in a small class when to be in the top 10 percent you have to be number one! Needless to say, for me to get the opportunity to travel to Florida was a HUGE occurrence in my life. It even made the front page of the Portales News Tribune. I’m pretty sure that was only the third time I had ever even been on a plane. The memory that is etched in my head actually occurred on the shuttle bus ride from the Orlando Airport to the hotel. I was the last one on the bus and the only vacant seat remaining was on the right side of the bus in the front row. Didn’t bother me, I had a great view of Florida right out the front window. Quickly, I discovered that there were a few minor differences between New Mexico and Florida. Most, for me, could be summed up in two words . . . trees and humidity. I am glad we outlawed both at Statehood. The other major piece of culture shock was the shuttle bus driver. I had NEVER seen someone drive down the interstate, rapping to his own “Boys in the Hood Air Band”. I thought to myself, “Self, we ain’t in New Mexico no more.” Whenever the driver finished his little tune he turned right to me and said, “So man, where you from?” I proudly said, “I’m from New Mexico.” That bus drivers eyes just about popped out of his head! He turned back to me and said in the most sincere, inquisitive voice . . . “How, did you get across the border?!?!” Me being the practical joker that I am said, “I swam.” “REALLY?!?!” he said as his eyes bugged out even farther. “That’s right. Then we had to walk to the airport.” “NO WAY?!?!?” I nodded my head to reassure him that I was telling him the ‘gospel’ truth. He said, “I can’t believe I’ve got ‘one of you’ on MY bus! Do you mind if I ask you a continued on page 31

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Farm Bureau continued from page 30

question?” “Not at all.” I said confidently. He said, “Do you people celebrate Christmas down there?” I said, “Absolutely. We even celebrate the 4th of July!” He popped that head back around and said, “That’s amazing!” We arrived at the hotel and as I stepped off the bus I turned to him and said in my best TexMex voice, “Bueños Dias Senior!” From the drivers seat, up on high, he stuck his hand down at me and said, “I’d like to shake your hand and be the first to say, welcome to America!” I said I was glad to be in Florida and it

was my pleasure to ride his bus. He beamed with a smile from ear to ear. To this day I’m convinced that there’s a hotel shuttle bus driver in Orlando telling his passengers about the blonde headed, blue eyed, white New Mexican that rode his bus once. What’s the point you say? Well, I thought you’d never ask. Don’t you think that’s how we operate in agriculture? When it comes to our urban friends we might as well be from a foreign country even though we might live right down the street. They don’t know who we are, where we’re from or why we do what we do. When they do meet one of us they usually look at us with curious bewilderment and ask questions that we feel are as ridiculous

as, “Do you people celebrate Christmas down there?” In these current times, the disconnect between the American farmer or rancher and the average American consumer could make the Grand Canyon look like an irrigation ditch. The most important question is where did the disconnect come from? We all know that those of us in agriculture are completely content to sit on a tractor or a horse and just do our jobs. In the void of our voices our “customers” have forgotten who we are and more importantly, why we do what we do. The Tractor and the Horse are our jobs, we just can’t forget to stop long enough to tell those we meet who we are and why we ■ do what we do.

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CALENDAR OF EVENTS OCTOBER 15 – CowBelle of the Year Nominations due to President Sharon King 9-20, 26-27 – Pumpkin Patch, Santa Ana Casino, Albuquerque

Dear Ladies, t is time for us to catch up with the world of “Mom’s, Millennials and More”. Well, I know what a mom is. As CowBelles we need to address these women. We must share their concerns and opinions. We must explain the benefits of modern beef production and so their attitudes about beef will improve. The “Mom’s, Millennials and More” program from ANCW leverages the power of social media and of woman-towoman interaction to enhance the image of beef. Millennials range from the age from 1332 and social media is their primary source of information and drives their decisionmaking. The majority of Millennials feel technology makes life easier. Beef is an important, healthy and muscle building

I

product and our job is to get this information to them. They are apprehensive about exploring the full range that beef has to offer due to a lack of knowledge of the cuts, and how to cook them. They make decisions by looking to online recipes, social media, online ratings, Pinterest, Facebook, Groupon, YouTube and traditional media. We need to get involved in social media since that is the up and coming information source for today’s Mom’s in the millennial era. We need to be online, engage in social media including Twitter parties, beef blogs, YouTube videos and Pinterest/Instagram contests, where Cattlewomen, Moms and Millennials are at

NOVEMBER 15 – 50 copies due of each locals’ activities which includes the 2014 officers on the back, committee Chairs and Executive Committee for the CIA Packet to President Elect Madalynn Lee 5 – Volunteer Time Sheets due to President Sharon King DECEMBER 5-8 – Joint Stockman’s Convention & NMCB Annual Meeting 6 – NMCB Board of Directors Meeting 7 – NMCB General Membership Meeting the forefront. Think visually and meet them where they are, seeing is believing. “More” is the last of the three M’s and continued on page 34

OCTOBER 2013

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Jingle continued from page 33

we need more. More membership, more young blood because this is the future of our organization. Some of us have been in this organization for several decades, we need to step down, turn the reins over to those who are younger and have great ideas. I have heard some great ideas while traveling with the young ladies that have been my officers. Let them be our leaders! Those of us who have been in a decade or longer, I challenge you to get new members and let the young ladies be our leaders. It is a challenge to be an officer, and granted it is like the book titled, It Is Okay to Be Wrong. If you are wrong you correct your mistakes and go on, no one is perfect. It is like a young lady who was teaching once asked me, “How do you teach a child to fall down, get back up and go on?” That is what we need to do. Give these young ladies a chance, it is okay to try new ideas, stand behind them and get them as new members to help our organization to grow. – Sharon King, New Mexico CowBelle President

With seven members and one guest present, Lariat CowBelles met on September 4, at Rabbit Ears Café. Guest Sarah King was introduced and she will be joining Lariat CowBelles. Past Lariat CowBelle Wynona Arnett has passed away. A memorial will be sent in her name to the Pat Nowlin Scholarship fund. The Fourth of July Pie Sale was a great success. All 74 pies were sold. The new location inside the fair barn was an improvement. A nomination committee for Lariat officers is needed. CowBelle of the Year nominations are due October 15. Owida Franz informed Lariats about the upcoming Kids, Kows, and More program coming up on Tuesday, October 15 at the Fairgrounds from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. The five presentations will be Beef & Ranching, a mobile cow demonstration, Traci (Williams) Curry– Ag in the Classroom, Curds and Whey, and Water and Soil Erosion. A hamburger lunch will be provided to the children attending. Some Lariat members will help at the program. Lariats will donate money from their State Fair and Beef Education funds. Alva School is doing a year-long promotion on agriculture. They will have a monthly program for all the classes on farming and ranching. The 39th Annual

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Five States Round-Up will be held October 2, 2013, at the Clayton airpark. The theme this year is ‘Beef is Relevant: Today and Tomorrow.’ Guest speakers will be Allen Jackson of Micro Beef Technologies and Barbara Jackson, President of American National Cattle Women. Mary’s Back Porch is catering lunch with roast beef, salad, baked potato, green beans and cobbler. Espy’s/3 West will provide a fashion show. There will be vendor booths, a silent auction booth, door prizes and a continental breakfast. There will be no registrations accepted at the door. The vendors will donate door prizes. Individuals may also donate door prizes if they wish. Vendors need to set up their booths on Tuesday, Oct.1, between 1:30 and 4 p.m. Silent Auction items need to be brought to the air park between 1:30 and 3 p.m. on that Tuesday. Yearly dues and volunteer time sheets are due at next month’s meeting. The next regular meeting of Lariat CowBelles will be October 9, at the Rabbit Ear Café. Respectfully submitted, Marianne Rose, Reporter, Lariat CowBelles The Chuckwagon CowBelles met at the home of Ruth Romero in Bosque Farms, on September 3, 2013, with 17 members present, President Toni presiding. Toni announced that money was made at the fair and talked about potential members. Carolyn Chance reported having a good fair booth. She said they visited with Deborah Fox from the local paper and invited her to come to one of the meetings. Carolyn announced that she has accepted the position of Secretary of New Mexico CowBelles for 2014. Lyn Greene is looking for an assistant NMCB treasurer. There was discussion about the State Fair. Ruth Romero then introduced her guest who is her neighbor and a Yoga instructor, who gave the program. Toni gave directions to the October meeting: Take highway 314 from Belen to Los Lunas. Go to the second light, Courthouse Road, turn east and travel ½ mile and it is the next building on the north side of the road. It is marked “Valencia County Extension.” Toni implored us to communicate intentions of attending the meetings to those hosting the meetings. Next meeting will be on October 8, 2013 at Vera Gibson’s office. Toni also mentioned the miles and hours of travel reports for the year. Babbi Baker read the minutes that Carolyn Chance recorded from the August meeting. $40 was collected for the Horses for Heroes fund. There was discussion about the New continued on page 35

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Jingle continued from page 34

Mexico bred and raised award for the State Fair. It was decided to not contribute any donation to the State Fair and NM Bred Steer Show. There was discussion about donating beef to assisted living facilities. Toni mentioned a DVD called “Field Trip.� She also presented a brochure about how beef is actually one of the best things a heart patient can consume. There was discussion about this. Anna Sanchez-Glenn mentioned the McDonald’s advertisement about potato farmers. Toni announced again the Pumpkin Fest on October 19 and 20, 26 and 27. It has been moved to the Santa Ana Center out in Rio Rancho. The Annual Meeting is on December 6 through 8 in Albuquerque. Five States will be on October 2. She also made suggestions for nominations for CowBelle of the Year. Toni adjourned the meeting at 2:00 p.m. Submitted by Babbi Baker 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 each month.

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Managing Fertility in Cows MANNY ENCINIAS, PH.D. NMSU EXTENSION ANIMAL SCIENCES & NATURAL RESOURCES DEPARTMENT Introduction he responsibility of the beef female is to conceive early in the breeding season, deliver a healthy calf, and wean a calf to its full genetic potential, making fertility the primary driving factor of profitability on a cow-calf operation. When a cow experiences a decrease in reproductive performance it often results in delayed breeding, lighter weaning weights, and more open (non-pregnant) females. These losses, which are attributed to decreased fertility, cost the U.S. beef industry more than $1 billion dollars annually. Reproductive traits commonly used to describe fertility, generally have a low heritability. In other words, this means that other factors, like production environment and management of a cowherd, play a larger role than genetic selection. Suggesting cow-calf managers should evaluate a production environment’s limitations and consider management strategies to measure, assess, and cost-effectively improve reproductive efficiency in beef females.

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Measures of Cow Fertility – Fertility in beef females is commonly measured by numerous traits with low heritability estimates. The following is a descriptive list of traits associated with cow fertility: Age at puberty – describes the age of sexual maturity of a replacement heifer. This trait is used to measure heifer fertility and is influenced by breed, body weight, and nutritional status. Heifers that achieve puberty at younger ages typically conceive early in the breeding season consequently calve earlier and have higher pregnancy rates than heifers who achieve puberty at older ages Age at first calving – is correlated to age at puberty in heifers and subsequent calving intervals. First calf females that calve at 24-26 months of age typically experience greater lifetime production. Pregnancy rate– is simply the percent of the herd diagnosed pregnant, which measures the success of the breeding season. Calving date – is defined as the day within the calving season in which a beef female calved. Typically, females that calve earlier in a calving season wean heavier calves and have higher pregnancy rates. Calving interval – describes the number of days between successive deliveries of

a live calf. Ideally this period is 365 days or less and not more than 365 days over multiple years to ensure the production of marketable calf on an annual basis. Dystocia – is a measure of a birth that requires assistance at delivery. An increased incidence of dystocia prolongs post-calving (post-partum) anestrus, negatively impacts fertility. Pregnancy Diagnosis Tools – Pregnancy detection is the most cost-effective management tool to measure reproductive success. Recent survey data suggests only 18 percent of beef cow operations in the U.S. evaluate the cowherd for pregnancy. This is unfortunate, since a large portion of the financial losses attributed to infertility in beef cows is the result of maintaining open cows. Traditionally, manual rectal palpation has been the standard method to assess pregnancy status on ranches throughout the Southwest. In experienced hands, rectal palpation is a rapid, inexpensive method to diagnosis pregnancy. The primary disadvantage of rectal palpation is accuracy. Even the most proficient technician or veterinarian has difficulty accurately detecting early pregnancies (<45 continued on page 37


Managing Ferttility

continued from page 36

days) and aging pregnancies with rectal palpation. Accurate diagnosis typically increases as pregnancy progresses beyond 90 days. Misdiagnosis is a costly consequence of using rectal palpation, and typically occurs in the hands of less experienced technicians or veterinarians and as fatigue sets in. The use of real-time ultrasound has evolved as the most accurate tool to diagnose pregnancy in beef cattle. Ultrasound is less invasive, enables the detection of pregnancy as early as 28 days, permits fetal sexing between 60 and 80 days of pregnancy, and does not require the handling of the uterus (which minimizes the loss of early pregnancies). Because ultrasound provides the opportunity to accurately age pregnancies, unique financial and marketing incentives, as well as management options are presented to producers who utilize this technology to determine pregnancy in the cowherd. Furthermore, ultrasound provides the visual proof of a pregnancy, which is something other methods cannot. In recent years, commercialized blood tests, have offered producers an additional tool to determine pregnancy in beef cattle. Most tests require that a 2 ml (cc) sample of whole blood (collected from the jugular or tail vein) be sent off to an accredited laboratory to determine the circulating concentrations of specific proteins produced by the placenta in pregnant females. The test simply determines whether or not these specific proteins are present in the blood. Thus the test is a simple yes or no determination of pregnancy, and does not define the stage of pregnancy. Within 48 hours after the samples are received in the laboratory, a pregnancy report can be generated to accurately identify 99 to 100 percent of non-pregnant females and 91-95 percent of pregnant females. False positives exist in the determination of non-pregnant females, typically by sampling too early, and in the determination of pregnant females, where the placenta continues to produce some of these specific proteins after embryonic mortality. The test can detect a 30 day pregnancy in heifers and cows. The only additional criterion is that lactating cows must be sampled at least 90 days since calving. The largest advantage of commercialized blood tests is that this tool provides the opportunity for producer’s to conveniently check for pregnancy without the need to be trained to palpate or ultrasound for pregnancy diagnosis, or schedule the

services of a veterinarian or skilled technician. This technology may provide the largest benefit to small producers who often time cannot schedule or justify the cost associated with pregnancy diagnosis. The largest disadvantage of these tests is the turnaround time of results when management or marketing decisions need to be made. Assessing Fertility in the Cowherd – Since multiple diagnostic tools exist for producers to determine the success of their breeding season, the largest decision is making the decision to begin preg-checking the cowherd. The next decision involves defining realistic expectations ahead of preg-checking and interpreting results. Questions like: Were the cows in good breeding condition? Was enough bull power supplied throughout the breeding season? Are real questions to

define these expectations. Sometimes asking oneself these types of questions ahead of time reduces the shock of going through the results. In most situations it has been our experience that if producers address bull power (i.e. bull:cow ratios, veneral diseases, fertility, etc.) issues, wellmanaged, middle-age cows adapted to the arid production environment of the Southwest will be confirmed pregnant at the conclusion of a fixed 120-150 day breeding season. However, producers should expect a percentage of open cows from: high risk age classes (pre-pubertal heifers, 1st and 2nd calf cows, and older cows), non-vaccinated females, and poisonous plant interactions. For the sake of improving reproductive rates it is important to pin-point the root continued on page 38

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and cause of open females. Utilizing a categorical matrix and developing a series of questions related to the following topics will aid the process of identifying management shortcomings: Cow/heifer Body Condition Score & Age ■Calving ■Beginning of Breeding Season (i.e. AI or bull turnout) ■During the Breeding Season Bull Power ■Bull to Cow Ratio (How many cows did I expect the bull(s) to breed?) • Age of Bulls (Were expectations too high for younger bulls?) • Terrain ■Fertility (Were all bulls fertility and trichomoniasis tested prior to turnout?) ■Soundness ■Social Dominance Management Pre-breeding Vaccination Program ■Disease coverage (What diseases were cattle vaccinated against?) ■Product Quality (Killed, ChemicallyAltered, or Modified Live) ■Label Recommendations • Was a booster dose required? continued on page 39

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Managing Fertility

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• Timing of last dose prior to the beginning of the breeding season ■Parasite control

General Herd History and Bio-Security ■How were new additions to the herd screened and introduced ■Fenceline contact w/neighbor’s cattle ■Wildlife and feral hog interactions Conclusion – The goal of improving fertility in any cowherd is setting females up for success by setting realistic goals and

implementing a sensible management plan. Recognize reproductive losses are going to happen, even with the best management guidelines put into practice. The bottomline is that the successful manager will make the right decision(s), whenever it is necessary, to improve reproductive â– efficiency.

NEW MEXICO FARM & LIVESTOCK BUREAU POSITION ANNOUNCEMENT

EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT & SECRETARY – TREASURER The New Mexico Farm & Livestock Bureau is seeking a qualified individual to serve as Executive Vice President and SecretaryTreasurer of the Corporation and Affiliated Farm Bureau Companies. The candidate should have a Bachelor’s degree or equivalent, and experience in business and fiscal management, staff supervision, strategic planning, program development and administration, or a combination of the above. A comprehensive position description is available on request. Compensation is negotiable with benefits commensurate with experience and industry standards.

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Rattlesnakes On The Border attlesnakes on the Border.” Some of you might think this is another grim tale about the cartels and gunfights in the Mexican Border states. It’s not. Most all of roads coming north to connect with the freeway have a manned border patrol checkpoint. The object is to deter illegal immigrants and drug smuggling. A good deal of the borderland is ranching country. Two young day-work cowboys had been helping gather cows. They put in a good day and were headed home.

“R

Devon was drivin’ and twilight was still hangin’ on as they headed north on AZ Highway 191. His compadré was Duke. They hung out a lot. Each was ridin’ colts for whoever needed it and somehow made the payments . . . Duke on his rent and Devon on his truck. They were livin’ the cowboy dream, which is to be able to support yourself your entire life without ever having to get a job! They also collected live rattlesnakes for a herpetologist. He paid $20 live, $5 dead but with the head intact. Although they were a team, Devon was ophidiophobic…skert of snakes! He held the bag. Sure nuf, down 191, there in the headlights they saw a rattler crossing the road. Devon was going purty fast as they whizzed by but Duke said, “Did you see

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that, Dev, he musta been 15 feet long, probably got 30 to 40 rattles! I never seen one so big! Less it was the one that got loose in your cab that time. ‘Member? We had to fish him out from behind the seat, dang near got kilt!” Devon kept his eyes on the road and his foot on the gas. Rasslin’ snakes in broad daylight was bad enough, much less trying to do it in the dark. “Man,” whined Duke, “Ol Doc might even pay us more ‘cause it’s so big! Whattya say? Think we better turn around afore we git too far gone . . . there’s still time. Long as he was it might take him twenty minutes to cross the road! Whatya think? Whatya think? Whatya think!” “Alright!” Said Devon. He slammed on the brakes, fishtailed, reversed direction and peeled out like a scalded tomcat! He barely noticed the line of fluorescent cones down the middle of the road directing drivers to bear to the right. The three border patrol agents had their quiet evening shattered! You can imagine what they thought . . . smugglers on their way north suddenly realizing their GPS went dreadfully wrong? Giant prison spotlights glared, 17 Border Patrol vehicles cranked up, threw gravel, red lights flashing, and sirens blaring in hot pursuit! It took them 2 minutes to have our cowboys pulled over. The big bullhorn was directing them to stay in their vehicle.”Lemme handle this,” said Duke. “Don’t move a muscle,” warned Devon. “Ah, what the heck, they can’t take this seriously,” said Duke as he opened the passenger door and stepped out. “Lissen, officers, I kin explain, see we were huntin’ rattlesnakes and . . .” “Look at your shirt,” said Devon, aword-at-a-time. Duke did. There were three red dots ■ between the pocket snaps.

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(right) Dina Chacon-Reitzel, NMSU’s Pistol Pete, and NMBC Director David McSherry celebrate Ag Day. Pete presented McSherry with a game ball in recognition of NMBC support. (below) Ag Day visitors checked out the NMBC’s booth in Las Cruces and took home all the latest beef hints and information.

OCTOBER 2013

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Sales Force Training Seminars for Mexican Red Meat Trade

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NMBC STATE FAIR EXHIBIT New Mexico Beef Council State Exhibit in the Ag Building provided fairgoers with information on nutrition, beef preparation, new beef recipes, and much more.

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2013 – 2014 DIRECTORS — CHAIRMAN, Darrell Brown (Producer); VICE-CHAIRMAN, Bernarr Treat (Producer); SECRETARY, Alicia Sanchez (Purebred Producer). NMBC DIRECTORS: Bruce Davis (Producer); David McSherry (Feeder); Mark McCollum (Feeder); Milford Denetclaw (Producer); Jonathan Vander Dussen (Dairy Producer); Tamara Hurt (Producer).

FEDERATION DIRECTOR, Jane Frost (Producer) U.S.M.E.F. DIRECTOR, David McSherry BEEF BOARD DIRECTORS, Tammy Ogilvie (Producer), Wesley Grau (Producer).

For more information contact: New Mexico Beef Council, Dina Chacon-Reitzel, Executive Director 1209 Mountain Rd. Pl. NE, Suite C, Albuquerque, NM 87110 505/841-9407 • 505/841-9409 fax • www.nmbeef.com

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OCTOBER 2013

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New Mexico’s Old Times and Old Timers

The Saga of Seven Rivers ne source claims that cowboys settled around Seven Rivers at the time of the Civil War (1861-65). Another claims the town was established in 1867 when a man named Dick Reed opened a trading post there, and competitor Sam Samson opened a mercantile near-by. Yet another says it was settled by “Ma and Pa Jones� who arrived from Virginia in an ox cart in 1870. It does seem certain that there was a community there by 1870, although the post office was not established until 1877. The original settlement, about 15 miles north of present-day Carlsbad, was called Dogtown because of the prairie dog villages in the area. At some point, probably around 1877, it was renamed Seven Rivers because of the seven streams (arroyos) that drained into the Pecos River. In 1883, the whole town moved about a mile west of the original location and came to be called Henpeck. No source identifies the source

O

of that name. One source also reports that the place was called Ashland at one time or another, but offers no elaboration. It was also called White City, after a rancher in the area (this White City should not be confused with the White’s City located in southern Eddy County, near Carlsbad Cavern National Park). Finally, though, the place came to be called Seven Rivers, before it disappeared from the face of the earth. Seven Rivers was a cow town in the classical sense. It was located along the Goodnight-Loving cattle trail, and became an important stop for cowboys tending transient herds bound for Fort Sumner, New Mexico, and the gold camps of Colorado and the grasslands of Wyoming and Montana. The trail itself was named for Charles Goodnight and Oliver Loving who sought to take advantage of cattle prices that were higher in the Rocky Mountain west than they were in Texas. The trail

here has been a rodeo team at NMSU since 1942. Members of NMSU were instrumental in the creation of the National Intercollegiate Rodeo Association (12 schools meet to discuss creation of NIRA in 1946 and by 1949 the NIRA is formed). Since then, there have been 33 national championships won by NMSU Rodeo athletes, including 2 back to back national champion Women’s Team titles. In 2002, NMSU hired first full time rodeo coach, Jim Dewey Brown. Since 2002, NMSU Rodeo has won 9 of 11 Grand Canyon Region Women’s Team Championships and 7 of the Men’s Team Championships and 4 Reserve Champion Men’s Team titles. The annual NMSU Spring Rodeo has won “Rodeo of the Year� for 9 years straight (an award given to the best rodeo of each region) Coach Brown has been elected Grand Canyon Region “Coach of the Year� 3 years in a row (2005, 2006, & 2007), and named NIRA “National Coach of the Year� for 2007. In 2002, membership in NMSU Rodeo was about 25 student athletes; today there are over 50 active student athletes. The NMSU Rodeo program hosts several events throughout the year including:

T

NMSU Rodeo DuBois Bronc Riding/Calf Roping – Oct. 25, 2013 NMSU Rodeo/ Rio West Barrel Race – Oct. 26, 2013 NMSU Wild Ride – Oct. 26, 2013 NMSU Spring Rodeo – April 25-27, 2014 !$ !$ ! ! * ! & % ( &% !$ #' %& ! % !'& ! ! " % ) * $!) !$ $!) %' ' ) * $!) + ! ! !

By DON BULLIS . . . Don Bullis is the author of ten books on New Mexico. Go to www.DonBullis.biz for more info.

began at Red Fork on the Brazos River in Central Texas, then northwest to the Pecos River and north to Seven Rivers and on to Fort Sumner where it broke into four different trails that continued north to four separate destinations. Seven Rivers was also surrounded by large cattle ranching operations. The southern boundary of the famed Chisum Ranch was nearby. By 1875, Chisum claimed to run 80,000 head of cattle and employ 100 cowboys. Also nearby was the Holt Cattle Company which was much smaller with only about 8,000 head. The Eddy Brothers also ranched in the area. Seven Rivers was originally located in Lincoln County (Eddy County was not created until 1889) but played virtually no part in the Lincoln County War (1878-81). Many residents participated in the violence, however. They were mostly outlaws continued on page 45

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Old Times continued from page 44

who referred to themselves as the “Seven Rivers Men,” the “Banditti” or simply as “the Boys.” Led by Jesse Evans, they were fond of stealing cattle, particularly that belonging to John Chisum, and then selling the livestock to L. G. Murphy, the economic dictator of Lincoln County. When Murphy needed gunmen to do his bidding, he called on Evans and The Boys. Members of that bunch murdered John Tunstall in February 1878. Isolation made the town ideal for outlaws. There were no other towns around— Eddy, later Carlsbad, was not established until 1888—and it was 125 miles to the county seat at Lincoln. There was no rail or stage service, so if the trip was made, it was done on horseback or by use of horsedrawn conveyance. A census of Lincoln County communities conducted in 1885 showed that Seven Rivers was home to about 300 people (most of “The Boys” were dead or in jail by then). There was no church, but predictably enough, several saloons. One of the latter establishments boasted “a door with easy hinges.” That is, a door which could be easily removed and used to bear the body of someone too fast with his mouth and too slow with his gun. In that same year, Les Dow, Eddy County’s illfated sheriff who was murdered by former sheriff Dave Kemp in 1897, opened a saloon in Seven Rivers. The Seven Rivers town site was flooded by waters of the Pecos when Brantley Dam was constructed in the 1980s.1 Because of that, the cemetery was exhumed and the remains removed to Twin Oaks Memorial Park north of Artesia. Before being reinterred, the skeletons were studied by forensic experts. Newspapers and court documents were also studied. All of this provides an interesting picture of life in old Seven Rivers. Here is what one source says about study: “Bullet or knife fragments were found in the bodies of ten of fourteen men in the 18 to 45 age group. Two had knives still in place, a third had a knife wound in the head. Although many men may have died with their boots on, none was buried in his boots. In those days, boots were too expensive to waste by burial in a grave.” Among the residents of the graveyard was K. S. Keith who was killed by Indians who then cut off his right leg above the knee. No reason is given for the amputa-

tion. John Northern was shot dead in the saloon where he worked. William Johnson was murdered with a shotgun, by his father-in-law, because he mentioned that he had been a Union man during the Civil War. There were 14 children in the cemetery under the age of two. Their deaths were attributed to scarlet fever, diphtheria, measles, croup and other disorders considered relatively minor today. One family lost four members, grandmother, mother and two children, to dysentery, the result of bad drinking water. One other point on the complexion of the Seven Rivers area: Texans dominated it. Chism, Dow, Goodnight, Kemp, Loving, and Evans were all Texans. Many Texans had a propensity for unceremoniously taking what they wanted and what they wanted most was land. It didn’t matter that people who had acquired land under Mexican or Spanish rule already owned it. The Texans held that the “Mexicans” were without rights. So, if you were Anglo, you were allowed to live in Seven Rivers. If you survived infancy, and avoided being shot or stabbed as an adult, you might live 45 or 50 years. There was no place to worship, but plenty

of places to drink. There does not appear to have been much to recommend life in Seven Rivers, New Mexico. 1 The dam was originally built in 1893, but was destroyed by a major flood. Reconstructed in 1906, it was incapable of holding back major floods because of silt buildup. Money for the latest structure was approved by congress in 1972. Selected sources: Eve Ball, Ma’am Jones of the Pecos Beck & Haase. Historical Atlas of New MexicoFugate & Fugate, Roadside History of New Mexico Robert Julyan. The Place Names of New Mexico William A. Keleher. Violence in Lincoln County David Lamb. Albuquerque Journal, May 31, 1988. Leon Metz. Pat Garrett, The Story of A Western Lawman T. M. Pearce. New Mexico Place Names Dan L. Thrapp. Encyclopedia of Frontier Biography

Don Bullis’ newest book, Unsolved: New Mexico’s American Valley Ranch Murders & Other Mysteries, was published in early October. It may be ordered from Rio Grande Books at www.LPDPress.com

OCTOBER 2013

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47


My Cowboy Heroes

Bobbi Jeen “Lee Robinson

by JIM OLSON

OLSON

A Saddle Made Him Famous� ee Robinson was born April 10, 1891 in Haskell County, Texas. His parents were ranchers and he went to school at a little place called Quitaque in West Texas. At the age of fourteen however, he hopped in a covered wagon that came by his folks place, leaving home to work as a cowboy on ranches all over west Texas— including the famous JA ranch. He also spent time in Arizona working on ranches. Lee was a born an adventurous cowboy. Very athletic, and handy with a rope, he learned early he could rope and tie calves about as fast as anybody. Bulldogging and bronc riding were also rodeo events Lee tried. There is even a story of Robinson trying to ride a buffalo on a bet. He rode the beast, but had to be pulled from the arena,

L

bleeding from his nose and ears, only to be taken to a doctor who told him he had internal injuries and should never ride rough stock again. Lee won many shows around the Southwest in the calf roping and bulldogging events, so in 1921, friends convinced him he should go back East and try his luck at Madison Square Garden, where Tex Austin held the World Championship Rodeo. Lee shattered Clay McGonagill’s record in the calf roping there, won the average, and became known as the fastest calf roper of the day. From then on, Lee Robinson was a rodeo man. Some of his other wins include: 1921 calf roping champion Prescott, AZ; 1922 all around and bull dogging champion,

Prescott, AZ; 1924 bulldogging champion Dewey, Oklahoma; 1925-1927 calf roping champion, Elks Rodeo, Rochelle, Illinois; calf roping champion Tampa, Florida and Tucson, AZ and numerous others throughout the 1920s. Along the way, he married Ora Lee Johnson, daughter of the famous rodeo contractor, Colonel William T. Johnson (producer of the Boston Garden show where cowboys went on strike in 1936) in a controversial marriage. According to Mary Lou LeCompete, in her book, Cowgirls of the Rodeo, “. . . Col. Johnson had no rodeo hands in his family, and apparently did not want any. When in continued on page 49

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Heroes

continued from page 48

the mid-twenties his beloved daughter Ora Lee fell in love with Lee Robinson, then one of rodeo’s premier calf ropers, Col. Johnson was violently opposed. He felt that she was too young to marry. He was also convinced that being a rodeo cowboy, Robinson would never amount to much, and was unworthy of his daughter. Johnson sent Ora Lee from boarding school to boarding school, with Robinson in pursuit, and was prepared to send her to Europe under the watchful eye of her maiden aunt Ora when the couple eloped. Johnson was furious, and the family was not reconciled until three years later when his two-year-old granddaughter Mary won the Colonel’s heart.” Besides being probably the fastest and best-known calf roper of the 1920s, Robinson even took part in the making of a Hoot Gibson movie at the Houston Rodeo in 1923. But if you are thinking that you have heard of Lee Robinson somewhere before—it was probably because of a saddle. In the 1890s, Newton Porter moved to Phoenix, AZ where he established the N. Porter Saddle & Harness Company, which became one of the best known saddle companies ever. After Porter died in the early 1900s, his sons took over. They continued to run the business for many years afterwards. In the late 1920s, the business was expanded to include a shop in Tucson. In the mid-twenties, calf roper Lee Robinson was looking for a way to better his times in the event and contacted Porter Saddlery about designing him a saddle with a low cantle and swells. The theory was—this should allow a faster dismount than the conventional high-back, high swell saddles, made for bucking horses from that era allowed. At the 1927 Tucson Rodeo, the Porter Saddlery presented him with the official “Lee Robinson Light Weight Saddle.” It was the first of its kind (however, Lee had ridden a prototype prior to that). The saddle became very popular and was “the introduction of the modern day roping saddle.” The N. Porter Saddle & Harness Company, in their 1929-1930 Catalog No. 17 describe the saddle: “The Lee Robinson Light Weight: Weight — Only 30 pounds, complete with latigoes, cinchas and stirrups — but strong enough for all-around use. Since its first showing, this number has lead all other saddles in sales. There must be a reason—this one exemplifies our slogan, ‘Quality, without penalty of

high cost.’ Like all of our saddles, this one is made of the best oak-tanned leather and on the highest grade tree obtainable.” The last thing Lee told Porter Saddlery was, “This is the best saddle that I have ever owned.” Unfortunately, On February 25, 1927, after winning the calf roping at Tucson and being presented with the first signature saddle, Lee, Ora Lee and daughter Mary Robinson died in a terrible car accident near Tornillo, Texas while driving to Fort Worth en-route to the rodeo there. The only survivor was Lee’s traveling partner, Louis Jones.

The family was buried in Denton, Texas, where Ora Lee was born and they were living at the time. As a eulogy and tribute to one of the greatest calf ropers of the era, rodeo personality, Fox Hastings, led Robinson’s saddled horse in the grand entry at the Fort Worth Stock Show and Rodeo that year. Lee Robinson was inducted into the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum’s Rodeo Hall of Fame in 1967 and the Lee Robinson Saddle, made by the N. Porter Saddle & Harness Company for many years, is a highly sought-after cow■ boy collectible to this day.

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OCTOBER 2013

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inMemoriam Albert Lyon, retired county agent in Sierra County, passed away as a result of a heart attack on September 14, 2013 while trying to save his livestock which were flooded out as well as his home. He is surived by his wife, Jan, and daughters, Audra and Aspen. A memorial service will be held some time in October. Sam L. Melendrez, 86, Deming passed away September 22, 2013 at Mimbres Memorial Hospital. Sam was born February 13, 1927 in Doña Ana to Samuel and Erminia Ledesma Melendrez. He honorably served his country in the United States Army in WWII and during the Korean Conflict. Afterward he worked as an agricultural equipment salesman in the Southwest until his retirement. In Las Cruces, Sam was a member of the Doña Ana Sheriff’s Posse and in his spare time he enjoyed lapidary, gardening, hunting and working with his horses. He was a member of the First United Methodist Church. He is survived by his wife of 63 years, Beatriz Miranda Melendrez; his chil-

dren: Samuel Patrick Melendrez (wife, Nina), Las Vegas; Imelda Veeder (husband, Elmer) Deming; Claudia Melendrez-Rel (husband, Ed), Albuquerque; Michael Melendrez (wife, Kari), Los Lunas; Faviola Martinez (husband, Manuel), Pojoaque; Mercedes McFerrin (husband, Rick), Burleson; Texas, Regina Goldhirsch (husband, Mark), Gilbert, Arizona; Lydia Zerwekh (husband, John), Parker, Colorado; 15 grandchildren, 13 great-grandchildren; sisters: Erma, Viola, Leah and Leva; brothers: Demetrio and David; many loving nieces, nephews, sisters in law, and brothers in law. Michael L. Casados, 55, Taos, passed away unexpectedly on September 8, 2013. He worked the Questa Ranger District and worked for the US Forest Service for 35 years. He was an excellent steward of the land and an extremely active member of the New Mexico chapter of the Society for Range Management. He was currently serving as treasurer of the group. He has served in other capacities and is remem-

bered as a tremendous person who cared for others and the land. Tony Schmidt, 76, Lindrith, passed away on April 29, 2013. He was born on the family ranch in Ojito Canyon on January 13, 1937 to Antone and Ruhey Welch Schmidt. They came to New Mexico from Texas to homestead.Tony was a lifelong rancher recognized as an outstanding cattlemen and range manager. He was visionary in the stewardship of the land, wildlife and livestock. He was also successful at a number of oilfield services provided to oil and gas producers in the San Juan Basin and Lindreth area. Tony was a deacon in the Lindrith Baptist Church and a leaders in his community. He took the lead in planning and contructing a community cattle shipping facility with scales to serve the community in a 30 mile plus area, as well as a rodeo arena / recreation facility. He helped establish and maintain the Lindrith Charter School when the school dis-

continued on page 51

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In Memoriam

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trict was closing the community school. Tony was a member of the New Mexico Cattle Growers’ Association for over 50 years and an active and committed property rights advocate. He was a humble man who lived by his work and quietly led by example. Tony is survied by his wife Darlene; sons Tony Lee (wife, Kimberlee) Schmidt, Craig D. (wife, Tisha) Schmidt; sisters Mary (husband, Jim) Mead, Durango, Colorado; five grandchildren and one great-grandchild. Richard Boyd, 90, San Juan County, passed away on September 16, 2013. He was born to Dick and George (Davenport) Boyd in Santa Fe on July 6, 1923. He spent the first part of his life in the Jemez Mountains, attending elementary school in Peña Blanca and graduating from Albuquerque High. After a semester at New Mexico State Univerity, he received notice from Uncle Sam and signed up for the US Navy. He became a Radarman First Class on the USS Geneva, troop/prisoner of war transport in the Pacific. When Richard was discharged from the Navy, he married Vera Mordasini, Brawley, California. They returned to New Mexico to work for Frank Bond & Sons, where he became cattle foreman working in the Valle Grande (now called Valles Caldera National Preserve) during the summers and on different winter ranches, from Santa Fe to west of Albuquerque. Other than his military service, a stint in Mexico, working on the AFTOSA Program for eradication of Hoof & Mouth Disease, and a winter in Colorado, Richard spent his entire life in New Mexico. In 1957 the Boyd’s bought a farm and moved to Sile, across the river from Peña Blanca. After a couple of years, he moved to Chama for the first time, to look after steers on the Sargent country up the Chamita. When Richard was 65, they bought a ranch in the Largo Canyon. Richard was a member of the NM Cattle Growers, NM Farm and Livestock Bureau, served on the ASCS board, and was active in the Acequias wherever he lived. He is survived by his wife of 67 years, Vera; his sister, Sally Hewitt (husband, Frank), Aptos California; daughters, Toni Broaddus, Magdalena/Chama; Linda Bierner, T or C; Molly B Manzanares (husband, Antonio), La Puente; son Richard (Buzz) Boyd (wife, Barbara), Sherman, Texas; 13 grandkids, 27 great-grandkids, and 7 great-great-

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TTRACTOR, RACTOR, IINC. NC. 8800/303-1631 00/303-1631 ((NM) NM) FULL-LINE FULL-LINE KUBOTA D EALER KUBOTA DEALER 33826 826 44th th St., St., NW NW • Albuquerque, Albuquerque, NM NM 87107 87107 Office Office 5505/344-1631 05/344-1631 • Fax Fax 505/345-2212 5 0 5 /3 4 5 -2 2 1 2

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PHILLIPS DIESEL CORP. I-25 & Hwy. 6, Los Lunas, NM

505/865-7332

"START WITH THE BEST - STAY WITH THE BEST" Since 1987

Williams Windmill, Inc. New Mexico Ranch Items and Service Specialist Since 1976 New Mexico Distributor for Aermotor Windmills 575/835-1630 • Fax: 575/838-4536 Lemitar, N.M. • williamswindmill@live.com

Motor Models available

Low Maintenance High Performance

References available in your area

We offer a complete line of low volume mist blowers. Excellent for spraying, cattle, livestock, vegetables, vineyards, orchards, nurseries, mosquitoes, etc. For free brochure contact:

Swihart Sales Co. continued on page 53

www. reveal4-n-1.com

D.J. Reveal, Inc. 937/444-2609 Don Reveal

American Made

800-864-4595 or 785-754-3513 www.swihart-sales.com

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7240 County Road AA, Quinter, KS 67752

OCTOBER 2013

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A Monfette Construction Co.

Drinking Water Storage Tanks 100 – 11,000 Gallons In Stock NRCS Approved

DESERT SCALES & WEIGHING EQUIPMENT Truck Scales Livestock Scales Feed Truck Scales

Heavy Duty Black Polyethylene Prompt Statewide Delivery 8' Poly Drinkers, Too!

SALES, SERVICE & INSTALLATIONS

1-800/489-8354 602/258-5272

FAX

602/275-7582

www.desertscales.com

ALSO: Underground Tanks! Please call for your BEST SERVICE & VALUE. Cloudcroft, NM • 1-800/603-8272 NMwatertanks.com

SALES AND SERVICE

Mixing / Feeding Systems Trucks / Trailers / Stationary Units LANDON WEATHERLY • Cell. 806/344-6592 SNUFFY BOYLES • Cell. 806/679-5885 800/525-7470 • 806/364-7470 www.bjmsales.com 3925 U.S. HWY 60, HEREFORD, TX 79045

Weanlings, Yearlings, 2 & 3 Year Olds

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FOR SALE ——————

D V E RT I S E

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

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

BARBARA LIVINGSTON O: 713/632-1331 • C: 832/265-2673 blivingston@harrisoninterests.com BECKY COOK Ranch: 281/342-4703 • C: 832/452-4280 www.harrisonquarterhorseranch.com

ROUND WATER TROUGHS ➤ ➤ ➤

Plate Steel Construction Plate Steel Floors Pipeline Compatible

HD 28 Ft. 24,000# GVWR Dual Tandem GN Equip Trailer $8,350 Like us on Facebook

Our website never closes:

WWW.SANDIATRAILER.COM 505/281-9860 • 800/832-0603 52

OCTOBER 2013

BRIAN BOOHER 915/859-6843 • El Paso, Texas CELL. 915/539-7781

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grandkids, numerous cousins, nieces, nephews, and so many good friends and neighbors. David (Rusty) Russell McCall, 27, Timberon, lost his battle with NF2 on August 31, 2013 at home on the ranch, surrounded by family. He was born June 25, 1986 in Elko, Nevada. Rusty grew up on the Elko County family ranch, attending a one-room school 25 miles away until 8th grade. In order to attend high school 65 miles away, he boarded in Wells, Nevada, with family members and the Louise Lear family. He loved ranch life, riding, working cattle, hunting, and trapping. He learned old cowboy poems and stories on the ranch, many from his granddad. Rusty was the youngest poet to perform at the Elko Cowboy Poetry Gathering, and went on to perform throughout the West. The cowboy poetry and music community became a second family to him. He was a member of 4-H and FFA. He participated in junior rodeos and on the Wells High School rodeo team, riding in the bareback bronc event. Rusty attended CSI, studying water resource management. Rusty was diagnosed with a rare disease at age 20, known as NF2. He underwent brain tumor surgeries, chemo and radiation. The disease resulted in deafness, gradually causing many disabilities. Regardless of this, he still kept up a miraculous spirit and sense of humor. He enjoyed touring the ranch to see the cattle, became an avid collector of guns and hunting paraphernalia. He spent many hours conversing with friends and family via computer, and treasured the folks who took the time to communicate with him. Rusty leaves his parents, Deanna Dickinson and David Kendall McCall, paternal grandfather, William Lyndell McCall, sisters Terrill Knight (husband, Jeremy), Katherine Owen (husband, Greg), many aunts and uncles, his beloved nieces and nephews and numerous cousins. Wynona Byrl (Willett) Arnett, 85 passed away August 31, 2013 in Pueblo, Colorado. Wynona was born December 19, 1927 in the family home near Guy to Alzo F. and Bessie (Cooper) Willett. Wynona spent her childhood on the family ranch. She started school at the age of three in the one-room Guy school. She graduated from Des Moines High School. She went to college at Highlands University in Las Vegas, New Mexico where she met and married Vernon Welch in 1949. Vernon’s job took them to live in many places:

Elkhart, Kansas, Colorado Springs, Colorado, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma and Broomfield, Colorado. After his passing, in 1983 Wynona married Phillip Arnett and returned to the family ranch near Guy which she called home for the rest of her life. She is survived by her son Kent (wife,

Carol Jean) Welch, Raton, and daughter Suzanne (husband, Ted) Bennefield, Des Moines. Six grandchildren, and 12 greatgrandchildren. She is also survived by several nieces, nephews and cousins. continued on page 65

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SEEDSTOCK

Please call us at 505/243-9515 to list your herd here.

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PRIVATE TREATY – SELLING:

Coming 2-year-old & Yearling bulls Sheldon Wilson • 575-451-7469 cell 580-651-6000 – leave message 1545 SR 456 • Folsom, New Mexico 88419

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D V E RT I S E

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

Brangus

Bulls & Heife rs 575-773-4770

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HEREFORD RANCH Grant Mitchell • 505/466-3021

Since 1893 • Se Hable Espaùol

BULLS & HEIFERS – PRIVATE TREATY TEXAS / N.M. RANCH: 5 Paseo de Paz Ln., El Paso, TX 79932 H: 915/877-2535 • O: 915/532-2442 • C: 915/479-5299 OKLA. RANCH: Woods County, OK • barjbarherefords@aol.com

432-283-1141

Weanlings, Yearlings & Riding Horses www.singletonranches.com

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PPRIVATE RIVATE TREATY TREATY

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ANGUS • BRAHMAN BRAHMAN ANGUS • HEREFORDS HEREFORDS • F1s F1s F1 & M ontana influenced influenced F1 Montana Angus CCattle attle Angus GARY GARY MANFORD MANFORD 505/508-2399 505/508-2399 – 505/414-7558 505/414-7558 OCTOBER 2013

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RED R E D ANGUS ANGUS

B Bulls ulls & R Replacement eplacement H Heifers eifers 575-318-4086 575-318-4086 22022 022 N. N. T Turner, urner, Hobbs, Hobbs, NM NM 88240 88240

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RANCH 20 – 50 BRED CHAROLAIS HEIFERS FOR SALE 575 760-7304 WESLEY GRAU

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Box 68, Elgin, TX 78621 512/285-2019 or 285-2712 Fax 512/285-9673 www.elginbreeding.com

Producers of Quality & Performance Tested Brahman Bulls & Heifers “Beef-type American Gray Brahmans, Herefords, Gelbvieh and F-1s.� Available at All Times

• Semen collection • Custom breeding service • Semen storage & shipping • Breeding supplies • Semen sales catalog • Embryo services for N.M.

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EBS WEST

Box 696 Capitan, NM 88316 575/354-2929 Fax 575/354-2942 W.H. Cardwell, DVM Quality Control Brad Cardwell President Brenda Cardwell Vice-President Hillary Voelker Manager, EBS

C Bar R A N C H SSLATON, L A T O N , TTEXAS EXAS

Loren & Joanne Pratt 44996 W. Papago Road Maricopa, AZ 85139 520 / 568-2811

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TREY W WOOD O 806/789-7312 CLARK WOOD 806/828-6249 • 806/786-2078

AGBA

American Galloway Breeders Association

GRAU CHAROLAIS Grady, New Mexico Breeding Performance Ch arolais Since 1965

RAISING DEPENDABLE SEEDSTOCK THAT IS LINEBRED FOR INCREASED HYBRID VIGOR FOR 48 YEARS! CALL FOR YOUR PROVEN PROFIT MAKERS!!!

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Lane Grau 575/357-2811 • C. 575/760-6336

OCTOBER 2013

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www.CaseyBeefmasters.com Watt, Jr. 325/668-1373 Watt50@sbcglobal.net Watt: 325/762-2605


Bradley 3 Ranch Ltd. www.bradley3ranch.com

RANCH RAISED

MOUNTAIN RAISED

Ranch-Raised ANGUS Bulls for Ranchers Since 1955

Annual Bull Sale February 15, 2014

WINSTON, NEW MEXICO Russell and Trudy Freeman

575/743-6904

at the Ranch NE of Estelline, TX M.L. Bradley, 806/888-1062 Fax: 806/888-1010 • Cell: 940/585-6471

David & Norma Brennand PiĂąon, NM 88344 575/687-2185

D V E RT I S E

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

• Weaned & Open Heifers • Calving Ease Bulls

YOUNG BULLS FOR SALE

JaCin Ranch SANDERS, ARIZONA

work: 928/688-2602 evenings: 928/688-2753

CORRI ENTE BEEF IS SANCT IONED BY SLOWFOOD USA

Quality Registered Black Angus Cattle Genex Influenced Mountain Raised, Rock-Footed â– Calving Ease â– Easy Fleshing â– Powerful Performance Genetics

Red Angus Cattle For Sale Purebred Red Angus

â– Docility Zoetis HD 50K 50,000 DNA Markers (Combined w/Angus EPDs provides the most accurate & complete picture of the animals genetic potential)

DNA Parentage Verified AGI BVD FREE HERD Born & Raised in the USA

Westall Ranches, LLC Registered Brangus Bulls & Heifers

Call us for ALL your Brangus needs!

Ray & Karen Westall, Owners / Tate Pruett, Ranch Manager " !

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Reg i s t er ed CORRI ENT E B ULL S Ex cell ent f o r Fir st Cal f Hei f ers

CAT E ES SR RANC A NC CH H WA GON M WAGON MOUND, OUND, N NEW EW M MEXICO EXICO 5 75/ 666- 2360 575/666-2360 w w w . c at esr an c h . c o m www.catesranch.co

Registered Polled Herefords Bulls & Heifers FOR SALE AT THE FARM

CaĂąones Route P.O. Abiquiu, N.M. 87510 MANUEL SALAZAR P.O. Box 867 EspaĂąola, N.M. 87532

Phone: 575/638-5434

OCTOBER 2013

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REAL ESTATE GUIDE

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FARMS, RANCHES, DAIRIES, HORSE & COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES — Satisfied Customers Are My Best Advertisement —

NEED NE N EEEEED D RANCH RA R AN NC C CH H LEASES LLEA EEA A SSEEESS & NEE ASE PASTURE PPA ASSTU U UR RREE FOR FFO O R 22013 01133 STTTU TUR URE OR

DAVID D AVID P. P. D DEAN EAN R Ranch: anch: 4432/426-3779 32/426-3779 M Mobile: obile: 4432/634-0441 32/634-0441 www.availableranches.com

Southwest New Mexico Farms & Ranches 5.34 ACRE FARM – with EBID located off Sayles Road in Mesquite, NM. Great little farm for your dream home. Horses or 4-H animals allowed. Telephone & electric available. Owner financing available. Priced at $107,500 19.18 acres of farm land in La Mesa, NM. Paved road frontage & EBID surface water rights. Call for aerial map and EBID water rights info. Farm located west of intersection of Engler Road and San Jose Road off Hwy 28 on north side of La Mesa. Sellers will divide. $326,060. 27.50 Acre Farm – Consists of 3 tracts – 8 Acres, 8 Acres, & 11.5 Acres – will sell separately. Full EBID & shared irrigation well. Community water, electric, telephone & gas on Camunez Road to adjoining property. Beautiful farm land, great mountain & valley views. Take Highway 28 south to San Miguel, east or left on Highway 192, first right or south on Las Colmenas, then left or east on Camunez to end of pavement. Priced at $467,000. Arrington Ranch – Located just west of Las Cruces, NM, between Interstate 10 and Afton Road on County Road B006. 182 head permit. 81 acres deeded, approximately 3090 state lease and 32,760 acres BLM (approximately 37,508 acres total). 5 pastures, 4 wells and 2 dirt tanks. 1940 adobe home with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths and 1526 square feet. Reasonably priced at $399,000. Fancher Ranch – Located southwest of Las Cruces, NM off Afton Road. 198 head permit, 210 acres deeded, 19,224 acres BLM and 4666 acres state land. 2 pastures, 3 wells, 1900 square foot home with 3 bedrooms and 2 baths, bunk house, green house, horse barn, corrals, round pen, etc. Easy access - 45 minutes from El Paso and Las Cruces. $550,000.

“If you are interested in farm land or ranches in New Mexico, give me a call�

56

OCTOBER 2013

DAN DELANEY REAL ESTATE, LLC 318 W. Amador Avenue Las Cruces, NM 88005 (O) 575/647-5041 (C) 575/644-0776 nmlandman@zianet.com www.zianet.com/nmlandman

C6 Ranch – This ranch is located at Patagonia AZ. The ranch consists of 40 deeded acres & 8,000 plus acres National Forest Lease. This ranch is rated at 165 head annually. Great water system & good strong grass. Improvements include 1600 sq. ft. home built in 2006, barn & corrals. The Ranch has easy access to town & beautiful views. $725,000. Santo Nino – This Ranch is located 7 miles south of Patagonia on the western edge of the beautiful San Rafael Valley. This ranch consists of 62 deeded acres & 12,000 plus National Forest Lease. The ranch is rated at 185 head annually. The land contained in the ranch consists of steep sided ridges to rolling hills along the side of the valley floor. Improvements include 3,000 sq. ft. owners home, cowboy house, barn & corrals. Rarely does a ranch in this area come on the market. $899,000 including cattle. NI Ranch Tombstone, AZ – The Ranch consists of 6555 deeded acres and 6650 state lease, 250 head annually; all improvements are in top condition, the ranch is well watered with 8 wells, and pipelines. Good strong grass country. The Ni Ranch is one of the last working cattle ranches in the state with the majority of the land being deeded. Priced at $3,150,000. K Bar Ranch Datil, NM – 160 deeded acres, 6000 forest permit. Rated for 70 head year-long. Nice improvements, close to town. $950,000

D L O S

D L O S

If you are looking to Buy or Sell a Ranch or Farm in Southwestern NM or Southern AZ give us a call:

Sam Hubbell, Qualifying Broker 520-609-2546 Tom Hardesty – 520-909-0233


Villanueva Ranch – is a working cow ranch on Hwy 3. It has 285 deeded acres + 4,450 acre NM state grazing lease. Its fenced & has stock tanks full of water, 10,000 gallon water storage tank & pipeline drinkers. Fenced & cross fenced! Price reduced $698,900 Sombrero Ranch – near Tremintina, NM has 1,442 deeded acres, 3 pastures, solar well, submersible well & windmill well. Traditionally carried 32 a.u. year round. Located on Hwy 104. Owner will finance too! Price is $575,000 Anderson Ranch – south of Villanueva has 9,024 total acres w/HQ home, Foreman’s home, Quonset equipment shed, 3 wells, 3 pipelines, working pens & 1,000 deeded acres all for $1,850,000. Can’t ranch this much land any cheaper than this... La Cueva Canyon Ranch – 1,595 deeded acres w/240 acres of BLM attached. Apache Mesa parcel has tall pines, canyon springs, stock tanks, new fence on NE corner. Turkeys, deer & other native species abound. Price is $677,875 & Owner will Finance! Trigg’s Ranch – 720 deeded acres lies adjacent to La Cueva Canyon Ranch on Apache Mesa. Off the grid in the tall pines & power is nearby! Priced at $306,000 & smaller 200 acre parcel available for $124,000! Owners will finance... Ledoux, NM – Perimeter fenced 60 acre dry land terraced farm has overhead electric, subirrigated pasture & county road access! Located ½ mile N. of Ledoux. Price is now: $228,000 Anton Chico – 65 acre irrigated farm has 100 + ac/ft ditch rights. HQ home on historic register. Bunkhouse, storage shed, shop + irrigation & some farm equipment go w/sale. Great value in this sale price! Price is below appraisal at $698,900 Owner may finance! La Loma – farm has ~18 acres of irrigated alfalfa plus 3 bedroom home, barns, corrals, & equipment & storage buildings. New listing, call for details! Sunshine Road – parcel near Ribera, NM has 77 acres w/drill stem fence along the county road, two cold water wells, perimeter fence, building site cleared & ready to go. Lot can be subdivided too! Price is $299,900

REAL ESTATE GUIDE

Little Cayuse Ranch – Horse & cow ranch operation north of Corona has 1,680 deeded acres + 280 ac state grazing lease, HQ home, foreman’s home, barn, sheds, tack room, 3 excellent wells, 4 pastures. 80 acre irrigation pivot incl. Priced reduced $798,900

W-R RANCH 18,560 Acres Miles NEE of NM 2200 M iles N of Roswell, Roswell, N M 680 680 DDeeded eeded AAcres cres State 117,900 7,900 State LLease ease AAcres cres 9927 27 BBLM LM AAcres cres 3300 00 AAnimal nimal UUnits nits YYear ear Long Long Newly rremodeled emodeled Newly SSouthwestern outhwestern HHome ome

GGood ood water; water; wwindmill indmill & ssubmergible ubmergible tanks tanks GGood ood fences; fences; 4-strand bbarbwire arbwire 4-strand $$1,800,000 1,800,000

North of Roswell, NM – 58,000 acre cow operation has reduced price to $204 per acre. Call for details. HQ Home, fenced, cross fenced, Pecos River frontage & water rights available!

KEN AHLER REAL ESTATE CO., INC. 1435 S. St. Francis Drive, Suite 210, Santa Fe, NM 87505

Office: 505/989-7573 • Toll Free: 888/989-7573 • Mobile: 505/490-0220 Email: kahler@newmexico.com • Website: www.SantaFeLand.com

CHARLES CHARLES BENNETT BENNETT Uni U nitted ed C Country ountry / V Vis isttaa N Nu ueeva vaa,, IInc. nc. ((575) 575) 3 356 56-5 5616 616 • w www.vista ww.vista-n nu ueeva vaa.com .com

Call Someone Who Specializes in Ranches & Farms in Arizona MARANA BRANCH

SCOTT THACKER, Assoc. Broker • P.O. Box 90806 • Tucson, AZ 85752 Ph: 520-444-7069 • Email: ScottThacker@Mail.com www.AZRanchReaIEstate.com • www.SWRanch.com

The Historic Fourr Ranch – Dragoon AZ: 225 Head Year-Long on 1200 Deeded Acres, State and Forest leases. Perfect mix of a functioning cattle ranch, rich history, and amazing headquarters. 4 Houses plus a main house and an indoor swimming pool. The ranch might be a guest ranch or large family estate. Asking $2,800,000

Reduced Price: Dripping Springs Ranch – Globe AZ, 202 Head Year Long, 1687 Deeded Acres plus State and BLM, some irrigated pasture, manufactured home, mineral rights. $1,479,680. Call Agent for Details! New Listing: K Bar W Ranch – 640 Deeded, 4880 State, Nicely remodeled stone and adobe home located at the end of the road in the middle of the ranch. 56 head year round. This is a perfect lifestyle ranch. Asking $500,000 Ranches are SELLING! d buyers looking We have many qualifie us if you’re for ranches. Please call considering SELLING!

New Listing: CK Ranch – Tonopah AZ, 50 acres deeded, 237 head year-long on state and BLM. The waters were recently reworked, and ephemeral increases can bump the numbers with rain. This ranch makes sense. Asking $425,000 Pomerene Ranch – Benson AZ, 81 head yearlong, 92 Acres Deeded, 7650 acres AZ State Lease, nice ranch with many new improvements. Ask Scott Thacker about the current FSA loan, EQIP Projects, & the Range Rest Rotation payments. Reduced Price to $399,000

We have more ranches available, please check our websites. All properties are listed by Arizona Ranch Real Estate, Cathy McClure, Designated Broker

Arizona Ranch R E A L E S TAT E

BAR M REAL ESTATE New Mexico Properties For Sale... CH E R R Y CA NY O N R A NCH : Secluded ranch located in the foothills of the Capitan Mountains in southeastern New Mexico. 10,000± total acres located in limestone hill country. Grazing capacity estimated at 200 A.U.s year-long. Improved with a two residence, mobile home, barns and corrals. Livestock water provided by three wells and pipelines. Abundant wildlife to include mule deer and Barbary sheep. Price: $1,800,000 – call for more information.

R E D UN RACT T N O C

J A CK SON R A NCH : Southeastern NM cattle ranch for sale. 8,000 total acres located in good grass country. Owner controlled grazing capacity at 200 ± A.U.s yearlong. Improved with one residence, barns and corrals. Livestock water provided by two wells and pipelines to four pastures. Easy to manage and operate. Price: $1,750,000. Call or view the information on my website.

Bar M Real Estate www.ranchesnm.com

Scott McNally, Qualifying Broker Roswell, NM 88202 Office: 575-622-5867 Cell: 575-420-1237

OCTOBER 2013

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REAL ESTATE GUIDE

JAMES SAMMONS & ASSOCIATES INC.

MAJOR RANCH REALTY RANDELL MAJOR Qualifying Broker

JAMES B. SAMMONS III FARM & RANCH / COMMERCIAL / RESIDENTIAL

O

Cell: 575-838-3016 Office: 575-854-2150 Fax: 575-854-2150

P.O. Box 244 585 La Hinca Road Magdalena, NM 87825

505/243-9515

UlEY HUGOF CLOVISCo. - SINCE 1962-

Cell: Cell: ((575) 575) 740-1528 740-1528 Office: Offffice: (575) (575) 772-5538 772-5538 FFax: ax: ((575) 575) 772-5517 772-5517

LAN

HC 445, HC 30 30 Box Box 4 45, Winston, NM Winston, N M 87943 87943

Spec S pecializing ializing iin nN NM MR Ran an cheess Hunting opert &H un ting Pro pertiies es www.BeaverheadOutdoors.com www.BeaverheadOutdoors.com

www.Paulmcgilliard.murney.com

U R A D V E RT I S E R S make this magazine possible. Please patronize them, and mention that you saw their ad in ...

J o h n D iamo John i a m o nd, n d , Qu Q u ali a l i f y ing i n g Bro B r o ke k er er jjohn@beaverheadoutdoors.com ohn@beaverheadoutdoors.com

Cell: 417/839-5096 • 800/743-0336 Springfield, MO 65804

rmajor@majorranches.com www.majorranches.com

T. 915.833.9373 • M. 915.491.7382 • F. 915.975.8024

6006 North Mesa Street, Suite 901, El Paso, Texas 79912 james @ jamessammons.com www.jamessammons.com

PAUL McGILLIARD Murney Associate Realtors

D SALES

Brokers in New Mexico, Texas & Colorado. Ranches and Farms are our Specialty. 575/763-3851 MARVIN C. HUGULEY

575/799-3608

INTEREST RATES A S L OW A S 3% Pay m en t s Sch ed u l ed o n 25 Year s

J o e Stu b b l ef i el d & A s s o c i at es 13830 Wes ter n St ., A m ar i l l o , TX 806/622-3482 • c el l 806/674-2062 joes3@suddenlink.net Mi c h ael Per ez A s s o c i at es Nar a Vi s a, NM • 575/403-7970

RICKE C. HUGULEY

575/799-3485

KEITH BROWNFIELD ASSOC. BROKER, GRI Brownfieldkeith@gmail.com

mathersrealty.net

LLC RICHARD RANDALS Qualifying Broker

We may not be the biggest, the fanciest or the oldest but we are reliable & have the tools. O: 575/461-4426 • C: 575/403-7138 • F: 575/461-8422

nmpgnewmexico@gmail.com • www.newmexicopg.com 615 West Rt. 66, Tucumcari, NM 88401

Laura Riley Justin Knight

505/330-3984 505/490-3455

Specializing in Farm and Ranch Appraisals

TOM SIDWELL Associate Broker

Mathers Realty, Inc.

! #0%1 -& 0)#( &"0+*",$ *-#"2%$ -,*6 +),32%1 1-32( -& "1 03#%1 5 +-3,2"), 4)%51 ."4%$ "##%11 )00)'"2)-, 5%** 5 #%+%,2 $)2#( 130&"#% 5"2%0 '0-3,$ 5"2%0 0)'(21 ),#* &! '

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1/ &2 (-+% )'(5"6 &0-,2"'% &! ' ## (& %$$! %& !' &%)$ ! # ! -& "$- #0%1 -& &"0+*",$ 5)2( 130&"#% 5"2%0 0)'(21 '0-3,$ 5"2%0 0)'(21 00)'"2)-, 5%** ,%%$1 0%.")0 &! ' ## $ (##% "

%& !' &%)$ ! # MATHERS REALTY, INC. 2223 E. Missouri, Las Cruces, NM 88001 575/522-4224 Office • 575/522-7105 Fax • 575/640-9395 Cell

“Propriety, Perhaps Profit.� 58

OCTOBER 2013


Sonoita, AZ

SCOTT MCNALLY www.ranchesnm.com 575/622-5867 575/420-1237 Ranch Sales & Appraisals

Committed To Always Working Hard For You!

both with concrete floors, two railroad cars with cover between for horse stalls, hay and feed storage. $750,000

RANCHES/FARMS *NEW* 500 Head Ranch, Tucson, AZ Well improved HQ with 3 homes, pool, barns, corrals, airplane hanger & strip. State & BLM grazing leases. 80 Deeded Acres. $2,380,000. Owner may split.

SOLD

MOLERES RANCH We got rain! Dirt tanks are full of water and grass is growing ... No cattle stocked on ranch since end of 2012. • 11,733 Deeded acres. (18½ deeded sections, 1 section State of NM) Located 53 miles north of Milan, NM. • Nice cattle producing ranch. 3 large fenced pastures. 3 smaller traps, all watering off the headquarters. Year round operation or good winter country. • Native grasses consist of galleta, blue grama, Indian rice grass, alkali sacaton and also fourwing saltbush. Partially wooded in pinon/juniper. Small sandstone mesas and outcroppings. Amazing Mesa top ruins with kivas and rooms. Near Chaco Canyon National Historical Park. • 4 producing windmill wells. Pumping from 250’ to 500’. 9 pit dirt tanks strategically placed throughout the ranch. Great water storage. 4 miles of pipeline. • Wildlife consists of Elk, Mule Deer, Antelope, Quail and Rabbits. Ranch received 2 Bull Elk tags and 2 Cow Elk tags in 2012. • Modest headquarters: Ranch house with kitchen, den and bunking quarters. 30x40 metal sided barn/ hay storage/tack Corrals with guard rail, squeeze chute, and certified scales/house, semi chute/ramp. Call for photos and brochure. Price reduced to $199 per acre! HOWARD MICHAEL, QUALIFYING BROKER Coldwell Banker Legacy 617 W. Santa Fe Ave., Grants, NM 87020 Office 505-876-2222 • Cell 505-290-0761 Email: howmi7cities@yahoo.com www.coldwellbankerlegacy.com /howard.michael Serving NW New Mexico, ranch, recreational, residential & commercial real estate for sellers & buyers!

REAL ESTATE GUIDE

Bar M Real Estate

Nancy A. Belt, Broker Cell 520-221-0807 Office 520-455-0633

335 Head Ranch, Greenlee County, AZ – Near Double Circle Ranch. +/20 Deeded acres, w/two homes, barn & outbuildings. 58 Sections USFS grazing permit. Good vehicular access to the ranch – otherwise this is a horseback ranch. Scenic, great outfitters prospect. $850,000

90 H ead, Agu a Fria Ran ch , Quemado, NM – This is a scenic midsize ranch with great prospects. Operating as a private hunting retreat, and a purebred Angus and Paint horse ranch. +/-1200 deeded acres, +/80 acres of NM lease, and +/-5220 acres BLM. 4BR, 2BA, mfg. home. Trophy elk, antelope, deer. Elk and mule deer permits. Candidate for a conservation easement or land exchange with the BLM. $1.65M

*NEW* Graham Co, AZ 78 Plus Head Cattle Ranch – Approx. 640 deeded acres, 3633 acres USFS and 5204 acres BLM; 1 BR, 1 Bath home/camp. Foothills of the Santa Teresa Mountains. $650,000 *REDUCED* Young, AZ, 65+ Acres – Under the Mogollon Rim, small town charm & mountain views. 2100 s.f., 3 BR, 2 Bath home, 2 BR cabin, historic rock home currently a museum, shop, & barn. Excellent opportunity for horse farm, bed & breakfast, or land development. +/- 65 acres for $1,070,000; home & other improvements. $424,500.

*REDUCED* 52 Head Ranch, San Simon, AZ – Indian Springs Ranch, pristine & private, only 12 miles from I-10. Bighorn sheep, ruins, pictographs. 1480 acres of deeded, 52 head, BLM lease, historic rock house, new cabin, springs, wells. $1,300,000 Terms. *NEW* San Simon, AZ – Indian Springs Farm 162 acres w/pivot, nice home, hay barn other utility buildings. $750,000

*NEW* 137 Head Ranch, east of Kingman, AZ – 40 Deeded Acres, State Grazing Lease, Adverse Grazing, well watered, good mix of browse and grass, 5 wells, numerous springs, four corrals. Remote but easy access to town. Very scenic. $314,000 Terms.

SOLD

*N OW R EDUCED TO $780, 000* +/-128 Head Flying Diamond Ranch, Klondyke, AZ +/-1500 deeded acres, State & (2) USFS Grazing Leases. Main residence, guesthouse, barn, hay barn, & corrals at HQ. Good access, in a great location.

SOLD

NEW MEXICO PROPERTIES Listed Cooperatively w/Action Realty, Cliff, NM, Dale Spurgeon, Broker – 575535-4177

*NEW* 314 Acre Farm, Pearce, AZ – Two pivots, three irrigation wells, charming +/- 2100 s.f. home, four car garage, large metal workshop,

* REDUCED* Virden, NM +/-78 Acre

Jesse Aldridge 520-251-2735 Rye Hart 520-455-0633 Tobe Haught 505-264-3368 Sandy Ruppel 520-444-1745 Erin Aldridge Thamm 520-519-9800

Farm, with 49+ acres of irrigation rights. Pastures recently planted in Bermuda. 3 BR, 2 Bath site built home, shop, hay barn, 8 stall horse barn, unique round pen with adjoining shaded pens, roping arena. Scenic setting along the Gila River. Great set up for raising horses also suitable for cattle, hay, pecans, or pistachios, $550,000 Terms. *REDUCED* +/- 50 Head Ranch, Virden, NM – 367 Deeded acres, 4,000 acres BLM, nice HQ w/home, barn, corrals, along two miles of the beautiful Gila River. $525,000 $485,000 *REDUCED* Franklin, NM, 28 Acre Farm – Franklin, NM, 28 Acre Farm – 19 Acres of water rights from Franklin I.D., 5 BR, 3 bath Mfg. home, corrals, barn. Great for small farming operation, horses or cattle. Along the scenic Gila River. $125,000 Terms.

SOLD

HORSE PROPERTIES/LAND San Rafael Valley, AZ – Own a slice of heaven in the pristine San Rafael Valley, 152 Acres for $380,150 & 77 Acres with well for $217,000 Rodeo, NM, 160 Acres - on the western slope of the Peloncillo Mountains. 4-forty acre parcels surrounded by BLM land on two sides. Unimproved lots with electric nearby. $141,760 Willcox, AZ 40 Acres – Great views in every direction, power to the property. $85,000.

Stockmen’s Realty is pleased to announce ... the addition of E r i n A l d r i d g e T h a m m to our team. We are excited to welcome her aboard and Stockmen’s Realty is now licensed in Arizona & New Mexico to better serve you!

www.stockmensrealty.com

OCTOBER 2013

59


REAL ESTATE GUIDE

MELROSE

A Little Bit of Country in a Small Town!

1121 E. ABO HIGHWAY Come see this 3 Bedroom, 2 bath home in Melrose. Complete with garage, carport and 30x40 barn. Arena style pen for boarding horses and/or roping. All on 2.2 acres.

TUCUMCARI

7351 QUAY ROAD AI Enjoy country living and spectacular views in this beautiful 3100 plus square home containing many custom features overlooking the far west reaches of Ute Lake on 3 3 acres, or build your own dream home on choice of eight 40 +/- acre lots.

Paul Stout, Qualifying Broker (575) 760-5461 pkstout@gmail.com

O’NEILL LAND, LLC P.O. Box 145, Cimarron, NM 87714 • 575/376-2341 • Fax: 575/376-2347 land@swranches.com • www.swranches.com

C6 Ranch: Sonoita/Patagonia AZ. 165 head, 45 acres deeded, 8700 acres forest lease great water, good improvements. $725,000. Sam Hubbell-Tom Hardesty Stockton Pass: Beautiful SE AZ Ranch North of Willcox, Mountain Ranch 145 head AU, Deeded Surrounded by forest. Reduced to $975,000. Walter Lane Red Top Ranch: 3,800 deeded acres in SE AZ. Priced at $225 per deeded acre. Walter Lane Perkins Ranch: Yavapai County, NE of Chino Valley, 214 deeded acres, 51,625 acres forest lease, 266 AU, located on the Verde River $8,575,000. Andy Groseta Wildhorse Basin Ranch: Yavapai county, 864 deeded, 6701 State Lease, $3,900,000. Con Englehorn La Cienga: Mohave county, 122.83 deeded acres, 166,234 State/BLM Lease, 490 head $1,200,000. Paul Groseta Crooked H: Central AZ, 126 Sections, 450 head Winter Range/664 summer Range. $2,375,000. Traegen Knight Lazy EH: Western AZ, 122.5 deeded, 300,000 BLM/State Lease, 17,486 AUM ephemeral/500 AU yearlong. 18 wells, 4 pumps on CAP Canal. $600,000. Con Englehorn NI Ranch Tombstone AZ: The ranch consists of 6555 deeded acre & 6650 state lease, 250 head annually; all improvements are in top condition, the ranch is well watered w/8 wells, & pipelines. Good strong grass country. The Ni Ranch is one of the last working cattle ranches in the state with the majority of the land being deeded. Priced at $3,150,000

SOLD

SOLD

Good inventory in the Miami, Springer, Maxwell and Cimarron area. Great year-round climate suitable for horses. Give yourself and your horses a break and come on up to the Cimarron Country.

"! ! "$! (! "" ) "!( )

! ) $"% & ' $"% & ' " $ %&) & $ ! $$) %% ! "$! $ ) # $ ! ! &

Providing Appraisal, Brokerage & Other Rural Real Estate Services

60

OCTOBER 2013

Miami Horse Training Facility. Ideal horse training facility w/large 4 bedroom 3 bathroom approx 3,593 sq ft home, 248.32Âą deeded acres, 208 irrigation shares, 30' X 60' metal sided shop/ bunkhouse, 8 stall barn w/tack room, 7 stall barn w/storage, 10 stall open sided barn w/10 ft alley, 2 stall loafing shed, 14 11' x 24' Run-In Shelters, 135' Round Pen, Priefert six horse panel walker. Many more features & improvements. All you need for a serious horse operation in serious horse country of Miami New Mexico. Additional 150 acres available on south side of road. Miami is at the perfect year round horse training elevation of 6,200. Far enough south to have mostly mild winters. Convenient to I-25. $1,550,000. Miami Horse Heaven. Very private approx. 4,800 sq. ft. double-walled adobe 4 bed., 3 bath home w/many custom features, 77.5Âą deeded acres & 77.25Âą water shares, large 7 stall horse barn, large insulated metal shop, large haybarn/equipment shed, all for $1,650,000, plus an additional 160+/-

deeded acres w/142 water shares avail. $560,000 (subject to purchase of 77.5Âą deeded acre parcel.) Krause Ranch. 939.37 +/- deeded acres. 88 Springer Ditch Company water shares. Mostly west of I;25, exit 414. Big views. $725,000. Miami Mountain View. 80Âą deeded acres w/80 water shares & house. $550,000. Miami. 10Âą deeded acres, awesome home, total remodel, awesome views $295,000. Miami WOW. Big home in Santa Fe Style great for family on 3 acres. $274,900. Miami Tangle Foot. 10.02Âą deeded acres w/water shares & meter. $118,000. Maxwell. 19.5Âą deeded acres, water, outbuildings, great horse set up. $269,000. Canadian River. 39.088Âą deeded acres, w/nice ranch home & river. $279,000.

O’NEILL AGRICULTURAL, LLC “Offers computer-generated color custom mapping service on digital USGS base maps. Hang a map in your office that looks like your ranch, w/water lines, pastures & roads etc. Put your ranch on one piece of paper.�


TEERRELL RR RE ELL LA AND ND & LIIV IVESTOCK VESTOCK CO.

LINCOLN COUNTY, NM CATTLE & HUNTING RANCH ~ Prime elk hunting & cattle grazing opportunity on 1,356 deeded & 2,000 acres forest allotment west of Capitan NM. Same family ownership for over 100 years. Elevation from 6,700 – 7,200’. Good water with 3 live springs, 2 wells, & lake bed. Ranch only elk tags.

575/447-6041 575/447-6041

ESTATE SERVICES

REDUCED - FORT SUMNER NM HORSE PROPERTY ~ 15 irrigated acres w/ pipe fences. Improvements include metal horse barn w/covered stalls/runs, tack room, 2 other metal barns, & a 2,745 SF home. Landscaped. Near town, but in the country. EAST OF FT. SUMNER ~ 262 acres native grass with 2 homes, barns, corrals, stalls, & well. Highway frontage. Only 5 miles from town. $310,000 REDUCED $285,000. RED BARN HOME ~ Highway frontage. 7.5 acres irrigated fruit & nut orchard & vineyard. Red 2 story barn converted to beautiful home or business w/character galore. $265,000

We W eK Know now New New M Mexico...Selling exico...Selling Ranches For For 40 40 Y ears! Ranches Years!

RANCH SALES AND APPRAISALS

SERVING THE RANCHING INDUSTRY SINCE 1920

John Stallard, Broker • 575-760-1899 • 575-355-4454 office • 866-781-2093 toll free 26230 US Highway 60-84 East • Ft. Sumner, NM 88119 realestate@plateautel.net • www.RanchEtc.com

575-355-4454 KIM STALLARD, QUALIFYING BROKER

`

Kern Land, Inc. $! ! +/ %2!. * $ %/ .!/ +* !03!!* +.0 1)*!. * *0 +/ $! . * $ +*0 %*/ !! ! .!/ )+.! +. (!// /0 0! (! /! .!/ * .!/ #+.#!+1/ /0.!0 $ +" 0$! ! +/ %2!. 3%* / 0$.+1#$ 0$! . * $ !(+3 / * /0+*! .%) "+. ,,.+4%) 0!(5 )%(!/ +2! 0$! .%2!. 0$! . * $ %/ , .0%0%+*! %*0+ , /01.!/ 3 0!.! ".+) /0.+*# /1 )!./% (! 3!(( 0$ 0 ,1),/ %*0+ ( .#! /0!!( /0+. #! 0$ 0 #. 2%05 "!! / %*0+ .%*'!./ /!.2%*# ! $ , / 01.! 1 * ! %+/ .!!' )! * +./ 0$.+1#$ 0$! )% (! +" 0$! . * $ * .1*/ %*0+ 0$! ! +/ %2!. !(+3 ,% 01.!/-1! / * /0+*! (1"" +* 0$! . * $ $! ! +/ %2!. * $ $ / !!* $+)! 0+ 0+ +3/ %* .! !*0 5! ./ 10 %0 %/ ,.!/!*0(5 *+0 /0+ '! $! .! $ / $ #++ /1))!. . %*/ * $ / #.+3* /+)! #. // ! $ 2! &1/0 (+3!.! 0$! ,.% ! 0+

+* 0$%/ ! 10%"1( 00(! +,!. 0%+* +* +0$ /% !/ +" 0$! ! +/ %2!. www.kernranches.com • (575) 762-3707 Dave Kern - (575) 760-0161 (cell) • 1304 Pile St., Clovis, NM

1507 13TH STREET LUBBOCK, TEXAS 79401 (806) 763-5331

A

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

Scott Land co. Ranch & Farm Real Estate

1301 Front Street Dimmitt, TX 79027 Ben G. Scott – Broker Krystal M. Nelson NM Qualifing Broker 800-933-9698 day/eve. www.scottlandcompany.com www.texascrp.com

■UNION CO. NM Just south of Clayton, 352.73 ac. +/- of choice grassland, well fenced & watered w/a good set of steel pens, on pvmt. ■UNION CO. NM Amistad area, 976.42 ac. w/612 ac. formerly under pivot irr., presently enrolled in new CRP contract @ $45.60 per acre, per year, for 10 yrs., irr. wells & pivot points all connected w/UG pipe. PRICE REDUCED! ■HORSE MOTEL – TUCUMCARI, NM Known coast-tocoast and in all parts in between – 4 ac. +/- on the edge of town. Nice metal frame horse stables w/pipe-rail pens. Nice brick home, 3 bdrm., 2 bath. Excellent opportunity! We have listed four choice ranches in the high rainfall area of Central OK & have access to several other choice ranches both large & small w/excellent, up-to-date improvements. We need your listings of all sizes of agricultural properties anywhere in NM, Colorado, Texas or Oklahoma.

Please call for details on these properties & large NM ranches. OCTOBER 2013

61

REAL ESTATE GUIDE

STALLARD REAL


New Mexico State University Announces $100,000 Endowed Student Leadership Fund Supported By CoBank & Farm Credit of New Mexico oBank and Farm Credit of N.M. are proud to join N.M. State University in announcing the establishment of the CoBank and Farm Credit of N.M. Endowed Student Leadership Fund at N.M. State University. The endowment will be funded through an initial $100,000 gift from CoBank, a cooperative bank serving agribusinesses, rural infrastructure providers and Farm Credit associations throughout the United States. Proceeds from the endowment will be used to develop and maintain a board of student leaders who will research and develop solutions for agricultural-based issues in N.M.. Farm Credit of N.M. is an agricultural lender serving the state. The mission of the student board is to provide NMSU undergraduate and graduate students with an educational experience in agricultural finance and cooperative board operations. It’s also designed to enhance the student’s ability to evaluate a business while developing forward-think-

C

ing business strategies. Students also will be exposed to how a board of directors functions and will be able to hone their decision-making skills. Serving on the student board will open up a broad range of career and leadership opportunities. The board will work directly with Farm Credit of N.M., which will give them access to real world problems. They will interact and learn from professionals in the industry and gain new perspective. According to Al Porter, Farm Credit of N.M.’s president and chief executive officer, this is a great opportunity for partnership with both CoBank and NMSU. “Farm Credit of N.M. is passionate about youth and their development in agriculture. This is a great way for us to all work together to make sure NMSU graduates are prepared to enhance rural N.M.� The student board will be a part of the Dept. of Agricultural Economics and Agricultural Business in the College of Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental Sciences. Dean & Regents Professor, Lowell Catlett, said “CoBank and Farm Credit of N.M. have always led by example – not only are they the bedrock of agriculture but their commitment to the future is steadfast. This generous gift to N.M. State

University is yet another example of their belief that the future of agriculture lies in developing young men and women. We are deeply thankful for this gift and for CoBank’s and Farm Credit of N.M.’s incredible vision and support.� This donation is part of a $5 million commitment from CoBank to fund agricultural research and education at land grant universities and other institutions throughout the United States. The CoBank contribution will support a broad range of programs at more than 30 schools, including academic research, scholarships for students, cooperative education and leadership development. Bob Engel, CoBank’s chief executive officer, noted that support for research and education is an important part of the bank’s broader corporate social responsibility program. “One of the best ways for CoBank to return value to rural America is by giving to academic institutions that are engaged in agricultural research and training the next generation of rural business and civic leaders,� Engel said. “We’re deeply thankful for our board’s generosity and look forward to strengthening our long-term relationships ■with these great schools.�

PREGNANCY DIAGNOSTIC TECHNICIAN Call Steve Jensen 575/773-4721 License PD-2266

“Testing Cattle in New Mexico Only�

The ultimate arena and gground The round prep prep tool )PSTF "SFOBT t 8BUFSXBZT t (SBEJOH -FWFMJOH %SJWFXBZT t &SPTJPO 3FQBJS t "HSJDVMUVSBM #BMMĂśFME .BJOUFOBODF

the Original...

Still the Best Best

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OCTOBER 2013

CONNIFF CATTLE CO. LLC Angus, Shorthorn, LimFlex

Bulls - Cows - Heifers for Sale John & Laura Conniff 1500 Snow Road, Las Cruces, NM 88005 575/644-2900 • cfxf@aol.com Casey & Chancie Roberts Upham Road, Rincon, NM 575/644-9583 www.conniffcattle.com


NOVEMBER STOCKMAN Celebrates the

2013

CATTLEMAN OF THE YEAR Reserve space to Congratulate-Honor-Applaud

BILL SAUBLE

For Jobs Well Done

Contact Chris today at 243-9515 ext. 28 or chris@aaalivestock.com

O

U R A D V E RT I S E R S make this magazine possible. Please patronize them, and mention that you saw their ad in ...

505/243-9515

2013 Judging Contest

Novice Winners (back l to r) Koelle Brandenberger, Andrew Lujan, Shawn Agar, Slade Shupe, front (l to r) Kristin Grau, Mia Encinias, Cash Spindle, Ren Fite Placing Order: 1. Kristin Grau 2. Koelle Brandenberger 3. Andrew Lujan 4. Mia Encinias 5. Shawn Agar 6. Cash Spindle 7. Ren Fite 8. Danielle Foster 9. Samuel Foster 10. Slade Shupe

A

D V E RT I S E

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

Senior Winners (back l to r) Ralf LeSueur, Abram Chapparo, Kelsey Taylor, (front l to r) Tori Riley, Shania Begay, Jordan Spindle, Abby Spindle, Laura Winn, Hailey Clark Placing Order: 1. Tori Riley 2. Shania Begay 3. Jordan Spindle 4. Ky Drummond 5. Abby Spindle 6. Ralf LeSueur 7. Laura Winn 8. Arbam Chapparo 9. Wade Cauzza 10. Hailey Clark 11. Kelsey Taylor

Junior Winners (back l to r) Colten Law, Cooper Autery, Avery Lee, Rayna Fite, (front l to r) Morgan Borden, Tanner Cox, Daniel Lujan Placing Order: 1. Daniel Lujan 2. Colten Law 3. Cooper Autery 4. Morgan Borden 5. Tanner Cox 6. Avery Lee 7. Abigail Foster 8. Rayna Fite

High Reasons Winner Jessica Gustin OCTOBER 2013

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Are You Ready To Own a Horse? A PRODUCT OF THE ABUSED, NEGLECTED & ABANDONED HORSE PROJECT

BASIC ESSENTIALS OF EQUINE OWNERSHIP – A Helpful Guide from Equine Industry Stakeholders Supporting Equine Welfare in New Mexico any are intrigued with the idea of owning their own horse; yet, responsible equine (horses, mules,

M

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the following described estray animals have been taken under the provisions of Chapter 77, Article 13 of New Mexico Statutes Annotated 1978, and sold for the benefit of the owners of said estrays as provided by law. The proceeds will be subject to claims and proof of ownership as provided by law. New Mexico Livestock Board Ray Baca, Executive Director · Albuquerque, N.M. All current estrays can now be found on the New Mexico Livestock Board website at www.nmlbonline.com. Lost, missing and stolen reports will be available on our website for 30 days.

and donkeys) ownership may not reasonably fit the lifestyle or financial resources of all. This brief guide describes essential elements of responsible ownership, and readers should seek alternatives if they can’t commit to owning responsibly. Some worthy activities that can be fun alternatives to owning your own horse: riding lessons at a local stable, a guided trail ride from businesses that specialize in that, get involved with an equine interest group, or volunteer at a local equine rescue, horse show, or other equine-related event. *NOTE: Informational values are based on an adult 1,100 lb. horse. Ownership Costs

“Buyin’ the horse is the cheap part . . . ownin’ him is the real investment.” – An old adage A responsible owner provides adequate feed, water, shelter, and hoof and health care on a routine basis. While costs can vary depending on your own circumstances, these figures provide a reference point for what it costs to adequately care for one horse in NM for one year: -Feed: Expect to pay $1000-2000. -Hoof care: Expect to pay $200-550. -Basic health care: Expect to pay $150300. Annual costs of owning can be $1,3503,000/horse, and including start-up costs (shelter, fencing, tack, etc.) for the new owner brings the total to over $6,500 without including the price of the horse. Safe Facilities & Equipment

In addition to daily care and observa-

estrays October 8, 2013

tion by the owner, some minimal requirements to own a horse include: -a shelter (natural or man-made) of sufficient size (at least 150 square feet/equine) that offers the equine a means of avoiding severe weather (extreme temperatures—over 100 or under 20o F; freezing rain, etc). -an area—free of hazardous equipment, refuse, or obstacles—allowing the equine ample space to exercise freely. Many city/county ordinances require at least 1 acre of land to legally own livestock. Fences in these areas should be constructed of materials that minimize the chance of injury to the equine and be a minimum of 4.5-6 ft. tall. -disposal of, on a daily or weekly basis, the 50 lbs. of manure/day the horse produces in order to maintain sanitary conditions and prevent problems with odor, flies, etc. -access to a vehicle to transport the equine in an emergency. -hay/grain feeders, water troughs, stable cleaning supplies, grooming tools, tack, and enough space to store all of these safely. Routine Care for Adult Horses

-A horse requires 10-12 gallons of clean, fresh, and drinkable water each day. -An average size horse will require at least 16-22 lbs. of hay and/or grain per day to keep itself in good condition. This is about 1/4 to 1/3 of a normal 2-strand hay bale. Feeding less can severely compromise the health and well-being of the horse. -The feet, or hooves, need trimmed every 8-10 weeks to insure proper hoof care. -Horses harbor internal parasites, so they require treatment (deworming) for these at least once every 6 months or more. -Horses, like most animals, require annual vaccination to prevent contagious diseases. -Some horses, especially those over 10 years of age, may require annual dental care and physical exam from a veterinarian. -Novice owners should castrate males as an aid in managing the horse and safety of others. -Owners should be aware of local/county ordinances (zoning, # equines/acre, care requirements, etc.) that continued on page 65

Please note that there is a misprint of our address in the new 2012 NMLB Brand Book. The correct address is: NMLB, 300 San Mateo Blvd. NE, Suite 1000, Albuquerque, NM 87108

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In Memoriam continued from page 53

continued from page 64

may apply to equine ownership in their community. A Long-Term Commitment

For More Information

These contacts can answer questions or direct you to resources on equine care: Local County Extension Service Agent (aces.nmsu.edu/county) Local NM Livestock Board Inspector or Office of the State Veterinarian (www.nmlbonline.com) or 505/841-6161

THE NEW MEXICO LIVESTOCK BOARD IS SEEKING ive s tock Boar A STATE VETERINARIAN

Mexi New co

L

The average life of a horse is 20-30 YEARS! So, the commitment to own and provide for an equine should not be made without considering how stable your financial resources are for caring for that animal. At a yearly expense of $3,000, the financial commitment for care of the horse over its life can exceed $60,000. In years past, there were many options for selling an unwanted horse. Today, there are few options for owners to be rid of an unwanted horse, and many times wellmeaning equine owners sadly find themselves in a spot where they can no longer care for their animal. Significant expenses are tied to putting a horse “to sleep”, and this often leads to horses being abandoned on public, private, and tribal lands which creates problems for all New Mexicans. This and other forms of neglect are criminal offenses that can lead to hefty legal fees, fines, or jail time for violators.

NM State University Horse Specialist (horses.nmsu.edu) or 575/646-1242 NM Veterinary Medical Association, www.nmvma.org or 505/867-6373 AAEP “Get-A-DVM” Resource (www.aaep.org/dvmsearch) This brochure is available online: horses.nmsu.edu, www.nmda.nmsu.edu, ■ www.nmlbonline.com

d

NMLB

Requ ir ements : A DVM or equivalent from an AVMA accredited College of Veterinary Medicine, experience in private livestock or mixed animal practice that maintained a livestock caseload, or the equivalent of such practical experience. Must maintain a valid NM veterinary license and membership in the New Mexico Veterinary Medical Association To Apply , Vis it: www.nmlbonline.com/index.php?id=52 Cl osi ng Date/Ti me: Saturday, 10/12/13 11:59 p.m. Mtn. Time

Lamoyne “Granddaddy” Peters, 93, Capitan, passed away on September 4, 2013 in Rio Rancho. The only child born to Gilbert Eugene Peters and Chloe Alice Zumwalt Peters, LaMoyne was born in the Carrizozo hospital on July 10, 1920. He married Nona Opal Jones on June 2, 1941. He worked for the Capitan Light Plant, Southern Pacific Railroad, United States Forest Service and the United States Soil Conservation Service. LaMoyne and Opal joined the Capitan (now Angus) Church of the Nazarene in 1947. He served as a board member and trustee for Capitan Church of the Nazarene. He served as treasurer at the Capitan and Angus Church for 40 years. He was extremely active in the organization and operation of Nogal Mesa Ranchmen’s Camp Meeting, serving as general chairman and on several other committees. He was a chairman of the Angus Cemetery Association, served on the Capitan School Board, Lincoln County Planning and Zoning Committee, Lincoln County Agricultural Stabilization Conservation Board and Upper Hondo Soil and Water Conservation Board. Among LaMoyne’s passions was ranching. When his father gave LaMoyne the choice of purchasing a ranch or attending college, he chose the former. His life consisted of fulfilling his dream of having a prestigious herd of Hereford, Angus and crossbred cattle. He loved his family and worked to provide a legacy for future generations. LaMoyne was awarded the Outstanding Land Stewardship Award in 2004. On any given day, when asked how he was, he always replied, “I’m worse,” said with a twinkle in his eye, which earned him the nickname of Mr. Worse. He is survived by his wife Opal, his daughter, Peggy Glenda Armstrong (husband, Leslie); three grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. Editor’s Note: Please send In Memoriam announcements to: Caren Cowan, N.M. Stockman, P.O. Box 7127, Albuquerque, NM 87194, fax: 505/998-6236 or 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.

S al ary : $27.16 - $48.29 Hourly $56,492.80 - $100,443.20 Annually Jo b Type: Permanent Classified Position Locati on: Albuquerque, N.M.

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Strauss Ranch, 1979 by CURTIS FORT

nternational Cattle Systems had made an offer to buy the cattle and lease the Strauss outfit. This company owned Grant County Feed Yards at Ulysses Kansas, and other holdings that were all a subsidiary of De Kalb Grain. The President and negotiator for the International outfit was Dale Lasater. Tom Lasater, Dale’s father, developed the Beefmaster breed, and had their first production sale in 1949. I have been friends with Dale and his wife, Janine, since the Strauss Ranch works, and have been to their ranch in Colorado several times, where Dale and his crew still carry on producing top-of-the line Beefmaster cattle. They started gathering the Strauss Ranch around the first of June and began to realize they were shorthanded and the cattle were pretty trotty. So that’s when Tye Terrell called Myles and I. We needed good mounts, so Myles loaded some Park Springs horses and Tye and I loaded some Question Mark cowponies, with Larry Dean’s OK. It was June and already hot in that Las Cruces range when we got there. We were mounted and trotting when it was getting pink in the east. We would make a drag on a piece of that desert and throw our gather into a big holding pasture. When we trotted into headquarters Barbara would have a great meal and plenty of ice tea. It was so hot, we’d shade up at the bunkhouse (the one Tye, Myles, Larry and I stayed in was really nice . . . with air conditioning), then we’d catch fresh mounts around 4 p.m. and gather more country. This went on several days. It was fun, but hot, and it was a big hunk of country . . . close to 300 sections. One of the hardest drives I was ever on was during this cow works. They had a big lava pasture with a couple of hundred heifer yearlings we needed to gather for the count in this trade. That pasture had big ridges of lava to cross, next to open

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country, then more lava. It would have been hard to gather milk cows out of this pasture. Because we knew it would get hot quickly, we scattered on this circle at first light, and sparks were flying off those horseshoes as we jigged across that 25-section pasture. We were scattered on that drive by good daylight, but we couldn’t stay even on the drive as the lava rock was thick. If you started some heifers, they left there like deer; and if they needed to be bent in the right direction, they made you feel like you were riding a burro. Soon you didn’t know which way they went! Myles and I and a Mexican puncher named Tecol jumped a few head, and really had to do some tall riding to throw them in a corner, which was in a big grassy flat. While we held them there in the corner trying to calm them a little, one freckle -faced heifer quit the herd. She had a figure nine in her tail, was kicking at her belly and came out by Myles, who had his rope down and tied. He’d already punched a hole in his rope, and when she came by he “fanged” her. Slobber flew when she hit the end of it! Myles was riding a big bay named J. Waggoner, and Tecol, a good vaquero and riata man, heeled her and went to the end of it. I tailed her over, put dirt in her eyes and took the ropes off . . . she decided the herd in the corner looked like a safer place. We had to take this handful up the fence and Tecol got in the lead. At that first or second ridge of lava we had to cross, things got faster and heifers went to ducking out or running straight ahead, causing us to spill the whole bunch in that rock. That’s the way the whole drive went with everybody, and no one was going to cripple good mounts for those heifers. Those heifers had never been moved around, thrown in a corner or had anything done with them a-horseback, so they had no respect for mounted men. I think those heifers had been weaned the fall before, hauled instead

of driven to that pasture and had never seen anyone until that day. So you cowboys reading this know it was a bust! Fourteen well mounted punchers would have had their hands full in flat country with those heifers. We realized the drive fell apart, our mounts were give-out, and it was 103 degrees! We followed a trail and came to a windmill that pumped into a 6 foot high steel tank. It was good water and we held up there to cool off. We poured water on our mounts, as well as us. Soon, Larry Dean and a couple others with sweat marks all over their mounts and not a lot of grins on their faces showed up. They unsaddled, watered their mounts and rolled a smoke. Everyone gave their version of the wildest or worst drive they’d ever been on, and felt this one was one of them. Over the years, Larry, Myles, Tye, and I have talked about that “drive”. You can’t make a drive on jackrabbits, or antelopes, and these heifers would make them look easy. I think they wound up building some wire lots around those tanks or windmills with trigger gates to get those heifers gathered. That’s a good example of why you prowl and handle your heifers a-horseback. One of the last days, we’d unsaddled tired mounts and had another great noon meal that Barbara had prepared. While we ate, the bosses talked over the things needing to be done, as we were about ready to gather the holding pasture the next day and start winding up this cow deal. We were short two big Brahman bulls that got away a few days before on a drive south of headquarters. So Myles and I said we’d go south and get those bulls. Everyone looked at us in doubt, but we spoke with confidence (we hoped). So the crew was split up on several missions to get things shaped

continued on page 67


Scatterin’ continued from page 66

up before tomorrow. After lunch we had a good nap at the bunkhouse, then all of us caught fresh mounts. It was only 90 degrees instead of 110 or more. Myles and I loaded in a big goose-neck trailer and went south to that big Chavez Pasture. We unloaded and split up, then made a big circle looking for those bulls. We each jumped one and hazed them toward those south pens. They were dry and it wasn’t so hard to drive to those pens that had water, although they were still sniffy, and you had to give them lots of air. We had backed up that pickup and trailer into a corner of the water lot, and with a couple of old gates, made a wing. We knew it was a long shot, but if we got them in that lot and boogered them just right, we might get lucky. As they went in the lot, Myles eased down and shut the gate as I kept my mount between Myles and the toros, who were really showing signs of pulling out or running over us. On purpose, Myles had left his mount on the outside of the pen, as we had a plan. He took off and ran in front of them, and in two jumps they were blowing snot on him

as he jumped in the trailer, and I was hollering and popping a slicker behind them. Myles went out the little gate in the front and got it latched just as they slammed into it, and I slammed the back gate. We got them into the front half, loaded our mounts in the back, and when we pulled into the big pens at headquarters to unload, several asked how we gathered those “toros diablos�. That night in the ranch cantina, someone would keep bringing up the subject, so finally I said, “Not a big deal. I tracked that one with the spots on his head to Willow Tank, Myles loped

up, we stretched him out and sidelined him. While we were resetting our saddles and cooling our horses’ backs, I asked Myles if he got the other one. He grinned as he lit a fresh Prince Albert cigarette, told me he did, and had tied him to a tree at Apache Tank, so we could get the trailer to both places. So we loaded them, and brought them in! Wasn’t that what they sent us to do?� We never said any different, so the next few days as we branded, culled, and sorted all those cattle they referred to us as those hombres that gathered the ■toros . . . we liked it!

“Strauss Ranch, 1979� by Curtis Fort

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C IA TION R

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he saga continues with the Outstanding National Resource Waters (ONRW) issue we have been fighting for more than five years. To recap, the initial proposal was made public in early 2009. The Water Quality Control Commission (WQCC) took the matter up in early 2010 and held hearings in the fall of that year, issuing a final decision before the end of the year. In 2011 the New Mexico Cattle Grow-

W MEXICO NE

C A TT L E

Io the Point

The Dead Body Principle ‌ & other euphemisms

O

S W E R S' A S

by Caren Cowan, Exec. Director, New Mexico Cattle Growers’ Assn.

ers’ Association (NMCGA), who was a party to the case along with several members, appealed the decision administratively to the New Mexico Court of Appeals and asked the WQCC to reconsider its decision in the matter. The Commission chose not to reconsider. The administrative appeal sat in the Court of Appeals until early 2013. At that point the Appeals Court ruled that NMCGA had no standing for an appeal

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without even looking at the procedural complaints the appeal was based upon. The Court found that because NMCGA could prove no direct harm, there was no standing. This isn’t the first time that NMCGA or many, many others have faced this issue. Here’s where the dead body comes in. Because NMCGA couldn’t produce someone who had been harmed by this proposed regulation, although such harm is inevitable, government at all levels is allowed to proceed with regulations and programs that sentence natural resource producers to sheer ruin. I say natural resource producers because that is the only area I am familiar with. I would guess that others are faced with the same death sentence. This seems to me to be a much higher standard than is required by the criminal court system. There, people are convicted of murders in the absence of a dead body. Circumstances can be enough for a conviction. Not so when dealing with federal and state regulations and programs. Unless you can produce someone who has been put out of business, driven to bankruptcy or some other dire consequence – a dead body – government agents are allowed to proceed. The point that we cannot seem to bring to light to is that if we wait until there is harm – a dead body – there is no way to resuscitate them. Livestock is not a stackable commodity. When a regulation puts a rancher in a corner, his only choice is to sell the cows. While there may be other cows to buy, they are not the cows that contain the genetics and the environment knowledge to be able to best utilize that rancher’s pastures. With the short supply of cattle in the United States today, there are not a lot of cattle on the market and the financial ability to be able to buy cows may also be gone. Never willing to give up, the NMCGA

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Point

continued from page 68

appealed the Court of Appeals decision to the New Mexico Supreme Court. That hearing was held in late September. The jury, in this case five members of the Supreme Court, is still on what the final outcome will be. At the hearing the Court was equally hard on both the NMCGA attorney and the three attorneys who argued on the side of the WQCC. Two of those attorneys were funded directly by your tax dollars. The third, representing the WildEarth Guardians (WEG) and several other groups were indirectly funded by your tax dollars. Thankfully in the case of the WEG, it is only your federal dollars that are in play. The state generally does not pay the “sue and settle” fees that federal agencies seem to dole out so regularly. It is the contention of the New Mexico Attorney General’s Office, representing the Environment Department, the New Mexico Department of Game & Fish and the Energy, Minerals & Natural Resources Department, that there should be no avenue of appeal if a state agency abuses process – and thus the rights of the public. The WEG followed suit, asserting that NMCGA had lost in the rulemaking process and that was that. Never mind that the Court of Appeals ruled that they had no standing to intervene in the case. That issue they took to the Supreme Court and were granted the right of intervention immediately. When asked if they had the right to appeal on process, the answer was that there was no need for that. They won. The Supreme Court was troubled by the fact that there are no dead bodies to demonstrate. Further, without the details of the entire process, they appeared to agree with the WEG that NMCGA had a victory because there was language in the final rule exempting grazing and other pre-rule activities. On the surface that does look like we might have won. However, that is similar to the language that is placed in most wilderness designation bills. It might make you feel good for a minute, but then look at how many cattle continue to graze in wilderness areas. Not many – because you are not allowed to maintain your improvements, or endangered species are identified that prohibit use, or the lack of management allows a catastrophic fire to destroy everything. Furthermore, the ONRW designation in question is not only sweeping, but turns to the U.S. Forest Service to manage graz-

ing through “best management practices.” How well is that working out for ranchers in New Mexico and the West? NMCGA’s participation in this process hasn’t been with our errors and mis-steps on our part. The legal representation in the hearing process left something to be desired. Our knowledge on participation has grown exponentially. To say that this has been a trial by fire is an understatement. A huge fallacy is that rule-making before the WQCC is a “public” process. There is absolutely no way that a member of the “public” has any role at all. If you are not represented by an attorney, and a darn good one, you may as well save your gas money and stay home. It is pretty amazing to me that I can summarize the blood, sweat and tears by numerous people in just this many words. The hearings in 2011 lasted about eight

days with several NMCGA members and others from across the state in attendance every day. I have threatened to take the transcripts from those many days to the Hospitality Suite at Joint Stockmen’s Convention and assign parts to folks to reenact. We might have something that could go on the road to help refill the Litigation Committee coffers. But the story is not yet complete. We await the decision of the Supreme Court on whether or not NMCGA has standing. That decision will dictate whether we head back to the Court of Appeals to continue the fight or prepare for the dead bodies. The other euphemism

NMCGA was honored to be invited to an appreciation reception for supporters of the Roadrunner Food Bank last month. All continued on page 70

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of New Mexico agriculture has been supporting the Food Bank more strongly than ever in the past couple of years. Of course the event featured a few speakers, including Governor Susana Martinez. While all were enlightening, the one that struck me hardest were the comments of Dr. Eugene Sun, MD, MBA, Chairman of the Board of Directors for the Food Bank. He noted that when his children are hungry, they don’t say, “Mom, I am food insecure, what’s for dinner?” They are hungry and they say so. We have become so bound by correct speech in this country that we cannot say what we mean and communication is difficult if not impossible. Instead of talking about hunger we hear about food insecurity, food deserts or food islands. Why can’t we just say what we mean? We have been told that more than 25 percent of the children in New Mexico go to bed hungry. There are similar scary numbers for the elderly and those who live on fixed incomes. But there seems to be confusion about even that. During New Mexico Hunger Month as proclaimed by the Governor, the Secretary of Health issued a statement that admittedly was ill worded saying that hunger isn’t the problem, but nutrition is. Again, aren’t we just arguing about semantics? The end result is that kids and others are hungry. Why cannot we just say what we mean and mean what we say? The moral of the story is that there are hungry people in New Mexico and we need to support the Roadrunner Food Bank and other such efforts to put a stop to it. Shutdown.

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As the war of words in the media regarding the government shut down began the President took to the airways to state his position on the issue. There were a few words at the beginning of the speech that stopped me. He said, “Tourists will find every one of America’s national parks and monuments, from Yosemite to the Smithsonian to the Statue of Liberty, immediately closed. And of course the communities and small business that rely on these national treasures for their livelihoods will be out of customers and out of luck.

Financing Available continued on page 71

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Point continued from page 70

“And in keeping with the broad ramifications of a shutdown, I think it’s important that everybody understands the federal government is America’s largest employer. More than two million civilian workers and 1.4 million active duty military serve in all 50 states and all around the world.” First it seems that these two statements came in backwards order. Do our national parks rank above our military and civilians workers, especially when you consider that the government is the largest employer? Then you consider that our government IS the nation’s largest employer. Is that what our founding fathers envisioned? Finally, going back to what originally struck me. The concern about communities and small businesses that lose income during a government shutdown is a real one, but where was the concern for these folks when Yosemite and other federal properties were raging with fire just a few weeks ago? Here is another one of those “failure to communicate” issues. There is plenty of blame to go around regarding the sorry state of our government at this point in time. When are we just going to sit down and talk it out face to face rather than through the media?

2013 NMCGA Showmanship

2013 MiniHereford Grand Champion Mini Hereford Bull ABJ Casper Owned by Lawrence Velasquez Santa Rosa, New Mexico Grand Champion Mini Hereford Heifer 2S’s Lay Myraih Exhibited by Shawna Garcia Chama, New Mexico

Novice: Cooper Autrey, Torrance County

2013 Lowline Grand Champion Lowline Heifer SRF Lucy Z22 Shown by Jessica Burson Roswell, New Mexico Junior: Colton Law, Rio Arriba County

Reserve Grand Champion Lowline Heifer GMC Kitt-N-Kabooty Z9417 Owned by Courtney Walker Roswell, New Mexico Courtney Walker was also the Champion Lowline Herdsman

2013 Joint Stockmen’s Convention

The meeting is just around the corner… December 5 through 8 at the Albuquerque Marriott Pyramid North. Make ■ your plans today to be there!

Senior: Derrick Cosper, Valencia County

NOVEMBER STOCKMAN Celebrates the

2013

CATTLEMAN OF THE YEAR Reserve space to Congratulate-Honor-Applaud

BILL SAUBLE For Jobs Well Done

Contact Chris today at 243-9515 ext. 28 or chris@aaalivestock.com

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A Ag New Mexico FCS, ACA . . . . . . .79 Agrow Credit Corporation . . . . . . . .31 Ken Ahler Real Estate Co., Inc. . . . .57 American Angus Association . . . . . .48 American Galloway Breeders Association . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .54 American Water Surveyors . . . . . . .68 American West Real Estate . . . . . . .60 Arizona Ranch Real Estate . . . . . .57 Artesia Trailer Sales . . . . . . . . . . . .70 B B & H Herefords . . . . . . . . . . . . . .19 Ken Babcock Sales . . . . . . . . . . . .52 Bale Buddy Manufacturing, Inc. . . .69 Bar G Feedyard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .27 Bar J Bar Herefords . . . . . . . . . .4, 53 Bar M Real Estate . . . . . . . . . .57, 59 Barber Ranch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15 Beaverhead Outfitters . . . . . . . . . .58 Big Mesa Realty . . . . . . . . . . . . . .60 BJM Sales & Service, Inc . . . . . . . .52 Border Tank Resources . . . . . . . . .52 Bovine Elite . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .51 Bradley 3 Ranch, LTD . . . . . . . . . .55 Brennand Ranch . . . . . . . . . . . . . .55 Jeff Budz . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .49 C C & M Herefords . . . . . . . . . . . . . .20 C Bar Ranch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .54 Casey Beefmasters . . . . . . . . . . . . .54 Cates Ranch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .55 Cattleman’s Livestock Commission .28 Caviness Packing Co., Inc. . . . . . . .38 Don Chalmers Ford . . . . . . . . . . . .47 Clavel Herefords . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12 Clovis Livestock Auction . . . . . . . . .29 Coba Select Sires . . . . . . . . . . . . . .55 Coldwell Banker Legacy/ Howard Michael . . . . . . . . . . . . .59 Coleman Herefords . . . . . . . . . . . .17 Conniff Cattle Co,, LLC . . . . . . . . .62 Copeland & Sons . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5 Cornerstone Ranch . . . . . . . . . . . .13 Cox Ranch Herefords . . . . . . . .20, 55 Coyote Ridge Ranch . . . . . . . . . . .18 CPI Pipe . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .37 Crystalyx . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .34 CS Cattle Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .17 D D & S Polled Herefords . . . . . . . . .18 D Squared Ranch . . . . . . . . . . . . .46 David Dean/Campo Bonito . . . . . .56

Roswell Brangus Female & Bull Sale . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .39 Roswell Livestock Auction Co. . . . .24

ADVERTISERS’ INDEX

Decker Herefords . . . . . . . . . . . . . .17 Dan Delaney Real Estate . . . . . . . .56 Desert Scales & Weighing Equipment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .52 Domenici Law Firm PC . . . . . .47, 52 E Elgin Breeding Service . . . . . . . . . .54 F FBFS / Monte Anderson . . . . . . . . .63 FBFS / Larry Marshall . . . . . . . . . .46 Farm Credit of New Mexico . . . . . . .8 Farmway Feed Mill . . . . . . . . . . . .25 Five States Livestock Auction . . . .27 4 Rivers Equipment . . . . . . . . . . . .78 Freeman Ranch . . . . . . . . . . . . . .54 Fury Farms Inc . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .25 G Giant Rubber Water Tanks . . . . . . .39 Grau Charolais . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .54 Grau Ranch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2, 54 H Doug Hall Herefords . . . . . . . . . . .16 Harrison Quarter Horses . . . . . . . . .52 Headquarters West Ltd . . . . . . . . .60 Headquarters West Ltd/ Sam Hubbell . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .56 Henard Ranches . . . . . . . . . . .18, 47 Hi-Pro Feeds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7 Hill Country Brangus Breeders . . . .36 Hubbell Ranch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .53 Hudson Livestock Supplements . . .35 Huguley Co. Land Sales . . . . . . . . .58 Hutchison Western . . . . . . . . . . . . .79 J JaCin Ranch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .55 Jamison Herefords . . . . . . . . . . . . .20 Steve Jensen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .62 JMT Pipe & Service Company, LLC .40 Joe’s Boot Shop . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .67 J3 Cattle Company . . . . . . . . . . . . .6 K Kaddatz Auctioneering & Farm Equipment . . . . . . . . . . . . .51 Kern Land . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .61 Bill King Ranch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3

L L & H Manufacturing . . . . . . . . . . .63 Lakins Law Firm, PC . . . . . . . . . . .20 Lazy D Ranch Red Angus . . . . . . . .54 Lazy Way Bar Ranch . . . . . . . . . . .54 Lowry Show Calves . . . . . . . . . . . .53 M Major Ranch Realty . . . . . . . . . . . .58 Manford Cattle . . . . . . . . . . . .17, 53 Mason Cattle Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .18 Mathers Realty Inc/ Keith Brown . .58 Matlock & Associates . . . . . . . . . . .14 Merrick’s Inc . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .33 Mesa Feed Co . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .35 Mesa Tractor Inc . . . . . . . . . . .30, 51 Michelet Homestead Realty . . . . . .56 Chas S. Middleton & Son . . . . . . .61 Monfette Construction Co . . . . . . . .52 Mountain View Ranch . . . . . . . . . .20 Paul McGillard / Murney and Associates . . . . . . . .58 N New Mexico Beef Industry Initiative 72 New Mexico Cattle Growers Insurance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .32 New Mexico Farm & Livestock Bureau . . . . . . . . . . . .39 New Mexico Hereford Association . .21 New Mexico Livestock Board . . . . .65 New Mexico Property Group . . . . . .58 New Mexico Purina Dealers . . . . . .80 NMSU Animal & Range Sciences . . . . . . . . . . 26, 39 Nine Cross Hereford Ranch . . . . . . .16 No-Bull Enterprises, LLC . . . . . . . .27 O Jim Olson . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .48 O’Neill Land, LLC . . . . . . . . . . . . .60

S James Sammons & Associates, Inc. .58 Sandia Trailer Sales & Service . . . .52 Santa Rita Ranch . . . . . . . . . . . . . .54 SciAgra . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .22 Scott Land . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .61 Singleton Ranches . . . . . . . . . . . . .53 Southwest Ag Inc . . . . . . . . . . .45, 70 Southwest Equine & Livestock Ap . .44 Southwest Red Angus Association . .53 Stallard Real Estate Services . . . . .61 Stockmen’s Realty . . . . . . . . . . . . .59 Joe Stubblefield & Associates . . . . .58 Swihart Sales Co . . . . . . . . . . . . . .51 T T & S Manufacturing . . . . . . . . . . .11 TechniTrack, LLC . . . . . . . . . . . . . .37 Terrell Land & Livestock Company .61 U United Country Vista Nueva, Inc . . .57 USA Ranch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .17, 55 V Virden Perma Bilt Co . . . . . . . . . . .44 W Westall Ranches, LLC . . . . . . .55, 73 West Star Herefords . . . . . . . . .17, 53 Westway Feed Products, LLC . . . . .75 Wild Ride . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .44 Williams Windmill Inc . . . . . . .38, 51 WW Paul Scales . . . . . . . . . . . . . .26 Y Yavapai Bottle Gas . . . . . . . . .40, 51

P Phillips Diesel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .51 Pratt Farms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .20, 54 R The Ranches . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .43 D.J. Reveal . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .51, 62 Riley & Knight Appraisal,, LLC . . .58 Rim Fire Stock Dogs . . . . . . . . . . .46 Tom Robb & Sons . . . . . . . . . . . . .18 Robertson Livestock . . . . . . . . . . . .52

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New Mexico Bred & Raised Steer Show We want to th ank who made a m everyone onetary donation, don ated supplies, gave their tim e or any way to p helped in ut o show. We cert n this appreciate yo ainly ur help.

New Mexico Bred & Raised Steer Show Sponsors Banner Sponsors: New Mexico Department of Agriculture Hi Pro Feeds New Mexico Cattle Growers’ Association Runyan Cattle Corky & Cathy Fernandez Gold Sponsors: Brent & Rachel Armstrong Mike Cone Truman Smith, DVM Farmway Feed & Equipment Buckle Donors: Farmers and Stockmen’s Bank Doherty Show Steers Donors: Paul’s Vet Supply Metzger Show Cattle Dale Mitchell Hank & Kelikay Hopkins Shane Lutrick Charles & Wade Mulcock Gary Dale Grubelnik John & Janet Griffiths Mike Cone Copeland & Sons Tracy Drummond Royce Maples Duncan Livestock Doherty Show Steers Brett Valentine White Herefords Diamond Arrow Ranch –Boe Lopez Gregory Burris Tom & Bucky Spindle Purina Mills 74

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(above) Grand Champion New Mexico Bred & Raised Steer Shown by Kaly Cone and bred by Mike Cone.

Reserve Grand Champion New Mexico Bred & Raised Steer Exhibited by Amy Gardner and bred by Cody Drager

New Mexico Bred & Raised Steer Show Results Class / Place / Exhibitor / Breeder CLASS 1: 1. Christian Hopkins / Hank & KeliKay Hopkins 2. Aleahna Branch / Dale & Debra Mitchell 3. Collin Anderson / Copeland & Sons 4. Tanner Caldwell / Duncan Livestock 5. Kade Hopkins / Hank & KeliKay Hopkins 6. Ryan Montoya / Doherty Show Steers / Ben Doherty CLASS 2: 1. Jonathon Beard / Duncan Livestock 2. Ryan Montoya / Doherty Show Steers Ben Doherty 3. Shyan Hill / Gary Grubelnik 4. Koby Cone / Mike Cone 5. Myron Denetclaw / Copeland & Sons 6. Jonathon Beard / Duncan Livestock 7. Dylan Smyer / Wade Mulcock CLASS 3: 1. Amy Gardner / Cody Drager 2. Ky Drummond / Tracy Drummond 3. Cooper Autrey / Shane Lutrick

4. Trey Yates/ Shane Lutrick 5. Trey Runyan / Brett Valentine 6. Ryan Montoya / Truman Smith 7. Christian Hopkins / Hank & KeliKay Hopkins CLASS 4: 1. Kaly Cone / Mike Cone 2. Derek Cosper / Shane Lutrick 3. Cade Hopkins / Albert Lyon 4. Kylie Daughterty / Truman Smith 5. Aleahna Branch / John & Janet Griffiths 6. Grady Hodnett / Wade Mulcock 7. Ruth Ann Stephens / Royce Maples CLASS 5: 1. Kemp Kuykendall / Runyan Cattle 2. Dylan Smyer / Tom Spindle 3. Mason Greenwood / Corky Fernandez 4. Annie Kuenstler / Hank & KeliKay Hopkins 5. Grady Hodnett / Wade Mulcock 6. Trey Yates / Runyan Cattle 7. Logan Woodburn / Charles Mulcock


FOOD Takes Water COMMENTARY BY JEFF WITTE, DIRECTOR/SECRETARY, NEW MEXICO DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE

n spite of recent rains, New Mexico continues to be in one of the most severe droughts on record. In these periods, the discussion often turns to water use: how much is used, and who’s using it. When the water supply runs short, especially in municipalities, agriculture is often called upon to reduce its water use. That conclusion is easy enough to make – statistics show that agriculture accounts for three-fourths of the water used in the state – but it ignores who the real beneficiaries of agricultural water are. Consider this: The top agricultural commodities in N.M. are beef cattle and milk, accounting for more than $3.2 billion in sales at the producer level. Crops add another $800 million (at the farm gate) to the state’s economy every year. The economic impact on local communities is much greater as agriculture is often the top driver in many counties across N.M. Now ask yourself: Who benefits from this production? Is it the farm or ranch family who produces the commodities, or is it the consumer who enjoys the fruits of that labor while being able to live and work in a field other than agriculture? I often say that N.M. producers “Grow the Plate.” We produce the main course, such as beef and lamb, vegetables such as corn, potatoes, pinto beans, and our “state vegetable” green and red chile; the salad mix with lettuce, cabbage, sprouts, and tomatoes, all topped with cheese. We provide some of the highest quality milk in the nation, and you can finish the meal with local ice cream topped with fresh pecans, pistachios, or fruit from the local areas. Adults can also enjoy locally grown and processed wines during their meal or a dessert wine after dinner. Jeff Witte This pro-

I

duction doesn’t happen without a good reliable source of water. According to United States Department of Agriculture, the capacity of agricultural producers in the United States is great enough to allow one producer to feed him or herself and 155 others. The ability of the United States to become a world power evolved because of this productivity; our citizens have been afforded the opportunity to pursue careers other than agriculture. Agriculturists continue to improve their ability to produce food because others have been able to research and advance technologies to

make them more efficient. One hundred fifty-five others – that’s who benefits when just one farmer is able to water his crop. That’s why we must be careful not to react too quickly when times get tough and insist that water be taken away from agriculture. That is FOOD we are talking about. And it is our consumers who “use” that water three times a day when they sit down to enjoy a meal. It is as simple as that. Secretary Witte will be sharing other thoughts on water in the months to ■ come.

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2013 Junior Heifer & Steer Shows

Champion Angus Heifer Manzano Jupiter 2014 Exhibited by Zaccary Dewbre, Rogers, New Mexico

Supreme Champion Heifer & Champion All Other Breeds. Shown by Kaly Cone, Portales, New Mexico

Reserve Supreme Champion Heifer & Champion Maine-Anjou Class. Zayless. Owned by Derek Cosper, Los Lunas, New Mexico

Champion Chianina Heifer FRCA Ms Walk Pretty Exhibited by Derek Cosper, Los Lunas, New Mexico

Special Thanks To These Calf Scramble Sponsors Champion Charolais Heifer Grau Miss Tracy Grace. Owned by Kristin Grau, Grady, New Mexico Champion Lowline Heifer SRF Lucy 222. Shown by Jessica Burson, Roswell, New Mexico

Champion Shorthorn Heifer TRE Strawberry ET. Owned by Maria Stout, Las Cruces, New Mexico

Champion Hereford Heifer TRL Dominque Bridger 2D48 Shown by Rhett Grant, Ft. Sumner, New Mexico

2013 Calf Scramble

Junior Heifer Showmanship Champions (l to r) Novice - Mia Encinas, Clayton; Junior - Colton Law; Senior - Courtney Walker

2013 Calf Scramble Champions (r) Kaly Cone, Roosevelt County, Champion Overall & Showmanship Winner; (l) Wade Streans, Lincoln County, Second Place Overall; (not pictured) Ethan Grant, Bernalillo County, Third Place

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Bernalillo County Farm and Livestock Bureau / US New Mexico Federal Credit Union / Farm Credit of New Mexico Mike and Helen White / Eddy County Farm Bureau / New Mexico Jr. Livestock Foundation / Gila Livestock Growers Assn / Nikki Hooser & Kathy Longinaker / 4-H Youth Development / TO Ranch/ Bell Ranch / Trina B. Sanchez Farm & Ranch / Alisa Ogden / Lea County Farm and Livestock Bureau / Express UU Bar Ranches / New Mexico Farm & Livestock Bureau / New Mexico Cattle Growers & NMCGA Jr Association / Bureau of Land Management / Ag New Mexico, PCA, ACA / T & T Trailers / New Mexico Stockman

Calf Scramble Showmanship Champions (l to r) 1st place, Kaly Cone, Roosevelt; 2nd place, Shayna Gallacher, Lincoln; & 3rd place, Paige Hunter, Valencia


Grand Champion Steer & Crossbred Champion Morgan McCall, Santa Fe County

Reserve Grand Champion Steer & Champion Limousin Koby Valintine, Curry County

Champion Charolais Steer Trey Runyan, Quay County Champion Angus Steer Taylor Fraze, Roosevelt County

Champion Maine-Anjou Steer Falyn Dixon, Roosevelt County

Champion Chianina Steer Derrick Cosper, Valencia County

Champion Shorthorn Steer Bryce Linson, Lea County

Champion Simmental Steer Amy Gardner, Dona Ana County

2013 Showmanship

Congratulations ... to all the youngsters, parents, grandparents, siblings, aunts, uncles, sponsors and everyone else who worked so hard this year! Champion Steer Showmanship (l to r) Senior - Paige Hunter, Valencia County; Junior - Colton Law, Rio Arriba County, Novice (or maybe Novelist and new writer for the Stockman), Mia Encinas, Union County OCTOBER 2013

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Make us your full-service lender

AgNewMexico.com Financing ffor or: 'BSNT 3BODIFT t -JWFTUPDL &RVJQNFOU 0QFSBUJOH $BQJUBM t "HSJCVTJOFTT t 3FDSFBUJPOBM --BOE

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