NMS October 2021

Page 63

Bradley 3 Ranch Earns Certified Angus Beef Sustainability Award

by Abbie Lankitus, Drovers

M

innie Lou Bradley is not sure what surprised her more: there were roots, or that they were alive. Nothing above ground promised either. “I didn’t know until later,” she recalls, “But no one had ever owned this piece of country for over 10 years without going broke.” Sixty years later, grasses are nearly stirrup high, water is no farther than a half mile away from any direction, and the Bradley 3 Ranch (B3R) herd is doubled in size and expanded acreage several times over. The changes are a result of investments over time, making the land better through cattle. Consistent progress and creative methods in developing their ranch earned the Memphis, Texas, cattle family the 2021 Certified Angus Beef Sustainability Award. In the early 2000s, Minnie Lou’s daughter, Mary Lou Bradley-Henderson, and her husband, James Henderson, sold their meatpacking company, B3R Meats, and returned to the ranch. They mapped out a 20-year plan, picking up work Minnie Lou started. The fruits of their labor are evident this year. With an average annual 18 inches of rainfall, water is the elixir to life in these parts. The plan: build more opportunities for water, gouge out the scourge of water-guz-

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zling brush one by one, and bring back the grass while managing a quality-forward seedstock business. Droughts are not an “if,” but a “when.” James and Mary Lou do their best to prepare for them, but the record drought of 2010 to 2014 changed everything. They thought they had a drought contingency plan, James says, “But we didn’t have enough of anything—grass, hay or money.” They formed a new plan. First, they invested in stock tanks (West Texan for ponds). It takes about 10-years to fill them. There are nine operational ponds now and more on the way. In 2019, Mary Lou and James began implementing Aqua balls on their water troughs. The black, palm-sized polyethylene spheres cover about 95 percent of the water surface area, preventing water evaporation, loss to wind and surface algae growth. “We’ve got 45 tubs on the ranch, all about 2,000 gallons each,” James says. “They’d typically be dry come springtime and we’d lose another 4,000 gallons in the summer to evaporation. We’re saving several thousand dollars a year.” Other touches include solar-powered wells with overflow ponds. Brush removal has brought back wildlife, now able to drink from springs that have emerged. To Mary Lou and James, sustainability is as much about the efficiency and quality of the animal as it is about land and water. They’ve built indexes around the performances of their cattle and focus on cows that can raise a calf, breed back, do it on

minimal resources and maintain their flesh. With their background in meatpacking, Mary Lou and James always keep carcass quality top of mind. “We’re trying to get a very highly productive cow,” she says. “One that will have calves that’ll work downstream for some of the Certified Angus Beef ® steaks later on.” While the genetics and performance indexes are finely tuned in a detailed spreadsheet, grass management for nutrition is just as intentional. “To maintain grasses in a fragile environment, you’ve got to be able to let them grow plenty of roots,” James says. “If we are grazing those grasses, then they regrow and refresh and redo. If you don’t, they become stale and basically worthless from a nutritional standpoint.” This year their cows weaned 61.4 percent of their body weight and averaged a body condition of 6 to 6.5. A big deal in the Panhandle, Mary Lou says. “For us, if you don’t have the bottom line, we’re not here,” Mary Lou says. “We’ve got to make it work. Truly, we are sustainable or we’re not.” Nothing is a one-year thought process, she says. Just like building a fence, Mary Lou asks herself whether their decisions will last the next 50 years. For the generation before, the progress made is already worth the struggles. “It’s taken 60 years to figure this all out, but we are about to get those grasses back that stirrup height,” Minnie Lou smiles. “It quite grabs my heart when I walk into those pastures and remember what they were and what they are today.”

FOR SALE

CATTLE GUARDS

ALL SIZES JERYL PRIDDY 325/754-4300 Cell: 325/977-0769

OCTOBER 2021

63


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NM Junior Livestock Expo — One for the Ages

3min
pages 80-81

Turquoise Circuit Finals

4min
page 82

NM Cattle Growers’ Association Heritage Buckle Awards

4min
page 79

Southern NM State Fair Public Speaking Contest

3min
page 78

FMCSA Extends Livestock Hours-of-Service Exemptions

1min
page 77

Real Estate Guide

7min
pages 70-75

Marketplace

4min
pages 64-65

Preconditionings - Why it Pays

5min
page 62

Where’s the Cheap Beef?

8min
pages 60-61

In Memoriam

13min
pages 56-59

Bradley 3 Ranch Earns Certified Angus Beef Sustainability Award

3min
page 63

Riding Herd

3min
pages 54-55

US Dairy Industry Advances

9min
pages 49-53

New Mexico Beef Council Bullhorn

4min
pages 47-48

Collectors Corner

5min
page 40

Muddying the Clean Water Act

4min
page 39

Ute Creek Cattle Company Received First New Mexico Leopold Conservation Award

6min
pages 41-42

Sustainabilty and Super Pandemics The Connection

3min
page 43

Inspector of the Year Nominations Sought

2min
pages 44-45

View from the Backside

3min
page 46

New Mexico’s Old Times & Old Timers

3min
page 37

On the Edge of Common Sense

2min
page 33

AHA Annual Meeting & Educational Forum October

2min
pages 18-19

New Mexico CowBelles Jingle Jangle

5min
pages 16-17

Purina Millis & Cattle Growers’ Scholarships

1min
pages 25-26

Answering the Call to Quality

2min
pages 20-21

Wit & Wisdom

5min
pages 12-15

State Land Office Proposes Rule Change to Protect Cultural Properties

2min
page 27

NMDA’ State Metrology Lab Receives Top Accuracy Certification

2min
page 32
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