4 minute read
Justin Luther and his family carry on with farming
from OFN May 25, 2020
by Eric Tietze
meet yourneighbors
Generations of Farmers
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By Laura L. Valenti
Justin Luther began his own cattle operation at the age of 13
Justin Luther describes him
self as a farm boy. He has diversified that passion into a variety of agricultural pursuits that keeps his family on their farm in Fulton County, outside of Viola, Ark.
Justin and his family are the fourth and fifth generations of Luthers to reside on the land bought by his grandparents, Lawrence and Virginia Luther, in 1949. In 2019, the Luthers were chosen as the Fulton County (Ark.) Farm Family of the year.
“I grew up on my parents’ dairy farm,” Justin said. “As a kid, I thought it was a great life, milking 80 to 100 cows twice a day. When I was 13, I bought my first cows, 10 momma cows, with a small loan that was co-signed by my parents. By the time I graduated high school, I had 65 head of beef cattle. I would go to three area sale barns and buy yearling cattle.”
Today, Justin raises 300 head of primarily crossbred cows, including Angus bulls on Charolais, Angus and Red Angus, and some Brangus cows on 4,000 acres, both his own and leased acreage.
His father has another 1,150 acres with another 100 head. Justin leases approximately 1,700 acres scattered across Fulton and Baxter counties in Arkansas and Howell and Ozark counties in Missouri.
Altogether, Justin supervises cattle, hay production and intensive grazing operations and still delivers fertilizer for Frank Rowlett at Farmer’s Plant Food in Salem, Ark. He also maintains approximately 320 acres in hay each year.
The majority of his farm is used for grazing.
“I keep about 1,000 acres in rotational grazing, with most fields being 30 to 50 acres. I move the cows every three to seven days.”
The Luther cowherd is mostly spring calving.
“I turn in my bulls on April 4, which gives me a calving state of Jan. 15,” Justin said. “That makes it easier for me to get my cows bred before my fescue heads out. “I also have about 70 fallcalving cows.”
Spring calves are weaned in October, then sold by early January. Fall calves and equipment for Community First Banking and serves as a field representative Ozarks Regional Stockyard in West Plains, Mo. He is on the board of directors of the Fulton County Farm Bureau, is a member of the board of directors of the Fulton County Conservation District and his family attends
Justin Luther, pictured with his wife Rachel and children, 12-year-old Addison and 6-year-old Tucker Wayne, continues farming on land that has been in the family since 1949.
Photo Courtesy of Arkansas Farm Bureau
Viola, Ark. are weaned in April and are typically sold in July.
“I try to wean my calves between 7 and 9 months of age,” Justin explained. “I try to sell my yearlings at 850 pounds.”
In addition to driving a fertilizer truck, Justin also inspects and appraises cattle the Enterprise Baptist Church.
Justin’s wife Rachel, who works for Central Arkansas Radiation Therapy, Inc., did not grow up on a farm, but rather in the small nearby town of Viola.
“My parents, Robert and
Becky Lash, had friends and relatives who had cows so I had been around them before Justin and I started dating when we were both 16. Helping him out when we were still dating, I had a pretty good idea of what to expect,” she added.
She has helped pull more than one calf but probably didn’t expect to be doing so when she was 8 months pregnant.
“That probably was not too smart,” Justin added with a grin. “But you never know exactly what you are going to be doing any particular day on the farm.”
As a part of his agricultural career, Justin began buying up small farms, especially around areas where he had previously leased acreage. He is now helping the next generation in the Luther family, his daughter Addison, to do the same thing.
“She just bought a 40-acre plot,” Justin said. “She now has eight cows on it as well. Both of our kids help out on the farm, raising bottle calves, opening gates, helping to move cows from paddock to paddock with rotational grazing.
The lifelong cattleman said farmers today are facing many hurdles in today’s world.
“The biggest challenges we face regularly are the things you cannot control, like the weather and the three F’s – the price of fuel, feed and fertilizer,” he said. “In recent years, the price of equipment has also added to that problem. Cattle prices are not in line with the costs and haven’t been for some time. Until America understands how important agriculture is to our economy as well as to our dinner tables, those prices will not come back into some kind of proper line. In the meantime, all I can do is improve my work ethic and do my best, praying the good Lord will lead me in the direction I need to go. And I’m hoping my kids will be able to continue in our family’s chosen profession, because like me, they love it.”