Volume CVI, No. 4 Huron, SD MAY/JUNE 2021
A PUBLICATION OF SOUTH DAKOTA FARMERS UNION
SERVING SOUTH DAKOTA’S FARM & RANCH FAMILIES SINCE 1915.
Insurance Scholarships
PAGE 7
Secretary of Ag & Natural Resources Answers Producer Questions
ValueAdded Ag Happening in Brown County
PAGE 9
PAGE 14
Celebrating Farm & Ranch Moms
PAGE 18
Rural Cooperative Members S.D. Farmers Union Celebrates Selected for the First Class Brown County Farm Family of Rural POWER
Billie Sutton and his wife, Kelsea, (front row) are pictured with members of 2019 Billie Sutton Leadership Institute. First class of Rural POWER, sponsored by South Dakota Farmers Union announced: Wayne Ducheneaux, Eagle Butte; Sara Hento, Avon; Joshua Hofer, Parkston; Jordan Jones, Rapid City; Krecia Leddy, Stockholm; and Katy VanderPol, Platte.
Rural Power article Continued on Page 5
JULY 30-31, 2021 Cedar Shore Oacoma Free to members! To learn more, turn to page 8.
South Dakota Farmers Union has served South Dakota farm and ranch families for more than a century. Throughout the year, we share their stories in order to highlight the families who make up our state’s No. 1 industry and help feed the world. This month we highlight the Larry and Sharon Stroschein farm family of Warner. Larry and Sharon (far rght) pictured here with daughter Amy Wanous, her husband, John, and grandchildren, Andrew, Katy and Elizabeth, and cattle dog, Rez.
S
ometimes history repeats itself. And Brown County cattle producer Larry Stroschein is happy it did. “My Grandpa August was born and raised in St. Paul, Minn. And when he was a young man, in his mid-teens, he and his buddy jumped on the Milwaukee Railroad and came out here to help with the harvest. While he was here, he met Ida Brick and they eventually got married and the city boy became a farmer,” Larry shares. Nearly a century later, Larry and Sharon’s daughter, Amy, married John Wanous and today, the couple manages the family farm – rotational grazing cattle on some of the same land August bought 10 miles west and one mile south of Warner in 1912. “Let’s face it, most of the time it’s a son that’s taking over the farm, not a daughter,” Amy says. “We love living out here. I just cannot imagine living anywhere else in the world. If anyone said I could go anywhere, I would not move.” Her husband, John, agrees. Although John had much more experience than Larry’s Grandpa August, like August, he grew up in town. His dad and namesake, John Sr., served as general manager of the local Warner Co-op. “I have been an animal nut since I was a kid. I always worked for farmers growing up,” John explains. “There is no way a young guy could get started in agriculture today without any ground. Without Larry and Sharon, this would not be possible.”
Stroschein Family Continued on Page 2