FALL 2019 THE CATTLE JOURNAL FALL 2019
NEBRASKASTRONG
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We are excited to offer: 18-MONTH-OLD REGISTERED RED ANGUS BULLS
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October 26, 2019 | Saturday | 1:00PM At the Ranch in Hay Springs, Nebraska
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• Several broke geldings and mares including 2019 colt crop by Shiner Smart Cat, Playguns Little Lena, Save it For a Rainy Day and PR Smooth Doc
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WWW.BRIDGERSTEEL.COM
11835 QUAAL ROAD, BLACKHAWK, SD TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
605.716.9003
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Sires include:
Spring Cove Reno, BUBS Southern Charm, HA Cowboy Up, Raven Jackpot, Prairie Pride Next Step, EF Commando, and Raven Bullock
This bull was purchased by Sitz Angus in our 2014 sale for $12,000 and went on to do great things for Sitz Angus and us. He sired the top sires groups in both outfits. His daughters will be talked about for years to come.
Sold to Maher Angus for $23,000. His first sons were sold last spring and were well received.
Dam of Powerball and Power Train. She will have sons by Next Step that will front-end the two-year-old bulls.
This daughter of Hoover Dam is phenotypically flawless. Sound feet and legs perfect udder.
She is the highest income cow in the History of Raven Angus. ET sons by Reno, Raindance and Commando.
A standout Pioneer daughter that is in our Donor pen. Look for her progeny in our future sales.
2183 was a graduate of the pick of the heifers in the 2014 sale. She has produced the $30,000 and $27,000 top selling bulls at the Simon Cattle Co bull sale.
Dam of Jackpot and other past high sellers. You will be seeing a lot of progeny from daughters as she really stamps them.
Rod Petersek: (605) 842-2919 | RJ Petersek: (605) 840-1826 | Reed Petersek: (605) 840-1292 32554 287th St., Colome, SD 57528 • ravenang@gwtc.net
Sale will be broadcasted live on: 6
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
www.RavenAngus.com TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
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Bryan Ratzburg: (406) 937-5858 Cell: (406) 788-3272
Ernie Ratzburg: Cell: (406) 788-3244
265 Bobcat Angus Loop, Galata, MT 59444 • Email: bobcatangus@northerntel.net
www.bobcatangus.com
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Cattle Journal FALL 2019
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Wilken Angus Your connection to... Proven, Profitable Genetics
The wait is over...
BLACK FRIDAY FALL SALE Selling 150 Potent, First-Time Offered Coming Two-Year-Old Angus Bulls 100% AI Sired | First Breeding Season Guarantee | Free Delivery 50 SAV Resource 1441
30 Sitz Top Game 561x 20 SAV Ten Speed 3022
10 Basin Payweight 1682
25 Connealy Comrade 1385
8 SAV Final Answer 0035
Also selling ... 7 Pay Grade 5064 | 4 GAR Composure sons
Friday, November 29, 2019 1 PM | Faith Livestock Auction | Faith, SD
“God made him who had no sin to be sin for us, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God.” TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
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FALL 2019 COVER PHOTO BY ROBYN KOELLING
CONTENTS
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14 #NEBRASKASTRONG Photo Essay 16 Tri-State Livestock News Archives
during the Floods: Bombogenesis A Hero in a Green Tractor Cattlemen in Crisis Spring Break Flood Relief Hay Drive White River Flooding
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46 One Day at a Time 58 Rain, Surrender, Hope and Miracles 68 Kindness Through Devastation 74 Through the Lens
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What Ranchers Read. 1501 5TH AVE., SUITE 101, BELLE FOURCHE, SD 57717 1-877-347-9100 · (605) 723-7001 · 877-347-9126 (FAX) SABRINA “BREE” POPPE Publisher Cell: 605-639-0356 Office: 877-347-9104 spoppe@tsln-fre.com
DENNIS GINKENS General Manager of Sales & Marketing & Fieldman 406-670-9839 dginkens@tsln-fre.com Editorial Department Editor: CARRIE STADHEIM 605-622-8935 cstadheim@tsln-fre.com Digital & Sections Editor: MARIA TIBBETTS 605-484-4488 mtibbetts@tsln-fre.com Full profile and recent articles Digital Engagement Editor: LIZ BANMAN MUNSTERTEIGER E-Mail: marketing@tsln-fre.com Graphic Designer: TRISHA MILLER Advertising DIANNA PALMER Special Projects Coordinator & Account Manager SD – N. of I-90, West of the River 877-347-9112 dpalmer@tsln-fre.com SUSAN CABLE Account Manager | SD – S. of I-90 Rosebud East Territory 888-648-4449 scable@tsln-fre.com KRISTEN SCHURR Wyoming & Montana Territory Account Manager 406-498-6022 kschurr@tsln-fre.com LEAH BRENCE Commercial Advertising Dept. Assistant & East River Territory Account Mgr. 406-839-1097 lbrence@tsln-fre.com CARISSA LEE Cattle Marketing Assistant & Nebraska Territory Account Manager 877-347-9114 clee@tsln-fre.com Field Service & Ringmen SCOTT DIRK Director of Field Services and Ringman West of the River ND & SD Territory 605-380-6024 sdirk@tsln-fre.com DAN PIROUTEK Field Service & Ringman 605-544-3316 dpiroutek@tsln-fre.com MATT WZNICK Field Service & Ringman | Montana & Wyoming Territory 406-489-2414 mwznick@tsln-fre.com DREW FELLER Field Service & Ringman | Colorado & Nebraska Territory 402-841-4215 dfeller@tsln-fre.com CLASSIFIEDS Main Line: 877-347-9122 classifieds@tsln-fre.com
SUBSCRIPTIONS: 1 (877) 347-9100
COPYRIGHT 2019. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. ERRORS: The Tri-State Livestock News & The Fence Post shall be responsible for errors or omission in connection with an advertisement only to the extent of the space covered by the error. Opinions stated in letters or signed columns do not necessarily reflect the official opinion of Tri-State Livestock News & The Fence Post .
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CONTENTS 80
Stuck in the Mud
88
Hot Meals To Go
94
Chopped Hay
104 Head Above Water, Financially
108 The Gift of Giving 120 Water Water 126 Using Water to Fight Water 134 Ag Events
Sales & Events Calendar
139 Ad Index
Age-Advantaged Bull Headquarters
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Bulls Bred FORD TOUGH! Contact us today for more information and your catalog! TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
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#NEBRASK As editors of Tri-State Livestock News
we don't just write about the livestock industry, we live it. While we are assigning stories and writing about saving baby calves and the stresses of the cattle market, we're trying to save baby calves and doing our own stressful cattle market calculations. When the news is chaos and heartache in the livestock industry we're feeling it too. And when it's bootstraps and grassroots making news, we get to feel that pride and community along with everyone else in the livestock industry who sees disaster not as an opportunity to profit from the misfortune of our neighbors, but as an opportunity to share our good fortune with them. The news was bleak for several months as much of Nebraska and surrounding states were doused with rain after rain on top of snow, followed by hail. We're all too 14
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familiar with drought, have the backup plans, the trigger dates, but we don't have plans for too much water. Most of us didn't think that was even possible. We're happy to report that the water eventually subsides, Photos courtesy of Jenny Stortz but the sense of community and encouragement that was shared so readily will last a lot longer than the sense of doom.
Maria Tibbetts
Digital & Special Sections Editor
#nebraskastrong
ASTRONG
“Water is a good servant, but a cruel master.”
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ronology of This is a ch reported in the news we s as estock New Tri-State Liv e ard, then th first the blizz g in el m m e pu flooding wer g in d n u o rr nd su Nebraska a ge e set the sta areas. Thes w. o ll fo t a es th for the stori
March 16,
2019
E JOY LANG e blizzard. th g n ri u d Cattle
PHOTO
: S I S E N oming, y E W , s G a t o O k ska, Da MB
ra b e N s BiO d n u o P now m S r o d t n S a g n n i i a r d, R c Sp in W h t i w e r o do and m
Ep Colora
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g
elson Lickin
N By Deanna
M
eteorologists said it could act like a hurricane over the plains. The March 13-14 storm brought sleepless nights for many in plains and midwest stat es with rain, sleet, snow, wind, mu d, flooding and freezing temperatu res as producers are in the thick of calving. “Bombogenesis,” a popular term used by meteorologists, occurs The Kottwitzes of Lusk, Wyom ing canoed their calves across Mule Creek after they when a midlatitude cyclone rapidly were threatened to be closed in by Mule Creek and the Cheyenne River after the mid -March blizzard. SAVANNA SIMM intensifies, dropping at least 24 ONS PHOTO millibars over 24 hours. A milliba and blocks of ice bigger than sem r i last night. Thank God it was onl measures atmospheric pressure. y trucks are wreaking havoc. two head,” Christi Leonard said This can happen when a cold air . Joe and Christi Leonard ranch “One piece of ice was bigger tha mass collides with a warm air n north of Bassett, Nebraska and had Joe’s pickup, and knee high thic mass, such as air over warm oce k.” cattle pastured along the Niobra an ra Joe moved the cattle using a sha waters. The formation of this rap rp River. During the night of March shod horse. idly strengthening weather system 13th the ice went out on the rive r Tyrel Licking reports that the is a process called bombogenesis, and propelled by massive amoun ts county roads in north Lincoln and which creates what is known as of runoff, huge ice blocks pushed a sou theast Logan Counties Nebraska bomb cyclone, according to the over the banks, across the road are impassible in many places, wit National Weather Service. And by h and even trapped a bull and a cow wat er crossing them in numerous many accounts, the March 13-14 among the chunks. “There is onl y places after more than an inch and storm “Ulmer” qualified. a half of rain. The extremely high The storm delivered and then wind even blew over a large creep some. Snowfall was estimated at fee der out on a pivot. Licking works more than a foot, possible floodfor Lincoln County Feedyard in ing and extremely high winds. In Sta pleton, Nebraska. “Cattle are many cases the snow piled up eve n bunched up, tails to the wind and higher. While heavy snow fell are alm ost impossible to check,” he said in Wyoming, South Dakota and on March 14. “The wind is horribl northwest Nebraska, much of the e, gat es are harder than hell to open or cornhusker state received inches close.” Licking said. “Not many of rain, preceded by a 50 degree are sick -T YR this morning but the next few EL LICKING day that melted much of the sno w days might be bad.” that was still on the ground from about 50 feet of fence left on the Mike and Lori Waldron, who the previous storms. The ground eas t sid ran e of pasture he had them ch north of Draper, South Dakois still frozen so the melting sno w in, the ta, ice figu wa re they got 16 inches or more she d it all out. I can’t and rain has pooled in all the bel iev of e the cow and bull were still snow.. “We have 10 foot drifts low areas, flooding towns, roads, aliv e, in the pla y ces. It is a really wet heavy we re on ground but and swelling rivers and streams. sur rou sno nded by huge chucks of ice, w.” Lori said. “We have cattle Dams and bridges are washing out I do believe God was on their sid trap ped in a smaller pasture due to e
“Our yearling colts were all ice and couldn’t see, we had to knock the ice off their eyes so they could see.”
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blowing snow bad,” he said, of the g in nd sta e lik st k was the winds, it was ju nd. Another windbrea e ar wi d we an ly ul kf g an in Th ar s. ro , just the crazy drift next to a freight train buried with snow. t.” ye rm was way g sto in is Th lving so he g. not calv in am re sc and briel is nearly done ca e Ga liv n ya t Br las O’ d e ha di d we Scot and Jo avies in a shed. worse than the blizzar and was able to put the he ta ko Da e, h bl ut va So lie e, be er un id e in Belv oisture. April. The drifts ar “You can’t cuss the m horn cattle ot fo lf ha a d an e fiv raise registered Long e re,” he said. the alleys ar We’ve been so dry he y say 18 he ar “T cle s. rse ow sn ho th ter wi ar and Qu ries of the panels packed solid And he’s heard the sto corrals are 8 e W ff. stu t we y av inches of snow. Our he h of him. across. It is flooding east and sout ss and our ro to ac g all in try ep de ay ot sd fo ur aling to 10 worked all day Th thankful we aren’t de re wn e’ do g “W di to . d ws ha co e W ed and fe barn is buried. id if the weather move snow to water with that.” Gabriel sa shovel a en ht th d fig an be or ll do wi rn we ba have a to the I’m worried if now t get much colder, he’ll n’ am es I . do or do e e th th en in s op knes 8 foot path to a day or two. ing pneumonia and sic lot of bare ground in e had to “W . id sa e di Jo .” ted exhaus r family es we saved.” Kathy Fortune and he t all are alive. calv e), ill sv ile M r ea (n dig some calves out bu h Dakota rli ut In the Ku ice and figure their Interior, So all re we k ee lts Cr co g ep lin De ar , Our ye 0 inches of uth Dakota, area ranch got about 17-2 to knock the ice So d just ha iel br Ga J. T. couldn’t see, we had r ne l Weather Serow snow and the Nationa d see.” The Angus ul co ey irs th pa so of es h ey nc eir bu d gotten off th gotten to the first d told her the wind ha ha are d ce vi an als d ke im an tal e ws liv e k Ne O’Bryans se when Tri-State Livesto as high as 70 mph. sed.” es bl so e ar e on. “W no . ter ul af n calves ay thankf sd ur Th m hi Fortunes had newbor in a to e re Th we es lv ca r ed de ol ow e t sn Many of th mper and in a “I don’t think any go in a horse trailer, a ca ried under bu s d wa fe he ich at wh th er ng elt di warm. calf sh under,” he said, ad g pickup to keep them in onn m t ru ha “T . to ow sn re fo of about 10 feet ed the evening be es with duct The marked the calv er is buried and bedd elt sh to lf xt ca ne ur y yo sta en to wh ’d know ment encourage the cows and a sharpie so they d e an tap el ov sh d d an ke el ec ov ch he deep. You sh them to. the windbreak. When which cow to return ing, their wl e ba on es d lv un ca fo e m he so t, ar gh ranch becan he them during the ni ally ul and Tamara Kearns fin Pa u Yo y. . az ow cr sn g in of ll go lf fu mothers are Lakeside, Necalf shelter blown ha tween Rushville and and everyg in at th en in op e en th se to er ev wn e get do “I don’t think I’v ck at you and thing in there looks ba e this ol’ girl they are all alive. Mad k you Jesus.” bawl like a baby, than cebook. O’Bryan posted on Fa exhaust“I was so emotionally myself to see ed and had prepared es. I literala bunch of dead calv ed. I can’t ly collapsed and bawl busted our explain the relief. We 30 below zero butts through all the em all and I just weather and saved th were dead.” for sure thought they O’Bryan said. mp are Judd and Jamie Scho , South Daranchers from Martin rting to get kota. “We were just sta g, eight to ten hot and heavy calvin a good inch calves a day. We had essing 24 of rain first and I’m gu . JOY LANGE PHOTO 70mph winds.” White River flooding inches of snow, with y something, Judd said. “It was reall 18
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braska. “We got a little over an inc h of rain before the wintry mix and we are figuring about 20 inches of snow. It’s making it very difficul t to get around. The drifts have covere d some gates that we had to dig out to feed, we have lost some calves due to drifting and the water. It’s rea lly a sloppy mess.” Tamara said. “M y husband was checking every two hours. It has been very emotional wondering if we did everything we could have or what we could hav e done differently to save the ones that didn’t make it.” Zach and Erin Cox ranch 27 miles northwest of Mullen, Nebra ska. They are guessing they had two and a half inches of rain. Immedi ately following, they were hit wit h eight to ten inches of snow and lots of wind. Zach checked the cows with a snowmobile and was hap py to report that their livestock fare d very well through the storm. Cody and Stephanie Wolf from Cattle in the snowy lot. COURTES Y OF KARINA JONES Cozad, Nebraska are flooding. “W e gro und . didn’t even get an inch of rain, its banks and over their road, but Not too far away, on the Wyoit’s all snow melt. There is water Laura Gray thinks the road may still ming side of the state line, the Ko everywhere. Highway is closed. tt- be intact when the water rec ede s. witz family was getting creative. We had to get a port-a-potty at She worries more flooding could be The family decided to try canoeing our house because the toilet won’t in their future when the snow fro m calves across Mule Creek as the flush.’ Cody said. “I feel bad tha y “Ulmer” melts. t fea red the creek and the Cheyenne we don’t have a dry place to get Paul Allen, a Bristow, Nebraska , River would close the cattle in. The them to. (His livestock) I have rancher answered an early mornin g, mother cows followed the calves never seen it this bad before.” in March 14 phone call to learn tha t a canoe similar to how they would Rod and Laura Gray of Harrithe Spencer dam had given way foll ow a calf sled. son, Nebraska, said rain turning seven miles up the Niobrara Riv er. to snow was on the menu on the Pau l and Lana, and Paul's son's ir ranch, too. “That made it really family escaped safely while the muddy underneath, then the win wa ter came within a few feet of the d came and it started snowing really main home. heavy.” Even with zero visibility, Paul was able to open panels tha t they checked cows constantly would allow some of his cattle to through the storm, and brought escape the impending floodwate rs. in new calves, after working all "His horsetrailer and 3/4 ton pic k-CODY WOLF day prior to the storm to bed cal up floated around for awhile but f shelteres and windbreak and mo his buildings are still standing and ve The Niobrara River was out of cattle out of muddy lots to dryer his machinery is still there, some
“I have never seen it this bad before.”
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hter. moved," said his daug 's brotherlen All structures on Al shed away in-law's place were wa gel remains upstream and Ken An missing. rm will be The effects of this sto r a long while widespread and felt fo th the warmto come, especially wi sted melting er temperatures foreca ntral Nebraska more snow. Here in ce have much we are thankful not to r those who new snow and feel fo t hit. have been the hardes th flooding Those needing help wi eck out the are encouraged to ch ta and Iowa Nebraska, South Dako ok page or Flooding Alert Facebo cal extension connect with their lo suggestions representative or find u.edu/flood or at: https://www.ag.nds https://flood.unl.edu/.
. LISA CRAWFORD NAL GUARD BY SPC Y NEBRASKA NATIO PHOTO COURTES
Let’s cut to the chase. Providing optimal material size helps increase feed efficiency in cattle. And that’s what the Vermeer Final CutTM FPX9000 bale processor is built for. Sending bales through multiple cutting points provides true fine-cut capability to deliver an average cut length of 1¼ in to 4 in (3.2 cm to 10.2 cm.) Plus, an optional automatic bale feed system varies the speed of the bale rotation for efficient processing, allowing you to process feed on your own time. Finally, a bale processor built for true feed efficiency.
Office (605) 859-2568 Mark Buchholz (605) 685-5975 Kent Buchholz (605) 441-4842 www.kennedyimplement.com
Vermeer Corporation reserves the right to make changes in engineering, design and specifications; add improvements; or discontinue manufacturing or distribution at any time without notice or obligation. n Equipment shown is for illustrative purposes only and may display optional accessories or components specific to their global region. Please contact your local Vermeer dealer for more information on maacchine specifications. Vermeer, the Vermeer logo and Final Cut are trademarks of Vermeer Manufacturing Company in the U.S. and/or other countries. © 2018 Vermeer Corporation. All Rights Reserved.
Vermeer Corporation reserves the right to make changes in engineering, design and specifications; add improvements; or discontinue manufacturing or distribution at any time without notice or obligation. Equipment shown is for illustrative purposes only and may display optional accessories or components specific to their global region. Please contact your local Vermeer dealer for more information on machine specifications. Vermeer, the Vermeer logo and Final Cut are trademarks of Vermeer Manufacturing Company in the U.S. and/or other countries.© 2018 Vermeer Corporation. All Rights Reserved.
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March 23, 2019
A Hero in a Green Tractor
By Savanna S immons Photos courtes y of the Wilke family ames Wilke was the epitome of a kind, giving, Godly pers on, so much so that he left this earth in an effo rt to help his fe ll ow man. The 50-year-old farm er from Colum ka, about 90 m bus, Nebrasiles west of Om aha, answered March 14 to re a call scue a motorist stranded in swel floodwaters in ling Platte County, Nebraska. It would be the last time he clim bed in his John Deere tractor, so mething he had do ne hundreds or perhaps thousa nds of times be fore, often with grandson Breck his in, who turned James Wilke, 50, of Columbu four just days af s, Nebraska, pa ter attempting to ssed away last save a mot
J
orist stranded in
floodwaters.
week
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Take command of your baling operation with the ultimate round baling tractor: a new T6 Auto Command™ from New Holland. Thanks to the award winning Auto Command™ CVT transmission, you have the ability to perfectly match your speed to your crop conditions without sacrifi cing PTO speed. The result? A better looking bale. Unlike most tractors, PTO speed is consistent because it’s independent of ground speed. This provides you with more consistent crop fl ow into your baler while maintaining belt speed for a denser and more uniform bale. You’ll benefi t from the eight-function Command Grip™ lever not only for speed and direction changes, but also for bale ejection by pressing the hydraulic remote button, which is one of the controller’s eight features. Take command of these additional SMART features:
Office (605) 859-2568 Mark Buchholz (605) 685-5975 Kent Buchholz (605) 441-4842 www.kennedyimplement.com TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
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his Papa’s death. onaserflow bridge along M ov an g sin os cr s wa As he rs, the strucemergency responde by ed id gu , ad Ro y ter water. r plummeted into the cto tra s hi d an y wa ture gave downstream, vered on a creek bed co re s wa dy bo ’ es m Ja at James a way, family said, th near his home. It was Hefti wrote family friend Jodi L. e, m ho is he y sa d ul co on Facebook Friday. e wrote. “I capes or uniforms,” sh “Not all heroes wear work a T-shirt, blue jeans, re wo o wh ro he e tru know a hn Deere tractor.” boots, and drove a Jo baserest Tuesday, and the to m hi d lai ily m fa ’ James was set up an Church, where a TV ment of Christ Luther tament room only, a great tes g in nd sta s wa w, flo for over usin Paul James was, said his co to the kind of person ch. elder at the rural chur Wilke. James was an together their ds, brothers, farmed James’ and Paul’s da t and lived only a mile apar ey Th . id sa ul Pa , es entire liv es stepped d labor. Paul and Jam shared equipment an close d farmed in a similarly an les ro s’ er th fa eir into th fashion.
bout “He didn’t just talk a be better, things that needed to ” he made stuff better. -PAUL WILKE
lton in lp James’ only son Co Paul will step in to he eks, and the coming days, we much the same way in boots. ll step into his dad’s months. Colton, 23, wi e neighbors m out, and a lot of th “We’re going help hi care ttle needed to be taken ca he “T . id sa ul Pa ” will too, . He loves to t of people pitched in of right away, and a lo to sit in ce he was old enough sin g in rm fa en be ’s farm, he d.” the tractor with his da hardest e loss of his father the th g in tak en be s ha n Colto ss of their dad r, Paul said, but the lo of any family membe bie. Rahters, Julianne and Ab ug da s hi on sy ea m is far fro id, is leaning y strong wife, Paul sa chel, James’ amazingl her life. ith during this trial in on her tremendous fa , including lved in his community James was very invo Neark Township Board, sm Bi e th of r be em m being a an. He was d Platte Valley Cattlem braska Cattlemen, an and keview High School, La at s ee itt m m co l ra on seve mni. active in the FFA alu 22
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ere tractor with his farm in his John De to ed lov e ilk W s Jame in the buddy seat. grandson Breckin
erned s friend. He was conc y’ od yb er ev s wa es “Jam ends and his d very close to the fri about other people an “He was t to him,” Paul said. os m e th nt ea m at th family munity. He church and in the com very involved in the better, he gs that needed to be in th t ou ab k tal st ju didn’t made stuff better.” ing due to re spared in the flood we e ttl ca e’s ilk W e Th els went down int, and the water lev their high vantage po at is left se, but the damage th ro ey th as ly ick qu just as ul lives only , Paul said. While Pa behind is astounding ht-mile e, he has to take an eig us ho ’ es m Ja m fro a mile between. to the damage done in route to get there due tock. s suffered loss of lives or hb ig ne eir th of y Man dad, grandfal that their husband, The family is gratefu e grand and g remembered for th in be is in us co d an ther, was. loving person James read,” Paul w fast the word has sp ho e bl va lie be un t’s “I be more like ll inspire someone to said. “Hopefully it wi James.”
March 23, 2019
Cattle trying to cross flooded Clear Creek.
CATTLEMEN IN CRISIS Flooded with No Place to Go
N
ebraska, a land of corn and cattle, is half underwater, two thirds of the state declared disaster areas and over a score of towns evacuated. Farmers and ranchers were cut off from their livestock or were unable to get them out due to the rapidly rising water and ice. Many lost all their feed, and calving supplies and don’t know how they are going to care for the animals they still have. At this point producers are just trying to survive, hauling hay by boat and helicopter to marooned cattle, saving calves and treating sickness. With so much of the state still covered by water, ice chunks and bottomless mud, the actual numbers of dead livestock are yet to be
By Deanna Nelson Licking Photos Courtesy of Karina Jones and Leah Peterson
truly known. Some ranchers are estimating they lost at least 25 percent of their 2019 calf crop. This comes at a time when the weigh-up market is low, yet producers can’t afford to feed a non-producing cow. These were some of the best and most productive members of the herd, the first ones to breed back, the ones who kept their calves alive through the bitter cold only to lose them now. Talia Goes, Communications Director for the Nebraska Cattlemen spoke of the need these ranchers will have for fencing and vet supplies, feed, tools--many lost everything. “One producer knew the water was coming so he pulled all his calves and put them in a high barn TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
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e them. Thankfully the because he knew he could sav st of his cows survived.” flooding wasn’t as bad and mo bility is the standard, In an industry where unpredicta ources. ranchers are running out of res hard on producers. “This winter has been really , they are resilient and Ranchers are always preparing hing they could do here.” self-sufficient but there was not e feedlots moved their Goes said. “We heard that som on high enough ground that cattle, most of the others are waters.” the cattle are safe from flood ily near the small Tye Bloom ranches with his fam ey have a cow/calf optown of Scotia, Nebraska. Th ng. He woke up in the eration along with a little farmi their usually dry creek was, night to a raging river where s that were calving heavy cutting them off from their cow ter a foot from the porch, at the time. My house had wa ing, trying to get to dry I could see rats and mice swimm und boarding things up so ground. We were running aro My grandpa is 73 and he they couldn’t get in the house. ce Creek flood like that. said he has never seen Walla snow and the gale force It was the good eight inches of calves drowned, others winds that got us. Some of the e wind and snow pushed the were tromped in the mud. Th ng out once we could get to cows. The worst part was goi calves. The mommas were them and picking up the dead them, trying to get them still standing over them, licking six of them were ET (emup. We lost 34 calves; five or our biggest calves.” Bloom bryo transplant) bull calves, s for the first few days, but said. “We had a lot of sick one hard to get around now haven’t lost any since. It is so gone. Our Rangers are with the bridges out and roads und now. the only ways we can get aro forced to leave their veBloom and his family are now nger ride just to get home. hicles and take a four-mile Ra n farmer/rancher at Leah Peterson, fifth generatio r Weissert, Nebraska, told Cooksley Clear Creek Far, nea her story: a.m., I woke to the sound Last Wednesday morning at 6 roof of our old farm house of gentle rains hitting the steel unty, Nebraska. along Clear Creek in Custer Co the kids and put them on As I scurried around to roust home from making an early the bus, my husband returned wore a worried expression. run through the heifers and he hered his things to head He didn’t say much as he gat with local farmers who down the road for a meeting planting season. were gathering to talk all things our toddler to head out As the sun rose, and I readied local weather man was the door to morning chores, our 24
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TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
Victim of the blizzard.
ns for localized flooding. cautioning us all about concer ut helping move the big I had been more concerned abo paration for the blizzard cow herd that morning in pre ecting later that night. and 70 mph winds we were exp the bridge at Clear Creek It wasn’t until I drove across sider the idea that flooding at 8 a.m., that I began to con a blizzard. would pose as much danger as
ot “As we approached a low sp that occasionally has standing water, I stopped in my tracks h when I saw cows going throug in water up to their bellies.” ves in the lot and then We hurriedly fed all the fat cal I began to plan for moving my dad, our ranch hand and wind. As we set out to drive the cows to shelter out of the grounds to the safety of them from their usual calving startled under the falling a large shelter belt, I became inning to appear. Everyrain. Small streams were beg
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25
Mud and snow made daily cho res
a challenge.
where. Those that were running downhill from melting snowpack moved quickly. As we approache d a low spot that occasionally has standing water, I stopped in my tracks when I saw cows going through in water up to their bellies . Water that was rushing. I quickl y grabbed a set of hobbles and put them on a new calf and threw him in my Polaris. We pushed the cows through and as we approached our “safe grounds” noticed the sounds of Clear Creek. It was beginning to sound angry in the distance. The area where we shelter the cows during blizzards was also beginning to collect water that couldn ’t 26
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
flow away because the ground remained frozen. The feed wagon we used to tease the cows out got stuck. Dad bailed out and waved us in. It was at that moment, that fear crept in. My father, ranching along Clear Creek since 1976, was worried. We hashed our backup plans. We began to try and execute the m. One by one, they failed. And the water continued to rise. The cows were getting exhausted and so were we. The eye of the storm passed over and we knew that we had one moment of calm to enjoy before the winds turned to the north and the
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
sun began to set. Worry turned to some panic. And the water rose more. In a final desperate attempt, we went to move the cow herd one las t time before the final bridge that remained above water disappear ed. By then, Clear Creek had risen to level none of us had ever seen. We were cut off from the main ranch headquarters by waters rushing high enough that we could cross by tractor only. The cattle, being exhausted, were then in shock. The y would not cross the bridge. Finally , we gave up and had no choice but to send them all through the rag ing waters for safety in a smaller she lterbelt. By the grace of God, the y
all made it. And so did we. We fenced them in and put out as much hay as we were able and retreated as darkness set in. Nothing was left to do but pray to God almighty to see our cows through the blizzard that raged the next 24 hours. When the winds calmed and waters began to recede, we took sto ck of our losses. We were spared mu ch of the heartache that our fellow Nebraskans were not. Now, almost a full week later, it’s difficult to even recall all that has transpired . For as much as we are grieving and concerned, life has gone on as it always does this time of year. The appearance of new life has remind ed us that hope springs eternal and that we will persevere through these times. With the help of God and one another we will get through all of this. Nebraska is our home and we are Nebraska Strong. Calf lying dead in the snow. Fifth generation rancher Karina Jones and family were hit hard by of our AI heifers, we prepared for a terrible hail storm in 2017 and the storm like we would any bliz were just getting back on their fee t zard. We fed everything up with when the storm hit. This is her extra hay. We made sure that eve rystory: thing had access to canyons which The National Weather Service have always served as their shelter s and all local news outlets gave us from the spring blizzards that hav e ample warning in the days leadin g come in the years before. up to our “Bomb Cyclone.” The As the rain began to fall the y talked about the moisture that afternoon of Tuesday, March 12, we would start as rain and switch were starting to see the runoff from over to snow and the category 2 these rolling hills and some water Hurricane force winds that were was beginning to go over low-lyexpected. But, really, who has eve r ing roads. We thought we had experienced a “Bomb Cyclone” in everything tucked in pretty good central Nebraska? to handle whatever the weather Although extremely weary from was going to hand us that night a brutal, record-breaking cold but as we laid sleepless in bed, our February in which we calved all stomachs in knots, we were start-
ing to get a grasp that this storm was of a different beast. I honestl y feared that the windows were goi ng to blow into our home. The force of the wind and the driving rain is something I will never forget. As the sun rose on the morning of March 13, the rain let up, the wind was still fierce. Our school called at 6:30 am and asked tha t we meet the bus at another location because they didn’t think the y could get down our road. I did not want to put our girls on the bus that morning, but they both had their Science Fair presentations and the y were anxious about missing that. When my husband returned from meeting the bus, my mother heart
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March 13. They said we were only supposed to get a few inches of snow. Surely, this has to be better than the driving rain. This was the blizzard we had been preparing for! We had a barn full of goats kidding, so my husband, Marty, and I took turns through the night going back and forth to the barn to help new baby goats nurse and such. It was the blinding, driving blizzard conditions we were all used to.
mud. Attempting to pull a tractor out of the
sank when he said, “I don’t think we will be getting the girls home today. These roads are in too bad of shape.” I called my motherin-law, who lives along Highway 2 and she agreed she could get to Ansley and pick them up and keep them until our roads would be safe. The rest of Wednesday was spent trying to feed cattle and accessing the health and safety of our February calves. Surely, those pairs would be fine. They were behind a cedar tree windbreak, with guard rail fence, not to mention they had an open-front calf shed bedded down with fresh hay. We had done all we could. But as the rain continued to fall on our completely frozen ground, 28
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
the run became torrential; the dams had all they could hold. We have three dams that hold water out of our corrals and lots. They were all spilling over and running right through our corrals like a river, including the one dam that breeched, the water running right to that open front shed. We worked to try and divert the water around that shed but we just couldn’t keep up. We kept clinging to some hope that our cows were supposed to be another week off from calving and they were out on winter range and had those canyons to go to. We were hoping they were fairing far better than our first-calf heifer pairs. The rain changed to snow in the afternoon and evening hours of
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
“Our cows, unfortunately, did indeed start calving during the storm. They took refuge in those canyons which have always served as their safe birthing center. They had no way to know that those canyons would turn into raging rivers.” When the sun came up on Thursday, March 14, our dig out from snow began. Snow had drifted as tall as the guard rail fences and right over them. The open-front calf shed was now filled with snow that had drifted in. At noon on this day the sustained winds in Broken Bow, NE were still clocked at 77 mph. This was now day three of this extreme weather phenomenon. The winds didn’t subside until well into that late evening. The sun came out Friday, March
Clear Creek flo od
waters.
14 and we bega n to grasp our real- are no ity. Snow was st w a state in cris arting to melt an is. We are d we were finding no w this really is ju an ag industry in dead baby calv st the beginnin crisis. es g, underneath. O A th s we continue, e be gi nn ur cows, unfort in g of a lot of diff day by day, unate- we ar er ent ly, did indeed st stresses, rebuil e now full into art calving duri di ng th , e an th d ro de es ng cisions. of the storm. The calving cows. So I am seeing op y took refuge in me cows were erators with in those too stre ju a 60 st canyons which miles radius of ssed from wha have always se us sa t th yi ey ng w rv th ent ed ey are as their safe bi through. Cows selling out. The rthing center. T that were in th y are not going hey e to had no way to prime of their rebuild after th know that thos life, the heart of es e lo ss es e . ca R anchour n- genetics, yons would turn ing has been so and optimal bo into raging rive tough the last fe dy condirs. tion. Whi We started seei w years. Emotiona le we lost calves ng the how badl ll y, m os du t of ri y ng us have our fences wer the storm, now been running on e washed out an it is the cows w empty. Financi d e dams comprom ally, seem to be nurs it should be no ised. We starte ing after the st se cr et th at d w or orking m. seeing the sadn Their bodies ar capital has been ess in the faces e trying to carr depleted the la of y a st our neighbors calf to full term few years. Hon and we didn’t ev or are lactatin estly, I think I sp en g and for all of eak have to ask. The that is big enou rural America n we watched th gh pull on a fe w he m e n al I e’ news and realiz s body. But the st say that we need ed that everythi ress of the stor the whole nation ng m ha s in Nebraska ha ju st be be hind us as farm en too much fo s changed and ers and ranche r some. we rs I think many of because this w ay of life is on us are realizing the brink of extinc tion. TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
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29
1-877-347-9100 • www.tsln.com
LIVESTOCK MARKET and
CALL TODAY TO LIST YOUR SALE BARN IN THE TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
877-347-9100
• NAPOLEON, ND
NAPOLEON LIVESTOCK
• LEMMON, SD
• ST. ONGE, SD
1-877-347-9100 • www.tsln.com P.O. Box 290
701-754-2216
LEMMON LIVESTOCK INC.
ND’s #1 YEARLING MARKET Regular Cattle Sale Every Thursday Monthly Cow Sales Through April Large Yearling Runs: Aug.-Sept. 40,000 Feeder Cattle Sold Jan.-Apr. Ray Erbele: 701-424-3307 Jim Bitz: 701-754-2404 Paul Bitz: 701-754-2440 George Bitz: 701-754-2857 For Market Reports & Upcoming Consignments. Check out our website: napoleonlivestock.com
605-374-3877 800-822-8853
• BELLE FOURCHE, SD
• Regular Sales Every Wednesday
Sale Barn: 605-892-2655
Baxter & Skyler Anders, Owners - 605-685-4862 Brett Loughlin - 605-210-0615 Mike Greenough - 307-620-2597 Joe Vodicka - 307-351-2024 Bill Johnson - 605-866-4813 Dan Piroutek - 605-544-3316 Bob Anderson 605-641-1042 Gary Krell - 307-746-8051 Rod Schaffer - 406-672-5546 Ty Jones - 406-951-4221 Jason Schaffer - 406-853-4626 Jason Twitchell - 406-480-2345 Brian Curtis - 605-641-9245 Shane Moke - 605-641-7961 Austin Snook 307-290-2161 www.bellefourchelivestock.com
Contact:
Paul Huffman, Owner/Mgr. 605-374-5675 605-645-2493 Chad Hetzel, Asst. Mgr. 701-376-3748 Clint Ehret, Baker Field Rep. 406-778-3282 or 406-772-5522 Jim Sheridan, Field Rep 605-490-2288 or 605-967-COWS
• DICKINSON, ND
STOCKMENS LIVESTOCK EXCHANGE Selling Thursdays 701-225-8156 800-472-2667 (ND & MT only)
“For the Best in NorthernGrown Feeder Cattle” All Fresh Rancher-Consigned Cattle
WWW.TSLN.COM
Cattle Sell Every Friday • St. Onge, SD 605-642-2200 • 800-249-1995
Barney Barnes - Sheep Yards Mgr. Justin Tupper - Cattle Yards Mg. & Auctioneer: 605-456-2582 605-680-0259 • 605-722-6323 Brooke Tupper - Off. Mgr.: 605-642-2200 Fieldman: Tim Tetrault: 605-641-0328 • Ron Frame: 605-641-0229 Jess Cline: 307-751-8143 • Taylor (Bugs) Smook: 307-290-2273 Ray Pepin: 605-892-5072 • Scott Crowser: 605-645-2654 CaseyHumble: 605-490-9829 • Trler Scott: 406–853-5690 • PHILIP, SD
• Special Sales as Advertised
REGULAR CATTLE SALES THURSDAY
St. Onge, SD 57779
Sheep Sell Every Thursday • Newell, SD 605-456-2348 • 800-409-4149
Philip Livestock Auction
Owner: Thor Roseth Owner/Auctioner: Jeff Long Philip, SD: 605-685-5826 Auctioneers: Lynn Weishaar: Reva, SD 605-866-4670
Office: 605-859-2577
Cattle Sale Every Tuesday
Fieldmen: Billy Markwed ~ Midland, SD: 605-567-3385 Bob Anderson ~ Sturgis, SD: 605-347-0151 Clint Hammerstrom ~ Hereford, SD: 605-490-0711 Mark Lantis ~ New Underwood, SD: 605-390-7828 Dan Piroutek ~ Milesville, SD: 605-544-3316
• VALENTINE, NE
• MANDAN, ND
VALENTINE LIVESTOCK AUCTION CO.
Cattle Sales on Thursday Special Feeder Sales Fall, Winter & Spring Greg Arendt, Mgr. 402-376-3611 • 800-682-4874 www.valentinelivestock.net Internet & Private Placements Available
Manager - Bill & Fred Kist 701-663-9573
Toll-Free in North Dakota 800-732-1163
Regular Sales Every Wednesday Horse & Dairy Sales Last Saturday of Each Month
DIRECTORY
• FT. PIERRE, SD FT.
PIERRE LIVESTOCK AUCTION, INC.
• SIDNEY, MT
• THREE FORKS, MT
Cattle Every Friday
Computerized Ring Scale
Sale Barn: 605-223-2576
Prewitt & Company, LLC 756 10th Ave S.E. Office: 406-482-5251 Fax: 406-482-6644
Dennis Hanson: 605-223-2575 Willie Cowan: 605-224-5796 Bryan Hanson: 605-280-1283
Rod Prewitt: 406-480-2777 Mike Yore: 406-480-2888 Tim Larson: 406-480-2666
Special Sales as Advertised
800-280-7210
• KIMBALL, SD
• BOWMAN, ND
• MILES CITY, MT
Regular and Special Feeder Cattle Sales on Wednesdays Owners: Jake Maurer • 402-822-0080 Shane Kaczor • 402-336-7011
• BILLINGS, MT
Regular Cattle Sales Tuesday Special Feeder Sales In Season Horse Sales As Advertised Home of Frontier Stockyards
Combined Competitive Markets of Billings BLS & PAYS
Bart Meged 406-951-3005 Office • 406-234-1790 800-755-5177 Amanda Kincheloe Office Mgr Andy Wemmer 406-853-0539 Danny Maag 406-351-9349
Cattle Monday, Wednesday,
605-778-6211 • 888-282-2593
WADE CHRISTENSEN (605) 730-1801 WEBSITE: KIMBALLLIVESTOCKEXCHANGE.COM Cattle Sell Every Tuesday DAVID VIERECK (605) 680-0386 FAX: (605) 778-6209 OWNERS: Chad Heezen 605-870-0697 STEVE CHAVEZ (605) 860-0016 KIMBALL LIVESTOCK EXCHANGE, LLC Marketing Cattle, Sheep, Wade & 680-2778 Christina Christensen: LEE NESS (605) CHRISTI CHRISTENSEN - OFFICE MANAGER & Horses 605-730-1801 (605) 680-1536 DICK DEFFENBAUGH (605) 680-1324 Fieldmen: Tuesday Sales - Sales Broadcast On Cattleusa.com Harry Kerr, Mgr. Dick Deffenbaugh: 605-680-1324 701-523-5922 David Viereck: 605-680-0386 701-523-6711 (c) Lee Ness: 605-680-2778 Wayne Miller Steve Chavez: 605-860-0016 Field Rep 701-523-6885 Paul Munsen: 605-680-1450 kimballlivestockexchange.com 001625876r1
• RUSHVILLE, NE
Phone 605-967-2200 Dace Harper 605-515-1535 Mason Dietterle 605-580-5878 Doug Dietterle 605-580-1362 Max Louglin 605-244-5990 Troy Wilcox 605-515-0121 Kaden Deal 605-515-4180 www.faithlivestock.com
Getting the best price for producers 406-285-0502 25 Wheatland Rd, Three Forks MT, 59752 headwaterslivestock.com
877-211-0600 Regular Sale Every Monday
P.O. Box 58 Bowman, ND 58623
EMAIL: COWTRACKS@MIDSTATESD.NET
Regular Sales on Monday Tues. Sheep Sales in Season
Cattle Sales every Monday Horse Sale as Announced Special Feeder & Stock Cow Sales in season Sheep Sales - see calendar
MILES CITY LIVESTOCK COMMISSION
for Cattlemen" Cattlemen "Cattlemen Workingworking for Cattlemen
• FAITH, SD
Bassett Livestock Auction, Inc. 402-684-2361
BOWMAN AUCTION MARKET
301 North Truck Street PO Box 20, Kimball, SD, 57355
605-778-6211
CHAD HEEZEN (605) 870-0697
• BASSETT, NE
SIDNEY LIVESTOCK
Sheridan LiveStock auction co., inc. Regular Sales Wednesday Office (308) 327-2406
Horse Sales Every Month As Advertised Hogs Sell at 9:30 a.m. Weigh-ups & Bulls Sell at 11:00 a.m. Stock Cattle Sell at 1:00 p.m. Owners: Dan & Sherry Otte 308-362-2563 Kirk Otte 308-282-0282 Fieldmen: Wayde Bolden, Gilbert Grooms • Galen Voss • Chip Hartman • Travis Binger
• TORRINGTON, WY
626 West Valley Rd. Torrington, WY 307-532-3333
All Classes – Every Friday Yearlings & Calves – Wednesday Bred Cow Specials Go to www.torringtonlivestock.com for current listings, sale schedules & results
Lex Madden 307-532-1580 Michael Schmitt 307-532-1776 Chuck Petersen 307-575-4015
www.frontierstockyards.com
www.milescitylivestock.com
-October thru NovemberThursday, Friday. -January thru SeptemberCattle Wednesday, Thursday
• CRAWFORD, NE
-Horse sales 4th Saturday-Sheep Sales Monday’s as Announced-
Sales Every Friday Office: 308-665-2220 Fax: 308-665-2224
Toll Free: 866-665-2220
Horse Sales As Advertised Owners: Jack & Laurel Hunter: 308-665-1402 • Cell: 308-430-9108
www.crawfordlivestock.com e-mail: clm@crawfordlivestock.com
• HERREID, SD
HERREID LIVESTOCK MARKET Regular Cattle Sales Every Friday Special Sales by Appointment 605-437-2265
Owners/Managers Joe Vetter: 701-391-3479 J.R. Scott: 605-359-7358 Kent Fjeldhein: 605-848-3459
For Information or to Consign Call: 1-800-635-7364 Ty Thompson 406-698-4783 Bill Cook 406-670-0689 Joe Goggins 406-861-5664 Bob Cook 406-670-0078
www.billingslivestock.com www.publicauctionyards.com
• RAMSAY, MT
Sale Every Tuesday Special Sales Friday 100 Cattle Drive Ramsay, Montana 406-782-1884 montanalivestockauction.com
March 23, 2019
k a e r B g n i r Sp
s
By Ruth Nicolau
helping k a e r b s d n e p s t ge studen
ranchers
ned to Petersen, had plan na La , om m r he her She and iling trip, but on ob snowmom t n’ ow is sn a a sk r ra fo eb y N was OK leave the next da college student in had planned mom, asking if it r e sh he e d lik lle , ca ta e so sh ne e, way hom biling in Min eak this week. br g e trip. rin sp er ov e could. to do ys, to cancel th da ur ho out in any way sh en te lp fif he ng to d ki te or w an s w e’ Petersen Instead, sh 16, Petersen and so on March ines to help those ic s, ed ye m id d sa an om ed m fe ska affect- Her collecting animal rth central Nebra no in rs he nc swung into action. ra d ore, armed with farmers an cal farm supply st lo r he . to t od en flo w g e in ying Sh ed by the devastat it out at $1,000, bu major at the ed e ax nc m ie d sc an , al rd im ca an , an her credit Katelyn Petersen icken feed. and a resident of n ol nc Li ahorse, dog and ch sk e, ra ttl eb ping to ca N of r ity fa rs e Unive ons, in th undMe account, ho Ly oF G in a e d m te ho ar r st he so ed to She al Lyons, Neb., head s. t 115 miles east of ou ab e, at ,500 to buy supplie st $2 e e th is of trailer, ra rt pa st on , ea north occurred her mom and the d ith ha w g f in of od ok flo to e re , whe Then sh the Niobrara River March 15.
Colle
A
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dropping off th e feed whereve r it was needed, in has also donate cluding in Verdi d six pallets of gre, trace where they star m ineral and white ted. salt block, whi ch She and her m “has been huge om traveled ar to th e ra nc he ou rs nd their catt and Verdigre and L le,” Lana said. ynch, Neb., so metimes not even talking to the fa rmer or rancher but leaving supplies . “Katelyn would get out (of the truck), see a ra ncher and a ho rse, and she’d throw a bag of horse feed by their mailbox . If she saw they had a dog, she’ d leave dog food ,” her mom said. Sometimes the two had to take back roads, sinc e main roads an d highways were closed due to flooding. The producers wer For a few days en’t during the wee usually availabl k, e because they Katelyn has team ed up with a were working to save animal s and veterinarian in Lynch who sh their facilities. e is And sometimes working with to distribute supp they wouldn’t lies. ask for goods She’s been mak when ing rounds wit she offered them h her, helping treat an . “A lot of thes imals. A few da e guys are proud, ys ” Katelyn said ago, they visite . d a rancher who “You’d talk to had them, and they lost multiple bu ’d lls and cows an say, ‘Oh, we’re d fine.” an unknown nu mber of calves During the mot . The calves are in a her and daughpile, and Katel ter’s trip to Lyn yn ch last weekend started counting , but quit when they had one of she the most movin got to 25, even g though she was moments of th n’t e devastation. A halfway throug s h the pile. they came over a bridge, they sa w a rancher loadin g a dead baby calf into a side -by-side, with the mama cow stan ding there, look ing at the calf. The rancher tipped hi s hat to the cow, as if in tribute to her loss. They cried. That mom ent “changed (Kat elyn’s) life righ t there,” Lana sa id. Donations have poured in to help her with he lping the ranchers, “the animal s’ first responders,” as she call ed them. On Sun day night, she got a call from a feed company wanting to dona te. She expected a few pallets of horse feed, but the company se nt a semi load full . Another busine ss
“Katelyn would get out (of the tru ck), see a rancher and a horse, and sh e’d throw a bag of horse feed by th eir mailbox.”
They are also de aling with calv es that have to be put down, due to frozen feet, from standing in icecold water. Ano ther calf they ar e doctoring is trap ped by a huge pi ece of ice. To treat it, they have to walk across ice to ge t to it. The Nio brara River banks ha ve large blocks of ice dug out from bridges and pile d on the embank ments. It will ta ke
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
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33
ted. to melt, Lana predic e ic of es ec pi e th r sitive, Katelyn weeks fo rs, the people are po he nc ra e th s sit vi e y says, Every time sh sitive and everybod po so e ar le op pe se odhe told her mother. “T “Their homes are flo . id sa yn el at K e,” ’re not fin and their ‘I’m fine.’ And they out of their houses, n w ro th ff stu et w of ed, there are stacks . ad hing like this animals are de ’ve never seen anyt ey th y sa rs he nc ra me “The farmers and I hope I never see so d an , 22 ’m “I d. rte yn repo in their lives,” Katel n.” Lana, and she’s of these things agai ughter of Rich and da e th , rm fa a on “She She grew up t this much at once. no t bu , id sa om m r seen animals die, he ty.” but not to this capaci people doing knows what death is, ere are many other th at th e iz as ph em Katelyn wants to
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what she’s doing. She doesn’t like grateful,” Lana sa the publicity. “It’s id. about the aniKatelyn’s quick or mals,” she says. Sh ganization and e’s shy, but that work was needed trait isn’t evident im this week. “She’s mediately after the flooding, her orchestrated all of mother said. The this,” Lana said. big companies an “She’s been amaz d big donations w ing. She deserves ill co me in as time goes all the credit.” on, but Katelyn’s help was im She’s careful with mediate. “We hear the use her credit d th ere’s a truckload card, her mom said of vet supplies , so for her to max coming in and th it out to buy supp at’s great,” Lana lies was unusual. sa id. “But it takes da But Katelyn had fa ys and days to ith. “She said, organize. She just ‘Mom, I know God w en t to the farm will provide. I’m store and got it ta going to do this.’” ken care of.” “She is doing wha School starts back t’s in her heart.” next week, and K Katelyn has an ob atelyn is organizi ng animal feed ligation to be in and medication an Lincoln on Sunday d ve , March 24 to t supplies to be sent to western make a presentatio and southern Nen to a 4-H group braska as well. that is collecting donations for the Katelyn’s fundrais flood victims, even er on GoFundwhen they have Me reached $3,695 their own floodin , in addition to g to deal with. many more privat “People are so am e donations. azing and so
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Cattle Journal FALL 2019
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March 30, 2019
HAY!
W
SY OF PHOTO COURTE
aska from r b e N to g in m o c Donations icking Ruth NicolausL y B y tr n u o the c
ica, help in rural Amer hen people need the call. someone answers a found out that a And Hannah Such e call. ople will answer th whole bunch of pe Nebraska were rthern and eastern no of rts pa n he rdigre, W a, a resident of Ve ch Su , 13 ch ar M flooded on the Knox Counok post put out by bo ce Fa a w sa ., for the Neb , asking for help 16 ch ar M on s ew ty (Neb.) N d all their farm lost their home an ho w , ily m fa ka ic Ruz oke. e Spencer Dam br ner buildings when th erer, the former ow m m Zi t ur C d, da She called her m to take the Market, asking hi k oc st ve Li re ig merer of the Verd to the family. Zim d ha he y ha of s lls, and an three round bale ade some phone ca m e H . er rth fa ep took it a st
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ANDREW OLSEN
all around
said, “we’re ck. “Hannah,” he ba r he d lle ca r, te .” She hour la re and make a sign he t ou et G e. iv dr having a hay in an hour, the ok page, and with bo ce Fa r he on it gentleposted rnoon, an elderly te af at Th . es ar sh ck. post had 300 ith a bale in the ba w , rd Fo 98 19 s hi d Sucha, man pulled up in told Zimmerer an he ” h, uc m t n’ is “I know this d I know this bale I have left an od go e on e th s t “brought “but it’ do.” His commen I an th e or m it s family need . tears,” Sucha said le, all lome and my dad to , March 16 21 peop , ay rd tu Sa y, da That first l over. cals, donated hay. d coming from al te ar st lls ca e th , r 300 After that the Ruzickas. Thei lp he to as w al s who Sucha’s first go een three neighbor tw be lit sp e er w e head of cattl
3RD ANNUAL PRODUCTION SALE
January 25, 2020 BUFFALO LIVESTOCK AUCTION
BULLS LIKE THESE SELL AT
BUFFALO LIVESTOCK AUCTION THE 4TH SATURDAY IN JANUARY
PHOTO COURTESY OF HANNAH SUCHA
were feeding them. Then Sucha and Zimmerer reali zed that destruction and devastation had occurred up and down the Niobrara River Valley and farmers and ranchers needed help. “My dad knows the livestock guys ,” Sucha said, since he and his wife Sherri owned the lives tock market for 23 years. “He said, ‘we have to do some thing for these guys.” The donations started pouring in. Hay and supplies from sixteen states: Nebraska, Kansas, South Dako ta, North Dakota, Wyoming, Missouri, Oklahoma, Ohio, Arkansas, Iowa, Indiana, Texas, Minnesota, Mon tana and Missouri have been delivered. A farmer and his wife and daughter from Pennsylvania even brought a picku p and trailer load of hay. “People wanted to help,” she said. Someone bring ing hay from Kansas commented that they were retur ning the favor that Nebraskans had done for them. “We bring hay to you, because Nebraska sent it to us during the wildfires,” Sucha was told. The drive continues, and the donation and distributi on center is the Verdigre Livestock Sale Barn (now owned by Sara Anthony and Matt VanDriel), and Zimm erer’s buildings. Three local men, all hay haulers, dona te their time and equipment to man the center. They recei ve hay, unload it, and deliver it. One of the men brought his own
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TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
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SY OF PHOTO COURTE
HANNAH SUCHA
ashingm their farm near W fro e ov dr t gh hio, and brou , a one-way trip transported from O n, Penn. to Verdigre to id sk s e d’ th da g y in us “M . of s. tractor, instead igre on March 26 of about 1,000 mile use it was to Verd e ca m be ca d, s ha ck er tru er e m os m th in Pennsylvaloader Zi eyes lit up when Beechy, who farms ue sc Re rm Fa , 24 e floodfaster. On March hio, had heard of th in,” Sucha said. O d an a ni as r fo or ct is tra ng shop anted to help. donated the use of a The Zimmerer weldi g in Nebraska and w in g in be . e ar ed at ed hay s th long as it is ne d a little bit of extra full of donated item ha e “W e th re he . w rs s te s and ranche a ran out of hay Zimmerer coordina passed on to farmer d is year and Nebrask an th , ed er ed liv fe de a e ar of s t bi as somehay and supplie e’re kind of a little st, a week ago. It w “W fa ty et d pr an s er rm fa l e e have it al help that didn’t he knows some of th store,” she said. “W ing we could do to r th fo k as n, to bi d a ou in pr e o ar es s money.” ranchers are to organized. The glov much more than ga us a st ch co Su ,” ys s, gu e irt es s, sweatsh up in the Omahelp. “He knows th there are boots, coat Beechy’s wife grew ou ‘y , er , ck od fo tru e g th do d to an reason said. “He says and that was also a hats, tons of cat food , ea ar is ha th , op dr ire u w yo the whole nce pliers, barbed go to this place and help out. “It makes u’ll insulators, fe to yo y, sa , d ed an fe , em um th str ll much colo off, and I’ll ca a flooding thing that vaccines, syringes, sk ra eb N un to e er th ne ckets. ” need to have someo milk replacer, and bu closer to our hearts. e fill w , in e m co le Facebook that op on pe load it.’” d “When he poste n he W d an ul . ef or at do gr e em out th more hay The recipients are them up and send th was making the trip, u he yo n he of l “W . al id ed sa ne a ’t ast two positive, Such And maybe they didn nated. He plans at le do g as bi w a ve ha u ’ll yo ey u know if d bales, square go to their place, th those things, but yo more trips, with roun gh ou t th n’ en do ev , ey th ce d fa r an , smile on thei send it with a farmer bales, and grain. u ask how Yo h. uc m so eir neighbor st th lo e be dMe page: ay m t they’v bu it ed ne He’s started a GoFun ing do I’m y, sa .” ’ll ey em th th to lief, and they are, and does, they’ll give it r Nebraska Flood Re fo ay H e nn ia Br s wife posts, another good today.” David Beechy and hi te, because of Facebook da to a n, up tio ed na ad do lo t es na le following Their bigg and daughter Magda from Ohio plans on er rm fa of r ile d tra an a s le y, round ba was ten loads of ha trailer with fourteen all n, ai gr of ad lo a d supplies, an 38
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Beechy on his ne xt trip to Nebrask a While the two ha with hay. The Ohi d coffee one o hay will be take n m orning, discussing to flooded livesto ck producers sout the hay drive, h Zimmerer told hi of Omaha. s daughter one of the reasons he’s w Beechy was glad orking so hard. to do it. “Be“He said, ‘Hanna cause we farm, it h, the government struck us. All can’t solve all ou farmers go throug r problems. We h difficult times. have to solve our We had extra hay own problems. W this year, and I e ha ve to help our neig guess it seemed rig hbors.’” ht to do.” She is quick to em When Sucha and phasize that her dad started th ere are many othe this, they didn’t th rs donating their ink it would last time and talents be this long. “We th sides her and her ought it would be fa mily. Andrew Ols a Saturday and Su on, from Nornday and we’d folk, has made m be done,” she said or e than eight trips . “My dad hasn’t to Verdigre to brin set foot in his busi g donated items. ness since last They’ve seen so Saturday. He’s ov much of him that erjoyed. He loves Su cha says, “he’s lit this stuff.” Sucha erally become has gone back family this last w to her fourth grad ee k. e teaching job in And I had no idea who this guy Creighton, Neb., was before a wee and she misses it. k ago.” “I was so sad I di dn’t get to see the And the commun twelve trucks com ity has responded e in.” as well. The projec t encompasses so
PHOTO COURTE SY OF
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
HANNAH SUCH A
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
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CHA SY OF HANNAH SU PHOTO COURTE
and fencing. d be looking for hay e’ w ry ve “E w. on we rs no very well be the reas many other voluntee ay m u Yo to g ity is comin a better year body in the commun go on and hope for n ca lp he ed ne e say, w gether. We call and next year.” and they’re ng hi et that summed m so g in ad unlo She got another text t. It read, right there. t ag people are abou ha w up mmunity u, your “It’s brought the co annah, the actions yo “H g in th le ib g are poss d volunteers are doin together. The worst an ily m fa a gs and it brin bringing light happens (the flood) unbelievable. You’re hour. .” ople at their darkest community together pe e es th to ht s the plig r hearts with Her dad understand ank you for filling ou Th e “H . in e ar enting ers the future and repres the livestock produc r fo pe ho ” il, anybody fa st possible doesn’t want to see e Midwest in the be th e w re su e ak m to ur actions.” she said. “He wants rs way through yo he nc ra d an s er rm e account can keep these fa Beechy’s GoFundM ll sti s it’ on as re be found in the area. He’s the for flood relief can om/ going.” https://uk.gofundme.c at iat gr r ei th d se ska-flood-relief People have expres her hay-for-nebra pt ke s ha at th d an to tude to Sucha, To make donations and lots s ur ho ng lo h ’s ug er ro er going th cha and Zimm from a farmer Su xt te a t go mer“I k. or w of hay drive, Curt Zim for everyu yo k an ‘th , id at sa and he er can be reached for me and my thing you’re doing 402.841.2835. ur dad, yo d an u yo t ou ith W family.
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March 30, 2019
Two men and two calves in a boat during a flood rescue.
JAMIE SCHOMP PHOTO
WHITE RIVER FLOODING
Ranching Almost Impossible Due to Water and Mud
“T
By Deanna Nelson Licking
he river has shown her true nature, she’s rather greedy.” said Ann Kustar, horse breeder at Solomon Farm in extreme south-west Jones County, South
Dakota. The Big White River has flooded across their bottom land, washing away fences, broke through the bank
into their old gravel pit and flooded the basement of her home. Everyone there now is crowded into the apartment above the barn. The alfalfa fields resemble an inland ocean and they are almost out of feed since their hay supply is in water. “Thankfully we have a load of hay coming the end of the week.” Kustar said. When the river came up they were hurrying to get TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
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OTO
. JAMIE SCHOMP PH edented flooding ec pr un g rin du r water and dry were unde a to keep cattle safe on t un co s er ch ran Grandpa’s cows to Facilities the White moved
lot just g on al h the water Frank Carlson, ranc of the house in case h , ut so nd ou gr er gh s hi k’ m Fran d get to them the young horses to River. They lease fro rose higher he coul or ct ’s tra ni a To ly is on is ud Th m . e an was on the but due to th grandpa Lyle O’Bry r to move them (this or ste ct fa tra r ei th d an r lped him, he could pull the traile experience. 18th). After Frank he ute a in m st id la lv e Be th t of A h ut rt. where wouldn’t sta “We are located so his horse to the east d tte d tro an or ct it tra en s hi wh ng heifer pairs ghway 63. Well, neighbor came with re on ere along hi we had what remaini stu pa e rm th to sto g up bi r e ile th r pairs got pulled the tra started to thaw afte the river. The heifer g on le al ab as w , or er hb riv ig to the e blizzard and we top and another ne all of the runoff went hit pretty hard in th and d rte at sta th or ct So t. tra ye t r’s river and to get Kusta and the ice wasn’t ou pile of calves to the a st ts lo ca o Tw . e. ic nd e ou th g over t them moved moved to higher gr water started runnin snow already. We go in e on , of od le flo up e co th a r by fo e heavy were trapped It continued like this hills at dark. But th e th o to Tw r. er ile riv tra e a th t in ou ere a tree and another . I was concerned ab still in the corral. Th ys re da we rs ife he e m ca ighbor d in 2010. Frank , two lower days later a kind ne ur lots in the corral . flooding like it ha fo es e lin ar fe e th m d ue fro sc ll re the heavies on with a kayak and (my fiancé) got a ca ones where we had get flood Carlson t es n’ liv ca o e w wh e p, liv ar e Sh w ey the new pairs “Where n a neighbor Rodn lower east bottom, e tio th op an e ’t th d isn ar A he M said he d upper west insurance and FE up the river and he were in the lower an s es d oc ha pr we ng if lo d a an be r, ill rio either. It w ice went out at Inte lots. es and fields. nc fe s, ad ro ttoms by the river g bo in e , on the ild th on rebu e ttl ca y an I have the night shift of nt ou am se en m im er was We lost an to get them moved. g of the 19th the riv in . en ev nd la of e s sid re st ac d we ong the fence and acres an ill over its banks. Al e have our cows on sp W to ng t, rti ye g sta in al fo re en’t lls so they we s water I’m thankful we wer of the road, in the hi wer east lot, there wa lo e d th an e lif le ’s ho an w ry y le O’B by the corral. I’ve lived here m fine. But Grandpa Ly starting to come up e it.” s lik hi ng of hi h yt ut an so m en se tto r I’ve neve cows were on the bo uncle Casey . id sa r ta us K use. Frank and his ho é nc fia r Toni Romero and he
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Frank moved th e heavy heifers to the lower west to the corral, I lot and the pair ran to see wha s t was were in the high go ing on. All I co er east lot. The uld think of was , river was flowin they all drowne g slowly all nigh d because I didn t. ’t let I went for my 4: them in on the 30 am check on higher ground. the heavy he The 20th, it was stil ifers in the low l calm. Nothing er lot were was standing going on with on the highest the heifers and po int they I noticed our calf pu could get to al ller and strap w ong the fence an as d leaning agains alley way. The t the corral fenc lower lot fence e. w as Frank had pull completely was ed a calf witho hed away, and ut so getting the heif was the lower er in the calvin east lot. So I co g m pen, and he lean bined the heav ed it against th y heifers and ne e wer fence. So I thou pairs. I filmed ght I should ta a short video w ke it hi le to the barn, it w driving back to as frozen down. highway 63. The I re was going to le was ice and wat ave it but somet er all across th hing south bo e said I better gr ttom where we ab it. So I chip previously ped the chain out of had our heifer the ice and haul pairs. Whateve r ed remains it to higher grou of the calves w nd. I went and e lo st in the hauled a few ba storm, that we les of hay while didn’t find, wer e lost the forever to ground was stil the river. Thank l frozen and fed goodness the we moved horses. My son the remaining had forgotten hi to higher s backpack in th ground. Part of e pickup that w the hayfield was as left at the river, under water, th so I drove dow e tank on the so n to bottom uth get it at 7 am. w as covered in wat The river had ri er se an n d an incredible am large chunks of ount with large ice. ice chunks flow The water was ing. So when I flowing fast got through the low er lots, the ice was
hitting and brea king trees, it w as scary. We lost the lower lot co rral fence, and the fences we had in along the river. If we didn’t rece ive that call, we w ould t have gott en to them fast en ough and we w ould have lost them all. We are very thankful to Rod ney for keeping us
Top, the front door of Gilber t Groom’s ho Dakota ranche use after the r’s feed tracto big blizzard. r sunk in the GILBERT GRO mud. JUDD SC OMS PHOTO HOMP PHOT Above, Benn O ett County So uth TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
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to the it’s been. It came in t es gh hi . Lyle’s barn Lyle’s barn, in and on in Grandpa ley way to Grandpa al ce sin ay id Fr on in yet in mind. The water receded e lots it hadn’t been th of e e th on on t ou ec nt El t Central it came up to Frank and Casey we the ice went out. Wes shing out it’s fence, y wa da rth ng bi ki ’s ec er ch ht ug en th da lls it. out 19th after our tric was out and ab cement barn as he ca d ol e th ed ov m d wn an es were do ng fast through party, at about 11 pm all the poles. The lin ena The water was flowi ar e th m e ic fro e th ws e co er ’s wh we gathGrandpa Lyle on the south bottom just 20’ from where n pe e th y ha e . th nk to ta e rth les by th e. lot they were in, no knocked down the po ered our horses to rid n. ow dr ’t dn ul the north wo rd wa to le po wing fast from e flo lin d bottom so they The high ll high an sti s l It’ al d re ve co to y heifers are, fell in t thank goodness The river completel and of where the all of the runoff. Bu er riv e th , g ay on aw al s ed m sh were wa of Lyle’s botto the river. The bank s are full again, they m da e rth tte Pa r to ou on e away wher ar.” water was backed up completely washed fully low after last ye aw . nd la ’s es re tre du e Ba Th . of lls bu , South son’s and part gate is to get to the Judd Schomp, Martin rve where g cu in e th iss m on rk ed ba m m of ja ks e es along the Little The ic have large chun Dakota rancher, liv e th to in ws ow bl flo r k te ee af ting Black Pipe cr ver. The snow is mel where they took blow Ri te hi in W nt co k r te an wa Fr . The 21st ers and creeks White River. Ice and from the ice chunks m rapidly, flooding riv tto bo h ut at so m e ja th e th er ng made ued to flow ov got another call sayi water and mud has e th d an e th en e th Th e. to We went Bennett County where our heifers ar Rodney’s just broke. almost every road in way gh hi er st fa ov w ng flo wi to flo d s ing out water starte river, it had risen, wa ible. “We are all runn ss pa s im wa d an so gh ng hi wi d it was flo t reach our hay 63. The river staye and we hoped since of farm fuel, we can’ ed em se It . m y. ja da e ing to th jammed all fast it would Break it to the cows. I’m go t ge or gh hi d ye on sta d er ter recede ws to the hay The 21st, the riv to work and the wa have to move my co ey Th . ed m m ja ll sti e in five and ice was Friday the 22nd. rt hauling fuel hom sta d r an te wa to te Sa du up on p said. “We are closed highway 63 The water came back evegallon jugs.” Schom at Th . el e av th s gr e wa th it er e, washing ov urday the 23rd. To m ckering off fli re we s ht lig e th ning
ROMERO highway 63. TONI White River along
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TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
far from back to normal life, thankrancher seems to always have that fully the weather has been nice for spirit that next year will be bet ter. calving, because we can’t get aro und.” That is what helps kee p the m in the Cole and Joy Lange ranch nea r ranching business.” Oglala, South Dakota along wit h Gilbert Grooms is one of the their son Brad and his family. Joy Lange’s neighbors and has bee n just left home on March 12th to hel p trying to survive first dealing wit with her grandkids in Harrison, h bigger drifts than he has ever seen Nebraska during the blizzard, so and now with flooding and unb elievson Bryan and his wife Jolene could able mud. “Our hou se was drifted focus on calving. The snow and then shut, just trying to dig out was hard. the flooding made getting hom e We lost some calves, the drifts were impossible for Joy, two weeks later, so choppy, like waves on the oce she finally made it home. Co an. le has It was so rough it was tough drivan airplane, as soon as the bli zzard ing a snow mobile across the m.” passed he cleared the landing strip Grooms said. “Now with the mud and helped his neighbors find miss- getting feed to the cat tle has bee n ing cattle. “I’d fill my suburb an up almost impossible. My cows are with groceries and we would find further away in the only pastur eI some decent road for Cole to land had grass left in. We were hai led out on and we would transfer eve ryreally bad last summer and tha t was thing to the plane. So at least they the one that didn’t get ruined . So the had something to eat. There has cows weren’t on the bottom wh en it been no other way into the ran ch, flooded.” we are eight and a half miles off the main road and with West Horse Creek flooding we couldn’t cro ss it. Now we can kind of get around in a side-by-side.” Lange said. Like many ranchers who live along rivers, the Lange’s hav e always relied on the river bot toms for protection during calving. The White River has flooded their bottoms, surrounded the calvin g barn and destroyed fences for miles. “Cole is able to fly and check on the cattle, it gives som e peace of mind. But he can onl y see the problem, he can’t do anything about it. We had some cat tle trapped and Cole called a nei ghbor who was able to cut the fen ce and save them.” Lange said. “The Flo od waters all the way around
“The frost going out has caused a lot of problems with the Ru ral Water system, the pipes are mo ving and breaking. Much of Pine Rid ge was without water for severa l days.” Grooms said. “My yard still has ice, snow, mud and running water, it will be a while drying out, but the water is going down.” The flooding continues across the region, the Yellowstone River in Montana has forced evacuatio ns and the Missouri river and its trib utaries are now flooding their way tow ards the gulf. Dams are stressed due to the high runoff volume and are failing, causing flashfloods downst ream. The Cheyenne and Moreau riv ers in north central South Dakota are threatening lives and livelihood s. As more rain and snow are foreca sted, ranchers are bracing for the wo rst and for once praying that it wo n’t rain.
the Lange calving barn. JOY
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
LANGE PHOTO
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
45
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
47
Sunday April 7 th, 2019 We found our way to the next
stop where we met the owner of
the farm on the road. Not sure he knew what to think as he saw a
semi with a cargo trailer leading
Battle Creek, Nebraska
just give up...” he said.
water rushing over roads was
Nick replied, “that’s why we’re
we talked on that 65-degree sunny
“We don’t want you to do that,”
here.”
These guys had lived through
insane. Hard for us to imagine as day.
Like others we had helped that
the small convoy of three, as most
the “100 year flood” less than 10
day, they were no strangers to the
for home.
year flood” again this year. The
did their best to hold back the
our other volunteers were headed “I see you have some supplies
for me.” he said. “How about I just load up my cows on a trailer and
years ago, just to re-live the “100 stories and videos they shared
of water rushing through fields
making them look like lakes, and
challenges that life brought. They emotion when we talked about
the hay and supplies we brought
them. They were so thankful and
I’m pretty sure if one of us started crying, we all would have been crying.
We were lucky to have been
informed that their neighbor could also likely use supplies. They
called him up and he came down.
He sorted through and was able to
48
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
49
take some needed items home to
got there—the 460 Farmall.
red!”
After most of the sorting was
of that old thing!” he said.
handles have a lot of stories to tell.
no idea how much I love old
couples we could have met, they
“You don’t want to take pictures
his cattle, too.
Of course I replied, “You have
through, I got my chance to go
take a peek and photograph the
one thing I had my eye on since I
tractors! Especially when they’re
One thing we agreed on, those old Not only being one of the nicest
fed us supper and gave us a place to stay for the night, too. While
the goal was to get to bed early and have a good night’s rest, it
was a late night for most. I don’t
think you’d hear any complaining though, as it was filled with
stories, jokes and some good
conversation around their old
family kitchen table. Felt like it
was where were just meant to be that night. We left that morning
with bellies full of breakfast, new
friends, and warm hearts knowing we had been led to the right place. We drove down to the
(605) 866-4670 13567 SD Hwy 79 Reva, SD 57651
neighbor’s, chatted with him, looked at his cows, of course,
took advantage of them being so
photogenic, maaaaybe did a little
wheelin’ and dealin’… then headed on our way to the next stop.
50
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
Monday April 8th, 2019 This place made news as
Wolfe Family, Richland, Nebraska
I first connected with this
Again, not a strong yes but said
called to talk to him about a
to supply him with. We had to
the 800+ acre farm that was
rancher Sunday morning. I
from the overflowing Platte River.
hay delivery it sounded like he
completely covered under water
You’ll see tiny islands of cattle, the house, some buildings and trees.
I asked if he knew it was under
water before seeing it on the news. He said “I got a text message from my sister saying there’s a video of Fremont completely under water. She said, I think it’s the farm.” And it was.
The stories this rancher has are
unbelievable... disturbing... scary... heartbreaking.
could use. I asked what else he
thought he needed, asked about
fencing supplies and vet supplies. Like everyone else, there was no astounding “yes, we need
supplies.” We sent out trucks of hay on Sunday and I told him
we could probably deliver some
fencing supplies on Monday and he was ok with that.
I called him Monday and
asked if he was still interested.
he would use what we were able drop the hay at a location off the farm on Sunday since the roads were so bad, but when I talked
to him Monday he said we could probably make it to the farm,
that there had been trucks in and out. If the roads were “better”
when we drove on them, I could only imagine what they were
like before. I came to find out
later those trucks on the road he
mentioned were hauling the dead livestock away from his farm.
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
51
You know it’s serious when
one of the first things you see
when you pull in the driveway
is a rescue airboat parked on the
farm. What we didn’t realize when we got there was the extreme
devastation this farmer and his family actually had going on.
I walked down a mile or so of
dirt road, completely shocked at how things had been destroyed. Dirt cut and carved out, trees
uprooted, feed bunks thrown
around, a stream of water still
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Bobcat®, the Bobcat logo and the colors of the Bobcat machine are registered trademarks of Bobcat Company in the United States and various other countries.
52
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
rolling through. “There’s about 40 bunks buried out there” he said later that night... I think I saw about 10.
But these things were absolutely
nothing compared to what we saw later.
When we finished unloading
supplies we took a quick ride
around his farm. We asked him if he wanted to come. We realized later why he told us to go on without him.
“How many cattle do you think
are out there?” I asked after we
returned.
“Probably about a thousand...”
he said
Completely shocked, I asked “of
dead cattle?!”
“Yeah...” he answered as he
started going into detail about the numbers he had and the numbers he figured he lost.
Dead cattle scattered around like
a handful of confetti that had been thrown up into the air and fallen
back onto the floor... strewn across over 200 acres. Stuck along fence
lines, buried in brush, shoved up against corner posts, mangled in
the trees. We saw a small handful of this mess.
It was absolutely,
heartbreakingly, unreal....
He talked with Mike about the
ridge out in the pasture. As the
water rose, the cattle went to the ridge. As the water continued to rise, and the current continued to strengthen, the ridge was
compromised. Little by little, the
Locally Owned and Operated Since 1966 I-90 & Deadwood Ave., Exit 55 • P.O. Box 3102, Rapid City, SD 57709
605/343-6682 • 800/658-4567
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ridge was taken out. And cattle dropped into the water. Swept
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
53
So. Much. Sand.
The future for this generation
farm and farmer has so many questions now.
“I can see the river from my
house, I never used to be able to...
it’s kind of an eerie feeling, seeing that. Scary.”
away to their death.
sand that was 3 to 6 feet deep,
mutter while we drove through
Hearing it was one thing. Seeing
and he said yes. When asked
another thing.
“Two weeks,” he replied. “We just
The only thing I could come to
the disaster zone was “oh my God... oh my God...oh.. my...
God...” There were no words we could use to describe what we were seeing.
We had heard about it... dead
cattle hanging in trees, stuck along fences or mangled in brush, dead cattle half buried in sand, acres
of land completely taken over by sand... acres of land covered in
covering pastures and fences. it... seeing it was so much of
And this rancher had all of that...
hundreds of cattle gone, many
to never be found.... feet of sand
over almost all of his pastures and fields. So much sand we could
barely see the tops of fenceposts.
We could barely see the fence lines at all. So much sand it covered the wheels on the irrigation system.
I asked him if he evacuated
how long he was evacuated for,
moved back in the house a week ago Thursday. It was really hard on the kids.” Between the roads
and driveway getting washed out, it was a challenge for them to get home sooner.
When they evacuated everyone
took something to the road.
“I led with my bulldozer to
“We’ll just take it one day at a time. We don’t have any other choice.” 54
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
make sure there were no holes in
His goal right now is to get the
the ground.”
cows to pasture. They typically
followed and last was the truck, in
graze. He’s hoping by the second
An end loader and tractor
it, the rest of his family.
“The water was over the hood of
the truck. That’s when I got scared. We should have left sooner. There were kids in there, you know.”
On this ranch, his fences were
completely destroyed and wiped out. Miles and miles of fence that need replacing. He said
he wouldn’t be surprised if it
wouldn’t happen until June, as wet as it was.
He was hoping to get some seed
take them to central Nebraska to week in May they can go, if not
sooner. The feed he has now has
been soaked in feet of water. He’s hoping tests may show it still has
some value. He’s being challenged by sick calves, often unable to
keep them alive, spending time
and money to treat and care for
Not to mention a farmer.
And like everyone else we met,
like we didn’t do nearly enough,
have to sell some cows. Their
fields will never be planted this year. I’d be surprised if they’re
planted next year. He’ll be buying feed or selling cows. I think his
decision is already made if he gets to that point.
Improve Herd Health Extend your Feed Supply
are hard on a newborn baby calf.
grazing is done. He mentioned
the fall coming, saying they might
Reduce Feeding Costs
Stress, change, and no mommas
he was humbled and thankful we
how he was already worried about
Mix in your By-Products
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cattle, he’ll need feed after summer
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did what we could. Us, we felt
knowing there will be struggles and challenges, there will be
unanswered questions, and that
the future he is looking into is so unknown.
“One day at a time,” he said
quite often. “We’ll just take it one day at a time. We don’t have any
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other choice.”
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
55
Sept. 9, 2019
We STILL have funds that we are looking to use
up, spending it like we did in the spring on supplies from our local stores, and delivering it to specific
individuals. Right now, we have over $10,000, which is so impressive, considering all of that was donated after we came back. It’s been a challenge returning since my husband farms full time, and I work full
time and the summer has been busy as well as into fall now.
We are looking forward to going back, hopefully
with a lot of our same crew. It was really neat
hearing their expressions of how they felt good
giving like they did. I think it was an eye-opening experience for most if not all, considering the
majority hadn’t done anything like that before.
Everyone from our group got the chance to interact
with one or more of the individuals we helped who
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Cattle Journal FALL 2019
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TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
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went through the flooding, hearing their stories, and seeing the devastation. It really adds to the reality of the situation and why we wanted to
help. It was an extremely busy two weeks, but made the reward was well worth it.
P.O. Box 290 • St. Onge, SD 57779
PHONES: 1-800-249-1995 • 605-642-2200 • FAX 605-642-7628
Our Internet Address: www.stongelivestock.com E-mail: stonge@rushmore.com
We appreciate your business. Call anyone of us any time if you have stock to sell. We are glad to come to your ranch.
Justin Tupper ~ Cattle Yards Manager 605-680-0259 • 605-722-6323 • Dave Brence ~ Yard Foreman 605-641-1173 • Brooke Tupper ~ Office Mgr. 605-642-2200
Auctioneers:
Doug Dietterle 605-788-2963 Randy Searer 406-480-1974
Tim Tetrault 605-642-9792 • 605-641-0328 Ron Frame 307-896-6397 • 605-641-0229
Fieldmen:
Taylor (Bugs) Snook 307-290-2273 Jess Cline 307-751-8143 Ray Pepin 605-892-5072
Tyler Escott 406-853-5690 Scott Crowser 605-645-2654 CaseyHumble 605-490-9829
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Saturday, November 30th – Annual Thanksgiving Bred Heifer & Stock Cow Special THANK YOU ALL FOR YOUR BUSINESS!
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
57
BY MARIA TIBBETTS PHOTOS BY KRISTI WOLFE 58
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
AFTER READING ABOUT ALL THE WOLFE FAMILY HAD DEALT WITH THIS SPRING (SEE PAGE 51), WE WANTED TO FIND OUT HOW THEY WERE FARING AFTER A SUMMER OF UPS AND DOWNS. HERE’S THE REST OF THEIR STORY. TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
59
KINDNESS THROUGH DEVASTATION Dirty laundry on the floor. Folding
chairs leaned up against a tree.
was just fine.”
On the banks of the
These threads of normalcy were
Platte River the family
family of Richland, Nebraska when
spot that they shared with
welcome lifelines for the Wolfe
they returned to their farm and
ranch after evacuating during the flood that started March 14, 2019.
had set up a camping
friends. They would grill while the kids played in
the river. “There were two
bunkhouse and other outbuildings.
tree. They’re still there. We have no
feedyard were shoved around and
folding chairs leaned up against a
Concrete feedbunks from the
idea why,” Wolfe said.
half-buried.
the dirty laundry was still sitting
father had said it would never
1,000 head of cattle ended up.
behind when we did leave that
nothing this all-consuming.”
entirely, plenty still had to be
Outside there was nothing normal.
of silt on productive cornfields,
their fields that they’d never seen
in the house and see everything
was mud in the calving barn,
how far up the Platte River.
“There was water all the way
around our house, but none in the
house,” said Kristi Wolfe. “The first time we got to come in the house
where I’d left it. The things we left Thursday were completely normal. It was a very surreal feeling to walk
Wolfe’s husband, Drew and his
flood. “We’d had minor floods, but The flood dropped several feet
burying parts of pivots. There
They don’t even know where
While a lot of them washed away disposed of. And they had cattle in before, washed in from who knows
CONTACT YOUR AREA DEALER
60
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
“As overwhelming as the
devastation was, equally
overwhelming was the love,
kindness and help people shared with us,” Kristi said. “I honestly
can’t say how things might have gone if it hadn’t been that way.
Every time we needed something, someone showed up with what
we needed. Hay, meals, fencing supplies. Things came from
everywhere. People came from Arkansas, two cowboys from
Louisiana came up for 11 days.
People from all over helped out,
plus people from Nebraska and our neighbors.”
Every day was a new challenge,
Kristi said. Things they’d taken for
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TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
61
KINDNESS THROUGH DEVASTATION granted, like being able to safely drive down the road or across a
field, were suddenly dangerous.
One of Kristi’s nephews, in his
early 20s, was helping gather cows and saw a calf struggling in a mud puddle. He jumped in to save the calf and went all the way under. The next day a friend brought
her horse out to help and they went into one of those hidden
puddles. She said she knew it was time to bail off when the horse’s head went under water.
“Thankfully both of those turned
out okay. There were so many
things we didn’t know,” Kristi
said. “Some of that sand was like quicksand.”
Their daily routine has changed
now, and is likely to never be the same again. “I keep saying it’s a new normal, but none of it feels
normal,” Kristi said. “Things still take longer than they used to.
We’re slowly getting the feedlot
put back together, hoping to take some feedlot cattle this fall. Our
remaining pairs went out to grass in mid-June, later than usual.
Normally we’re chopping silage by now. We’ve had more rain over the
last couple days, so that puts things even further back. It’s a different process of the daily things that happen.”
Standing in their yard looking
at a landscape so foreign it might as well have been the moon,
they knew they needed help, but that didn’t make it any easier to 62
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
accept. “The first call we had about
needs this more than we do?’ You
would have a very hard time,”
we can’t do this by ourselves. At
donated hay I knew my husband Kristi said. “It was very hard for
me. That first ‘yes’ was the absolute hardest. You cry afterwards,
thinking ‘what if somebody else
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
know you’re going to struggle, but some point you come to realize you can’t do it on your own. People were incredible.”
A group from Michigan brought
“AS OVERWHELMING AS THE DEVASTATION WAS, EQUALLY OVERWHELMING WAS THE LOVE, KINDNESS AND HELP PEOPLE SHARED WITH US.” -KRISTI WOLFE Easter baskets in April for their
“It’s hard to be on the receiving
kids, and others. “There were so
end of everything we’ve been
said. A group from York, Nebraska
supplies, meals. You can never say
many thoughtful things,” Kristi
knew it was going to be Kristi and Drew’s daughter Alyse’s eighth
birthday and they got some gifts
together. “There were a lot of really
given,” Kristi said. “Prayers,
thank you in an adequate way. It would have been an even bigger
struggle if all those people hadn’t
stepped in out of the goodness of
their hearts. It was overwhelming,
just the feeling of love and care that people were providing us with.
You hear all the bad things, but we know there’s amazing goodness, because we’ve seen it.”
amazing personal things like that.” Wolfes have spent nearly six
months getting things put back
together enough to function and hopefully collect a paycheck of
some sort. Their banker has been supportive through the whole ordeal. “The bank has been
amazing,” Kristi said. “They’ve
continually asked what they can do, how they can help.”
The bank had funds set aside they
put toward the recovery, which
allowed the Wolfes to rent an extra
skidloader when they needed to get a lot of things moved.
But Kristi knows there are some
difficult conversations down the
road. “We haven’t had to make any definite decisions about permanent
things that will need to be changed.
The bank has been very good about knowing this is going to take some time to figure out.”
The Wolfes have also gotten
some help from Nebraska Farm
Bureau and Nebraska Cattlemen, both organizations that helped coordinate donations.
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Meet your new herd-feeding workhorse. The BPX9010 is ready to bring simplicity, durability and versatility to your farm or ranch. Ready to distribute uniform windrows along bunk lines or out in the Vermeer and the Vermeer logo are trademarks of Vermeer Manufacturing Company in the U.S. and/or other countries. © 2018 Vermeer Corporation. All Rights Reserved. pasture. Ready to spread bedding with consistency and accuracy at ranges up to 50 ft (15.2 m). Ready Meet your new herd-feeding workhorse. The BPX9010 is ready to bring simplicity, durability and to simplify the process of processing bales. It’s ready. Are you? versatility to your farm or ranch. Ready to distribute uniform windrows along bunk lines or out in the pasture. Ready to spread bedding with consistency and accuracy at ranges up to 50 ft (15.2 m). Ready to simplify the process of processing bales. It’s ready. Are you?
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May 28
Farming is the most humbling of
professions. The notion that we are in charge here is quickly smashed
is exactly what we pray for in late
got it.” And when he says, “God’s
I ache for my husband, and for
all the farmers across the USA
and Canada. They stand at their
windows, arms crossed over their
chests, watching as rain puddles in swamped fields.
Over and over again this
weekend, the farmers at church were saying, “I’ve never seen anything like it.”
Today, out of spiritual necessity, I
drove these country roads, praying for farmers everywhere. Then,
when I got home, I re-read words
I wrote in my book, "It’s All Under Control."
“Farming is putting yourself in
a position to trust God. It’s a way
of life in which you can’t miss the
truth: God is God of the clock, God
author of the book It’s All Under Control.
JenniferDukesLee.com 66
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
Scott says he has no choice but
to trust God. For years, he’s gone
July.
an Iowa farm wife and
overlay…
by relentless and unwanted rain. The thing we despise in May …
Jennifer Dukes Lee is
things lie beneath the idyllic
around this farm saying, “God’s
got it,” he is talking himself into the truth. That’s a form of active trust
— which is like giving yourself the gift of future faith, in advance.”
So here we are. We are farmers:
at the mercy of God, relying on the grace of God, certain of the care of God.
June 3
My husband always tells me that
he didn’t learn the art of surrender
in a church. He learned it in a field. Farming is constantly putting
yourself in a position to trust
God. This profession requires the
knowledge that God is in control, whether you are standing under blue skies or rainclouds.
Today, my husband finally
of the calendar, God of the weather,
stepped into the tractor to plant.
knows when the rain will come,
for him. And I prayed for every
God of the to-do list. God alone
when the heat will rise, when it’s
time for the seed to push up from the dark into the light.
A lot of people have romantic
notions about farm life. But hard
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
Standing here in this field, I prayed other farmer, and for other every
spouse who stands in the shadows, asking God for His great mercy. This year, farmers have faced
historic delays in planting due
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
67
“The Lord will send a blessing on your barns and on everything you put your hand to. The Lord your God will bless you in the land he is giving you” (Deuteronomy 28:8)
to unrelenting rains. That’s on
our fingernails and in our hearts.
door and held in his hands the
circumstances: low prices, rising
For the skies above to be blue. For
bag filled with cookies, along with
wonder farmers feel battered.
the equipment to work, and for
top of an already shaky set of costs, trade disputes. It’s no
It’s no wonder that the phones at the farm-crisis hotline won’t stop ringing.
Some people wonder why
farmers keep going, in a profession with so much risk and uncertainty. Farmers keep going because
farming is more than a job, it’s a way of life.
So today, I pray for the farmers.
the ground below to be dry. For
wheel to know that God truly is
through."
every farmer with a hand upon a in control, and that He has called
feel the call and duty to take care
of all that God has asked them to steward.
Farmers keep going because, to
them, dirt is more than dirt. It’s potential. It’s life.
Out here on the farm, we live
where we work, and we work where we live, and you can
scarcely tell the difference, ...
because we carry all of this life and love and hardship, like dirt under 68
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
The guy was from the city ... from
the Sioux Falls Area Chamber of
where we also grow in faith.
city for the day to drive around the
we grow more than crops, but This is God’s promise:
"The LORD will send a blessing on
God will bless you in the land he is
Farmers keep going because they
we understand what you're going
them to the field — a place where
working the same fields that their grandfathers worked.
"Cookies won't make it better," he
said. "But we wanted you to know
your barns and on everything you
fathers, grandfathers, and great-
a note.
the markets to flourish. And for
Farmers keep going because,
like my husband, they are
most unexpected surprise: a paper
put your hand to. The LORD your giving you" (Deuteronomy 28:8).
June 4
Today, my husband stood on the
edge of a soggy cornfield when a stranger pulled onto the farm yard. The stranger wasn't from
Commerce. And he had left the
countryside with cookies and notes. He had zero motive. He came only to deliver hope to farmers like my
husband, who are really struggling right now.
The note read: "We know the
ag sector -- this region's number
one industry -- is struggling. We recognize your hard work and
perseverance through one of the
most difficult times the ag industry has ever seen."
In an instant, this stranger
around here. He was dressed like
became our friend. Simply because
up in a shiny car -- clean, not like
someone who was hurting. Simply
someone from the city, showing
the way a truck looks from driving the muddy, rutted country roads around here.
The stranger stepped out the car
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
he cared. Simply because he saw because he understood the basic human need for community.
You might not be a farmer, but
I'll bet you know the gift of being
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
69
seen, of being heard, of feeling like someone who doesn't even know you truly cares. Or maybe you
know what it's like to leave your
comfort zone, like that man left the city, to make sure someone who is struggling feels a little bit less alone. What a priceless gift!
We all need to know that we
belong to each other -- whether we are city folk, farm folk, whatever
folk. No matter where people live,
work ... no matter what we believe ... we all belong to each other. And in a hurting world, that can make all the difference.
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TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
June 25
Today, I stood at the edge of this
field, knelt down and snapped this photo. I wanted to capture what a
weren't ideal. Some crops were
"miracle" should be reserved for big
had to skip over whole patches of
experience. But Einstein once said,
planted straight into the mud. We ground that won't get planted at all this year.
Everything is late, and growth
miracle looks like.
has been spotty.
a soggy mess. Like most farmers,
field with ideal growth.
unrelenting rains. The sun came,
The crops are growing, thickening
we wanted, but it came just the
green and touching. There is
Four weeks ago, this field was
we were kept out of the fields by
not always as hot and plentiful as same.
And then, little by little, we
were able to plant. Conditions
So this is not a picture of an ideal But look at it there... the miracle.
over the rows so everything is
something quite beautiful and hopeful about that.
Some people say that the word
things, like surviving a near-death “There are only two ways to live
your life. One is as though nothing is a miracle. The other is as though everything is a miracle.”
So I choose to call this a miracle. You might not be a farmer, but
I am guessing you plant seeds
in your own way — seeds that you hope will produce good
fruit, stronger faith and everyday miracles.
May our fields be an
encouragement to you to keep
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
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71
All of us have been in the middle of a hard but important lesson: farming is an act of faith.
planting — even if you're dropping
My husband, Scott, is a crop
seeds into the mud.
farmer. And like farmers across the
front of you, and the seeds cupped
some of his crops due to too much
heartland, he was unable to plant
It will come in time. The field in
rain. Months later, in the middle of
in your hands, were intended for you, by God's design.
And when you do see growth,
take a moment to pause at the edge of your field. Snap a picture. Say a prayer. Hold the moment close so
you won't forget the gentle bursting
Sept 4
forth of an everyday miracle.
out over the gentle slope of our
the seeds.
All of us have been in the middle
of a hard but important lesson: farming is an act of faith.
It takes great courage, but we
wake up each day with hope.
We accept that disappointments
happen, but we don’t lose hope. A single bit of hope is a very
powerful thing. In time — if the
you and see a wound in the fields
hands were intended for those
you’ve been called to plant.
Perhaps, for you, the inaccessible
text you anymore. Perhaps it’s
season, all was not well.
That’s what the people of God do
bet you know what it feels like to
where crops should have been
giant wound, a reminder that, for a
This is what we do: We stand at
— we hope.
field looks like the heart of a
planted but weren’t. It looks like a
What then?
to grow, because we couldn’t plant
spot, where nothing was allowed
land. As I scan this field, I see a
bald spot in the middle of the field,
field.
the window, and we dwell in hope.
look out on what God has given
front window of our house, looking
marriage, but you can’t reach the
a field, there remains this ugly, bare
You may not be a farmer, but I’ll
Every morning, I stand at the
flailing ministry or a fractured
seeds that God has placed in your fields rolled out before you — they will open.
Until then, cast your seeds where
wayward child who won’t even
you can. Wait for the time to enter
an unfulfilled dream on which
hope given to you, in the name of
someone closed a door. Perhaps you’ve tried to plant seeds in a
the fallow fields. But never lose the the One who gave you the seeds in the first place.
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Cattle Journal FALL 2019
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TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
Through their Lens
Robyn and Larry Koelling Ord, Nebraska August 12, 2019 From an interview with editor Maria Tibbetts.
e’ve never seen so
much rain in our whole
life.
It didn’t stop with the bomb
cyclone—it just continues.
We keep thinking if it would
straighten out, you could make plans and adjust, get things to
somewhere normal. We’re on plan E and F.
Everything’s a question.
We continue to get a lot of rain—a dam in our back yard runs over like a waterfall. Sometimes the bridges are up to the very top.
Roads and bridges continue to
wash out. So we make adjustments
on routes to town or to the pasture. I won’t send you the pictures of
piles of dead calves. A lot of cows
ended up abandoning their calves. Our neighbor had 120 bucket
calves. They knew the storm was coming so during the storm took
the calves off the cows to put them in shelter. The cows wouldn’t
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
75
take them back. It’s so unusual.
Everything is not as it should be. There’s no capacity in any of the
dams. Either they totally filled up
or washed out. Some of them don’t even have water sometimes, and
now they’re 20 feet deep. The soil has no more holding capacity; it’s totally saturated. Any rain we get
runs off. There’s no place for it to go. It’s taking a lot longer to do things
than it used to because of the mud. Everybody’s in the same boat. It’s just difficult with all the rain.
We got maybe 60 percent of our fields planted with the planned
crops. We were planning on getting more corn in. Then you shift over
to beans. When you didn’t get the
76
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
beans in you plant the sunflowers or forage sorghum. Some ground
will not be planted at all this year.
On a positive note we don’t have to irrigate the crops we did get in. It can be disheartening when a
person thinks they have a plan for planting crops and things keep changing. What one needs to
realize is that the previous year’s
crops were cared for with different
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STUCK IN THE MUD ONGOING EFFECTS MAKE RECOVERY DIFFICULT BY JAN SWAN WOOD
Gene Dubas, Fullerton,
Nebraska, was born into a dairy farming family, and after the
dairy was sold when he was in sixth grade, he continued to be
involved in the livestock industry. “I knew I liked livestock at an early age. I ran some cows,
worked for neighbors, the local
PHOTOS COURTESY OF GENE DUBAS
Moly Manufacturing in Lorraine, Kansas. “When I took it around
renting it to people to work their
better with that chute,” says
the U.S., Canada and Mexico, plus
their cattle worked faster and Dubas, adding, “So, I started selling them in 1994.”
“Jon Mollhagen changed the
do. When I got out of school
Silencer. He was the first one to
people.”
It was while working for other
people in 1993 that he noticed a
chute that was different. “It was quiet and allowed the cattle in
and out of the chute easily. So, though I didn’t have enough cattle of my own to justify
owning one, I bought one with
the intention of renting it out and
helping people work their cattle.” says Dubas.
That was the Silencer, made by
“I attend trade shows,
conventions and fairs all over,”
industry’s view on how to handle
I continued to work for other
own cattle.
cattle they started noticing that
vet and salebarns,” says Dubas, “We always had something to
tried on his own place with his
animals when he developed the
come out with the noise reduction system on hydraulic chutes,”
explains Dubas. Selling the chutes in a saturated hydraulic chute
market was daunting, but Dubas
says Dubas. With sales all across other countries, it’s proof of one
man’s belief in a product that he’s selling. By using the equipment and being a cattleman himself,
he understands the value of the equipment much better than
most dealers. “I take great pride in the fact that I bought one for
my operation before I ever sold them.”
The Nebraska cattleman’s life,
persevered and started educating
as did many others, changed with
in the Silencer chutes. Dubas
whole mess actually started in the
people about the difference
Equipment and Dubas Cattle are one and the same entity as Gene Dubas started the cattle end of
the enterprise while still in high school. Now in his mid 50s, he doesn’t sell anything he hasn’t
the March storms of 2019. “This
fall of 2018 though. It was a wet
fall, lots of rain, then heavy rain in December. Cornstalks rotted in the fields, there was mud
everywhere, then it turned cold,”
says Dubas. “The condition of the
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
81
STUCK IN THE MUD cows was bad in spite of lots of
inevitable floods were in full
safely carrying her to firmer
in January it was tough. The
of ice the size of vehicles were
to Facebook to show the world
feed, so when we started calving calves didn’t have any get up and go. Looking back now, the cows
had used up all of their nutrients just to survive themselves.” It
force. Raging water and chunks inundating southeastern South
Dakota, northeastern Nebraska and northwestern Iowa.
In spite of being on higher
didn’t get any better as spring
ground, Dubas Cattle had water
sick, then it got colder and stayed
stuck in the mud and couldn’t
approached. “Calves were getting cold. Some froze their feet after they were several days old, in
spite of shelter. It was the worst you could get,” Dubas said.
But it did get worse. Much
worse. On March 17, a Sunday
morning, there had been snow,
melting, rain, all on top of ground that was still frozen in spots. The
everywhere. “We had cows get
get out. There was nowhere to go with them, there was just water
ground. The video was shared
what was happening along with the flooding in Nebraska. As
of the end of August, 2019, the
video had been viewed around 2.9 million times and shared
thousands more. It drew attention to the situation in Nebraska like few things could.
That same Sunday, Dubas
and mud everywhere.”
talked to some other people and
of a bogged cow, Dubas had
and a lot of it. People started
During one rescue operation
someone video it. He carefully
pulled into the lot with a tractor and gently plucked the cow
out of the mud with the loader,
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on top of the task of just keeping the stock alive one more day.
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Cattle Journal FALL 2019
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
“People started donating stuff like calving sheds
and other items. I called my friend Dan Broz
at DVAuctions and he agreed to resell them on the auction to raise more money,” says Dubas. “Checks started rolling in from everywhere!”
With all that money coming in, Dubas knew
he had to do something with it to make sure it
was safe and could be used properly. He tried to
open a bank account for it but couldn’t without a 501(c)(3) status. So, he tried the local cattlemen’s organization with the same results. Time was of
the essence so attaining the correct tax status was too time consuming.
“I wanted it to go to individuals that it could
help, honoring the donators wishes,” says Dubas, frustrated. “We came close to raising $40,000
and needed to get it in the hands of those who
needed it immediately. So, the decision was made to divide it between the first responders within
Gene Dubas and Nebraska governor Pete Ricketts.
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Cattle Journal FALL 2019
83
STUCK IN THE MUD
yard. We set
on, so much money comes in,
for it and
But now, when those calves
up an account people who
had to rebuild fences could
get materials there.” With
miles of fence
destroyed and
corrals washed away, that Nance County, helping to defray
route was very
the expenses that fire departments
beneficial.
flood rescues in the local
of Agriculture, in mid-April,
and EMTs were accruing with
The Nebraska Department
communities.
estimated that the livestock sector
an individual, so I finally figured
the crop sector $440 million. No
in particular. I had donors write
it’s an ongoing loss.
“Some people wanted it to go to
in Nebraska had lost $400 million,
out a way to get it to someone
recent estimate has been made, as
the checks to the local lumber
Dubas says, “When it’s going
84
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
everyone’s thinking about it.
you lost aren’t going to be sold, cows aren’t bred and you have
to explain it all to your banker,
now’s when it’s really hitting us. Now is the time we need to be
there for each other and people outside of here have kind of forgotten.
“We’ve started preg-checking
cows and there are way more
opens. They’re still stressed and
don’t look good. We have lots of
grass but it doesn’t have anything to it. The calves that did survive aren’t thriving and are fighting
respiratory problems. We have no
crops to harvest and the hay either is still under water or just too
wet to cut and bale,” says Dubas,
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Cattle Journal FALL 2019
85
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adding “Our own vet expenses are running about 10
times higher than normal and though we already had
60 T 1-8
to buy hay, we’ll have to buy more. We haven’t even
been able to clean our corrals and lots ‘cause they are still too wet.”
Dubas had his booth at the Nebraska State Fair in
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86
Grand Island starting the end of August. Heavy rains caused flooding there during the fair run and crowds were dramatically diminished, with parking lots under feet of water.
“I look out from my booth and I see people in
ag that are just beaten down. The ag community
doesn’t have the money to help each other out of
this situation and it affects everybody in the whole community. I’ve done 12 shows since July and it’s been that way at every one.”
Governor Pete Ricketts visited Dubas in his booth
WHITE RIVER LOCATION - 1107 Park Place, White River, SD 605-259-SCLS
at the state fair and they talked about his concerns for
GREGORY LOCATION - 33830 US Hwy 18, Gregory, SD Katie Kahler, Gregory Store Manager 605-680-9384 or 605-835-BEEF
governor’s office and that listening ear had connected
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
the ag sector. Dubas had found a listening ear in the Ricketts with Dubas. “I explained what was going
STUCK IN THE MUD on in a big area and I told him that I’m worried
about the economy and mental health of the people in farming and ranching. He really listened to my concerns and I was impressed with that.
“People need to be aware of the problems we’re
being faced with here. Not many people, myself
included, can handle another bad winter and that’s what’s being forecast,” says Dubas. “This whole
thing won’t be over for years to come, even if the weather is better. The decisions made this fall by
banks and lenders will not be positive for many. Ag
is already in crisis, but the storms and flooding have just made it disastrous.”
Dubas Cattle and Dubas Equipment, one and
the same, are doing their best to help themselves and others, but all outside help, financially and
emotionally, is certainly welcome. Those not in the This is an image from the video that Dubas shared of using his tractor to lift one of his cows out of the mud. The video was viewed nearly 3 million times.
areas traumatized by the flooding can think “There, but for the grace of God, go I—this time.”
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TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
87
s l a e M t o H
To Go he bomb cyclone that
swept through Nebraska
in March displaced many
families, tore up infrastructure,
and managed to bring many
communities together. Out of
all the destruction, one business found the ability to bloom; Hot Meals USA.
Hot Meals USA is a 501(c)(3)
charity that provided 8,300 meals for affected families, emergency management personnel, and
law enforcement and emergency
medical professionals during the wake of the storms in Nebraska. The organization is based out of
Kearney, Neb. but has the ability to provide meals to victims all over the country.
The inspiration started long
Nebraska charity provides hot meals for disaster victims By Brenna Ramsden
Hot Meals USA founder, Dick
Chochran was living just 11 miles from the devastation of the EF5
tornado when it tore through 22 miles of Joplin and surrounding
communities. Chochran was able to gather some food and buddies
“We spent three days feeding those firemen and policemen,” said Chochran, “They were the real heroes there, not us.”
before the bomb cyclone hit
who loaded up eight barbecue
an organization like this started
and nearly 500 hotdogs. When
Nebraska. The idea and need for in 2011 in Joplin, Missouri.
grills, 500 pounds of hamburger they arrived in Joplin seven hours
after the
tornado hit, an
emergency center worker
said food wasn’t needed at that time of day.
Chochran responded, “What
about the police and firemen who have been working through this all night?”
Having forgotten about feeding
those people, the woman had
Chochran and his crew escorted to the command center, and
within 40 minutes burgers were on the grill.
“We spent three days feeding
those firemen and policemen,”
said Chochran, “They were the real heroes there, not us.”
It was this event that led
Chochran to build an organization equipped to help victims,
management personnel, and
emergency staff in the wake of
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
89
meals a day from their portable
trailer, and have two more units in the works.
“We just want to help people
when they are down. We are
trying to do what we already do every day,” said Chochran.
Dickey’s BBQ Franchise owner
and 30-year veteran of Schwan’s, Cochran has connections in the destruction. Before getting too
involved, Cochran met with the Red Cross to discuss the idea,
he wasn’t sure if this was even needed in the community. Red 90
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
Cross was enthusiastic, and other major players Chochran brought in said “this is exactly what we
need right now.” Now, Hot Meals USA has the ability to feed 2,500
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
food industry. Hot Meals USA was the product of a desire to
help people in need and seeing a
need for it during large disasters. “People my age, 9 times out of
10 you can show up to volunteer
Hot Meals To Go
and they will tell you to go home,” said Chochran.
By today’s standards, you get
an A+ if you are on the ground in 72 hours after a natural
disaster. Chochran thought “we can do better than that.” With
Chochran’s trailers, he estimates his crew can be on the ground
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and cooking meals within 24
hours. This is made possible by the strategic placement of his trailers.
Right now, Chochran is running
one small unit, a 24 foot trailer
that can cook about 2,500 meals
a day if needed. A second trailer,
a medium unit is a 48-foot trailer
Marilyn Roen Promotional Specialist
that can cook 4-5,000 meals a day when needed. Chochran hopes to one day have large units as
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TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
91
“We’re just a bunch of cooks and certified chefs who want to go out and cook food for people who have lost everything.” -Dick Chochran
well, a 53 foot double decker
and Joplin, Missouri for quick
of natural disasters.
serve 25,000 meals a day. There
be disbursed in areas near the
deployed to help communities
access to major cities in the wake
community events, state fairs and
that would have the capacity to are plans to have a medium unit placed between Kansas City
response times. Large units will interstates, giving them quick
When the units are not
in need, they can be used for
other special events. One recent event was in Donovan, Neb.
where Red Cross, United Way,
FEMA and other organizations were hosting a gathering for
victims of flooding. People could come to fill out the necessary
paperwork or check-in on their statuses in getting relief from damage. Hot Meals USA was Where there's work to be done. there's Kubota equipment ready to get it done right. With reliable diesel engines and an array of attachments. it's time to conquer every task. Visit us today.
there to feed the victims who were attending.
After the bomb cyclone in
Nebraska, Hot Meals USA was called on to feed victims in
Dannebrog, Neb. Chochran had
one cooking unit at the time and they hadn’t put it to use yet, but
in one evening they were able to feel 350 people.
“These are good meals too,”
said Chochran, “We fed turkey,
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WWW.LINDSKOVIMP.COM 92
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
ham, mashed potatoes, and green beans.”
A few weeks later in Hamburg,
Iowa, Hot Meals USA served 500 meals. In July they were able to
provide food for the Red Cross to deliver in Kearney, Neb. totaling
Hot Meals To Go
more than 1,100 meals. In the
six months following the March bomb cyclone Hot Meals USA
served 8,300 meals in 26 different locations.
“We’re just a bunch of cooks
and certified chefs who want to
go out and cook food for people who have lost everything,” said
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Chochran.
Hot Meals USA is still running
on one trailer, with another nearly finished. Thanks to Cookies BBQ, a 48-foot trailer was donated
and will be rolled out shortly.
Chochran has big hopes for Hot
Meals USA. Eventually he would like to have seven units in total,
two medium and two large units,
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out in the world working. At that point, Hot Meals USA would be able to provide 130,000 meals a day.
If you would like to volunteer
with Hot Meals USA you can email HotMealsUSA@gmail.
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See the Authorized Wilson Sales Representative below for more details TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
93
94
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
95
CHOPPED HAY It’s a friendly act to drop in and check on your
neighbor.
It’s even kinder to drop in – literally, out of the sky
– and bring hay to their stranded cattle following a massive natural disaster.
As the flood waters started rising on March 14,
2019, the infrastructure of Nebraska – not just
the dams, roads and bridges, but the heart of its
sustaining industry, agriculture – began to wash away. Trapped in the aftermath were pockets of cattle that overnight became inaccessible.
On the evening of the 14th the governor had
activated the Nebraska National Guard, which
performed more than 100 human rescues by air
and five via ground transportation that night. As
the waters remained unrelenting over the next few days, the Nebraska Department of Agriculture
requested the governor to mobilize the Guard for
Nebraska Army National Guard Soldiers used a CH-47 Chinook helicopter with Company B, 2-135th General Support Aviation Battalion, to secure multiple bales of hay, March 20, 2019, and airdrop them to cattle isolated by historic flooding across the state. The Nebraska National Guard has been supporting the ongoing response in Eastern Nebraska following massive flooding on the state’s river systems, which began March 13, 2019 and has caused catastrophic damage to the state’s infrastructure, agriculture and personal property.
96
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
feeding isolated livestock as well. Requests were put out to other states for additional assistance
and the Minnesota National Guard answered the call, sending two aircraft and crews to assist the
Cornhusker state in what became officially called Operation Prairie Hay Drop.
Video footage from the Nebraska National Guard
of the hay drop could be mistaken for the opening sounds of M.A.S.H., with the steady drum of a
chopper in the background and aerial dispatch
jargon filtering through the radio. But interspersed among the dialog is the sound of “Whoop! There
goes one!” and a hay bale falls from the cargo hold of a CH-47 Chinook.
This wasn’t the first time the National Guard has
delivered hay following a natural disaster, but this was the first time this unit had. Starting March 20
and for the next several weeks they delivered a total of 94 round hay bales – 12 by ground and 82 by air, and 80 square hay bales – all by ground.
“We had never tried or practiced this before,” says
Major William McGreer, a full-time guardsman who piloted one of the choppers and who also grew up Cattle Journal FALL 2019
97
“There was just really a lot of fulfillment in being able to help out our own.”
-Major William McGreer
Red Angus, ChARolAis BReeding stoCk & RAnCh hoRses for sale by private treaty throughout the year
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Cattle Journal FALL 2019
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
CHOPPED HAY on a farm and ranch near Big
Springs, Neb. As hay bale pounds can vary widely, McGreer said they first had to get accurate
weights on their load to estimate capacity. “We ended up running out of space before we maxed
out on our weight capacity,” says McGreer. Each load ended up
carrying four bales. The chopper crew made every effort to land the plane and unload the bales
on the ground. In some cases that wasn’t possible, resulting in the widely viewed videos of “hay
bombs” delivered to appreciative cattle.
Most of the hay was donated
from out-of-state and hauled in
by volunteers. The team initially
worked out of a hay dispatch area at the state fairgrounds in Grand Island and then out of a second
collection area near the livestock sale barn in Columbus. Like
most of the accounts of volunteer responses activated following
the flood, the identification and location of cattle needing fed was mostly “crowdsourced,”
as Major Scott Ingalsbe, public
affairs specialist for the Nebraska National Guard says.
“The Department of Ag put
a cell phone number on their site and on Facebook for the
guy on the ground in Columbus dispatching hay, and we started getting addresses where people
had livestock in need,” Ingalsbe
Nebraska National Guard rescue missions by the numbers:
102 80
total support missions completed (both air and ground) in the entirety of the flood response, not just the hay drops
square hay bales transported, all by ground
1
Bobcat T770 was transported by aircraft (sling load)
1,000 1,100
94 round hay bales transported, 12 by ground and 82 by air
sandbags delivered by ground vertical-type sandbags delivered by air
90
5
people rescued by personnel on the ground
13
pallets of bottled water and 11 pallets of medical supplies animals delivered by ground rescued people rescued by air, 66 of which were by vertical hoist
107 449
total National Guard Soldiers and Airmen served on this state active duty mission, not all at once but over several weeks
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
99
CHOPPED HAY says. Most of the hay drops ended
many of us like myself grew up
as the owners were still unable
and the surrounding area.
just really a lot of fulfillment in
destroyed infrastructure.
up being near Columbus, Neb., McGreer said dropping hay
bales through the air from a
on a farm or a ranch. There was being able to help out our own.” The operation spanned
helicopter was interesting for
approximately two and a half
him was being able to help out
the last, although the missions
sure, but the biggest reward for the farmers and ranchers. “Most
of us are native Nebraskans, and
weeks from the first hay drop to weren’t constant. A couple
locations required repeat drops
“There were 30 cows over there, standing at the fence wanting some of that hay we were bringing” -Brent Wulf
100
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
to access their cattle due to
Brent Wulf, a private chopper
pilot and owner of Hexagon
Helicopters in Elkhorn, Neb.,
came to the aid of some cattle, and their owners also, as a
volunteer responder. “In the
days after the flood hit, someone
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5 Sections Issue 7 Volume 53 •
BHSS means ranch business
ON IT U CAN COUNT
ry 31, 2015 Saturday, Janua
YO
than in the future a little more on an AI bull a Smith be able to count Photo by Chesn Producers will fertility of donor bulls. the help determine
they have up
until now. New
Genex research by
will
es that wreak ous interferenc this cycle.
- See BHSS on Page
erative, Inc., Genex Coop burg said we Willie Alten think about want to
It seems simplof the varitell rancher can
THE BIG PICTURE
In memoriam
How much is too much?
Happy Veterans Day
A8 SDSU Econo consider buyingmist Matt Dierson project s corn prices corn early if to it pencils out. Photo by Amandincrease, and suggests that cattlemen a Radke
CORN AND CATTLE A bumper co rn opportunities crop creates for feeders
C
Marketing Plan...what ? marketing plan
good for right now, so it’s going to be a on Page A13 -cow-calf produ ber 30, and exciting fall run.” pretty One factor that good spot this cers are in a is playing into the decision of their calf crop,year as they sell cow-calf operator of how long the calves to hold his weane HLA Field Rep. says J.R. Scott, that’s is corn, and the overall abund d at his disposal ance of grain now that the “While every 2015 corn harves one would love is winding down. t to see prices According to as 2014, folks at the same levels Statistics Servicethe USDA National Agricu ltural (NASS), “Corn production about the fact are still optimistic cast at 13.6 billion bushel OUTSIDE that this will s, down 4 percenis forelast year’s record secon be the t from d-highest year produc CIRCLE on record for percent from the Augus tion and down less than 1 calves,” said t foreca oys Scott st. Based on condi. PRCA cowb
laid up
- See Corn on Page
E3
B11
B1
A13
A7, D9
A4
famA ranching d ily’s continue success
A brand that lasts
4 Sections
WE REMEMBER
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FARM MINUTE
RANCHING LEGACIES
IT’S THE PITT S
There are good reasons not all men have facia l hair
25TH ANNUAL
A4
Trade office releases docu A5 ment’s text to the public
ANGUS ASSOCIATION
G YEARLIN BULLS
46
ANGUS
AG
s.co gus@sdplain
foosan
.com
• foosangus
Organization names Texa s native its new leader
TEACHING OF THE HORSES
UW equine program seek s to expand opportunities
D1
HORSE
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SAMPLE OF OUR TSLN SPECIAL EDITIONS:
Sad news come s as Wyoming horse breeder passes away D2
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and
P
2018
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ED! FIRST SEMEN TEST UNTIL MAY 1ST! m
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By Carrie Stadh eim Editor
The only one of four brothe “see action” rs to in ard Palczewski,World War II, Richbackground gave91, said his ranch in the U.S. Navy. him an advantage “I got to run and I only had this landing craft an eighth grade education.” Palcze wski said whenhe menti oned his limited education to one of his superi ors, the respo nse was “I know, but you have common sense.” Palczewski One brothe Carl, also servedr, the second Worldin the Navy during left home soil, War but he never chanic station working as a meed in Palczewski spent Florida. his young helping his family on the years ranch west of Haley, North farmin the extrem Dakot e southwest corner a the state. of At the age of to herd sheep twelve, he was hired for of Ralph, South a big outfit south Dakota. “I was suppos ling ewes away ed to keep the yearfrom the lambin ewes. I didn’t g have a horse or a dog, just my feet.” lar per day plusThe job paid a dolMeals, Palcze “room and board.” wski said, consis ted
THE CATTLE JOURNAL FALL 2018
ary 12, 2015 •
BLACK HILLS Stock Show& Rodeo
Veteran Salute: Richard Palczewski
INSIDE THI
BEEF TALK Think smar t, not more work
C1 JANUARY 26 - FEBRUARY 4, 2018
A1
Volume 53 • Issue 44
l soon. Lakot a Triba The Oglal a June 11, 2013, Council voted ance 13-21, that to adopt Ordin 1,000 head of uce the would introd South Unit of buffalo to the al park, part of By Amanda Radke Badlands nation Indian Reserfor Tri-State Livest A quick snapsh ock News ot of current the Pine Ridge Unit is manScott says 400 pound steers prices at press time, the vation. The South cwt; 500 pound are bringing ership with $260-275/ lose to 3,500 steers are $220-2 aged in partnService (NPS). pound steers 40/cwt; and 600 are $205-220, moved throu calves National Park respectively. “We are just directed the gh the That ordinance Affairs to nosale ring at at the sale barn,getting started on our fall calf run Herreid and and Bureau of Indian held the grazLives tock December,” he our peak will be in Novem who said. “Things ber Auct ers (HLA ion the cow-calf guy tify ranch are pretty ) on Octo
S WEEK
INSIDE THI PASTOR IN E THE PASTUR
ock News
ber 7, 2015
g By Maria Tussin Assistant Editor the South Unit Ranchers in are National Park of Badlands Their sigh of relief. by breathing a be replaced cattle will not buffalo anytime ed tribally-own
Progr dent of Beef
ROUNDUP IN THE SKY
Tri-State Livest
Saturday, Novem .com and www ber 7, 2015 .facebook.com /tsln.fre
Saturday, Novem
rs Tribal ranche regain South ses lea it Un on Badlands
might havoc on “Open!” unced open little more often.is. the mostWhen prono ultrasound doing it a bull, that It is perhaps -lett er or Blaming the is by the vet him, dedrea ded four age of technician, often the cowShe Or maybe thanking dual. was thin. ng on the indivi word in the langu blamed. “She g. Maybe pendifact Genex recently deIn trouble calvin m ranching. t up had racist and she didn’t veloped a research progra righ ing much she’s Rank ine just how bull sale like that bull.” the bull bred to determ were there with credit or cows blame ing day, When day and shipp er preg- using artificial inseminatake. le al- should ex is pleas ed to the day a ranchcan be tion, the list of possib “Gen first even longer. launch PregCheck, the in es becom nancy tests s most ibis weather was bad that sire fertility evaluation “The on one of the year’ said Brad she slipped beef industry,” day. I think was loud the on, the company’s Beef stressful. e profit ice. The help Johns A ranch’s entir on the the spooked the cattle. I Product Development Mans and of potential relie cows to think we got a bad batchwas ager. put a lot of “Genex has ability of the raise a semen. The techn” ician list 12 to 18 The last erienced... effort in the prod uce and fertility back inexp be endless. s to gather could calf, then come times do month get pregBut how many ty of the into heat and a short fertili in we blame the nant again . on Page A2 bull? Genex Presi See time Vice period of Assoc iate e but any ams with
Enjoy us onlin
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aude Hamilton-M By Heather ock News for Tri-State Livest cers, states produ ® For western Stock Show the Black Hills e to compare chanc (BHSS) is a ly buy a new chute s, possiband price bulls. g ranch geldin that typically It’s a social eventess transaction includes a busin for those on the ver, or two. Howe the vendor table, other side of show stick, it is or saddle horn to engage with an opportunity while community one the ranching competing in in or ing attend er stock shows of the premi is the country. ing customer “The ranch and of the BHSS, the foundation I’m involved in deal only of it’s the meet that kind r where I can horse traine customer,” said mers r. “The custo evJamie Stove er, your ranch at BHSS are types who have y eryday cowbo they breed each 10 or so mares horse stud a pick year. If they mares, it’s to to use on those a really nice elves raise thems
ation to give hes new evalu Genex launcs data on fertility of bulls producer or Stadheim, Edit By Carrie
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Cattle Journal FALL 2019
101
posted on Facebook that there
agronomy business doing crop
bales, neighbors and friends
stranded in their house near
seeding. Wulf just happened to
together, then Wulf hooked on
was a couple who had been
Genoa, Neb., for about four days
and their cattle also were without feed.
“I thought, that’s not too far
away – I can help them out,” says Wulf.
Wulf operates a Robinson R44
chopper, which he uses to run his
102
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
spraying and aerial cover crop have the perfect tool – a large,
handmade stainless steel treble hook he had constructed to try
helped ratchet strap the bales
with a long line and the treble hook from the air.
“We hauled 110 bales over to
out his new tig welder. “It was
the island – it probably took an
I hadn’t used it yet, but it looked
over there, standing at the fence
just hanging on my garage wall – cool.”
Someone donated small square
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
hour or so. There were 30 cows wanting some of that hay we were bringing,” says Wulf.
CHOPPED HAY
A farmer affected by the floods awaits hay as the Nebraska National Guard continued hay drop operations, April 1, 2019, supporting farmers and ranchers in need near Columbus and Scotia, Neb. Using a Ch-47 Chinook helicopter from Company B, 2-135th General Support Aviation Battalion, the Nebraska National Guard Soldiers picked up donated hay bales collected at the Nebraska State Fair Grounds in Grand Island and delivered them to farmers unable to move feed to their livestock after historic flooding damaged infrastructure and limited equipment movement.
Wulf said the number of people
“It was something neat to do –
and the ways the communities
definitely out of the ordinary. When
other was incredible. With
equipment for a good purpose, it’s
were pitching in to help each
transportation means under water, many people couldn’t get to work
you get the chance to use your a lot of fun,” says Wulf.
McGreer noted one thing that
family and neighbors show up
with food … we basically had a
tailgate picnic beside the Chinook helicopter as we were loading bales.”
Because when an emergency
even if they wanted to. Despite the
will always stand out in his mind
strikes in rural America, everyone
great sense of camaraderie during
and ranch families they were
people, for the cattle and for the
tragedies, Wulf said there was a the ordeal.
is the appreciation from the farm helping. “At one stop we had
shows up with food. For the people feeding the cattle.
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
103
Head Above Water,
104
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
FINANCIALLY nexpected disaster
such as the flooding
experienced throughout most of Nebraska this
spring and summer
can leave ag producers in an
exceptional financial bind, and
knowing the best route to take to
crawl out of financial devastation can be a difficult choice. After
claiming the appropriate insurance damages, reaching out to state and
federal aid, such as through FEMA or the USDA, is often the best
option before turning to existing loan officers to extend or adjust current loans or apply for new. Once all federal aid avenues
have been exhausted, several
options exist when exploring the best fitting loans with the lowest interest rates and best terms.
Choosing a loan that doesn’t make a producer take more than is
Business Association’s office of
can still be felt in the lack of feed
can be individual and helps
throughout the Cornhusker state
disaster assistance. “One type business owners, renters, and
non-profits. The other is public
assistance that is a program that FEMA administers to help the
state municipalities and cities and counties to rebuild.”
The declarations started March
9 and extended to include
disasters, like flooding, tornados,
“Sometimes we think disasters are really quick and then they’re gone, but these are things that will take time.” and storms, through July 14.
flood water has subsided.
opportunities have closed and are
“There were two major
presidential declarations in
parts of Nebraska this spring,”
said Garth MacDonald, a public
information officer with the Small
and seen in the skinny, sick cattle and other livestock that will be hard to winter and challenging to breed back for another year,
affecting the income in the calf
crop a complete year from now. Many agriculture and other
businesses still have bills rolling in for that unused nearly-new
John Deere tractor or their acres of unusable land this summer.
Tim Kock, a chief credit officer
with Farm Credit Services of
America (FCA), has been assisting producers in navigating the best financial plan moving forward,
which can include reconfiguring a payment loan.
FCA offers both short- and long-
term disaster assistance planning
-Tim Kock
necessary is helpful when income
has been compromised, even after
available as barren fields stand
Many state and federal assistance already distributing aid; SBA has doled just over $44.1 million to
producers in Nebraska thus far. While most of Nebraska is no
longer under water, the effect
to provide financial relief. Their short-term plan “allows us to extend loans or payments as
needed to give producers time
to focus on cleanup and assess the availability of funds from
insurance and/or financial aid,” as listed per FCA’s terms.
Long-term planning allows for
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
105
Head Above Water, Financially FCA to “begin to plan for the
future. . . Our goal is to provide
flexible loan terms customized to
fit the needs of each producer and operation,” states FCA’s terms. FCA hasn’t seen many
producers reach out for help yet, as they are still deciding the best plan of action to take and what losses have to be considered.
When they’re ready for assistance, FCA is ready to step in and make a plan of action.
“We look at where everybody
is and we understand what
remedies are provided from insurance, through disaster assistance at the federal or state level, then we have a
conversation about where there are shortfalls or what needs to
be addressed,” Kock said. “Then we can focus on that new loan
request or if we need to provide cash flow relief.”
“Sometimes we think disasters
are really quick and then they’re gone, but these are things that
will take time,” Kock said. “The
impacts of these things, depending on how individual producers were hit, will last multiple years.”
Often federal or state assistance
is a one-time occurrence, but other loan avenues, like FCA or FSA,
can cover financial gaps over an ongoing period.
The Farm Service Agency (FSA)
106
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
ROBYN KOELLING PHOTO
in Nebraska has implemented
coming into their county FSA
including a Livestock Indemnity
paperwork and complete their
programs throughout the state, Program, for producers who have lost livestock above
normal mortality rates due to
adverse weather, and Emergency Conservation Program, to aid in
office to provide supporting LIP application. We are working
with producers to finalize this paperwork and move their
applications through for payment.” If producers haven’t applied
the rehabilitation of farmland or
for either program and still
disasters.
assistance, other aid alternatives
structures damaged by natural
“Regarding LIP, producers who
filed an initial Notice of Loss,
which had to be done within 30 days of when they noticed the loss, have until March 2020 to
submit their completed application for payment,” said Bobbie KrizWickham, Public Affairs and
wish to reach out to FSA for exist, including payment
deferrals or loan restructures for those already borrowing from FSA. Emergency loans
are available as well as some
debt forgiveness or interest rate reduction.
“The earlier the discussion,
Outreach Coordinator in the
the more options that may be
Farm Service Agency. “In some
to farmers and ranchers,” Kriz-
Nebraska State Office the USDA cases producers are now just
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
available to provide assistance Wickham said.
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Cattle Journal FALL 2019
107
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Cattle Journal FALL 2019
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
“March thirteenth
was our defining moment,” recalls Julie Kreikemeier, an Extension
Educator who works with 4-H and
Youth Development in Colfax County, Nebraska. “Looking back over this
year, everything is either ‘pre-flood’ or
‘post-flood,’ before or after. I remember I was travelling to meetings that day,
and I could see hour by hour that the
water was getting deeper. I was talking to my dad on the phone while I was
driving, and as I came over a hill I said, ‘Holy Water! The creek is out of its
banks!’ Dad hung up on me and went to go check our creek.”
The fierce storm that hit the northern
Great Plains that weekend caused
historical flooding across much of
eastern Nebraska, and ag producers are still dealing with the aftermath half a year later.
The flood waters were
overwhelming, yet so was the
response of generosity from people everywhere.
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
109
The Gift of Giving
Literally.
Talia Goes, Communications
Coordinator for the Nebraska
Cattlemen’s Association said they received a total of $1.7 million from all across the world.
information officer for the
had working the phones people
Agriculture said that while the
coordinate drop spots for the hay
Nebraska Department of
Department did not handle any monetary donations they did
coordinate donations of hay and
knew where to find us. We helped and checked on a daily basis to
verify that they were legitimate.”
“Floods, blizzards and disasters
fencing materials.
‘R’ us,” laughed John Hansen,
“Within days after the disaster
producers could call to ask for
“We’re still at it.”
Nebraska Cattlemen’s Disaster
contributions,” she said. “We had
has given out $105,000 in $500
people who wanted to donate
ranch families affected by this
“There were a lot of very
generous donors,” she said.
we got a new 501c3 set up: the Relief Fund. One month into the recovery period we had
applications ready for producers
who had been affected. In August, all the applications were reviewed by a private committee, and we just distributed the funds, so
people are getting their checks, and we are done processing donations now.”
Christin Kamm, public
110
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
“We had a number that
help and donors called to make far more calls coming in from
than from people asking for help. It was truly a heartwarming
response from across the nation
to help our Nebraska producers. We worked with Nebraska
of the Nebraska Farmers’ Union, Nebraska Farmers’ Union
grants to Nebraska farm and spring’s disastrous flooding.
Farm Aid contributed $75,000 and the balance from the Nebraska Farmers’ Union Foundation.
“Just recently we went through
Emergency Management and had
$5,000 in two weeks. Earlier it
and all over social media. On the
that fast,” Hansen said. “We have
the information on our website basis of the number of staff we
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
was going out two or three times
another $5,000 earmarked to give
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
111
The Gift of Giving to families if the need continues.
We really struggled to know how
Fence posts.
“We were simply helping do the
much to put in each family’s
nuts and bolts things in family life
begin to deal with the amount
have it anymore you don’t even
hands. We know $500 doesn’t
of damage, but we still wanted to send an amount that was
that unless you suddenly don’t think about,” Hansen said.
Nebraska Farmers’ Union is
meaningful so that they would
uniquely qualified to deal with
cares. The letters of thanks we
along with Interchurch Ministries
receive the message that someone got about how people used the money were really touching.” Paying the phone bill.
Replacing tools or family things
lost in the flood.
disaster response. In 1984, they,
of Nebraska, the National Farmers Organization, the Nebraska Department of Agriculture,
Legal Aid of Nebraska, Women in Farm Economics, the UN-L Ag Extension Division, and
Clothes.
ag lenders started the Rural
Gloves.
Response Hotline.
Boots.
“We thought we would just
Barbed wire.
help get folks through the ag economy crisis at the time,”
Hansen said, “But we’re still
going strong. There has never
been a time when there wasn’t a
need. This is a collaborative effort between the farm and church communities. Because of this
high level of networking we are
able to meet more needs. We are plugged in to the food pantry
system. With funding through the Nebraska Department of
Health and Human Services we
are able to provide vouchers for mental health counseling with
ag-knowledgeable professionals across the state. We work with the Nebraska Department of
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TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
“We were simply helping do the nuts and bolts things in family life that unless you suddenly don’t have it anymore you don’t even think about.” -John Hansen Agriculture to help people plug into all kinds of resources. We sponsor financial workshops.”
All this was already in place prior to the March
weather disasters and the worst flooding Nebraska has seen in five hundred years.
“We actually get calls from other states, asking
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Cattle Journal FALL 2019
113
The Gift of Giving Hansen said that donations
came from a wide variety of
places and from people in diverse walks of life.
A tattoo parlor in Omaha. Ohio.
Pennsylvania.
to help other farm families in need.
“One thing we did was to
help pick up the transport cost
Former Nebrasakans.
Farm families who just wanted
Julie Kreikemeier said the
considerably, but just the other
from people looking to help those
said. “That has slowed down
trucker coming from Illinois with three loads of hay. We sent it up
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got a lot of random cold calls affected by the flood.
“They figured we would know
people who needed help. We
took fencing donations: any kind of posts, insulators, clips, wire.
Initially there was a big need for milk replacer, because so many calves got separated from their
mothers, and even if you could
find the right cow the calf’s smell had been changed by the dirty
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Colfax County Extension office
at six-thirty in the morning from a
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were a couple of families who
of donated loads of hay,” he
day I got a call on my cell phone
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I think we were there with the
posts but not quite with the wire. “I was helping our emergency
management with donated food and supplies one day, and I
opened a box and saw a twenty-
five pound bag of noodles. I also
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Cattle Journal FALL 2019
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
saw a four pound can of tuna that day. I’ve never seen anything like
it. We went through a lot of water
test kits, because of contamination from the flood water. People
ended up with coliform and e. coli in their wells, so even when they
could finally go home their water wasn’t safe to drink. And bleach. We went through lots of bleach.
“We saw an incredible amount
of generosity from people all over:
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115
The Gift of Giving Michigan, Arkansas, Minnesota,
see cows!’”
someone saying they had three
passed, Nebraskans are slowly
Florida. I would get a call from
trucks of hay coming, or a load of barbed wire. I don’t even know
As the summer months have
finding a new normal.
Three roads in Colfax County
how it all came together.
are still closed due to bridges that
mindset run together in my
Evert, the county’s Deputy
“All those weeks in disaster
mind. We were just trying to get over the next hurdle. And the next. One of my good friends
finally got home to their ranch and sent me a video. She was
crying, because she found they
washed out this spring. Michelle Emergency Manager, says it will
be at least two years until they can get all the roads fixed, and that
there is still a sense of shell-shock lingering.
“Every time it rains, awareness
still had cows left. The water had
sets in,” she said. “People are
husband left, he almost didn’t
pretty closely.”
been over the pickup when her
make it out of the driveway. She
said, ‘I’ve never been so happy to
116
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
watching the river and creeks Evert said needs remain that
FEMA cannot meet.
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
“Colfax County, along with
Boone, Butler, Nance and Platte counties have formed the East Central Long Term Recovery
Group to help with these lingering needs. United Way is our fiscal
agent, because you need a 501c3
designation in order for donations to be tax deductible. Anyone
donating through United Way
can specify which county they
wish their gift to go to and United Way will relay it to the long term recovery group.”
Some things, though will never
be the same.
“We’ve had 100-year floods that
weren’t even close to this one,”
John Hansen said. “This affected
“Every time it rains, awareness sets in. People are watching the river and creeks pretty closely.”
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Cattle Journal FALL 2019
117
The Gift of Giving a lot of ground. A 500-year flood scours not just the river bottoms
but the whole flood plain. In some places it was three miles wide. To put it in perspective, Nebraska
has more miles of river than any
other state, plus all the tributaries and creeks. There was as much
water measured in the North Fork of the Elkhorn River this spring
as normally flows in the Missouri River. And that was just one tributary of one river.
“There’s a lot of ground with a
combination of cornstalks, mud and timber piled up on it. It’s
going to take an incredible amount of work to clean that up. Some of the ice slabs—and they were as
ROBYN KOELLING PHOTO
big as cars—took until mid-June to
“There’s a large area where the
melt. A lot of sand moved. In some
Platte and Missouri rivers meet
acre field is under sand four feet
under water; they’re still waiting
places and entire thirty or forty
deep. Some of that farm ground
will probably never be reclaimed.
where there is still corn ground
for the water to go down. Being
under water for this long changes the entire aerobic profile of the soil, so even when the water
does go down it’s not going to be ready to plant a crop. Nebraska
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Randy and Julie Holmquist
40425 252nd St., Mitchell, SD 57301 118
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
program this year.
“Roads are a huge issue as well.
There is Federal funding available through FEMA. A 75 percent
Federal cost share, with the state picking up 12.5 percent and the county expected to cover 12.5
percent doesn’t sound too bad. But for some counties just repairing
one or two bigger bridges wipes out the entire budget, leaving
them wondering how to deal with
all the other roads that are washed out. They will probably end up
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which will hurt the farmers and ranchers even more.
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to understand what the problems are and figure out how to find resources and get them help.”
Julie Kreikemeier says FEMA
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“Ag families are hanging in
there,” Kreikemeier said. “The general attitude is one of ‘we
have work to do, and we just do what needs to be done.’ People
have come into the office asking, ‘What do we do?’ because they
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though some are still finding dead carcasses of cattle buried in the sand.
“‘Each day is a new adventure,’
as one put it.”
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Cattle Journal FALL 2019
119
water,
eveywhere, nor any
ver had a nightmare
Between a lingering cold
ran rampant.
where you’re lost
leading to ice and excessive
and dying of thirst?
nowhere to go, Douglas Fox,
affected,” Fox said. “People rely
Management Agency, said the
when that went away, it caused
adrift in the ocean
You’re simultaneously parched
and surrounded by water – but
not a single drop of it will quench your thirst.
This nightmare modified itself
amounts of rainwater with
director of Region 24 Emergency entire state was tormented by flooding.
Region 24 serves five counties in
to become a frightening reality
Nebraska – Boyd, Brown, Cherry,
during the early weeks of March
suffered a unique challenge
for individuals living in Nebraska this year when flooding plagued the state. Residents found
themselves surrounded by water
but unable to safely consume any of it. 120
area – the same time the floods
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
“Everything and everyone was
on the rural water system, and a lot of problems for drinking
water and cattle confined and in pasture. Nobody had water.”
Fox said the waterline served
Keya Paha and Rock – and all
three towns and over 500 farms
accompanying the flooding.
to fresh drinking water for the
Ice jammed the Spencer Dam and gouged the Boyd county
rural waterline in early March,
eliminating all fresh water in the
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
and ranches, eliminating access
public and livestock alike. Due to the high water tables in the area, he said drilling a well is nearly impossible to do affordably, a
water
drop to drink
By Megan Silveira
challenge that served to only
He said the past two winters
situation, Fox said help was
the northern central areas of
hay production low and the
need. Milk delivery companies
further the troubles people in Nebraska faced.
With a lack of water for all
living creatures in the affected
were exceptionally wet, making nutritional value of the little crop harvested even lower.
Combining these factors with
areas, things only got more
the floods and lack of available
rainwater washed away roads
than desirable environment in
complicated, Fox said. Excess
and bridges, preventing ranchers from going out to search for help or bring assistance back to their herds.
Even worse, according to Fox,
problems faced farmers and
ranchers of Region 24 long before the rains began to fall in March.
drinking water created a less
which to raise cattle, Fox said.
These changes resulted in a high number of livestock deaths.
“I’ve been in this business a
long time, and this was the worst devastation I’ve ever seen,” he added.
Despite the bleakness of the
provided and offered to all in volunteered their vehicles to
transport water from a district in
South Dakota and ranchers within Region 24 offered each other as
much assistance as they could, he said.
At the end of the day, however,
Fox said it was people both in and out of the ranching community from across the country who
stepped up to help those effected in Nebraska.
Fox said he was humbled by the
amount of support the counties
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
121
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Cattle Journal FALL 2019
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
water, water
PHOTOS COURTESY OF REGION 24 EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT
he manages received from other states.
“We had assistance from
everywhere,” he said. “People
brought food and bottled water
and anything else we might need
Top, US-281 Bridge south of Spencer. Above, Rock County Road damage.
for the towns that were affected.” In addition to food and water,
items like port-a-potties were
shipped into Nebraska to help
fulfill basic human needx. For the livestock themselves, states like Texas and Oklahoma donated
hay. Fox said the National Guard even helped distribute the feed
to livestock that were in locations unreachable by farmers and ranchers.
While people of backgrounds
offered help, Fox said the
amount of support from rural
communities was astounding. He said he believes livestock people
help their own, and this case was no exception.
“I would just like to thank
Pine Creek Bridge northwest of Bassett.
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
123
MPLETE SEED water, water CILITY! people for their generosity and
of Region 24 were blessed with
Lincoln (UNL) urge ranchers
getting donated items out to the
to come together in the face of
in advance and have a plan
support,” he said. “We’re still people that need them.”
come to YOU! While the Nebraska counties
to be prepare for bad weather
community members willing
adversity, extension agents from the University of Nebraska-
for action once the disaster has occurred.
“I’ve been in this business a long time, and this was the worst devastation I’ve ever seen.”
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Cattle Journal FALL 2019
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
Kimball 605.778.6579
weather common to an area. UNL extension services encourages 800.683.3374 Platte Location:
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research if their property is in the “danger zone” – for flooding this
could mean the land is at a lower elevation or downstream.
When warnings for severe
weather are issued, ranchers
should either already have their
livestock located in an area with access to high ground or be
prepared to move their herds to
an area with that option, the UNL
website adds. Cattle will naturally seek higher ground to escape the rising water levels.
The safety guide encourages
individuals in the cattle industry
to set aside feed in a dry location on high ground in case of
emergencies. A plan involving access to fresh water (both for
Carnes Bridge
livestock and humans) should
Management Agency’s website.
everything in their power to
More information regarding
were blessed with a supportive
clean water for themselves and
also be made.
action ranchers should take both
before and after natural disasters such as floods can be found
on the Region 24 Emergency
These five Nebraska counties
and giving community when
faced with the latest challenge Mother Nature sent their
way, but ranchers should do
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Cattle Journal FALL 2019
125
126
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
127
Flooded roads and fields in the Wood River, Nebraska area.
BRIAN URBOM PHOTO
f you have driven
to protect grain from moisture,
during harvest season,
Nebraska are thankful for these
through farm country
there is a good chance
you have seen the long white grain bags lying in fields like giant
caterpillars. Made of 10mm polyethylene
(PE) they are usually
9 or 10 feet wide and
200-300 feet long, with a grain
capacity of 8,000 to over 14,000 bushels. They are a temporary
on-site storage solution, saving farmers’ time and labor spent
trucking the harvest to bins and are much cheaper than steel
bins. The bags are a one-time use product and cost between $900 and $1,000 each.
While the bags are designed
128
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
the residents of Wood River, bags and outside-the box-
thinking. Ken Christensen of the Grand Island, Nebraska Aurora
Cooperative had seen a YouTube video showing grain bags used in place of sand bags. When
the massive flooding started in
March, they were brainstorming options and he remembered the online video and the Aurora
Cooperative donated a bag to
use as a temporary dam which
helped divert the flood waters.
The bag was used together with traditional sand bags along
highway 30 near Alda, Nebraska and diverted the water around the town.
Unfortunately, the flooding in
What Ranchers Read and
and
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Dianna Palmer
Special Sections Coordintor & Account Mgr SD - Black Hills & North of I-90 West of the River
605-423-6045
dpalmer@tsln-fre.com
Scott Dirk
Susan Cable
Account Manager South of I-90 Rosebud E. Territory Midwest & Eastern NE Territory
888-648-4449 scable@tsln-fre.com
Dennis Ginkens
Director of Field Services & Fieldman West River SD/ND Territory
GM of Sales/Marketing & Ringman East River SD/ND Territory
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dginkens@tsln-fre.com
605-380-6024
406-670-9839
Leah Brence
Account Manager East River SD/ND Territory
406-839-1097 lbrence@tsln-fre.com
Dan Piroutek
Field Service & Ringman
605-544-3316
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Carissa Lee
Commercial Account Manager & Livestock Dept Asst. Nebraska Territory
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Kristen Schurr
Account Manager Montana-Wyoming-National
406-498-6022
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Matt Wznick
Field Service & Ringman Colorado & Nebraska Territory
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TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
129
Volunteers working on the dam. BRIAN URBOM PHOTO
“It has been an unprecedented year, the reality of working in agriculture, whether in crops or livestock, we have to work through all the challenges and keep working for a good outcome.” -Brian Urbom
130
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
March was only the beginning
empty bags, they were used along
much of the state already having
Dirt was piled along the bags
of an extremely wet year, with
received more than twice their
normal precipitation. Early July brought yet another flooding
event to Nebraska when up to 9 inches of rain fell overnight,
flooding the area and swelling rivers. To save their town,
volunteers created a temporary dam to hold back the Wood
River from flooding the town of Wood River. Since the grain bag
had been effective in March, the
Highway 30 and Cottonwood.
from a field. “We found out that we had to have the white side out, the black side got too hot and we had one rupture. We
used a garden hose to run water
over the bags to cool the plastic,” said Brian Urbom, local manager for the Cairo, Wood River and Sodtown Aurora Cooperative
and paramedic/volunteer on the Wood River Fire Department. The Aurora Coop was
Aurora Cooperative donated
established in 1908 and
fire truck to pump water into the
joining together, farmers can
two of the huge bags. Using a
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
committed to the belief that by
The natural habitat of the big grain bags. JOSH GARTNER PHOTO
accomplish things they cannot accomplish alone. They have
a strong commitment to their communities and employees. “They have been really good
to their employees during the
flooding. They never questioned
time off and paid for hotel rooms for those whose homes flooded.
14th Annual
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Coming in
APRIL 2020
His First sons sell 2020
They have been very good to
the volunteer fire department and organizations, like 4-H,” Urbom said. “It has been an
unprecedented year, the reality of working in agriculture, whether
in crops or livestock, we have to work through all the challenges and keep working for a good outcome.”
The March flooding was mainly
north of highway 30, while
the July event affected those
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TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
131
living south of the highway. The grain bag dam is still in place, with plans being made for a
permanent water barrier. The farming outlook is grim with the fields beyond saturated,
some of the crops were drowned out or planting was prevented completely. “Farmers are
worried about the cool weather,
(possibility of an) early frost and the fields not drying out. Folks who have never had water in
their basements are pumping it out this year,” Urbom said.
FEMA has helped some of the
residents of Wood River. Different church organizations and groups came to help cleanup homes and
offer support. “Some of the houses still have $20-50,000 worth of
damage. The owners’ incomes
132
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
Giant water filled tubes together with a dirt bank, serve as an impromptu dike, diverting water around the town. BRIAN URBOM PHOTO
are too high to qualify for federal
was truly overwhelmed by the
the money to repair the damage
lady with a bad back brought
assistance but they don’t have themselves,” Urbom said.
Urbom has been a paramedic
for many years, so he was one of the many who stepped forward during the March nightmare. “I
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
people who offered help. One
us coffee. People came from all
over Nebraska, Kansas, Colorado, Missouri, it was pretty cool.
“I rode in the airboat doing
water rescues from vehicles and
A fire truck pumping the bags full of water. BRIAN URBOM PHOTO
homes. The state patrol
brought in a LAV (a light armored vehicle, which has eight wheels and is amphibious); we took it
across town for a cardiac event since the ambulance couldn’t get there. For about 48 hours
none of us slept, from Friday to
Annual Bull & Female Sale
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23RD, 2019 1:00 pm MST at the Ranch, Rapid City
120 Bulls–80 Females Bred & Open–Pregnancies & Embryos Sires: GAR Phoenix, LD Capitalist, Amdahls Rocketeer, Spring Cove Reno, BUBS Southern Charm, Enhance, HA Prime Cut, Connealy Armory, GAR Sure Fire, PAHR Yeti, Black Granite and Monumental
Sunday. Friday night of the flood we had already shut down the
highways, it was like 9 p.m. and this guy pulls up. He was in his
60s or 70s, from eastern Nebraska and he came to fill sandbags. On Monday a couple showed up
10 sons & 6 daughters sell
GAR PHOENIX
10 sons & 10 daughters sell
AMDAHL’S ROCKETEER 636
Reg. 18636106
Reg. 18529618
offering assistance, they were
from a town east of Lincoln that had been flooded. When they
40th Production Sale Jim Baker Herefords
told us where they were from, we said, ‘Didn’t it flood?’ ‘Our house
is gone; we didn’t know what else to do,’ they said.”
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2018 10 sons & 10 daughters sell
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50 FEMALES: OPEN & BRED
Tim Amdahl: 605-929-3717 • timamdahl@yahoo.com Tim & Marcia Amdahl · 605-929-3717 JD Amdahl: 605-999-6487 • jarredamdahl@gmail.com JD & Annie Amdahl · 605-999-6487 Jim Baker: 605-381-9519 • jbakerherefords@gmail.com
All info online: Catalog online Oct. 15
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man. We start with the mother cow, raised in western South Dakota conditions, and bulls that put pounds on their calves from the Pasture to the Plate. We are honored and feel the responsibility of being your Seed Stock Source. We will be selling, at the Ranch, 150 Bulls along with 50 bred and open females on February 10, 2018! TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS Cattle Journal FALL 2019
133
Ag EVENTS
Have an event coming up? Call 877-347-9100 to list it here free, or email editorial@tsln-fre.com PHOTO BY ROBYN KOELLING 134
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
October 2019
Ag EVENTS
3-4
Jamison Ranch Performance Horse and Weanling sale, Quinter, KS
5
Colyer Hereford Female Sale, Bruneau, ID
6
Fawcett’s Elm Creek Hereford Ranch Female Sale, Ree Heights, SD
8-12
Western Jr. Livestock Show, Rapid City, SD
8
Coleman Angus Ranch Female Sale, Charlo, MT
11
Mettler Polled Herefords Production Sale, Menno, SD
11-12
Farmers & Ranchers Livestock Fall Classic Catalog Horse Sale & Futurity, Salinas, KS
12
19th Annual WYO Quarter Horse Sale, Thermopolis, WY
12-19
NILE Livestock Show, Billings MT
12
Schrag 605 “Family Event” Production Sale, Marion, SD
12
25th Annual New Direction Simmental Sale, Seward, NE
17
Jacobson Red Angus Complete Cowherd Dispersal at the farm, Hitterdal, MN
17
Dubas Cattle Co. Spring Herd Dispersal, Fullerton, NE
17
Pine Coulee Angus Sale, Billings, MT
18
37th Annual Prestigous NILE Red Angus Sale, Billings, MT
18
Isaak Ranch Complete Dispersal, Golden Valley, ND, sale at Dickinson, ND
19
Jed Stevenson Complete Cowherd Dispersal, Billings, MT
21
J & L Livestock Montana Angus Female Bonanza, PAYS Livestock, Billings, MT
22
Stevenson Angus Online Female Sale, Hobson, MT
23
Micheli Ranch Hereford Bull Sale, Ft. Bridger, WY
24
Jensen Bros. Hereford Female Sale, Courtland, KS
26
Pieper Red Angus Fall Production Sale, Hay Springs, NE
28
Rust Mountain View Ranch “Queens of the Pasture Sale” Mercer, ND
28-29
TC Ranch Angus Female Sale, Franklin, NE
30
Bumgarner Angus Sale, Wibaux, MT
31 - Nov. 2 SD Stockgrowers Convention, Rapid City, SD
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
135
Ag Events
&
Sales Shows
November 2019
Oct 31 Nov. 2
South Dakota Stockgrowers Convention, Rapid City, SD
1
Jamison Herefords Female Production Sale, at the ranch, Quinter, KS
2
Cottonwood Angus Female Sale, Pipestone, MN
2
Jungels Shorthorn Farm “Durham Nation” Production Sale, Kathryn, ND
3
Triangle J Ranch “Harvest Select” Simmental Female Sale, Miller NE
5
Cobb Charolias Ranch Ranch Fall Bull Sale, Great Falls Livestock, Great Falls, MT
14
Diamond D Angus Sale, Valier, MT
14
K-2 Red Angus Fall Sale, Wheatland, WY
15
Green Mountain Angus Ranch Bull Sale, at the ranch, Rygate, MT
15
Schurrtop Ranch Charolais & Angus Bull Sale, McCook, NE
16
Baldridge/Tiedeman Angus & Guests Sale, North Platte, NE
16
Redland Angus Bull Sale, Buffalo, WY
16
Campbell Red Angus Commercial Bred Heifer Sale, Mobridge Livestock, Mobridge, SD
16
Fuchs Angus Dispersion, Mandan, ND
6
Geppert’s Rock Creek Livestock Mature Cow Dispersion, Mitchell, SD
18-20 Range Beef Cow Symposium 19
Idland Cattle Co. Complete Female Dispersal Sale, Billings, MT
7
5 L Red Angus Profit Seeker Bull and Female Sale, Sheridan, MT
20
Spickler Ranch North Bull Sale, Glenfield, ND
7
Montana’s Choice Simmental Sale, Billings, MT
21
8
Montana Ranch Bull Sale, Columbus, MT
Largent and Sons Herefords Desert Mart Bull Sale, at the ranch,Kaycee, WY
9
South Dakota Hereford Assn. Excellence Sale, Brookings, SD
21
South Dakota Simmetal Source Sale, Mitchell, SD
9
Leachman Cattle of Colorado Red & White Bull Sale, Leachman Bull Barn, Ft. Collins, CO.
23
Amdahl Angus & Hereford Bull & Female Sale, Rapid City, SD
23
Diamond Peak Angus Female Sale, Loma, CO
9
Vedvei Charolais Ranch “The Dakota Standard V” Female Sale at the ranch, Lake Preseton, SD
23
Sonderup Charolais Ranch Inc. & Friends Foundation Female Sale, at the ranch Fullerton, NE
9
Nebraska Hereford Assn. Annual Meeting, Grand Island, NE
23
Bear Mt. Angus Female Sale, Palisade, NE
10
Nebraska Hereford Assn. Cornhusker Classic Sale, Grand Island, NE
25
Connealy Angus Fall Bull Sale, at the ranch, Whitman, NE
10
Wyoming Angus Assn Select Female Sale, Casper, WY
25
R-Math Angus Bull Sale, Glascoe, MT
10
Pearls of the Prairie Angus Sale, Mandan, ND
26
Paint Rock Angus Ranch Bull Sale, at the ranch, Hyattville, WY
11
Mohican West Polled Hereford Bull Sale, Laurel, MT
26
Weller Angus Annual Production Sale, Philip Livestock, Philip, SD
12
Jorgensen Land & Cattle Online Sale, Ideal, SD
29
Chestnut Angus Female Sale, Pipestone, MN
12
Sitz Influence Commercial Replacement Female Sale, Dillon, MT
29
Wilken Angus “Black Angus Friday” Fall Production Sale, Faith Livestock, Faith, SD
12
ZumBrunnen Angus Female Sale, Lusk, WY
30
Vermilion Angus Ranch sale, Billings, MT
13
Heart K Ranch Production Sale, at the ranch, Lewistown, MT
30
The Event Simmental Sale, Tecumseh, NE
14
Bieber Fever Fall Production Sale, at the Ranch, Leola, SD
30
Ward Livestock Red White & Blue Sale, at the ranch near Laramie, WY
136
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
CONCRETE BUNKERS 2.5 x 2.5 x 5
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Cattle Journal FALL 2019
137
Ag Events
&
Sales Shows Have an event coming up?
Call 877-347-9100 to list it here free–or email editorial@tsln-fre.com
December 2019 2
Stevenson’s Diamond Dot Angus Sale, Hobson, MT
7
Nebraska Angus Banquet, & Jr. Angus Preview, Kearney, NE
2
CK Cattle “The Inagural Female Sale” at the ranch, Highmore, SD
9
Inderland Angus Bull Sale, Big Timber, MT
2
TK Angus Bull Sale, Valentine, NE
9
Cross Diamond Cattle Co. Red Angus Sale, Bertrand, NE
3
Stevenson Angus Bull Sale, Hobson, MT
10
PAYS Blue Ribbon Stock Cow Sale, Billings, MT
3
Badlands Angus Alliance Sale, Dickinson, ND
10
Slovek Angus Ranch Fall Bull Sale, Philip, SD
3-5
South Dakota Cattlemens Assn. Convention, Pierre, SD
10-12 MT Stockgrowers Annual Meeting & Trade Show, Billings, MT
4
Beef Country Genetics Bull Sale, at Midland Bull Test facility, Columbus, MT
11
Shipwheel Cattle Co. Sale, Chinook, MT
4
11
Big Sky Elite Red Angus, Logan, MT
Armstrong Angus Ranch Bull Sale, Cardwell, MT
4-5
11
Nebraska Cattlemen Convention, Kearney, NE
Spruce Hill Ranch Angus & Sim-Angus Bull Sale, at the ranch, Ludlow, SD
5
Sitz Angus Sale, Harrison, MT
13
Richard Angus Ranch Sale, at the ranch, Belfield, ND
6
KG Angus Bull Sale, Three Forks, MT
13
Carr Angus Sale, Lewistown, MT
6
Evans Cattle Co. Red Angus Production Sale, Cozad, NE
14
Spickler Ranch Sale, Glenfield, ND
6
Harmon Angus Annual Production Sale, at the ranch Lavina, MT
14
ND Red Angus Red Select Sale, Mandan, ND
7
Currant Creek Angus Bull Sale, Roundup, MT
14
ND Simmental Select State Sale, Mandan, ND
7
Lonesome River Ranch Sale, Anselmo, NE
14
Laubach Red Angus Sale, Big Timber, MT
7
Pyramid Beef Angus & Hereford sale, Spearfish, SD
14
Gaugler Angus Bull Sale, Judith Gap, MT
7
Sonstegard Red Angus, Montevideo, MN
14
Minnesota Hereford Assn. “Gopher Sale” Hutchison, MN
7
Altenburg Simmental “Super Baldy” Sale, Ft. Collins, CO
16
Hunt Creek Angus Bull & Replacement Heifer sale, Miles City, MT
7
North Dakota Hereford Assn. Sale and Annual Meeting, Valley City, ND
18-19 Shearer’s Spear U Angus Ranch Dipersal, Rushville, NE
7
Montana’s Choice Simmental Sale, Billings, MT
21
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SD Simmental Source Sale, Mitchell, SD
ADVERTISER INDEX Agri-Best Feeds ........................................ Back Cover Alltech South Dakota ........................................... 141 Amdahl Angus ...................................................... 131 Assman Implement ............................................... 123 Bear Mountain Angus Ranch ..................................71 Bejot Feed Lots ..................................................... 115 Bieber Red Angus ......................................................1 Black Hills Stock Show.......................................... 109 Bobcat Angus .............................................................8 Bridger Steel ..............................................................5 Brooks Chalky Butte Ranch ....................................65 Butte Co Equipment ...................................... 61 & 90 Callicrate PRO Bander.......................................... 117 Cammack Ranch Supply .........................................54 Cross Diamond Cattle Co .......................................13 Cross Five Cattle Coolers, Llc. ............................. 115 Crystalyx.....................................................................85 Dean Odden & Sons ...............................................96 Diamond D Angus ................................................ 144 Diamond Peak Cattle Co ........................................49 Farm Credit Services -Rapid City .............................4 Fawcett’s Elm Creek Ranch .......................................3 FMG Feed & Seed ...................................................75 Greg Goggins ....................................................... 111 Heartland Tanks & Supply .................................... 116 Hewitt Land Company ......................................... 140 High Plains Genetics ...............................................83 Hoffman Ranch .........................................................67 Hutchison Western ............................................... 105 Insure My Forage .................................................. 117 Jamison Herefords & Quarter Horses .Inside Back Cover Jenner Equipment ......................................... 50 & 51 K R Rauch Co. ...........................................................91 Kammerer Livestock ............................................. 129 Kennedy Implement ...................................... 18 & 19 Kyle Shobe ............................................................. 130 Lakeside Livestock Equipment ........................... 123 Lindskov Implement ...................................... 61 & 90 Little Goose Ranch ...................................................35
Livestock Market Directory............................ 28 & 29 Lone Creek Cattle Co. .............................................59 Lynn Weishaar ..........................................................48 Matt Lowery ........................................................... 114 Meyerink Farm Service ......................................... 112 MH Equipment & Truck Repair Inc. .......................70 Modern Farm Equipment .......................................77 Mount Rushmore Angus ...........................................7 MRG Marketing Tools...............................................89 National Western Stock Show ................................77 New Direction Media ..............................................53 Orwig’s Tubs, Inc. .....................................................47 Penny Newman/Cowbos ..................................... 113 Pharmco.................................................................. 122 Pieper Red Angus ......................................................2 Quality Liquid Feeds ...............................................76 Rafter T Angus ....................................................... 143 Ranchers Choice.................................................... 120 Ranchers Livestock Equipment ..............................33 Raven Angus Ranch ...................................................6 Redland Black Angus ..............................................10 Repro Scan ...............................................................32 Rowdy Benson ...................................................... 111 Rowse Rakes Inc .......................................................58 Seth Weishaar ....................................................... 137 Sinclair Cattle Company .............Inside Front Cover South Central Livestock...........................................84 Spickler Ranch North ............................................ 142 St Onge Livestock.....................................................55 Stuart Concrete ..................................................... 137 The NILE.....................................................................23 Tippmann Industrial....................................... 68 & 80 Tri-State Livestock News........................81, 99 & 127 VitaFerm ....................................................................37 Western Ranch Supply ......................................... 110 Wilken Angus .............................................................9 Willrodt Motor ..........................................................84 Zumbrunnen Angus ................................................74
TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS
Cattle Journal FALL 2019
139
Because it’s more than a deal. View complete listings, videos and interactive maps at hewittlandcompany.com
RICED NEWLY P
NEW
Flat Top Ranch | Squaw Gap, ND 4,867 Acres | $3,400,000 Comprised of nearly equal deeded and low-cost leased acres, the Flat Top Ranch is an economicallysized and priced opportunity that is hard to find!
Renner Ranch | Beach, ND Acres | $2,100,000 Exceptional improvements, grassland in excellent condition with pipeline water to every pasture, superb hunting, and fully finished HQ with built-in living quarters.
RICED NEWLY P
Coalbank Creek Grassland | Mill Iron, MT 1,880 Acres (1,240 acres Deeded, 640 acres Private Lease) | $810,000
Corrals, cross-fenced, pipeline, wells. This property makes an ideally sized tract of grassland with enough scale to make it efficient and yet very affordable.
NEW
Tres Crosses Grassland | Newell, SD 1,348 acres | $940,000
K-S Ranch | Nisland, SD 280 Acres | $700,000
The Tres Crosses Grassland is comprised of 1,348 deeded acres along with 80 BLM acres, bringing the total to 1,428 acres. Presently fenced as one unit, this property has exceptional water availability and fences.
With 69 acres irrigated hay meadows and 200+ acres pastureland, this well-diversified ranch can accommodate many different operations.
Oahe Lakefront Acreage | Pierre, SD 40 Acres | $325,000 This 40-acre property offers a view with physical access to Lake Oahe, is home to wildlife, and provides options for building sites.
ABSOLUTE PUBLIC AUCTION: Bennett County Farmland Auction Martin, SD | 845 Acres | October 9, 2019 HQ improvements/site, 90% tillable with Hwy 18 frontage! For photos, video, and online budding go to hewittlandcompany.com
Peoria Flats Lakefront Home | Pierre, SD 4.58 Acres | $575,000 This property has a 4.58 acre view & physical access to Oahe Lake. Built in 2007, 3,177 sq. ft. home, attached 2-car garage.
JD Hewitt 605-347-1100
Tyson Hewitt 605-206-0034
Tanner Hewitt 605-490-7952
Dan Todd 605-280-9214
SETTING A CALF UP FOR SUCCESS STARTS BEFORE IT EVEN HITS THE GROUND. ALLTECH IS FOCUSED ON BUILDING A STRONG FOUNDATION TO PROMOTE HEALTH AND REPRODUCTIVE DEVELOPMENT FOR THE NEXT GENERATION OF CATTLE PRODUCTION.
CONTACT YOUR LOCAL ALLTECH SALES MANAGER TODAY:
DAWN SCHOOLEY Territory Sales Manager - MT, WY 406.633.3003
RANDY ASHER Regional Sales Manager NM, KS, UT, CO, AZ 575.359.5570
BRETT LEBRUN Territory Sales Manager - ND, SD 605.651.5982
KADE SCOTT Territory Sales Manager - NE 402.450.6043
As we move into calving season, build a strong foundation with BIO-MOS. Effective in cow and calf feeds, BIO-MOS promotes immunity, productivity and profitability. All to safeguard your cattle — and your legacy. Learn more at bio-mos.com today.
Alltech.com
AlltechNaturally
@Alltech
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OUR BUSINESS is Coming-Two-Year-Old ANGUS Bulls! 140 Coming-Two-Year-Old Bulls 150 Bred Angus Cows/Heifers S Powerpoint WS 5503 #18159093
BW -1.1 WW +69 YW +118 M +21
25 Sons Sell Nov 20th!
Ellingson Transcend 5212 #18182675
BW +2.2 WW +71 YW +130 M +26
We are really excited to offer this set of bulls for sale this fall. During the last 5 years our cowherd and program have really evolved. Over 70% of our cowherd is 4 years old and younger. Our young cows represent the proven cow families that our program is built on. We rigorously cull our herd for udder quality, hoof structure and disposition; while improving performance and carcass quality. Coming two year old bulls offer many unique advantages. One that is often overlooked is their proven data and predictability. This sale offering represents the top 50% of the bull calves born at our ranch in 2018. 70% of this offering is sired by Powerpoint, Thrive, Diligent and Transcend. By the time our sale rolls around on November 20th, we will have 3 years of weaning data on these young sires, plus their daughters will have weaned their first calves. These four young sires are quickly becoming cornerstones for our program not just because of the performance they possess, but specifically as a result of the daughters they are producing.
Powerpoint, Thrive and Diligent are all sired by Tehama Revere. Why use 25 Sons Sell 3 half brothers and 2- ž brothers? Nov 20th! The answer is simple: they all possess and transmit different genetic and phenotypic strengths. All three sires have donor dams who rank in the top He Sells Nov 20th ten cows in our herd for udder qualiLot 1: S Resurgence 8785 #19171916 ty, fleshing ability and solid maternal BW-0.2 WW+74 YW+119 M+34 strength. Transcend is an outcross This Donor Sells bull for our program and a high perS Cora 204 Nov 20th! formance, extremely potent sire of Bred to Transcend! muscle and pounds. His dam is a #17298577 S Summit 956 x beautiful, productive daughter of Tehama Blackcap Revolution. S Chisum 6175 x S Gridmaker 5131 Transcend is a favorite of many who BR 5/96 WR 5/106 YR 4/105 visit our ranch due to Dam of S Axiom 4525, Lead off his overwhelming depth, Bull in the 2015 sale! muscle and power.
Wednesday,
S Thrive JAS 5515 #18159105
BW +1.3 WW +74 YW +132 M +20
25 Sons Sell Nov 20th! S Diligent 5548 #18159131
BW -1.9 WW +65 YW +108 M +19
25 Sons Sell Nov 20th!
He Sells Nov 20th Lot 3: S Diligent 8500#19139856 BW-3.1 WW+63 YW+111 M+25
<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
Bred Females Selling:
1 Featured Donor Dam 30 Single Lot Registered Cows 40 Purebred Commercial Cows 80 Purebred Commercial Heifers
<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
November 20, 2019 1pm cst at the Ranch
Call/Text: Justin 701.650.8840 or Sara 701.650.9890
8377-7th Parkway NE Glenfield, ND 58443 w jsspickler@gmail.com m
www.SpicklerR S i kl rRanchNort R hN rth.com th
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Annual Production Sale Thursday November 14, 2019 at the ranch in Valier, Montana
I am 15 years old and weaned a 600 lb calf. I will be calving again next spring. My mother had a calf every year until she was 18 years old.
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I am 5 years old and I weaned a 750 lb calf. I will not be calving next year. Due to my great E.P.D. numbers, my owner will ï¬&#x201A;ush me.