Tri-State Livestock News Beef & Business Cattle Journal Winter 2019

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BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

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PUBLI C ATION

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2019 EDITION | VOLUME XVII


WienkCharolais.com JEFF 605.860.0505

STERLING 605.203.0137

CharolaisBulls@outlook.com

TY 605.203.1082


31st annual bull sale

U

Martin ranch

Monday ♦ february 4th ♦ 2019

Offering 100 Angus Bulls Ogallala Livestock • Ogallala Nebraska 1:00 MT

Stunner Renown LD Capitalist 316 Ellingson Chaps Sensation Cowboy Up

Stunner

BW -1.3 WW +76 Milk +27 YW +128 $B +148.81

Renown

Genomic GGPLD on Sale Bulls 100% Proven AI SIRED Large Selection of Half & Three quarter Blood Brothers FIRST BREEDING SEASON GUARANTEE Volume Discounts Free Feed Free Delivery

BW +2.8 WW +73 Milk +21 YW +128 $B +110.45

Martin Ranch 2 year average sired Steer mates 227 head fed at our feedlot harvested Graded 41% Prime • 59% Choice 52% CAB® 98.5% PREMIUMS PAID $136.27/Head

Capitalist

BW -.7 WW +70 Milk +31 YW +126 $B +150.79

TJ & KRISTY MARTIN ♦ 1361 Keystone Sarben North Rd ♦ Keystone NE 69144 martin@lakemac.net ♦ 308-726-2855 ♦ 308-883-2333

Martinangusranch

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Pursuing A New Horizon

SPRING PERFORMANCE SALE MONDAY, APRIL 8, 2019

1:00pm MDT • Sale at St. Onge Livestock T O TA L P E R F O R M A N C E B U L L S & H E I F E R S BY OUR OUTSTANDING HERD SIRES & AI SIRES

SAV Intent 5590

Mill Bar Hickok 7242

#18256854

AAR Bankroll 5016

#18241686

#17351674

OTHER SIRES: HERD SIRES: Vermillion Sirloin B587 Carlson Resource 6038 A A R Frontman 6803 Mill Bar Code Black 8554 AI SIRES:

BREEDING ANGUS CATTLE FOR OVER 65 YEARS!

11440 Angus Lane • St. Onge, SD 57779

Coleman Charlo 0256 Musgrave Aviator

www.bakerlemarangus.com Mike & Sandra Baker H 605-642-9785 | C 605-641-0502 lemarangus@gmail.com

THE BRAND THAT WORKS 2

TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS

Visitors Always Welcome

Ranch located 5 miles west of St. Onge on Hwy 34 Or 6 miles east of Belle Fourche on Hwy 34

THAT FILLS YOUR HERD SIRE NEEDS

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


Gill Red Angus

"You Buy We Bid” Bull Sale

Tuesday, February 19, 2019 1:00 P.M. (MT) • AT THE RANCH • TIMBER LAKE, SD

SELLING

250 BULLS - 135 COMING TWO YEAR OLD BULLS - 115 YEARLING BULLS

You buy our bulls, we bid on your calves! 3rd Generation Bull Customer, Aberle Ranch Selling Steers at Mobridge Livestock. We purchased these steers on order and sent them to Dave Balduke at Sidney, MT.

Gill Red Angus 13138 256th Ave Timber Lake, SD 57656

www.gillredangus.com

Follow Gill Red Angus on Facebook!

Bryan Gill • 701.730.0134 Brent Gill • 605.848.3722 Larry Gill • 605.865.3288

bigredgenetics@hotmail.com

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Wednesday 1:30pm February 20

2019

SAV Renown

Yearling & Two-Year-Old Bulls

PAHR Yehti

At the Ranch • Sturgis, SD

LD Capitalist 316

Selling

125

Sires Include

VAR Commander, Aviator, PAHR Yehti, LD Capitalist 316, Poss Element, SAV Renown, Vision Unanimous, Tombstone

FREE WINTERING until April 100% GUARANTEED for the first breeding season FREE DELIVERY to adjoining states Bulls will be semen tested, scrotal measured and ultrasounded for carcass data

Jon & Breezy Millar - Sturgis, SD 605.347.BULL or 605.347.0553 www.MillarAngus.com THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

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SAV Real Performance 4876

6

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SAV President 6847

60 progeny sell!

th Production Sale 116 • February 9, 2019 •

Saturday

SAV Raindance 6848

10 am at the ranch

SELLING 500 REGISTERED ANGUS BULLS & 200 FEMALES • FREE NATIONWIDE DELIVERY ON BULLS • • VIEW SALE OFFERING AT www.schaffangusvalley.com •

60 progeny sell!

SAV Constitution 8054

SAV America 8018

SAV Rainfall 6846

50 progeny sell!

SAV Cutting Edge 4857

BW 85 205 Wt. 1107

30 progeny sell!

President X SAV Madame Pride 0075 • BW +1.8; WW +82; YW +134; Milk +27 A highlight of the 2019 sale season, representing the phenomenal first calfcrop by President. He shattered all records as the heaviest 205-day weight bull in SAV history.

BW 74 205 Wt. 965

President X SAV Blackcap May 1416 • BW +.9; WW +74; YW +128; Milk +26 A cowmaker supreme out of a fabulous flush sister to Resource who reigns among the top-producing cows in the SAV herd.

SAV Splash 8001

SAV Downpour 8794

SAV Sensation 5615

105 progeny sell!

SAV Resource 1441

BW 88 205 Wt. 1082

75 progeny sell!

Rainfall X SAV Madame Pride 4407 • BW +1.9; WW +86; YW +148; Milk +29 A cowman’s bull with massive volume and muscle dimension, dominating performance and herd-changing type. His Resource X Density dam is a seventh generation SAV embryo donor.

BW 60 205 Wt. 961

Rainfall X SAV Madame Pride 3045 • BW -2.2; WW +66; YW +116; Milk +31 This elite curvebender and AI stud prospect blends calving-ease, performance and phenotype with one of the strongest maternal lines in the business.

SAV Rainstorm 8223

SAV Thunderstorm 8075

SAV Renown 3439

20 progeny sell!

SAV International 2020 BW 81 205 Wt. 981

25 progeny sell!

SAV Prosperity 9131

35 progeny sell!

Raindance X SAV Blackcap May 1433 • BW +2.0; WW +75; YW +131; Milk +25 Major-league herdsire prospect with length, muscle, performance and superb structure. His front-pasture dam is a productive flush sister to Resource recording a weaning ratio of 108 on 6 calves.

The 2019 SAV Sale features large AI sire groups and a volume selection of seedstock affordable to the cowman. SAV bulls have earned a reputation for adding thickness, volume, muscle and real-world fleshing ability, while leaving moderate, beautiful-uddered, productive females. They are the kind ranchers demand and search for — adding pounds to your calfcrop, maternal strength to your cowherd and dollars to your bottomline.

BW 87 205 Wt. 1026

Raindance X SAV Blackcap May 1808 • BW +3.8; WW +79; YW +139; Milk +30 This high-octane performance bull will put pounds on the scale and add premiums at the marketplace. His Pathfinder dam by Net Worth records a weaning ratio of 110 on 6 calves.

Catalogs by request:

Many additional sires represented!

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r r e e b v e e Bi F SPRING PRODUCTION SALE

THURSDAY, MARCH 7, 2019 300 RED ANGUS YEARLING BULLS We are dedicated to producing exceptional cattle with high quality genetic values. We will be offering 300 Red Angus yearling bulls that have been bred to excel in all segments of the beef industry, including those traits that matter to your bottom line. We truly believe that with focused selection, you can have it all.

www.BieberRedAngus.com

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THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


Sale Date:

Selling

Spring Performance Leader Sale: March 29, 2019

Over 300 Production Tested 1A Registered Red Angus Bulls Every Year!

PieperRedAngus.com

Ask about our intensive buy back program!

Over 46 years of experience you can count on.. PIEPER RED ANGUS Mark, Deb, or Tate Pieper | 3779 550th Rd, Hay Spring, NE 69347 H: 308-638-4557 | C: 308-430-0989 | Tate’s Cell: 308-430-1777 Email: pieperra@gpcom.net

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JR 540 TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS

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Preserving the power of Scotch Cap genetics

PASSING ON PERFORMANCE BY THE POUND Selling approx.

160

& E T DA N!! W E IO T N CA O L

J indRA A CClAim

19tH AnnuAl PRoduCtion sAle WEDNESDAY

FEBRUARY 13 2019 At

the

Bull Center

neAr

ClArkson, ne

J indRA m egAHit

R egisteRed A ngus B ulls 50

R egisteRed A ngus H eifeRs l ARgest 2019 s Ale s iRe g RouPs By Colonel Renown Playbook Treasure Acclaim Megahit Stout Premium Blend 1623 Contender Rectify Beckon Guinness

Owned with Macholan Angus 3rd Dimension x Impression BW 76 • WW 852 • YW 1577 BW +0.4 • WW +79 • YW +161 • Milk +25 • $B 218.01

C onneAly g uinness

Connealy Dublin x EGL Target BW 82 • WW 741 • YW 1322 BW +1.8 • WW +62 • YW +110 • Milk +27 • $B 160.88

This year’s offering will feature progeny by the prolific dam of Jindra Acclaim and her brilliant cow family. Highlights will also include power packed progeny from the dams of Jindra Double Vision and Jindra 3rd Dimension.

Hoff Blockbuster x Hoff Heartland BW 84 • WW 912 • YW 1571 BW +0.9 • WW +90 • YW +151 • Milk +13 • $B 200.59

J indRA PRemium Blend 1623

Jindra Premium Blend x Hoff First Edition BW 88 • WW 799 BW +2.1 • WW +92 • YW +155 • Milk +17 • $B 197.47

Jindra Blackout owned with Poss Angus, Jindra Stonewall owned with Koupal’s B&B Angus, & Alta Genetics Nobmann Cattle Co. A big thAnks to All the greAt cAttlemen And friends behind

Jindra Grand Banks owned with Slagle Angus our progrAm. We Are very excited About the extrA performAnce our customers continue to see in their cAlf crops. those extrA pounds pAy the bills! lAst seAson most of our bulls WeAned At over 800 pounds And this yeAr they’ve done it AgAin. Another greAt crop of bulls Are developing! if you hAve Any questions on them We Would be glAd to visit.

Call or stop by anytime! • Nick Jindra • 2478 Rd 4 • Clarkson, NE 68629 402-920-3171 • nickjindra@hotmail.com • www.jindraangus.com 12

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11835 QUAAL ROAD, BLACKHAWK, SD THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

605.716.9003

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BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

22 PRODUCER PROFILES 24 MOHNEN ANGUS

BY AMANDA RADKE

BY SHALEY LESEGRAV

BY LYDIA KYLE

32 BARENTHSEN-BULLINGER RED ANGUS

44 LINDSKOV-THIEL RANCH CHAROLAIS & ANGUS

66 54 SCHIEFELBEIN FARMS ANGUS BY KELLIE LASSACK

66 TAUBENHEIM GELBVIEH

BY DEANNA NELSON-LICKING

BY DEANNA NELSON-LICKING

BY SHAUNA KOPREN

BY TAMARA CHOAT

BY TAMARA CHOAT

BY SHAUNA KOPREN

BY HANNAH JOHLMAN

78 BARSTOW ANGUS

90

90 RYDEEN FARM - SIMMENTAL/SIM-ANGUS 102 BOBCAT ANGUS 116 VALLEY VIEW CHAROLAIS 130 RIDL ANGUS

116

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142 LARGENT & SONS HEREFORDS

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What ranchers read.

SUBSCRIPTIONS: (877) 347-9100 Publisher: SABRINA “BREE” POPPE Cell (605) 639-0356 | Office (877) 347-9104 spoppe@tsln-fre.com

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

1501 5TH AVE., SUITE 101, BELLE FOURCHE, SD 57717 1-877-347-9100 · (605) 723-7001 · 877-347-9126 (FAX)

BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

GM of Sales & Marketing & MT-WY-ND Fieldman: DENNIS GINKENS Cell (406) 670-9839 | dginkens@tsln-fre.com Editor: CARRIE STADHEIM cstadheim@tsln-fre.com Digital & Sections Editor: MARIA TIBBETTS mtibbetts@tsln-fre.com Audience Engagement Coordinator: LIZ BANMAN (970) 371-9073 |lbanman@tsln-fre.com Graphic Designer: CHRISTA VANDYKE Cattle Marketing Assistant & Nebraska Territory Account Manager: CARISSA LEE (877)347-9114 | clee@tsln-fre.com

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Special Projects Coordinator & Account Manager: DIANNA PALMER SD–N. of I-90 West of the River (605)423-6045 | (877)347-9112 | dpalmer@tsln-fre.com Account Manager: SUSAN CABLE SD–S. of I-90 Rosebud East Territory (605) 840-1986 | (888) 648-4449 | scable@tsln-fre.com LIVESTOCK MARKETING DEPARTMENT Field Service & Ringmen SCOTT DIRK, Dept. Director & Fieldman (605) 380-6024 | sdirk@tsln-fre.com West River SD, NE Territory CHRIS EFFLING, Fieldman (605) 769-0142 | ceffling@tsln-fre.com East River SD, NE & MN Territory DAN PIROUTEK, Fieldman (605) 544-3316 MATT WZNICK, Fieldman (406) 489-2414 | mwznick@tsln-fre.com

CLASSIFIEDS: CLASSIFIEDS@TSLN-FRE.COM 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 News.

PUBLI C ATI ON

OF

2019 EDITION | VOLUME XVII

COVER PHOTO BY

HEATHER HAMILTON MAUDE

156 RESEARCH & TECHNOLOGY 158 MANAGING MINERALS

BY SHALEY LENSEGRAV

168 SMART TAGS

BY DEANNA NELSON-LICKING

178 A PROMISING PREDICTION

BY MEGAN SILVEIRA

190 RFID TECHNOLOGY

IS MORE THAN JUST TAGS

BY TODD KLASSY


204 RANCH & FARM MANAGEMENT 206 THE GOOD STUFF

Customer gifts BY AMANDA RADKE

218 CREATIVE AG

204

ENTREPRENEURS DIVERSIFY TO INCREASE RANCH INCOME BY AMANDA RADKE

230 YOUTH & FUTURE 232 FOCUS ON THE FUTURE

240

Symposium gives youth a look at the beef industry BY RUTH NICOLAUS

240 TECHNICALLY SPEAKING

New Belle Fourche Career & Tech Center BY TAMARA CHOAT

252 RANCHING HITS THE BIG SCREEN

IN OCEAN OF GRASS:

Life on a Nebraska Sandhills Ranch BY MARIA TIBBETTS

274 AG EVENTS

252

296 ADVERTISER INDEX BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

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South Dakota Red Angus Association www.SouthDakotaRedAngus.com Don’t Miss These SDRAA Events Jan 22-23 Sioux Empire Livestock Show Jan 29-30 Black Hills Stock Show

July 26-27 SD Summer Spotlight Show B Lazy T Ranch Brad & Trixie Grill 12256 Argyle Road Hot Springs, SD 57747 Bergeland Stock Farm Karl Bergeland 46377 217th Street Volga, SD 57071 Bieber Red Angus Ranch Craig & Peggy Bieber 11450 353rd Avenue Leola, SD 57456 Broken Heart Ranch Gary & Chad Pederson 12523 245th Avenue Firesteel, SD 57633 Campbell Red Angus Robert Campbell 5096 95th Street SW McIntosh, SD 57641 Carruthers Brothers Ranch Barb Carruthers 47165 253rd Street Baltic, SD 57003 Double S Farms Neil Stuefen 226 County Road 15 Arco, MN 56113 Driscoll Cattle Company Brian Driscoll 21359 427th Avenue De Smet, SD 57231 Eagle Pass Ranch AJ Munger, Andy Ledoux 34261 200th Street Highmore, SD 57345

20

Eichacker Red Angus Steve & Cathy Eichacker 25466 445th Avenue Salem, SD 57058 Fleming/Flagstad Jim Fleming/Lois Flagstad 1312 Woldland Drive Spearfish, SD 57783 Garrigan Land & Cattle Riley & Justin Garrigan HC Box 12 Dupree, SD 57623 Grussing Red Angus Mark Grussing 35331 264th Street Platte, SD 57369 Handel Red Angus Bruce & Mary Handel 28574 435th Avenue Menno, SD 57045 Hanson Red Angus Ben Hanson PO Box 355 Garretson, SD 57030 Hanson's Red Angus Joel & Pam Singrey 18155 440th Avenue Hazel, SD 57242 Hein Cattle Company Mike Hein 932 State Street Osage, IA 50461 Homestake Ranch Keith & Amanda Larsen 38393 US Hwy 14 Wolsey, SD 57384

TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS

Jung Cattle Company Alex Jung 561 N Sunset Drive Mina, SD 57451 Kappes Red Angus Nathan Kappes 402 S Commercial Street Clark, SD 57225 Kemen Farms Red Angus Dave Kemen 2495 Hwy 212 Madison, MN 56256 Koedam Cattle Co Steve & Christina Koedam 10168 Ahlers Avenue Edgerton, MN 56128 Lazy J Bar Ranch John & Stephanie Jung 36813 131st Street Mina, SD 57451 Leddy Red Angus Gene & Wade Leddy 47296 153rd Street Twin Brooks, SD 57269 Lone Tree Red Angus Brad & Brooke Schecher 18164 135th Street Bison, SD 57620 M & M Acres Mark & MaryKay Lacek 3580 County Road 105 Canby, MN 56220 Mitchell Red Angus Brandon & Belinda Mitchell 23950 South Creek Road Kadoka, SD 57543

Aug 29 South Dakota State Fair

Namken Red Angus Jared & Lacey Namken 45536 189th Street Lake Norden, SD 57248 Odden Cattle Company Dean & Susie Odden & Sons 20280 Green Valley Road Ree Heights, SD 57371 P4 Cattle Co Scott, Chance, Clay Popham 18297 447th Avenue Hayti, SD 57241 Pladsen Red Angus Chase Pladsen 1310 Lansing Harpers Road Harpers Ferry, IA 52146 Reisdorfer Red Angus Jeremy Reisdorfer 23059 Birkett Avenue Magnolia, MN 56158 Rocking Tree Ranch LLC Randy Hallock 1745 Davenport Street Sturgis, SD 57785 S Bar U Red Angus Cal & Tracy Swanson 26233 Main Street Hamill, SD 57534 Sanderson Red Angus Bruce & Carolyn Sanderson 11997 410th Avenue Claremont, SD 57432 Sandy Willow Red Angus Glenn & Paul Gaikowski 13933 450th Avenue Waubay, SD 57273

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

Shaggy Meadows Red Angus Jared & Michelle Dick 27634 443rd Avenue Marion, SD 57403 Sinkie Ranch Matt Sinkie 22313 361st Avenue Gann Valley, SD 57341 Thomas Ranch Troy & Veabea Thomas 18475 Capri Place Harrold, SD 57536 Valnes Ranch Red Angus Emit & Jayme Valnes 12310 447th Avenue Eden, SD 57232 VanderWal Red Angus Kent & Shawn VanderWal 20513 465th Avenue Bruce, SD 57220 Weber Red Angus Dean & Jason Weber 39120 292nd Street Wagner, SD 57380 Weidenbach Ranch Lawrence & Barb Weidenbach 18035 331st Avenue Highmore, SD 57345

Ranch Tested. Rancher Trusted.

Red Angus


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&

@classicangusranch

+.30

+0

FAT

YW

+61.90

$W

+133

MARB +.62

CW

+3 +71

BW +3.2

CED

RE +.90

+85

WW FAT -.022

+77.33

$W

+150

YW

+176.15

$B

+28

MILK

Reg.No. 19278233 Birth Date: 2-15-2018

Classic Top Cut 813

+.38

+55

RE

+74

WW

+145.31

$B

+17

MILK

BW 82 lbs. 205-Day Wt. 853 lbs.

Cowboy Up • SAV Ten Speed • 3F Epic • Bruns Top Cut • Black Granite • QLC Aviator and more

used ch: s e ir s p o t e Thes ssic Angus Ran at Cla

BW 85 lbs. 205-Day Wt. 740 lbs.

MARB

+10

CW

BW +1.6

CED

Reg.No. 19278501 Birth Date: 2-9-2018

Classic Cowboy Up 805

37th Annual Production Sale on Sunday • January 27, 2019 • 2 p.m. • at the ranch • Regent, ND

Bulls that will keep you in the cow business

Visit us on

Cell: 701.690.9059 | Office: 701.563.4630 Email: classicangus@gmail.com Website: classicangus.com

6449 100th Ave. SW | Regent, ND 58650

Bob and Angela Carlson


Producer

PROFILES

PHOTO COURTESY OF BARENTHSEN-BULLINGER RED ANGUS

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Producer

PROFILES THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

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Mohnen Angus

Mohnen

Angus

S

BY AMANDA RADKE

teve Mohnen is passionate about Angus cattle. He’s spent the last 38 years studying the breed and building his herd of elite mama cows.

“I was 25 years old when I started working for Howard Hillman of Bon View Angus Farms in Canova SD from 1980-1985,” said Steve. “While there, I learned how to AI and about the genetics of the breed. Bon View Farms was one of the most progressive Angus operations in the nation, and in starting my own herd back home, 90 percent of my cows originated from Bon View’s proven 8-10-year old cows.”

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Steve added, “In 1980, my dad started purchasing bulls when I was working for Bon View and was proud of the calves they produced on his commercial cows. Our registered Angus herd began to grow, and we proudly became Mohnen Angus.” The Mohnen family has been a staple of the White Lake community since German immigrant Matthew Mohnen homesteaded the ranch in 1884. Since then, generations of Mohnens have worked the land. Steve and Kathy Mohnen

“I learned my hard work ethic from my Dad,” said Steve. “Growing up in a family of 11 brothers and sisters, we were expected to help on the ranch. I always enjoyed working with the cattle and hogs. In 1985, I came back home to work alongside my dad, and for the next 10 years, I built my own cow herd, as well.” In 1994, Steve and his wife Kathy purchased their own place, just four miles down the road from the original homestead site where he grew up. Together, the couple raised cattle and four children — Josh, John, Jenny and Jared.

An example of a powerful cow-calf pair at Mohnen Angus. (PHOTO BY KATE ROBERTS)

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Jared Mohnen owns Dakota Ag Insurance in Mitchell.

Josh, his wife Katie, and their four boys — Koye, Kade, Kase and Kole — are back on the ranch. John, his wife Tory, and their two children — Gage and Laynie — also came back home to continue the family tradition in the cattle business.

Meanwhile, Jennifer, and her husband Ty Krell, along with their two children — Jake and Hadlee — ranch near Sundance, Wyo. Jennifer works for Wyoming Farm Bureau Insurance, and Ty serves as the vice president of the Sundance State Bank. Jared Mohnen owns and operates Dakota Ag Insurance Mitchell SD, and runs cattle on the Mohnen ranch, as well. Today the ranch consists of a registered Angus seedstock herd located near White Lake, S.D., as well as a 275-head commercial herd located in Canova, S.D., which is managed in a partnership with a family friend. To support three families on the ranch, Mohnen credits slow and steady expansions over the years.

Josh, his wife Katie, and their four boys — Koye, Kade, Kase and Kole — are back on the ranch, running Angus cattle alongside Steve and Kathy.

John, his wife Tory, and their two children— Gage and Laynie —came back home to continue the family tradition in the cattle business.

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TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS

PHOTOS COURTESY OF MOHNEN ANGUS

The Ty and Jenny Krell family ranch in Sundance, Wyo.

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


“We have continued to increase our land, which has allowed us to grow,” he said. “Our early-calving commercial cows in Canova are used as recips in our embryo transfer program, which has allowed us to bring great genetics to our customers year after year.” Mohnen Angus hosts an annual bull sale, marketing 140 bulls, that is held on the ranch the second Thursday in February. February 2019 will mark the family’s 25th annual bull sale. Although the Mohnens don’t sell females every year, a fall female sale is slated for 2019. Also new in 2018, Mohnen Angus introduced an “Open the Gate” May bull sale selling an additional 35-40 bulls to customers.

years,” said Josh. “Our customer base is a big factor in our business. We need to have strong relationships in order to be successful, and we need to believe and stand behind our products.” With strong demand for Mohnen Angus genetics, the ranch has enjoyed tremendous success over the years. In 2013, Mohnen South Dakota 402 sold for $120,000 for two-thirds interest to Semex, Dale Edwards and Anvil Angus. In 2014, Mohnen Impressive 1093 sold two-thirds interest for $160,000 to Richard Angus and Genex. Other successful sires for the Mohnens include Long Distance, Dynamite, Substantial, Success, Global and many more.

“The Open the Gate sale allowed us to further develop a younger set of bulls with the same strict set of criteria as the bulls sold in our February sale,” said Josh Mohnen. “This was our first year of doing this, but it gave us the opportunity to help our customers out who were needing bulls after semen testing or if a herd sire had gotten hurt. In previous years, when we had gotten those calls, we were sold out of bulls and had to turn them in different directions.”

Another prestigious highlight for Mohnen Angus was winning the 2014 National Western Grand Champion Angus carload show, with a set of 10 Angus bulls. Six of the 10 bulls were sired by Mohnen South Dakota 402, and all 10 went back to the pedigree of Mohnen’s very successful wellknown foundation cow, Mohnen’s Jilt 910.

The Mohnens agree that it’s the great people in the cattle business that makes it so enjoyable.

“It all goes back to the Angus cow, and the hard work each and everyone here does to make it successful,” said Steve. “We have a lot of different ideas, and that’s what makes it so rewarding. We are passionate about our part in the Angus business,

“We love the people in this industry, our customers and the relationships we’ve developed over the

So what has been the secret to Mohnen Angus’ success?

Larry & Chasity Broadbrooks, Owners

Handling ALL Your Sales, Service & Parts Needs 5400 US Hwy 312

|

Billings, MT 59105

Authorized Dealers

| 406.373.9800

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

|

mhrepair.net

TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS

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and we will never stop working to keep our genetically-sound females. Angus are the best mama cows there are, in my opinion. Our cows graze until two weeks before calving. They aren’t pampered. They are expected to work for us and be profitable.” “Raising quality cattle isn’t just our job; it’s our life,” added John Mohnen. “Everything goes back to the cow, and the Angus cow has always been superior as a maternal female.” “Angus females breed back on time. They are functional, easy-fleshing, and good-uddered, can wean a calf that sells well at market and produce a premium beef product that consumers all over the world love,” said Josh. This passion for the breed extends to the next generation, as well, as the Mohnen grandkids are learning the ropes from a young age.

“Every year, the kids gain a little more experience helping us in the business,” said Josh. “We started in 4-H this year, and Koye is really enjoying it. Every kid gets to keep one cow each year, and they get to make their own breeding decisions. It’s a learning tool for them and a way to keep them involved and have something to build upon.” “I hope our kids love the Angus breed as much as we do, and they can continue Mohnen Angus for years to come,” Josh said. “We are very excited for our future in this business. One day, we’ll be retired and our kids will be selling the bulls in their annual sale. It’s something to look forward to.” Yet, like all ranching families, the Mohnens have faced ups and downs. In the early 2000s, they were forced to disperse half the herd after a five-year drought left them short of grass. They’ve weathered the market swings, the inclement weather and other challenges over the years, but Steve never wavered in his goals of developing a premier Angus herd that would serve his commercial and registered breeders. “We’ve weathered the challenges by selecting the best genetics possible each year,” he said. “I built this cow herd from the ground up; nothing was handed to me. I never chased fads, and I’ve always just focused on raising functional cattle that work in my herd. My best advice to others is to keep your mindset on what you really want and don’t look the other way.”

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THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

He said, “Don’t build your cow herd solely off the results of a 50K test. Just because a female has the best genomics scores, doesn’t mean she stays. A functional cow with a good udder, temperament, structure and feet is critical. The power is in the genetics.”


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Barenthsen-Bullinger Red Angus

Barenthsen-Bullinger

M

BY SHALEY LESEGRAV

RedAngus

ark Barenthsen recognizes the part his wife and daughters have played in making their cattle business what it is today—a recognition that’s reflected in the name, which is now hyphenated to include his daughter and son-in-law. “It’s not an ‘I’ operation, it’s a ‘we’ operation,” said Mark about BarenthsenBullinger Red Angus. “My wife and I have developed this together and our girls have worked hard on this too.”

ALL PHOTOS COURTESY OF BARENTHSEN-BULLINGER RED ANGUS

Fourth generation Mark and Kathy Barenthsen along with fifth generation Jeremy and Jessica Bullinger.

Harsh winters call for hearty cattle.

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Mark and Kathy Barenthsen

Mark and his wife, Kathy, are fourth generation cattle producers near Powers Lake in northwest North Dakota. Together with their son-inlaw and daughter, Jeremy and Jessica Bullinger, the family farms small grains and raises purebred Red Angus cattle. “We were always a commercial operation,” Barenthsen said of the family’s ranch when his father and grandfather were in charge. In 1976, Barenthsen came back to the ranch and after their marriage, he and Kathy began trying out different breeds of cattle including Herefords,

black baldies, Charolais, and some Simmental before deciding to focus on Red Angus. To make a go of it in the early years, Mark sold insurance and Kathy worked as a part-time registered nurse. “We wanted to make our living off the farming and ranching, so [working as a nurse] was supplemental income,” Kathy says. In 1993, the couple decided to go into the seedstock business and began selling purebred registered Red Angus. This February, they’ll be hosting their 20th annual sale at the ranch.

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Jeremy and Jessica Bullinger with children Avah, Jaden and Adalyn.

Around ten years ago, the Bullingers joined Jessica’s parents back on the ranch. “I always had that desire to be back on our place,” Jessica, the oldest of the four Barenthsen girls says. “It kind of just really played out. We knew we wanted to be back here and my parents were willing to work with us.” The Bullingers have three children, Jaden, Avah, and Adalyn, who are also involved on the ranch and with their 4-H projects. Jessica isn’t the only daughter who works in agriculture; each of the Barenthsen’s daughters married farmers or ranchers and work along side their husbands at their operations.

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“Kathy and I have watched our other daughters develop their own operations and to see the kids do the same thing is the most rewarding thing to us,” Mark said. Together, the two families have been able to improve upon the business and expand as well. Barenthsen explained that they decided to stick with Red Angus because they “cover all of the bases.” “They have a lot of maternal value and are a little more docile—that’s a big plus for us. They clean up a lot of udder problems other breeds face as well,” he said. “One big thing that helped us decide to be in Red Angus too was the demand

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


from other breeds. It’s a non-diluter breed so you don’t get gray colored calves and that’s a big advantage for selling bulls.” When the Barenthsens began raising Red Angus, the demand for the breed wasn’t that high; however, over the years they’ve seen an increase. “Red Angus has really been becoming more in demand,” Mark said. “We never knew it would be this strong, but it is one of the things we’ve benefited from.” Variations in demand for different breeds isn’t the only change they’ve witnessed. A love of agriculture is passed down from one generation to the next.

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“There have definitely been a bunch of changes since the time that we started,” Mark said. “Earlier in our career a 500-pound calf was a good weaning weight.” Along with the progression and focus on a heavy weaning weight, Mark has noticed differences in what has been considered the desired frames in cattle. “We’ve gone through times where cows were short and thick, then in the ’80s the focus was on larger-framed cattle that were harder to keep,” he explained. The family’s ranch is located twenty miles south of the Canadian border, which means a harsh winter climate. “The weather can be unpredictable, so we raise cattle that are going to stay in our herd because of where we live especially,” said Jessica Bullinger. “We’re trying to raise cattle that can get by on less feed—less hay and grain—than we used to,” Mark said. Another change that has impacted the cattle industry is the increase in available technology and various tests.

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“One big change for sure was the use of EPDs and technologies. We’ve been able to develop cattle that are much more functional,” said Mark. “We’ve developed cattle that can calve on their own without any assistance where, back a few years, you’d have people hauling cattle to town to get assistance or a cesarean.” Jeremy Bullinger explained that their purebred operation pays special attention to developing their females. “We focus mainly on the female side of it. The maternal value in the Red Angus is what has kept us with this breed.” Besides developing quality cattle, BarenthsenBullinger Red Angus strongly focuses on serving their customers. This past June, the ranch organized and hosted a “Red Angus Feeder Calf Marketing Meeting and Supper” for producers to meet with feedlot owners from Oklahoma, Kansas, Colorado, and South Dakota. At the meeting, feedlot owners discussed different natural (growth hormone-free and antibiotic-free)

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


programs that can add value to cattle, along with talking about different areas or ways to market conventional cattle for increased profit. “I think these are really exciting times—there’s a lot of changes, but there’s a lot of really good avenues that we as producers can take these days to add premiums to our calves,” Jessica said. Mark said he feels as though they are removed from “bigger markets,” so the meeting was a way for producers in northwest North Dakota to make connections with those larger markets that are farther away. “They [the feed lot owners] looked at [the meeting] as an opportunity to visit an area that is overlooked and provided a place for them to develop relationships,” he said.

Around 150 producers attended the meeting and Barenthsen says they are still receiving positive feedback about the event. “It was good to open up new opportunities for marketing for our customers—we totally enjoyed it.” “Customer relationships are important,” Jeremy said. Which is also why the Bullingers have began Bullinger Family Meats. The couple saw an opportunity for a niche market and now offer 100 percent All-Natural Red Angus Beef sold directly off of the ranch. “We have to be really in tune to what our customers are asking for,” Jessica said.

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The two families have also built their own feedlot, which can hold 450 head. For right now the facility is used to develop their own bulls and heifers, but Jeremy said that it could be a way to expand in the future. Working in agriculture is a lifestyle that both the Barenthsens and Bullingers said that they enjoy.

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“It is really fun having Jessica and Jeremy part of the operation,” Mark saod. “It’s very rewarding to have family members become involved and gratifying for Kathy and I.” Likewise, Jeremy appreciates having his children a part of the ranch as well: “It’s just a great way of life to have our kids with us and grow and

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


work with us. It’s a way for them to learn hard work and dedication.” “Cattle are important, along with caring for the land, but above and beyond all of that it’s all about seeing our family developing their lifestyle and continue in the tradition that we’ve been able to be a part of,” Mark said.

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

Red Angus is a non-diluter breed which is an asset.

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2019 Private Treaty Sales 66 Ranch

2019 Production Sales

Havre, MT

2019 Private Sales Private Treaty 2019 Treaty Private2019 Treaty Sales 6R Ranch Powell Butte, OR Sales

Ahlgren, John & Rebecca Winnett, MT ch66 Ranch 2019 66 Ranch Havre, MT Private TreatyMT SalesHavre, MT Angelo Cattle Company Havre, Drummond, MT ch6R Ranch 6R Ranch Powell Butte, ORButte, OR Powell Butte, OR Cabernet Cattle Company Powell Pomeroy, 66 Ranch Havre, MTWA n, John & Rebecca Ahlgren, Winnett, John MT & Rebecca Winnett, MT Ahlgren, John Red & Rebecca MTMT Christensen Angus Winnett, Park City, 6R Ranch Powell Butte, OR Cattle Company Angelo Drummond, Cattle Company MT Drummond, MT Angelo Cattle Company Drummond, MT Clark Red Angus Fishtail, MT Ahlgren, John & Rebecca Winnett, MT netCabernet Cattle Company Cabernet Pomeroy, Cattle WA Company Pomeroy, WA Cattle Company Pomeroy, WASD Cross F Cattle Red Angus Porcupine, Angelo Company Drummond, MT City, MT nsen Red Angus Christensen Park City, Red MT Angus Christensen Red Angus Park City, MT Park Four C Red Angus Hot Springs, MT Cabernet Cattle Company Pomeroy, WA edClark Angus Clark Fishtail, Red Angus MT Fishtail, MT Red Angus Fishtail, MT Franz Ranch Sidney, MT Christensen Red Angus Park MTPorcupine, SD Red Angus Cross Porcupine, F Red Angus SD City, SD Cross FRed RedAngus Angus Porcupine, Geib Dagmar, MT Clark Red Angus Fishtail, MT Hot Springs, MT Red Angus Four Hot C Red Springs, Angus MT Four C Red Angus Hot Springs, Glacier Red Angus Polson, MTMT Cross F Red Angus Porcupine, SD Ranch Franz Sidney, Ranch MT Sidney, MT Franz Ranch Sidney, MT MT Hidden Hallow Ranch Townsend, Four C Red Angus Hot Springs, Dagmar, MT ed Geib Angus Geib Dagmar, Red Angus MT MT Red Angus Dagmar, MTMT I Like It Like That Chinook, Franz Ranch Sidney, MT Red Angus Glacier Polson, Red Angus MT Polson, MT Glacier Red Angus Angus Polson, Kelly Red Red GrandMT Island, NE Geib Angus Dagmar, MT Townsend, n Hallow Ranch Hidden Townsend, Hallow Ranch MT MT Hidden Hallow Ranch Townsend, MT Kingfisher Farm Lolo, MT Glacier Red Angus Polson, MT t Like That I LikeChinook, It Like That MT Chinook, MT I Like It Like That Chinook, Loosli Red Angus Ashton,MT ID MT Hidden Hallow Ranch Townsend, ed Kelly Angus Kelly Grand Red Angus Island, NE Grand Island, NE Red Angus Grand Lost Creek Red Angus Molt,Island, MTMTNE I Like It Like That Chinook, herKingfisher Farm Kingfisher Lolo, MT Farm Farm Lolo, MT MT Lolo, MT MeesRed Ranch Forsyth, Kelly Angus Grand Island,Ashton, NE RedLoosli Angus Loosli Ashton, Red Angus ID ID RedCattle Angus Ashton, ID MT Meyer Company Helmville, Kingfisher Farm Lolo, MT eekLost RedCreek Angus Lost Creek Molt, MT Red Angus Molt, MT Red Angus Molt, MT MT Mork,Red Don Sanders, Loosli Angus Ashton, ID Ranch Mees Forsyth, Ranch MT MT Mees Ranch Forsyth, MT Forsyth, Nissen & Corey A Reds NorthMT Plains, OR Lost Creek Red Angus Molt, Cattle Company Meyer Helmville, Cattle Company MT Helmville, MT Meyer Cattle Company MT Orchard Cattle Company Helmville, Berthoud, CO Mees Ranch Forsyth, MT Don Mork,Sanders, Don MT MT Mork, Don Red Sanders, MT Sanders, Ostendorf Angus Powderville, MT Meyer CattleNissen Company Helmville, MTNorth & Nissen Corey A&Reds North & Corey Plains, A Reds OR Plains, OR Corey North OR Ott Red AngusA Reds ReedPlains, Point, MT Mork, Don Sanders, MT d Cattle Company Orchard Berthoud, CattleBerthoud, Company CO CO Orchard Cattle Company CO Berthoud, Owings& Cattle Company PowellPlains, Butte, OR Nissen Corey A Powderville, Reds Red Angus North OR dorfOstendorf Red Angus Ostendorf MT Powderville, MT Red Powderville, MT RaislandCattle Red Angus Angus St. Ignatius, Orchard Company Berthoud, COMT d Angus Ott Red Reed Angus Point, MT Reed Point, MT Ott RedCreek AngusRed Angus Reed Point, Rock Joliet, MT MTMT Ostendorf Red Angus Powderville, s Cattle Company Owings Powell Cattle Butte, Company OR Powell Butte, OR Owings Cattle Powell Butte, OR Rutledge RedCompany Angus Big Sandy, Ott Red Angus Reed Point,MT MT d Red Angus Raisland St. Ignatius, Red Angus MT St. Ignatius, MT Raisland RedRed Angus St.Cody, Ignatius, MT Shepherd Angus WY Owings Cattle Company Powell Butte, OR MT reek RedCreek Angus Rock Joliet, Creek MT Red Angus Joliet, Rock Red Angus Joliet, MT Silver Spur Ranches Encampment, WY Raisland Red Angus St. Ignatius, MT ge Rutledge Red Angus Rutledge Big Sandy, Red Angus MT Big Sandy, MT Red Angus Big Sandy, MT Smieja Red Red Angus Belgrade, Rock Creek Angus Joliet, MT MT erdShepherd Red Angus Shepherd Cody,Red WYCody, Angus Red Angus WY MTCody, WY Summers Ranch Flaxville, Rutledge RedSilver Angus Big Sandy, MT Spur Ranches Spur Ranches WY Encampment, WY Silver SpurAngus RanchesEncampment, Encampment, WY TG Red Dagmar, MT Shepherd Red Angus Cody, WY Belgrade, MT Red Angus Smieja Belgrade, Red Angus MT Smieja Belgrade, MT MT ThreeRed WayAngus Ranch St. Ignatius, Silver Spur Ranches Encampment, WY ersSummers Ranch Summers Flaxville, Ranch MT Ranch Flaxville, MT Flaxville, MT WalkingRed T Genetics Joliet, MT Smieja Angus Belgrade, MT d Angus Dagmar, AngusMT TG Red Angus TG Red Dagmar, MT Dagmar, MT Summers Ranch Flaxville, MT St. Ignatius, MT Way Ranch ThreeSt.Way Ignatius, Ranch Three Way Ranch St. MT Ignatius, MT TG Red Angus Dagmar, MT Joliet, MT g TWalking GeneticsT Genetics Walking Joliet, T Genetics MTJoliet, MT Three Way Ranch St. Ignatius, MT Walking T Genetics Joliet, MT

Jan 28 Feb 1 Feb 12 Mar 1 Mar 2 Mar 5 Mar 8 Mar 9 Mar 12 Mar 13 Mar 14 Mar 15 Mar 16 Mar 16 Mar 18 Mar 18 Mar 19 Mar 21 Mar 23 Mar 25 Mar 27 Apr 4 Apr 6 Apr 12 May 9 Nov 7 Nov 14

Jan 28 Bullis Creek Ranch Burwell, NE 20191 Production Sales 2019 Sales Production Sales 2019 Production Feb TJS Red Angus Buffalo, WY Feb 12CreekForster Red Angus Dickinson, ND Bullis Ranch JanCreek 28Production Bullis Burwell, Creek NE Ranch 2019 Sales Jan 28 Bullis Ranch Burwell, NE Burwell, Mar 1 Sutherlin Farms Stevensville, MT TJS 1Red Angus 1 TJS Buffalo, Red Angus WY Feb TJSFeb Red Angus Buffalo, WY Buffalo, Jan 28 Bullis Creek Ranch Burwell, NE Mar 2 Redland RedForster Angus Hysham, MT Dickinso Forster Angus Feb 12 Dickinson, RedDickinson, Angus ND Feb 12 Red Forster Red Angus ND Feb 15 TJS Red Angus Buffalo, WY Mar Sandhills Red Angus Sidney, MT Sutherlin Farms Mar 1Farms Sutherlin Stevensville, Farms MT Stevens Mar 1 Sutherlin Stevensville, MT Feb Forster Red Angus Angus Dickinson, Mar128 Red Leland Red Sidney, MTND Redland Mar Angus 2 Redland Hysham, Red MT Angus Hysham Mar 2 Redland Red Angus Hysham, MT Mar Sutherlin Farms Stevensville, Mar 19 Red Lucht Red Angus Bozeman, MTMT Sandhills Mar Angus 5 Sandhills Sidney, MT Red Angus Mar 5 Sandhills Red Angus Sidney, MT Sidney, Mar 2 Redland Red Angus Hysham, MT Mar 12 Loosli Red Angus Ashton, ID Leland Angus MarRed 8 Angus Leland Sidney, Red MT Angus MT Sidney, Mar 8 Red Leland Sidney, Mar 5 Sandhills Red Angus Sidney, Mar 13 Heart River Red Angus Belfield,MT ND Bozema Lucht Red Angus Mar 9 Lucht Bozeman, Red Angus MT Mar 9 Lucht Red Angus Bozeman, MT Mar 8 Leland Red Angus Sidney, MT Mar 14 Fritz Red Angus Brady, MT Loosli Red Angus Mar 12 Loosli Ashton, Red ID Angus Ashton, Mar 12 Loosli Red Angus Ashton, ID Mar 9 Lucht Red Angus Bozeman, MT Mar 15 Graystone Cattle Co. Stockport, IA Heart Red Mar Angus 13 Red Heart Belfield, RiverND Red Angus Mar 13 River Heart River Angus Belfield, ND Belfield, Mar 12 Loosli Angus Ashton, Mar Red 16 Angus 9 Mar MileRed Ranch Touchet,IDWABrady, M Fritz 14 Fritz Brady, Red MT Angus Mar 14 Fritz Red Angus Brady, MT Mar River Reds Red Angus Belfield, ND Mar 13 16 Heart Milk Creek Plevna, Graystone Cattle Mar Co. 15 Graystone Stockport, Cattle IA Co. MT Mar 15 Graystone Cattle Co. Stockport, IA Stockpo Mar 14 Fritz Red Angus Brady, MT Mar 18 Flatwater Gang Broken Bow, NE 9 Mile MarRanch 16 9 Mile Touchet, Ranch WA Mar 16 Ranch 9 Mile Touchet, WA Touchet Mar 15 Graystone Cattle Co. Stockport, IAMT Mar 18 Sun River Red Angus Great Falls, Milk16Creek Reds Mar 16 Reds Milk Plevna, CreekMT Reds Mar Milk Creek Plevna, MT Plevna, Mar 9Green Mile Ranch Touchet, WA Mar 16 19 Gang Mountain Red Angus MT Flatwater Mar 18 Flatwater Broken Bow, Gang NELogan, Broken B Mar 18 Flatwater Gang Broken Bow, NE Mar 16 Milk CreekRed Reds Plevna, MT MT Mar 21 Klompien Angus Manhattan, Sun18 RiverSun RedMar Angus 18Red Sun Great RiverFalls, Red MT Angus Mar River Angus Great Falls, MTGreat Fa Mar 18 Flatwater Gang Broken Bow,MT NE Mar 23 Fischer Red Angus Harlowton, Green MarMountain Red 19 Angus Green Mountain Red Angus Loga Mar 19 Mountain Green RedLogan, AngusMTLogan, MT Mar Sun River Angus Great Falls, MT Mar 18 25 Red Feddes & Red C-TKlompien Red Angus Manhattan, MT Klompien Mar Angus 21 Manhattan, Red Angus MT Manhat Mar 21 Klompien Red Angus Manhattan, MT Mar Mountain Red Angus Logan, MTMT Mar 19 27RedGreen Westphal Red Angus Grass Fischer Angus Mar 23 Fischer Harlowton, Red Angus MT Range, Mar 23 Fischer Red Angus Harlowton, MTHarlowt Mar 21 Klompien Red Angus Manhattan, MT Apr 4 Bowles J5 Reds Glasgow, MT Feddes C-TMar Red&25 Angus Feddes Manhattan, & C-T Red MT AngusMT Manhat Mar 25 &Feddes C-T Red Angus Manhattan, Mar Fischer Red Angus Harlowton, Apr 23 6 Red Spear J27 Jordan, MT MT Westphal Mar Angus Westphal Grass Range, Red Angus MT Grass Mar 27 Westphal Red Angus Grass Range, MT Ra Mar 25 Feddes & C-T Red Angus Manhattan, MT Apr 12 5L Red Angus Sheridan, MTGlasgow Bowles Reds Apr J54RedsBowles Glasgow, J5 Reds MT Apr 4 J5Bowles Glasgow, MT Mar 27 Westphal Red Angus Grass Range, MT May 9J RedKoenig Angus Glasgow, MTJordan, Spear Angus AprJ Red 6Red Spear Jordan, J Red MT Angus M Apr 6 Spear Angus Jordan, MT Apr 47 Bowles J5 Reds Glasgow, Nov 5LApr Red12 Angus Sheridan,MT MT 5L Red Angus 5L Sheridan, Red Angus MT Sheridan Apr 12 5L Red Angus Sheridan, MT Apr 6 Spear J Red Jordan, MT MT Nov 14 Laubach RedAngus Angus Big Timber, Koenig Red Angus May 9 Koenig Glasgow, Red MT Angus May 9 Koenig Red Angus Glasgow, MT Glasgow Apr 12 5L Red Angus Sheridan, MT 5L Red NovAngus 7 5LSheridan, Red Angus MT Nov 7 Angus 5L Red Sheridan, MT Sheridan May 9 Koenig Red Angus Glasgow, MT Laubach Nov Angus 14 Laubach Big Timber, Red MT Nov 14 Red Laubach Red Angus BigAngus Timber, MTBig Timb Nov 7 5L Red Angus Sheridan, MT Nov 14 Laubach Red Angus Big Timber, MT

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TROUT RANC H

KEHOE FARM

6,858+/- acres with 640-acre state land lease located on western edge of the Nebraska Sandhills. Operated as a 450 AU year round cow-calf ranch, with center pivot and excellent water resources. $4,000,000. Contact John Stratman.

CHALK ROAD RANC H

DALLAM COUNTY FARM

In the northwest corner of Dallam County, TX is a 1,740+/acre irrigated farm. Excellent access and the availability of local grain elevators, feedyards, sale barns and summer grazing in NE New Mexico. $6,960,000. Contact Zurick Labrier.

BUTTERMILK RANC H

Located between Powell and Cody, Wyoming next to Heart Mountain featuring 455 acres with 200+/- acres under pivot and flood irrigation. Improvements include a shop with living quarters and a feedlot. $1,450,000. Contact John Stratman.

MCCLELLEN FARM

Located in western Colorado, a diverse working cattle ranch with a total of 2,307 +/- deeded acres allowing for an efficient 520 head “out the back gate” contiguous ranch operation. $4,000,000. Contact John Stratman.

FISHHOLE CREEK RANC H

796+/- acres in the northwest corner of the Texas Panhandle. Opportunities for corn, wheat, and milo production. The current owner also utilizes a cow/calf operation to maximize his farming operation. $1,250,000. Contact Zurick Labrier.

GREGORY IRRIGATED

Located in Oregon’s SE corner, consisting of 15,300+/- acres; 3,598 acres deeded. Included is the Aspen Ridge Resort, a 7,000 square-foot log lodge and five 1,250 square-foot log cabins, and a historic homestead. $9,800,000. Contact Robb Van Pelt.

42

1,590+/- acres, mainly center pivot irrigation with dryland corners, located 10 miles south of Texline, Texas. The seasonal Carrizo Creek runs through the property. Diversity of crop production. $1,520,000. Contact Zurick Labrier.

960+/- acres near Kimball, Nebraska, a combination crop and livestock operation. Four pivots producing cash crops and three small pivots planted to grass and backgrounding lot for stocker livestock program. $2,200,000. Contact Buck Hottell.

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Can your bull Can your bull get more than get halfmore yourthan cows half your cows PREGNANT PREGNANT onthe thefirst firstday dayof of on breedingseason? season? breeding

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Lindskov-Thiel Ranch

Lindskov-Thiel Ranch

Excellence and Longevity in the cattle industry

L

BY LYDIA KYLE

es Lindskov and Brent Thiel aren’t the kind of producers that boast about their success, but with the name Lindskov-Thiel Ranch being a heavy hitter in the industry their influence speaks for itself. The Lindskov-Thiel Ranch is a shining example of how true longevity is attained in the cattle industry and their journey goes well beyond good genetics.

Situated in the grasslands of Western South Dakota, the Lindskov-Thiel Ranch raises one of the

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TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS

premier purebred herds in the Midwest. In addition, the Lindskov family operates one of the largest commercial herds in the country. Maintaining a thriving seedstock business has made Lindskov-Thiel a well-known name amongst producers around the country. Comprised of twothirds Charolais and one-third Angus, the operation has grown tremendously from the foundation laid by the Lindskov family many years ago. Les’ father, Bill Lindskov, struck out in the cattle industry in 1934 with a small herd of Hereford cattle. Les

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


Western South Dakota provides excellent hard grass and beautiful topography for the LT seedstock operation. PHOTOS COURTESY OF LINDSKOV- THIEL RANCH

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laughed noting, “Everyone started out with Hereford cattle back in the day!”

Most Efficient Most Convenient Most Durable Least Cost OSU Research Proven

Efficiency = Profitability

"Much expense and many long hours go into harvesting

and storing hay for winter feeding, so why waste it?" Bruce Anderson, UNL Extension forage specialist. Beef Magazine, Dec., 2011

“The Lindskovs were some of the first people in South Dakota to use Charolais bulls on their commercial cows,” said Brent Thiel, “and we’ve evolved from there.” Evolved may be too humble a description for the tremendous growth the Lindskov-Thiel Ranch has seen over the past 38 years since Les took over for his father. “We’re very diversified,” said Les, “diversification is a huge part of any success.” After working as Les’ field rep for the American National Charolais Association for several years, Brent Thiel along with his wife, Nancy, set out on a new adventure by becoming partners with Les and his wife, Marcia. Both having a passion for producing good, solid cattle for cowmen across the country, the partnership set themselves apart by laying a solid foundation for their seedstock venture. “Basic cow sense things are what are important to us,” said Brent. With a heavy focus on calving ease, added pounds at weaning, and longevity all the bulls from the Lindskov-Thiel Ranch are born workers. “We have several customers who have bulls that are seven to eight years old and still breeding,” noted Brent.

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Selling roughly 225 bulls on the third Saturday of every April, Brent stated that providing “good, practical range cattle,” is what Lindskov-Thiel Ranch aims for every single year. Along with herd sires, the operation prides itself on providing guaranteed heifers from their herd and proven cows to purebred producers cross the country through private treaty.

customer base has always been a focal point of how

Specifically noting the involvement of both his wife Nancy and Les’ wife, Marcia, Brent said that it has always been all hands on deck when it comes to making the ranch successful. With Nancy as the business manager and Marcia taking charge of all hospitality for the annual sale and other events, these men credit much of their longevity to the women working alongside them.

their herd, “our actions speak for themselves,” said

While having solid range cattle who are proven to produce excellent carcass merit is a major component to the success of the operation, honoring their

are things that Les knows have helped the business

these families do business. Becoming actively involved with their customers, Lindskov-Thiel Ranch provides more than just an annual sale every April. Taking extra steps like listing more than 20,000 feeder calves for their customers and offering marketing for calves sired from Brent, “we want people to get more than a good bull from us.” Much like Brent, Les Lindskov believes that success in the cattle industry goes well beyond the cattle being marketed from an operation. Succession and letting go to make room for the next generation his father started over sixty years ago continue to thrive in a new era.

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LT Brenda represents the most prolific cow family in the linebred Charolais herd at Lindskov- Thiel Ranch.

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With four sons being full partners in all aspects of the Lindskov legacy, Les and Marcia took all the necessary steps to insure the success of their children and the success of their business went hand in hand. “My recommendation to anyone my age is to do detailed estate planning,” Les said. Despite the tedious and often grueling process that estate planning can be, the Lindskov family and the Lindskov-Thiel operation have seen benefits far outweigh the time spent orchestrating the succession.

Obviously working with family can be hard and often leaves many ranches left without options for continued growth, but at the LindskovThiel Ranch the ability to pass the torch gracefully offers a glimmer of renewed prosperity across generations. “There are always some bumps in the road, but that is part of life,” said Les, “it’s really survival of the fittest.” Though Les isn’t ready to call himself an “old timer” just yet, his insight into the current state of the industry reflects that of someone who has spent many years watching the ups and downs cattle producers face. While offering practical

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International and domestic tour groups are a common sight at the ranch annually. In the background herdsman Blake Conner and his wife, Kate, present cattle to a group of visitors.

advice like watching overhead when times get tough, Les feels that the biggest mistake ranches can make in this current climate is to not let go and “let their heirs take it to the next level”. Les jokes that he’s practically bankrupt because his sons “pretty much own it all now”, but his enthusiasm for life remains fully intact as he watches the next generation step in to grow his and Maria’s vision beyond anything they could have imagined themselves. “Material possessions

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mean nothing to me, so letting go wasn’t hard,” he said, with a tone of true contentment. If anything, the Lindskov-Thiel Ranch proves that cattle are just one of the factors in true success in this industry. From a partnership molded over 30 years of shared passions to being willing to share the prosperity with the next generation, The Lindskov and Thiel families have become more than just solid seedstock producers in the world of cattle production.

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


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Green Mountain Red Angus 54

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Schiefelbein

Farms

BY KELLIE GREGORICH

I

n 1955, Frank Schiefelbein and his wife, Frosty, were a young city couple who knew nothing about farming or cattle. Frank did

of embryo transfer, making them one of the first breeders to try this.

know one thing – people liked a good steak. That foundational concept led to the start of Shciefelbein Farms, the largest registered Angus operation Minnesota. They started by buying two heifer crops from another Angus farmer in Minnesota. Frank chose the Angus breed back then for two reasons—they were good eating and didn’t have horns. As Frank and Frosty were starting their farm, they were also starting their family. After the birth of their ninth son, their family was complete. As the boys grew, so did Frank’s ideas for the herd. In the late 1970s Frank wanted more from his calves and knew he needed to do something to make them stand out from the others. He decided to start breeding his Angus cows with a Simmental bull. This didn’t work out very well in the beginning because the calves were too big at birth and they had too much frame. That didn’t stop Frank. He knew there was a way to do this, but not the normal way. Frank knew that by taking the egg out of one cow and putting it in a donor cow that he would be able to get the results he wanted. This led him to discovering the benefits

As the years went by the boys grew and headed to college. Frank continued on the farm and waited for the boys to finish school. All of them were welcome to come back to the farm, but there was one stipulation–they had to bring a skill back that would add value to the farm. Seven of the nine boys came back, while the other two continued on with their own career goals. No two of the seven who returned share the same skills. With all the skills that the boys brought back to the farm that meant there were more opportunities for the farm. Besides more crops, the Schiefelbeins were able to build a state-of-the-art feeding facility, increase their herd numbers, have an annual bull sale, sell semen and embryos, and finally, run a calf buy-back program. The farm is split into two. One half of the farm is used for crop ground and the other half is pasture. About, 2200 acres of crop ground are planted to corn, soybeans and alfalfa. The pastures run 1,200 pair and are full of rolling hills and timber that provide great shelter for the cows during the summer months. To get the most out of their grass they have incorporated rotational grazing in their program and have enjoyed the benefits. In the winter and after harvest the cows are moved to graze cornstalks.

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The closed herd goes back to the very first group of heifers, the Elbow line that Frank bought in 1955. They’ve never been afraid of innovation and use a combination of embryo transfer, in-vitro and AI. Their embryo transfer embryologist is just 20 minutes away and a Transovo In-vitro station is just 10 miles away, which makes it easy and efficient to use the latest technology. With seven sons, and now four grandsons, working on the farm, it’s important that everyone knows their own job, but is willing and able to help with whatever needs to be done.

Every morning at 8 a.m. the brothers meet to discuss what they’re doing that day and what help they might need. No one is exempt from any task, from picking up rocks in the field to sorting cows and hauling grain. Frank III, the oldest boy, manages the farm’s steer barn, the spray application, and is trained to AI. His son, Frank IV, took over the embryo transfer program. Sam is in charge of feeding of the 2,400 steers, as well as 200 cows. When he’s not feeding livestock he is helping maintain the farm equipment.

The oldest son, Frank III, with wife and family.

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Frank III’s son, Frank IV, with wife and sons.


The entire Schiefelbein family.

Angus cows with calves grazing in the pasture.

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Son, Tom with wife and kids. Second oldest son, Rick, is pictured back second from the left.

Rick, the second oldest, is in charge of checking on the more than 1,000 registered animals on the farm. Bob manages the crops and also acts as the farm’s operation manager. Austin, Bob’s son, runs the plow, the digger, and the fertilizer spreader. He’s there to help with anything that needs to be done.

Son, Bob and wife with family.

Tom is a welder and mechanic so he spends his time building pens, fences, or fixing machinery. In between all of that you can find him doing dirt work or feeding the livestock. Mike owns a trucking business and doesn’t work at the farm full-time, but does still help out at the farm and hauls the farm’s crops.

Son, Tim pictured with wife and family.

Tim runs the family’s buy-back program and the feedlot risk management. His other job includes heading up the farm’s bull sale. The farm’s state-of-the-art feeding facility is full of calves that Tim has bought from their buyback program. Travis, Tim’s son, sells calves on Superior Livestock Auction and writes the articles for their catalog and flyers. Dan, the youngest brother, is in charge of running the seedstock operation. The annual bull sale, the pinnacle of 63 years of breed development, is held every February at the farm near Kimball, Minnesota. The two-day event includes a viewing of the sale cattle, farm

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Son, Don with wife and daughters. TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS

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Son, Mike with wife and two sons.

Son, Danny with wife and son.

tour, social hour, educational panel and free prime rib dinner. Sale day starts with another viewing of the sale cattle and free beef lunch. The sale is broadcast by Superior Livestock. In addition to their live cattle sale, they also sell semen and embryos through genetic marketing companies like Genex. Their buy-back program is a testament to the faith they have in their breeding program. This year alone, Tim, who’s in charge of the program, has bought about 30,000 head of their customers’ calves for their farm to feed out, and for other feeders who are looking for a proven quality feeder animal. From a young city couple to one of the most progressive Angus breeders in the state, success has been a series of small steps. They have come a long way from filling up their corn crib with an old picker on an International M. Tim says the drive to do better is the key to success. Their family’s goal is to do something better every year, and for at least the last 10 years, they’ve accomplished that. From incorporating rotational grazing, to fall calving part of their herd and new this year, planting rye grass, which will provide early forage for cows and new calves. The emphasis on family shows, in that, even given the size and diversity of the business, every person working on the farm is a member of the family. Tim said, “We grew up building this farm together. We’re hard headed and want to keep it that way.”

Sam, Grandson of Frank, pictured with girlfriend.

From a young city couple to one of the most progressive Angus breeders in the state, success has been a series of small steps.

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The annual bull sale, the pinnacle of 63 years of breed development, is held every February at the farm near Kimball, Minnesota.


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Taubenheim Gelbvieh

Taubenheim

Gelbvieh

Taubenheim sale day at the ranch, customers viewing the sale offering and facility.

E

BY DEANNA NELSON-LICKING

very year on the first Monday in February, beef producers gather at the Taubenheim ranch for their annual Gelbvieh and Balancer bull and female sale. While many of the

bulls stay in Nebraska, some of them are sold into the surrounding states, even to as far away as California. Repeat buyers, who trust the Taubenheim genetics, make up a large percentage of the sales.

But the Taubenheim family hasn’t always raised beef cattle. Dale and Jeannette Taubenheim of Amherst, Nebraska owned a dairy and showed dairy cattle. Their son Mike, while in college, began researching the different breeds of beef cattle. He was impressed with the many traits of the Gelbvieh breed, the docility, heavy muscling, good milk production and mothering abilities. On the advice of a cattle semen representative, Mike purchased two bred heifers from Jim Wilson of Mankato, Kansas in 1982 and they each had a bull calf. “Back in the early eighties a calf brought around maybe 480 dollars. I sold the bull calves for $3,700,” Mike Taubenheim said.

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Pairs on summer pasture.

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“We had about 200 head in the ’90s and run 600 registered cows now. I try to raise a more efficient cow, who will do more with less.” The Taubenheims were some of the first to cross their Gelbvieh cows with top Black Angus sires, resulting in Balancer cattle. The Balancer genetics offer producers the ability to crossbreed their herds, taking advantage of heterosis, higher weight gains and the hybrid vigor. At their annual sale, they sell 100 yearling bulls, 25 Gelbvieh, with the remainder Balancer bulls. They also offer 45 bred heifers, right out of their own replacement pen. “These are heifers that are bred just a little later than we like, and some might already have calved by the sale so buyers are able to see what they are bidding on,” said Justin Taubenheim, Mike’s son. In December of 2018 the family decided to try something different by offering eleven heifers and one steer on www. AngusLive.com, an online cattle auction site. The halter broke yearlings were ready for some young person to show and maybe eventually become embryo donor cows. Mike and his family usually artificially inseminate 400-500 females to some of the beef industry’s top bulls and implant around 200 embryos a year. They calve in January so the bulls they sell are old enough and ready to go to work. Mike and his wife Renee have five children, four sons and one daughter: Justin, Tanner, Sydney, Seth and Kale. Oldest son Justin and his wife Janelle have two kids and Tanner and his wife Kelli have one. The Taubenheims have always shown cattle, competing almost

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every year at the Junior National Show and the National Western Stock Show among other stock shows. The Taubenheim cattle bring home many grand champion Balancer and Gelbvieh female and bull pennants and awards. The NWSS gives prospective buyers a chance to see some of the sale offerings early with the show bulls being included in the production sale. “I feel showing

cattle really helped to make our kids who they are today,” Mike said. Dale and Jeannette Taubenheim are still active in the day-to-day operations. Dale, at 76, runs the combine, and Jeannette drives the grain cart during harvest and works with Justin to register the calves and put together the sale catalogs. Mike’s son Tanner is hoping soon to be able to return full time to the operation.

Justin Taubenheim showing the Balancer Pen of 5 Bulls.

Mike and Renee Taubenheim and family at the NWSS.

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Dale and Jeannette Taubenheim with their children and grandchildren.

In addition to raising quality bulls, the Taubenheim family farms a thousand acres and runs their own 400 head feedyard. They finish out their own cattle and purchase some of their bull customers’ calves to keep the pens full. The fat cattle are sold on the grid in Lexington, Nebraska at Tyson Meats. “We sell a load at a time, 40 head fits on the truck. Our cattle grade high with 94 percent yielding choice or higher and 91 percent are 1s or 2s. We are rewarded for how each carcass yields and also for being in the Certified Angus Beef

Sydney Taubenheim showing the NWSS Champion Balancer Futurity bull TAU Weigh UP 98E in 2018 exhibited by Taubenheim Gelbvieh, friends and family gathered behind.

program. We’re committed to making the best product we can from start to finish,” Justin said. Justin hopes to be able to grow the feedyard and one day buy and finish more of their customers’ calves.

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Champion Balancer Pen of 5 Bulls at the NWSS in 2017.

(605) 569-1493 Livestock Auctioneer 72

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The Taubenheims like being able to follow the cattle through the feedlot and see all the data on each animal. “We are confident in what our cattle can do, and this way we can provide more data and information to our bull customers,” Justin says. Making that information available to both buyers and consumers is going to be a big part of the future of the industry, Justin says. “We need to tell our story to the public. Let people know we have a passion to raise quality food and beef. We should take advantage of every chance we have to talk to strangers, tell them about our way of life, and get the true information out there,” said Mike. “As producers, stay true to

your roots, breed for soundness and fleshing ability, more rib and muscle. EPDs aren’t everything; it all starts at the ground.” Justin agrees. “As producers we need to roll with the punches, and use the technology available to us. We need to follow through, vaccinate and give the cattle the best chance to flourish in our environment. The world is growing fast, there are and will be a lot of mouths to feed, beef producers are all in it together. There are a lot of changes coming to the industry and people are willing to pay for information. We should provide information and data and show the strict guidelines we have to follow. We need to work together to sell what we have for the most money.”

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XIX V

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For a sale book, call 701.674.3152 or visit ToppHerefords.com 76

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Barstow Angus

Barstow

Angus

BY DEANNA NELSON-LICKING

P

roducers are getting paid for raising better cattle, and it shows in the cattle they raise, says Neri Barstow.

Neri and son Wyatt visit in the sale pen.

“It’s hard to hide your genetics. With the use of genomic testing, cattle are easy to identify, especially to buyers. There are no secrets; being aware of what you are raising and where you buy cattle is very important,” Neri said. Barstow Angus sells 95-100 yearling bulls at their annual sale located at the ranch near Springview, Nebraska, and in 2019 will also offer the top pick of the 2018 heifer crop. The sale is always the second Monday in March—March 11 in 2019. A good number of the bulls stay in the Sandhills but many states are also represented at the sale. “Our bulls are home-raised; they never leave our place. We sell a few private treaty and save some for back-up bulls, as we have a first breeding season guarantee,” Neri said. “Customer service is important, we stand behind our product.” Nebraska hasn’t always been the home of the Barstow family. Neri’s parents, Marlan and Shirley Barstow farmed in Kansas. They grew wheat, raised cattle and bought feeder cattle to feed out. Traveling around Nebraska and South Dakota buying cattle gave them the opportunity to see different areas. In the 1970s they were seeking a change from Kansas. The hills, trees and river around Springview, Nebraska appealed to them. They purchased a ranch in 1976, where Barstow Angus is still headquartered.

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The Barstow sale facility at the ranch. Select Sires reps stopped to view the young bulls for Barstows’ March 2019 sale.

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


Neri, their middle son, then a senior in high school, moved there with his grandparents in 1978, along with some of the cows. Marlan and Shirley continued farming in Kansas with their two younger daughters, before moving north several years later. Shirley was a pharmacist for the state of Kansas and wanted to work until her retirement date so she commuted between the two states for a number of years. The Kansas farm is now leased to a neighbor. Barstows raised Hereford cattle, but as time went on Marlan started looking at other breeds because of issues they had with the Herefords, especially eye problems. Marlan attended Angus dispersal sales in the early eighties and purchased some Black Angus heifers for his daughters to show in 4-H. He studied the Angus breed and liked what he learned: easier calving, hardiness and good genetics. He purchased more registered females and built his herd, phasing out the Herefords altogether. Neri married a local ranch girl, Patty Frauen, in 1980, and continued working on the ranch and rodeoed on the side. In 1988 Neri and Patty purchased some registered Angus females from Marlan. The family started an artificial insemination program and eventually replaced all their commercial cows.

By having registered cows they were able to make a living with a smaller herd due to higher premiums for the calves. Marlan and Shirley turned over the Nebraska operation to Neri in the mid-1990s, and still live in the area today. Neri and Patty built up the herd and began selling some bulls private treaty before having their first production sale in 1992. The Barstows now run a base registered herd of 250 cows and a cooperator herd of embryo recipient cows owned and run by the current lessee of the Kansas farm, taking advantage of the southern weather for early calving. They have an extensive AI and embryo program, usually having 60-100 embryo calves a year. The registered herd is bred via AI and exposed to herd bulls, with every calf being DNA parent-verified. They start calving in January so the yearling bulls are big enough to do their job by breeding season. They also have a good feed program so the heifers breed back. Neri doesn’t believe in using a bull just because of his numbers on paper. “I want to see the animal in person. I get out and look at a lot of cattle. I only use balanced, multi-trait sires that are strong on the maternal side,” he said. “Structural soundness is also one of my main criteria.”

PHOTOS COURTESY OF PATTY BARSTOW.

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Barstow family: (L-R) {back row} Wyatt, Amanda, Sierra, Austin, (Front) Patty, Wiley and Neri.

Neri and Patty have two sons, Wyatt and Austin; they grew up leaning to work on the ranch and also rodeoing. Wyatt works alongside his dad on the ranch now. He is married to Amanda, an occupational therapist, and they have two children. Austin and wife Sierra live in Bozeman, Montana, where he is a catastrophic insurance adjuster and she is a lawyer, but they still run cattle at the family ranch. 80

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EMILY SWAN PHOTOGRAPHY

Family is very important to the Barstows, so to have Wyatt and his family there working alongside is a dream come true for Neri and Patty. “Wyatt has been a tremendous help, it’s like a having an extension of Neri and has taken a lot of the burden off him,” Patty said. “He has a fresh and new prospective on things and it’s nice to have another view. His young muscles are also a help for building and upkeep of the place.”

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


Cash Cow

Wyatt Barstow is carrying on the family tradition of focusing on the eye appeal of the cattle, striving to raise animals that are ascetically pleasing. “We want our bulls to match their visual appearance with their EPDs,” he says. “I want to expand our market, to match customers with the bulls that will best fit their needs. There are basically two types of

producers: the western ranchers with large pastures and the farmers with smaller pastures who background their own calves, I want to provide the best bull for each environment.” Barstow Cash, a 2011 bull raised by Neri, was a sire with all the strengths they—and their customers—seek. He sold 1/3 interest for $108,000 in 2012. The highest-selling bull ever raised by the family had a very prolific career as an AI sire. His progeny excel in the show pen and also as herd bulls. Cash was a bull who perfectly married the traits Neri has been breeding for, and his visual appeal matched his numbers. Two of his progeny raised by the Barstow family carry on their sire’s legacy: Barstow Banker and Barstow Bankroll are available from Select Sires with Bankroll being one of the leading AI sires in the country.

Wyatt and Amanda Barstow’s children, Wylie and Presley. THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

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“We run a fine line between proven lines and cutting-edge genetics. We are constantly bringing in new and better genetics to improve our own herd and that of our customers’.” Wyatt said. “We try to raise a product that sells its self. We encourage customers to come see our bulls and not just shop out of a catalog.”

ABOVE: Productive embryo donor cow in the Barstow herd.

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“There is a trust between commercial producers and genetic suppliers. Cattle producers need to raise the best cattle possible. Be aware and do your homework on what you are raising and the amount of input it takes,” Neri said.

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


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Check us out on the web at www.meyerinkfs.com THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

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“Rock Solid” is their motto and the Barstow family is committed to raising the most functional cattle for their environment and looks forward to providing ranchers with top-notch bulls for

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many years to come. “We want to help our buyers to be successful, providing bulls that will hold up to use,” Patty said, “We love what we do.”

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


Neri viewing next season’s sale crop.

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

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36th Annual Sale

Friday, January 25, 2019 1:00 p.m. MST In our heated facility at the ranch, Bowman, ND

Cattlemen, do you want market topping calves at sale time? THEN YOU NEED A SOREIDE CHAROLAIS BULL!

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Sire: VCR Ledger 578 P BD: 3-21-2018 BW: 80 205: 811 Index: 111 EPDS: CE: 10.3 BW: -2.4 WW: 39 YW: 71 MK: 11 TM: 31 TSI: 219.00

Charolais cross calves gain more weight, are more feed efficient and have more overall performance thanks to hybrid vigor – giving YOU the advantage. When Char/cross calves walk in the sale ring, buyers can see the distinctive look of superior Charolais genetics right away and will pay more for it. Those calves will go into the feed lot, have more gain ability and better carcass values. Creating more pounds and dollars for you!

We believe our bulls should provide calving ease, eye appeal, great disposition and consistent quality and confirmation you have come to expect!

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Maternal Merit Igenity Score

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Performance Merit Igenity Score

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Igenity DNA Profile for the Commercial Cattleman ®

Can you tell which heifer has the superior maternal, performance, or carcass traits? Igenity Beef profiles can, and the results might surprise you. Confident Selection. Igenity Beef profiling utilizes DNA to predict genetic potential of both heifers and steers, providing an additional selection tool to commercial crossbred and straightbred cattle producers. Confidently determine which superior heifers to retain as replacements, and which steers will have a major impact on economic productivity.

Valuable Insight. Igenity scores and rankings enable informed decision-making on replacement heifer selection and marketing strategies including custom indexes you build on Igenity Beef Dashboard, delivering a competitive edge.

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THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

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RYDEEN FARMS

RYDEEN

Farms

A cow/calf pair which exemplifies the phenotype of cattle Rydeen Farms like to raise.

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TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS

F

BY SHAUNA KOPREN

or three generations the Rydeen family has flourished in the beautiful lakes and trees of northwestern Minnesota where they have expanded and diversified into selling high quality breeding livestock. Through embracing new technology, they have been able to acquire accurate information about their herd, which has allowed them to make informed decisions and pass that information on to their buyers.

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


A field of sunflowers at the end of Rydeen Farms driveway.

History of Eureka Excelsior In 1897, Edward D. Rydeen homesteaded 160 acres of Eureka Excelsior (Rydeen Farms) at the age of 21, when President Cleveland signed the Minnesota Homestead Act. In 1950, Edward and Louella Rydeen’s son, Reuben and his wife Wanda went into partnership with his father in the dairy business. Reuben and Wanda’s son, Paul bought his first beef herd when he was a sophomore in high school and the farm moved into beef production. In 1985 Paul and Lois were married and bought the family farm. “Only a small percentage of businesses remain after 100 years,” says Paul Rydeen. “We feel fortunate to be able to expand on what my grandfather started over 120 years ago. We have grown from that original 160 acres to owning just under 2,000 acres.”

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Today, Paul and Lois work together to operate Rydeen Farms along with Perry Lambright, Matt Lavin, and Gene Warren. Paul and Lois’s two children Claire (married to Chad Patel), and Justis both currently work as full time engineers and provide support and help whenever they are home. Additionally, Justis maintains a small herd at the farm. “We live and work in one of the most beautiful places in the world,” says Paul. “We are blessed to have family members that surround us whenever we have a need for extra help.”

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Breeding Program Rydeens are constantly trying to improve their cattle so that buyers like the phenotype and stay profitable at the same time. “Keeping an eye on industry trends, we believe that Simmental cattle work extremely well on Angus and Red Angus cows,” states Paul. “We believe that a bull is an investment so it is essential that buyers have the information that they need to make a sound choice as a bull will affect the herd for years to come.”

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


Winter sets high demands on your cows’ nutrient requirements

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Cows coming home in the fall to Rydeen Farms

Rydeen Farms have both a spring calving herd and a fall calving herd which allows them to offer yearlings and aged bulls to their customers. Customer satisfaction is very important to the Rydeen family. “The relationship we have with our customers is one of the most gratifying parts of this business,” says Paul. “We won’t succeed unless they succeed.”

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Making Technology Work for Them Technology now plays a larger role in the cattle industry than ever before, with more accurate and affordable ways of providing valuable data. Buyers are very information-savvy and expect meaningful data. The American Simmental Association is very data driven and in the forefront with adopting new technologies. RFS Bulletproof B42 is a bull Rydeen Farms raised and sold in their 2015 Vision Sale that is now at Genex.

“We verify EPDs and parentage through DNA on the bulls we sell,” Paul says. “Genomic-Enhanced EPDs improve accuracy, tests for genetic defects and confirms parentage to ensure the buyer is getting the most reliable EPDs possible.” Paul goes on to explain that the more reliable genomics are goof for breeders and buyers as meaningful data improves confidence in the product and decreases risk. The Rydeen family has been a member of the American Simmental Association for decades and participates in Total Herd Enrollment.

A future Rydeen Farms customer during sale day.

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THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


They have also been recognized as a Performance Advocate for several years, which means that they have collected and submitted every required data point to the Association on time. This information helps provide data that can improve the accuracy of the herd and the breed as a whole. “This last year we participated in the Cow Herd Round Up and tested the DNA of every female in our herd as well as weighing every adult female in our herd,” Paul explains. “Since the genotype of every female in our herd has been validated, we can provide more accurate EPDs on the bulls we sell.”

commonly known as Johne’s disease. Every animal in the herd has an electronic identification that is linked to Rydeen Farms USDA premise identification number, which allows for complete traceability. Rydeen Farms also follows the Beef Quality Assurance guidelines and are certified through them. “As we look at trends such as Amazon Beef and single source beef, we know that consumers’

Biosecurity measures are also very important to Rydeen Farms, so they do not utilize cooperator herds, and they annually test the whole herd for paratuberculosis, more

A small representative group of Rydeen Farms open heifers.

Tim Olson & Chandy Olson, DVM 605.641.5966 or 605.641.2325 Levi Garbel 605.591.2096

www.catlresources.com

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The Rydeen family from left to right Chad, Claire, Lois, Paul and Justis.

preferences are changing,” says Paul. “As producers, we need to position ourselves for these changes as they present us with opportunities for improvement.” For over 20 years Rydeen Farms has held an annual production sale, the Vision Sale,

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on the second Saturday of February. This year’s Vision Sale will be held Saturday, February 9 at the heated sale facility located right at Rydeen Farms.

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


Candids taken during the Vision Sale, Rydeen Farms annual livestock production sale.

Less can actually be more. We’ll state the obvious – you could use a head start. CRYSTALYX® Blueprint® is a premium organic trace mineral nutritional program designed to unlock the genetic potential of livestock. Blueprint® products are formulated with Bioplex® organic trace minerals, which are better absorbed, stored and utilized by the animal, helping to meet the increased nutrient needs of today’s cattle. This results in optimal reproductive performance and animal health, while reducing excessive mineral excretion.

blueprintbythebarrel.com l 800-727-2502 Visit your local CRYSTALYX® dealer for more information.

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Each year we purchase 25,000 high quality customer calves. y a d o t s u l l a C e u q i n u r u o about program!

400

Bulls Sell...

me S a le ti . 11 a . m

USDA Market News Mobridge, SD • Oct. 30, 2018

Saturday, February 16, 2019 at the farm near Kimball, MN

Head

Avg. Wt.

Price Range

789

578

164.00-180.75

776

617

162.00-176.00

335

668

164.00-176.75

Schiefelbein Genetics brought the top dollar in each price range!

Schiefelbein Genetics Pay!

For more information, contact:

Frank Schiefelbein & Family 74208 360th St., Kimball, MN 55353 320/224-5830 (Tim) • 320/266-8487 (Dan) • 303/324-5149 (Don)

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info@schiefelbeinfarms.com • www.schiefelbeinfarms.com

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THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

Put the Schiefelbein Customer Buy-back program to work for you!


28th Annual Bull & Female Sale

400 Bulls Sell...

Saturday, February 16, 2019 at the farm near Kimball, MN

Plus

Schiefelbein Attractive Semen available from Semex or Peak Dot Ranch.

60 Registered Angus Bred Heifers Sell! Angus A.I. Sires Include:

Baldridge Colonel Baldridge Bronc 38 Special SAV Pedigree Confidence Plus HA Cowboy Up 3F Epic MAR Innovation

Schiefelbein Allied our most dominating new sire.

VAR Discovery Bush’s Easy Decision SAV Ten Speed Weigh Up SAV Renown Schiefelbein: iBULL, Allied, Protocol, Attractive, Zeus

Sitz Investment MAF Tanker KCF Bennett Fortress KCF Bennett The Rock Connealy Armory Sitz Dividend Remedy Rampage

– plus many others!

Plan to join us for these events: Friday, February 15 12 noon 2 till 5 pm 4 till 6 pm 4 pm 6 pm

Schiefelbein iBull our sale topping proven sire.

All Bulls HD50K DNA Tested

Saturday, February 16

9:00 am Viewing of Sale Cattle 10:30 am Free Beef Lunch 11:00 am 2019 Sale Begins

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Sale to be broadcast live!

150 bulls sold between $2500 to $5000 in 2018 sale • Free Delivery • Sight Unseen Guarantee

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Viewing of Sale Cattle Tour of the Farm Social Hour (Free Drinks & Appetizers) Premium Beef Educational Panel Free Prime Rib Dinner with all the fixings

For more information, contact:

Frank Schiefelbein & Family

Find us on Facebook

74208 360th St., Kimball, MN 55353 320/224-5830 (Tim) • 320/266-8487 (Dan) • 303/324-5149 (Don)

info@schiefelbeinfarms.com • www.schiefelbeinfarms.com

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PROTECT YOUR HERD FROM DISEASE IN RECORD TIME. AlphaTM from Boehringer Ingelheim covers 7 clostridial diseases in a single dose. Including blackleg and pinkeye. Cold weather and interrupted feeding patterns open the door for disease in your herd. Slam that door shut and deadbolt it with a single dose of ALPHA.

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Dakota Dart Gun

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THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

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BOBCAT ANGUS

Bobcat

Angus

BY TAMARA CHOAT

S

ometime around 1985, amidst football helmets, cowboy hats, and a blue and gold mascot, ideas for collaboration began to form among three Montana State University “farm kid” athletes. What came from that partnership was Bobcat Angus, today one of Montana’s successful purebred Angus ranches, which continues to grow with the next generation coming home. Brothers Bryan and Ernie Ratzburg, of Galata, Mont., were fourth generation dryland farmers and commercial cattlemen. Both played football for the MSU Bobcats with John Goggins of Shepherd, Mont., whose family had been in the purebred cattle, ranching and auction business for decades. After their degrees were on the wall and football games watched from the stadium, the three formed a partnership to expand the Ratzburg business using Goggins Angus genetics. The likely moniker? Their college mascot.

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The registered herd heads out to work at their home base near Galata, Mont.

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


Cows and plows The Ratzburgs grew up with cattle, but farming was their mainstay. After returning home, Bryan branched out to expand the cattle and Ernie managed the farm side. Today they run 500 registered Angus mother cows and a commercial herd of around 1,000 head. The farm has grown to

include malt barley, durum, winter wheat, lentils, canola, hay, and corn silage, and they’ve built a 2,000-head feedlot near the farm feedbase. In fall they truck most of the cows from the main cattle operation in the harsher, Sweet Grass hills near Galata where Bryan and his family are based, back to the home farm near Conrad, where Ernie and his family live. The 70-mile drop in latitude offers

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Brothers Ernie (l) and Bryan Ratzburg talk a couple of times a day as they work jointly on operations 70 miles apart.

milder climate and ideal winter grazing on field residue. This diversification adds synergy that couldn’t be achieved by two independent operations. “It works out really well to run the two places together,” says Ernie. “If the cattle aspect were strictly on its own, we would only be about a 600-cow operation, but we’ve basically doubled that by being able to winter them down here.” Two-thirds of their registered herd calves in the spring and one-third in the

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fall. They artificially inseminate for six weeks in May and June, and sell bred heifers in their production sale in synchronized, sexed and 10-day calving lots. Weaning comes mid-October. All heifer calves are backgrounded at the feedlot, with a couple hundred head sold at their January sale. Steers are marketed through the Northern Video Auction. This January will be their 14th production sale, with an expected 90 2-year-old bulls, 50 fall bull calves, 60 yearling bulls, 850 head of bred females,

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


ABOVE: The Bobcat Angus crew gets one of the reserve champion bull calves ready for the show in Denver.

LEFT: Bobcat Angus exhibited the Reserve Champion late pen bull calves at the 2018 National Western Stock Show in Denver.

and over 200 head of Bangs vaccinated heifer calves. They also sell all coming 8-year-old cows each year in order to turn genetics over faster.

EPDs and improvement Every animal in the Bobcat Angus sale is 50K genomic tested, with many of the mature registered cows also now in the database. “Having full genomic EPDs helps us accelerate our breeding and culling decisions,” says Bryan.

Along with their personal parameters, they pay a lot of attention to $B (beef value) and predicted carcass traits. “I’m really a solid believer in science,” say Bryan. “I’ve seen results since we first started using 50K, and I believe it is only going to get more and more accurate every year.” He noted a case of four full brother flushes they took to Denver – all with genomic data. Theoretically, flushes should be equal, “But when we looked at them, phenotypically, there were differences. The fun thing was the

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50K nailed those physical differences every time – the EPDs correlated directly. That’s when I really became a believer.” The Ratzburgs won’t buy an outside bull unless it is 50K tested. “With the investment cost of some of these bulls, we don’t want to roll the dice. We want information before we buy it, no surprises.”

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Commercial at heart The bull business isn’t an easy one to break into. “You really have to have slow growth and build customer trust in this business,” says Bryan. “A lot of people tell us we’ve done well in our relatively short time period, and we know if our customers come back for three or four years, we’re doing something right.”

Vern Frey of Frey Livestock Sales & Service in Towner, N.D., works with the Ratzburgs promoting their sales and expanding their marketing base. He says the Ratzburgs are to be commended for their progressive work in genomics and embryo work. Additionally, he says they are matching traits SERVICES LOCALLY to real world scenarios and TAILORED FOR OWNED & environments. “They are raisTHE PHARMCO OPERATED TERRITORIES ing cattle that fit the needs of their commercial producers, CHAMBERLAIN • PARAGON • PLATTE • WINNER who are interested in both improving their cow herds You can successfully feed urea to high producing ANIMAL HEALTH Using Quality and theirLiquid bottomFeeds, line.” liquid cows? Used properly urea can serve as an • RATIONS, NUTRITION supplements can improve feed efficiency, economical protein inI’m corn based diets. “I’vesource alwaysoftold people ADVICE & IDEAS giving you More Beef Less Feed? • VACCINES a commercial man on at heart,” • EQUIPMENT says Bryan. “It’s fun to look • ID TAGS at ourliquid commercial cows,enhance supplements • IMPLANTSQLF molasses-based they’re pretty predictable and • CALF SHELTERS fiber digestion and decreases ration sorting. Also, QLF consistent.” This consistency supplements stick small diet particles to larger ones. Les has been built through years Dedicated To Earning Your Businesssorting means better rumen efficiency and less feed wa of AI, and “mass producPharmco is built on terrific service, quality products, and a knowledgeable team driven to growing your business. ing” bulls he liked, includChamberlain Loca Platte Location: At Pharmco we have ing Leachman Right Time, PET FOODS • HORSE & SHEEP FEED 800.258.1736 800.683.3374 the quality supplements, HUNTING (GUNS, AMMO, TARGETS, BLINDS) WK Bobcat and Musgrave Kimball Location: Winner Location: minerals and feed 605.778.6579 605.842.0703 Big Sky. “When we take our ensuring top performance BOGS BOOTS • FENCING SUPPLIES CONTINUOUS FENCING • FEEDBUNKS in your livestock. www.qlf.com 2- and 3-year-olds and our 8- and 10-year old cows to town, our customers see what our genetics are doing on a commercial basis. That’s been TRUSTED CUSTOMER RELATIONS our model from the time we Platte Chamberlain Winner Kimball 800.683.3374 800.258.1736 605.842.0703 605.778.6579 started our production sale.”

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It takes a good crew to get through ultrasounding 1,000 head, but this one gets it done.

The ultrasound records crew includes Camille McCreary, fiancé of Kamron Ratzburg, and Rebecca Ratzburg.

Bullish future When talking to either Bryan or Ernie, it’s easy to see how the success of their operation is tied to the positive and progressive outlook both share. Both agree politics, land prices and labor are challenges within the industry, but technology and sophistication within ag have created an exciting future. “Back in the ’90s when I came out of school, if I hadn’t had an operation to go home to my options were to work for $17,000 a year as a hired man or be an ag banker,” says Ernie. “Now days kids out of universities have multiple jobs waiting. It’s refreshing to watch it evolve.”

Cathy and Bryan Ratzburg take a shift at the ultrasound records table.

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Kamron (l) and Cole Ratzburg are both returning to Bobcat Angus, representing the fifth generation in the family.

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The Ratzburg operation is a model of a true family business – in particular, one that has put a lot of work into planning for successful generational transfer. Bryan and Ernie’s parents, Karl and Roberta, are still involved, with their dad operating a tractor most days of the year. Bryan and his wife, Cathy, and Ernie and his wife, Jayne, each have three children. The oldest four of the six have or are making plans to come back. In addition to having the wisdom to build a team of outside resources, the Ratzburgs have the fortune of diverse interests and niche fits among the next generation.

nutrition – his emphasis is in the genetic work

Bryan and Cathy’s oldest son Cole completed a master’s degree in cattle reproduction and

bought out the interest of Goggins, as he opted to

TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS

and embryo transfer. Second son, Kamron, is finishing up vet school and is engaged. He plans to oversee herd health as well as practice locally. Daughter Rebecca is interested in health care, with many options ahead. Ernie and Jayne’s oldest son, David, has a degree in ag business and will be married in February, and their middle son Justin will graduate in diesel mechanics. Their youngest son Richard will graduate from high school this spring. Within the past year the Ratzburgs have move his focus closer to home as well.

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


Bryan Ratzburg visits with attendees of the American Angus national convention.

Beyond family, the Ratzburgs value outside consult and their network is wide. “In my opinion you have to take advantage of every piece of advice you can get,” says Ernie. “The more knowledge you have before you enter into something, the better real-life experience you’ll get out of it.”

Bryan says it’s critical to have a good legal structure, good entity structure, a good accountant and a good banker. “And you better be willing to not retire early – it takes a lot of effort. “My Dad is 78 and still loves doing this. I see myself the same way; we’ll never retire totally, we’ll always be involved until our time is past.”

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Bobcat Angus travels to promote their genetics, this booth was at the American Angus convention trade show.

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VALLEY VIEW CHAROLAIS

Valley View

Charolais

Westphal says his cows don’t have to climb the snowy mountains, “but they sure can see them.”

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Buddy Westphal

A

BY TAMARA CHOAT

s Buddy Westphal reflects on his 50 years of purebred Charolais bull sales, the words “genetics” and “work” continue to resurface. Working hard to raise good genetics. Genetics that work for cattlemen. Work that makes for a good way of life.

Growing up a ranch kid in Limon, Colo., Westphal’s father had used Charolais bulls, but “I was more concerned with football and girls than what color our cattle were,” says Westphal. A rodeo scholarship took him to Colorado State University, where his focus eventually returned to cattle. After receiving a degree in animal science he worked on his master’s under Dr. Thomas Sutherland, noted geneticist (who later was

held hostage in Beirut, where he was kidnapped by Islamic Jihad while teaching at the university and kept captive for more than six years). Dr. Sutherland was always “preaching about hybrid vigor, and what the European breeds would do when crossed with our cattle.” Westphal decided then that Charolais were the route to go. He went searching for Charolais cattle, and upon finding a herd in Polson, Mont., ended up with a

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VVCR bulls have two years of testing and culling before the sale – where 185 2-year-old bulls sell each March.

Charolais herd and the ranch as well when the owner offered it for sale.

lengths. “There’s no question I’ve built up a reputation for easy calving,” he says.

The ranch included a commercial division, which Westphal ran for several years before dispersing it to focus on seedstock. “The commercial end was a good chance to put my own genetics to work – I learned a lot about the Charolais business by using my bulls on my own cows. You learn to produce what you want to use, and what others will want.”

Westphal details factors they have focused on to avoid calving problems: short gestation of 283 days or less, conformation, age of dam, and birth weight of dam and bull. “A large, dead calf at birth has a distressingly poor weaning weight and growth rate,” says Westphal.

Because of calving 500 cows with limited help, Westphal says his focus has always been on easy calving, which he has developed through light birthweights and short gestation lengths. After a year of calving early in his career when the AI bred cows went long overdue and his calves were too big, Westphal went to Canada to comb through their Charolais Conception to Consumer genetic records, specifically seeking bulls with short gestation

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Two unique facets of his business have always been selling only 2-year-old bulls and offering free delivery long before it was standard in the business. “We want our bulls to have a chance to mature, and sort out the good and cull the bad,” says Westphal. “Plus, we believe they stay sound for more years than feedlot-fattened yearling bulls.” He learned early on that the northwest corner of Montana is a tough draw for location, so he

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


Trailing cows home from winter pasture.

Buddy and Lin Westphal

included free delivery to entice sales. “In those days, there weren’t any goosenecks – just stock trucks with rickety frames that would only go 40 miles an hour while you’re wondering the whole time if the bull was going to jump out.” Westphal and his wife, Lin, tally 60 days and 20,000 miles delivering bulls to a 16-state region after the sale. “It’s a great opportunity to visit some of the best ranches in the U.S., get to know the people and also get to know their cow herd.” Many of his repeat customers now rely on his recommendation to deliver their bulls, sight unseen. Today Westphal’s son, Scott, and his wife, Amy, and their two sons, Jaden, 12, and Jace, 9, are the second and third generations on the ranch. Scott handles daily operations and while Amy teaches at a local country school, she also does computer work and outside

Westphal is incredibly proud of grandsons Jaden and Jace, who are very involved and great help. “Jaden honestly does the work of an 18-year-old already,” he says.

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work. “She can drive a truck and ride a horse, plus she’s a real good mother,” says Westphal.

selecting cattle that cattlemen, not showmen, would breed to.

Westphal’s philosophy continues to focus on solid bulls that work hard and earn their keep and grow off genetics, not feed. While probably one of very few people who have judged both horses (cutting) and cattle (Charolais) at the National Western Stock Show in Denver, he views the show ring as having little correlation to the needs of cattle producers. He took his role lining up the Charolais cattle at this event in 2001 as an effort to impact the future of the breed by

“I joke that most of the time I like to go see who won the show so I know who not to breed to,” he says. “I look at my genetics and have to decide if I want to make bulls that I can sell one bull to a purebred breeder across the country, or sell a truckload of them to a commercial breeder who has 1,000 head of cows.”

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Westphal notes the terrain of northwest Montana is tough country. “We have to use

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


genes instead of feed – we have a cow herd that fits our environment, which means we do not have mammoth cows. We have to stay practical to fit our environment and lack of good feed.” He continues to select herd sires for carcass traits, and recently had a group of cull heifers grade 93 percent Choice or Prime and yield 65.5 percent. Detailed weight and EPD records are kept on all cattle, one of Westphal’s favorite aspects of his work. “I could analyze records all day long,” he says. “You can’t know

where you’re going if you don’t know where you’ve been.” An annual production cycle for Valley View Ranch starts in April with a 45-day calving window, with 80 percent calving in a 21-day cycle. Anything not calved after 45 days is sold so calving is complete before irrigating and haying begins. October brings the annual “trailing home” of the yearling bulls from the pasture– 17-miles of gravel, pavement, across the Flathead River, and home. “This is a great culling tool for us,” says Westphal. “When you trail a yearling bull that many

Westphal says his cows have to work for a living, climbing hills and walking long distance to water. “We want them to work for us, not us work for them.”

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Sale ring auction action at Valley View Charolais Ranch.

miles on gravel, then pavement, and off in the brush, you can tell who‘s going to travel and who isn’t. Those last ones in line, we take to town and cull them. Our bulls go across the scales at 18 months; this rank is used to make our sale order.” One year saw an atypical crew of “cow-punchers” on the drive. Amy brought her students from the rural school on a unique “field trip” to bring the bulls home. “Some were on ponies, some were on good horses … there were even a few on bicycles,” says

Westphal. “It was the Wild West, but those kids had a lot of fun and learned a lot that’s not found in a classroom.”

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Cattle are preg-tested and sexed by ultrasound. “This gives me the option to sort by sex and also nail down exact gestation lengths, which we are very, very conscientious of,” says Westphal. Weaning occurs for threeweeks around Thanksgiving. Bulls are pastured until January, then pre-sale production starts. The annual bull sale is the last Saturday in March, and 185 2-year-old bulls cross the block.

Yearling heifers are sold private treaty, with many bull customers repeat purchasers on the female side. Westphal says it seems unreal he’s been blessed to do this for more than 50 years. “I’ve been lucky for 50 years, but I guess we’ve also worked hard to prepare for our luck. We definitely have the best life that anyone can ask for.”

The scenic homestead of Valley View Charolais Ranch.

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Valley View Charolais pairs overlooking the homestead.

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SIMMENTAL BULL SALE Sunday, February 3, 2019 Tecumseh, NE 12:00 noon Hors d’oeuvres & Drinks F

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LIVESTOCK SERVICES, LLC.

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RIDL ANGUS

Ridl

Angus

L

SHAUNA KOPREN

ocated two miles north of Dickinson, North Dakota, Ridl Angus is a family-owned and operated business whose mission is to provide high quality customer service, productive cattle and continue to maintain a refined, distinguished cow herd. Being a father-son operation, Ridl

Angus has all the makings of a business that prides itself on its customer service and ensures that buyers know the breeding stock that they see is the breeding stock they buy.

Arthur and Cindi Ridl

Ridl Angus cows grazing corn stalks during a North Dakota winter.

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Rusty, Alysha, Emaly and Betty (not pictured) Ridl

The newest addition to Ridl Angus Ranch Betty, daughter of Rusty and Alysha.

“I think the progression of our cow herd is one of our greatest accomplishments,” states Rusty Ridl, son of Arthur and Cindi Ridl. Arthur and Cindy ranch and farm alongside their son Rusty, his wife Alysha and their two daughters Emaly and Betty Joe.

It’s All About the Cows In 1997, the Ridls dispersed their longtime commercial Simmental herd and Ridl Angus was created. They began buying cows and currently most of the Ridl Angus breeding females originate from Dale Luhman and Luhman Angus. “We implemented an extensive AI program into our herd right away and have continued that today,” says Rusty. In 1998, Ridl Angus had its first joint production sale with Luhman Angus and now has a yearly production sale the first Tuesday in March. “We strive for docile, productive cows that are easy keepers and wean off a good calf and breed back in a timely matter,” says Rusty. “We demand a maternal herd that is good-footed with good udders.”

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Rusty and Arthur strive for these maternal based characteristics and qualities that excel in calving ease, production and disposition while also having the genetics and eye appeal that producers want. Heifers start calving the beginning of January and run right along with the main cow herd that begin calving the first of February. The herd is summered on native North Dakota pastures until the calves are weaned the end of September. The cows are then preg-checked and return to fall grazing, which consists of cover crop and corn stalk residue. After weaning, the bulls go on a high roughage ration to induce fertility and longevity to ensure they are athletic breeding bulls for the upcoming season.

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business aspect of the test alongside Rusty and the Ridl family, who are in charge of feeding the bulls. “It is a great bull test where consigners from Montana, Minnesota, Iowa, South Dakota and North Dakota can, the first week in November, bring bulls to Ridl Farms, where they are put on gain tests for 112 days,” says Janet Dohrmann. “At the end of the 112 days, bulls are sold at the sale the fourth Monday in April.” Along with being home to the bull test, Ridl farms usually consigns one or two bulls to the NDAA Bull Test each year as well. In 2018, there were 75 bulls involved in the bull test.

NDAA Bull Test

Feed Em Till You Need Em

For 31 years Ridl Angus has been heavily involved in the North Dakota Angus Association (NDAA) Annual Bull Test. Bulls involved in the test are received at Ridl Farms the first week of November and are fed there until the sale. L.J. and Janet Dohrman manage the

Customer service is important to the Ridl Angus operation and Rusty and Arthur strive to make sure the experience their customers have will encourage them to return. Along with having to pass a complete breeding soundness exam, all bulls sold at their March sale will

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An aerial photo of Ridl Angus ranch located near Dickinson ND.

be freeze branded and have DNA enhanced EPDs. Ridl

ranch, we are happy to care for them as if they were our

Angus also offers producers the option of “feeding ’em

own, free of charge until you are ready for them.”

till you need ’em.”

Rusty goes on to say that they have multiple pro-

“The feed ’em till you need ’em program is a feeding

ducers that come to pick up their bulls the day they

program we offer after the sale,” says Rusty. “We do not

turn bulls out and go directly to pasture with them.

put a restricted timeline on when you have to pick up

Producers are also welcome to brand their bulls be-

your purchase, as long as you pick your bulls up at the

fore they are loaded onto the truck.

After the cows are preg checked, Ridl Angus let their cows out for fall grazing which consists of cover crops and corn stalk residue.

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More Than Just a Job “Raising cattle is my passion,” Rusty says. “Waking up in the middle of the night and going out to the calving barn isn’t work. It has to be done and I enjoy doing it. Fixing fence every day, moving cattle around, AIing season and new calves in the spring is more of a treat than it is a job.” Along with the cattle, the Ridls have a large farming operation that is run by Rusty’s brother Joe and his uncle Kirt. Together they grow multiple different crops including spring wheat, malted barley, corn and sunflowers. During the busy season, such as harvest, everyone helps each other succeed.

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TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS

“The best part of working with family is everyone puts in 100 percent,” says Rusty. “This isn’t just a job, so when family is the main source of labor everyone puts in 100 percent effort; it’s a way of life, not just a job.” This year the Ridl Angus Production Sale will take place Tuesday March 5 at 2:00 PM MDT at Stockmans West in Dickinson where there will be 75 yearling angus bulls for sale. The Ridl family is proud of their herd and encourages potential buyers or interested individuals to stop by the ranch.

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


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Case IH has redefined soil management. Across all soil conditions, post-harvest or pre-planting, Case IH tillage tools: Cut, size and mix residue to increase nutrient availability and spur decomposition. Smooth and level seed beds, preparing them for planting and promoting early emergence. Create optimal soil tilth by removing compaction and crusts and aerating the soil Case IH tillage tools. Built tougher than the ground you work.

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Ridl Angus cows grazing in the early summer on the green grass near Dickinson, ND. 136

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s e d a c 6 De

SELLING 80 RED & BLACK ANGUS VIRGIN, COMING TWO-YEAR-OLD BULLS

SIRES

FEATURING 62 YEARS PUREBRED ANGUS GENETIC SELECTION • LARGE HALF BROTHER SIRE GROUPS • BULLS HAVE GENOMIC PARENTAGE AND I50K EVALUATIONS

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Gelbvieh and Balancer速 genetics offer more pounds ofand calf Balancer weaned, 速 added fertility, Gelbvieh genetics offer and greater herd longevity. more pounds of cow calf weaned, added fertility, and greater cow herd longevity.

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LARGENT & SONS 142

Largent & Sons

Herefords

T

BY HANNAH JOHLMAN

o the Largents, their Kaycee, Wyoming ranch is part of a long family tradition of breeding and raising Hereford cattle that has been carried on for over 100 years. While the cattle that they stand behind mean a lot, so much so that they offer a two-year guarantee on their seedstock bulls, the fact that they are able to use the ranch to impact lives is also important to the family.

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The first Largent bought his first Herefords in 1902 when Mark Largent’s great-grandfather, C.M. Largent, began to add registered Herefords to his commercial ranching operation in Texas. His son, Roy Largent, grew up with Herefords and eventually his two sons helped the family business climb in the industry under a new name, Largent and Sons. In 1970, David Largent and his sons, Steve and Mark, along with Mark’s wife, Cathy, bought a ranch near Wilsall, Montana, where they moved

with both commercial and registered cattle. Twenty years later, the family relocated to Kaycee where they remain today with the seedstock herd. Steve developed health issues and moved back south, and in the 1990s, Mark began to take over more management of the ranch. Early on, the family was very involved in showing and proved to be very successful, becoming known across the country for their Hereford cattle as David

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set the pace by showing at 32 major cattle shows in one year. In 1953, the family sold a bull for $25,000 and a heifer for $8,500 in Denver. After moving to Kaycee, the show ring became less of a priority and David and Mark began to focus on carcass merits, traits of reproduction, performance and efficiency in the feedlot. The program began to move in a new direction.

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“It seemed some of our competition for the Hereford bull market share was from predominately Angus cattle, which are better known for more marbling than Hereford cattle in general terms,” Mark says. “We wanted them to have multiple trait superiority so we showed cattle and started carcass testing them back in the ’70s, before it kind of became a major industry focus.”

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When a report came out in the late 1980s saying that one in four beef eating experiences were sub-par, the Largents


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doubled their carcass focus, gearing their Hereford bulls to be even better. Every year their offering improves, and in November, Mark and Cathy, along with their son David Largent and his wife Heather Largent, held their 37th annual bull sale. “We have customers that finish their own cattle and like to retain interest, so we really focus on the marbling and ribeye area of the cattle,” Mark says. “We’ve tested our own cattle in feedlots and we do ultrasounding. We’re one of the few herds that focuses on carcass traits.” While EPDs are not a primary driver of their selection process when choosing which bulls will make the cut for the sale, Mark says they are still an integral part of the decision making process. “We don’t want any outliers, especially really large birth weights, and in our part of the country excessive milk

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can cause maintenance issues so we try to avoid outliers with our EPDs,” Mark says. The family is unique in that they are the only Hereford bull producer they know of to offer a twoyear guarantee on all bulls sold, something Mark credits to the bulls growing up in a somewhat harsher environment than most and because they simply believe in their product.

146

matter what their new environment is and, besides that, Mark and David are both bivocational pastors and must be in town Sundays and Wednesdays, during youth group, church camps and vacation bible school, so it’s important that all the cattle be able to “work on their own” in a sense.

“The Hereford cattle were trending a little less popular in the late ’80s and ’90s with the infusion of all the exotic cattle and so, to help our customers feel better about continuing to purchase Hereford bulls versus the exotics, we decided to go with the two-year guarantee,” Mark says.

“The bulls have to have good bone and good thickness and be able to maintain condition even while they are working,” Mark says. “Our particular country here, we don’t hay the cows in the winter time, they’re pretty much on their own. Occasionally we’ll have some protein supplement that we put out for them but our operation is primarily geared so the cattle don’t have to have a lot of maintenance.

The Largents don’t pamper or baby the cattle but instead make them work hard so that when they get to their new owners, they know how to work no

In a sense, the Largents have production goals for their ranch and family goals, both of which tie together.

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THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


Post Driver

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Mark Geoffrey Largent’s 2018 graduation. Mark is the third child of Dave and Heather. From top to bottom and left to right, back row: Heather’s family, Robin Gray, Fred Gray; second row from back: Helen Straight, Jan Gray, (friend of the family) Anita Bartlett, Vaun Pierson (Toby and Laura’s Son) Mark and Cathy Largent; third row from back: Toby Pierson, Laura Pierson, Tinley Pierson (Toby and Laura’s Daughter), Jordan Largent (Dave and Heather’s oldest) Victora Arno (Jordan’s fiancée); front row: Kelley Largent (Dave and Heather’s daughter) holding Evander William, Alaina Fauber (friend of the family), Mark Geoffrey Largent, Nathan Largent (Dave and Heather’s fourth), Heather and Dave Largent.

“Going forward, our goal is to continue a family tradition,” Heather says. Her oldest son is planning on returning to the ranch as soon as he saves up enough money to buy into it. “There aren’t many family ranches left and we want to impact as many lives as we can through what we do.” Through breeding better bulls and focusing on carcass merit, and through learning what customers want and what works for them, Mark says they tweak the program accordingly to keep doing their part to move the Hereford breed forward. “Our primary customer base is people with black hided cattle, and the Hereford Angus cross, the black baldy, has proven to be the most profitable cross in the industry,” Mark says. While it can feel like an uphill battle sometimes because the cattle industry is given to fads and swings, just like any other industry, Mark says that the best they can do is continue

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to stay the course as breeders and continue to raise a product that customers want and raise Herefords that not only will improve the breed, but mix and match well with other breeds. “We talk about how we can help the Hereford breed, but actually the Hereford breed has also helped us through the years,” Heather says. “Really the breed exactly, but the people who have come along side us in times of need as well.”

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Be different.

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This is the kind we will sell in volume on Tuesday, February 12th, 2019. This bull calf is a 3/4 Simmental 1/4 Angus son of our 2017 Top Seller, W/C Bankroll.

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 12TH 12:00 NOON AT THE RANCH 27262 424th Avenue Emery, South Dakota 57332 When selecting the next genetics for your herd, make sure you’re on the right side of the fence!

SELLING 300 HEAD!

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SIMMENTAL, SIMANGUS™ & ANGUS

200 PERFORMANCE BULLS 160 YEARLING BULLS 40 STRONG AGED BULLS 100 REGISTERED BRED HEIFERS SEMEN & EMBRYOS

Selling 90 Progeny & Grandprogeny A standard setter for putting explosive muscle in a functional package for the commercial cowman to utilize.

OFFICE 605-825-4024 DALE 605-661-3625 SCOTT 605-682-9610 JARED 605-933-1661 27262 424th Avenue, Emery, SD www.werningcattle.com

W/C United 956Y

Eberspacher Enterprises Inc. Val & Lori Eberspacher 507-532-6694 Val Eberspacher Cell 612-805-7405 Email: sales@ebersale.com Like us on Facebook for all sale updates! 2904 County Road 6, Marshall, MN 56258

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W/C HOC HCC Red Answer 33B

Offering another impressive set of red and red blaze faced bulls in 2019!

Selling 70 Progeny & Grandprogeny • Trait leader and Top 1% for WW, YW, ADG & TI Top SimAngus™ bull in America for registrations! This bull continues to make a huge impact in the commercial beef business!

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1-877-347-9100 • www.tsln.com

LIVESTOCK MARKET • NAPOLEON, ND

NAPOLEON LIVESTOCK 701-754-2216

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

• BELLE FOURCHE, SD

• LEMMON, SD

and

LEMMON LIVESTOCK INC.

• ST. ONGE, SD

P.O. Box 290

Sale Barn: 605-892-2655

Baxter & Skyler Anders, Owners - 605-685-4862

Brett Loughlin - 605-210-0615

Brooke Tupper - Off. Mgr.: 605-642-2200

Fieldman: • Ron Frame: 605-641-0229 Jess Cline: 307-751-8143 • Dustin Vining: 605-354-9966 Ray Pepin: 605-892-5072 • Gilbert Wood: 605-456-2400

1-877-347-9100 • www.tsln.com Tim Tetrault: 605-641-0328 605-374-3877 800-822-8853 • Regular Sales Every Wednesday

Philip Livestock Auction

• PHILIP, SD

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

Owner: Thor Roseth Owner/Auctioner: Jeff Long Philip, SD: 605-685-5826 Auctioneers: Lynn Weishaar: Reva, SD 605-866-4670

Randy Curtis - 605-892-5694 Craig Deveraux - 307-746-2317 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

• DICKINSON, ND

STOCKMENS LIVESTOCK EXCHANGE Selling Thursdays 701-225-8156 800-472-2667 (ND & MT only)

Rod Schaffer - 406-672-5546

“For the Best in NorthernGrown Feeder Cattle”

Ty Jones - 406-951-4221

All Fresh Rancher-Consigned Cattle

www.bellefourchelivestock.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

• Special Sales as Advertised

REGULAR CATTLE SALES THURSDAY

St. Onge, SD 57779

Sheep Sell Every Thursday • Newell, SD 605-456-2348 • 800-409-4149

Office: 605-859-2577

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

WWW.TSLN.COM 154

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Cattle Sale Every Tuesday

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DIRECTORY CALL TODAY TO LIST YOUR SALE BARN IN THE TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS

877-347-9100

• FT. PIERRE, SD FT.

PIERRE LIVESTOCK AUCTION, INC.

• BOWMAN, ND

• MILES CITY, MT

BOWMAN AUCTION MARKET

MILES CITY LIVESTOCK COMMISSION

Computerized Ring Scale

877-211-0600 Regular Sale Every Monday

Special Sales as Advertised

Marketing Cattle, Sheep, & Horses

Regular Cattle Sales Tuesday Special Feeder Sales In Season Horse Sales As Advertised Home of Frontier Stockyards

P.O. Box 58 Bowman, ND 58623

Cattle Every Friday

800-280-7210 Sale Barn: 605-223-2576

Dennis Hanson: 605-223-2575 Willie Cowan: 605-224-5796 Brian Hanson: 605-280-1283 • KIMBALL, SD

Harry Kerr, Mgr. 701-523-5922 701-523-6711 (c) Wayne Miller Field Rep 701-523-6885

www.frontierstockyards.com

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

• RUSHVILLE, NE

Sheridan LiveStock auction co., inc.

• CRAWFORD, NE

605-778-6211

Regular Sales Wednesday Office (308) 327-2406

CHAD HEEZEN (605) 870-0697 EMAIL: COWTRACKS@MIDSTATESD.NET 605-778-6211 • 888-282-2593 WADE CHRISTENSEN (605) 730-1801 WEBSITE: KIMBALLLIVESTOCKEXCHANGE.COM

Cattle Sell Every Tuesday FAX: (605) 778-6209

DAVID VIERECK (605) 680-0386

Horse Sales Every Month As Advertised OWNERS: Chad Heezen 605-870-0697 LEE NESS (605) 680-2778 Hogs Sell at 9:30 a.m. CHRISTI CHRISTENSEN - OFFICE MANAGER Wade & Christina Christensen: (605) 680-1536 DICK DEFFENBAUGH (605) 680-1324 Weigh-ups & Bulls Sell at 11:00 a.m. 605-730-1801 Tuesday Sales - Sales Broadcast On Cattleusa.com Stock Cattle Sell at 1:00 p.m. Dick Deffenbaugh: 605-680-1324 Owners: David Viereck: 605-680-0386 Dan & Sherry Otte 308-362-2563 Lee Ness: 605-680-2778 Kirk Otte 308-282-0282 Steve Chavez: 605-860-0016 Fieldmen: Wayde Bolden, Gilbert Grooms • Galen Paul Munsen: 605-680-1450 kimballlivestockexchange.com Voss • Chip Hartman • Travis Binger STEVE CHAVEZ (605) 860-0016

KIMBALL LIVESTOCK EXCHANGE, LLC

001625876r1

• FAITH, SD

Regular Sales on Monday Tues. Sheep Sales in Season 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

Bassett Livestock Auction, Inc. 402-684-2361 Regular and Special Feeder Cattle Sales on Wednesdays Owners: Jake Maurer • 402-822-0080 Shane Kaczor • 402-336-7011

www.milescitylivestock.com

301 North Truck Street PO Box 20, Kimball, SD, 57355

for Cattlemen" Cattlemen "Cattlemen Workingworking for Cattlemen

• BASSETT, NE

• 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

Shawn Madden 307-532-1575 Lex Madden – 307-532-1580

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

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

• BILLINGS, MT

BILLINGS LIVESTOCK COMMISSION

Cattle Sales Every Thursday Monday IN Season Northern Livestock Video Auction Horse Sale the 4th weekend of each month For Information or to Consign Call: 1-800-635-7364 or call: Ty Thompson 406-698-4783 Dan Catlin 406-671-7715 Bill Cook 406-670-0689 website: www.billingslivestock.com

• SIDNEY, MT

SIDNEY LIVESTOCK

Prewitt & Company, LLC 756 10th Ave S.E. Office: 406-482-5251 Fax: 406-482-6644

Rod Prewitt: 406-480-2777 Mike Yore: 406-480-2888 Tim Larson: 406-480-2666

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Research &

TECHNOLOGY

PHOTO BY TODD KLASSY

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Research &

TECHNOLOGY THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

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M

BY SHALEY LENSEGRAV

Managing MINERALS 158

TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS

inerals play an important part in livestock health and immunity, but when it comes to establishing a mineral program there is no “one size fits all” solution.

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


It’s important to understand what’s in your feed and forage as well as in your mineral supplement. PHOTOS BY CARRIE STADHEIM

Beef cattle require seventeen minerals to maintain good health. These minerals are divided into two groups: macrominerals and microminerals. Macrominerals include elements such as calcium, magnesium, phosphorus, potassium, sodium, chlorine, and sulfur. The remaining minerals are called microminerals or trace minerals because animals require them in much smaller quantities. Trace minerals, which are stored in the animal’s liver, include

chromium, cobalt, copper, iodine, iron, manganese, selenium, and zinc. Determining which minerals need to be supplemented always depends on the region and its forage and water sources that are available. In general, the Midwest is sufficient in phosphorus, iron, and sulfur. However, trace minerals zinc and copper are typically deficient across the Unites States.

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Producers who want to create a mineral program that will serve their herd most effectively should begin by taking samples of their forage, other feed sources, and water and connecting with their local extension office for guidance.

The most accurate way to determine what mineral supplements are necessary is to evaluate forage seasonally, over three years.

Adele Harty, South Dakota State University extension cow/calf field specialist, recently developed and began working with ranchers through a cattle mineral nutrition program. Her yearlong program begins with face-to-face sessions with producers to educate them about basic nutrition and the roles that minerals play in animals’ health. After that, she works with ranchers to collect forage and feed samples in the spring, summer, and fall to “get a profile of what minerals are available to the animals.” In the fall, she hosts a session to discuss how the samples are interpreted in the lab, and she

Part of being in the cattle business is dealing with things out of your control. It comes with the job. But, when you feed Vigortone® mineral there’s one thing you can always count on – peace of mind knowing your cattle are getting the nutrition they need, when they need it. In a business full of the uncontrollable, count on Vigortone to deliver. Every time.

TALK TO YOUR LOCAL VIGORTONE DISTRIBUTOR Call 1-800-553-1712 or visit

www.vigortone.com 160

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works with the producers to find a commercial mineral that meets their needs or makes plans for a personalized mineral to use. Mary Drewnoski, assistant professor and beef system specialist at University of Nebraska-Lincoln recommends that for the best data, producers should take samples of what their cattle are eating once a season. Taking samples during different seasons tracks which minerals are present in the early, mid, and mature stages of the forage. Ideally, producers should also take samples over three years to get a clear picture of the changes in mineral content in relation to rainfall. As a rule of thumb, 50 percent of the mineral content found in forage is actually available for absorption into the animal. For example, if the forage contains 10 parts per million (ppm) of a trace mineral,

you could assume that 5 ppm of that mineral will actually be absorbed by the animal. “Not all that is consumed is being absorbed,” Drewnoski said. Mineral content within forage can change from region to region, which is why it is important to know the needs for your specific location and resources. Harty described that selenium toxicities are a common issue in western South Dakota, but on the eastern side of the state, producers often are deficient in selenium. Selenium toxicities are a huge issue for horses, which will start losing their mane and tail and begin sluffing off their hooves. Cattle are more resilient to toxic levels of the element, but are still affected. The problem with mineral deficiencies isn’t always that there is a lack of minerals in forage, but often

If cattle aren’t eating much mineral, it is more likely a case of it not being palatable, than that the cattle know they don’t need it.

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different elements negatively react together, forming compounds that cattle are unable to absorb and therefore use. For example, iron, molybdenum, and sulfur act as antagonists against copper absorption. Drewnoski explained that these antagonists “bind to copper and create an insoluble complex that never enters [or is absorbed by] the animal.� Water in the Midwest tends to be high in sulfur and distiller grains are typically high in molybdenum which both negate copper supplementation.

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Producers can also adversely affect their herd by supplementing iron when the forage supplies an adequate ration to begin with, especially since iron can have negative absorption effects on copper. “Redder is not better,” Drewnoski advises producers when purchasing a mineral supplement. “One of the challenges we talk a lot about in mineral consumption is free choice,” Harty said. Free choice is the most common method used to distribute minerals, but it is not an exact science. Harty explained that ranchers might assume that because their cattle are not eating the provided minerals that they don’t need them, but she went on to say, “That is probably not the case, it’s probably a palatability issue or an imbalance with it.”

“In forage-based diets, cattle are pretty much always deficient in salt,” Drewnoski said. Another way for producers to supplement is through injectable minerals. Drewnoski said injectable minerals can be a good way to improve mineral status quickly during a period of high need or in a case where the animal has no trace mineral stores built up. This form of supplementation should always be used in combination with a free choice mineral. In

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Stephanie Hansen, associate professor and beef feedlot nutrition chair at Iowa State University, also cautions against assuming that cattle will consume the mineral that they need. “Remember cattle have no nutritional wisdom, just like humans reach for the salty potato chips instead of nutrient rich broccoli, cattle are driven to consume mineral based on palatability (largely driven by salt content), not by some knowledge that they are deficient in a certain mineral,” she said. Typically, free choice minerals are salt driven; however, some minerals that have a bitter taste— like those containing high levels of magnesium—may need a sweetener added to mask the taste. Adding salt to mineral solves a macromineral deficiency and boosts consumption.

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When choosing a mineral supplement, read the label carefully to make sure the supplement isn’t providing something that already may exist in excess, like selenium.

addition, ranchers must use caution when using injectable minerals because they are typically high in selenium which could lead to toxic levels. Recognizing trace mineral deficiencies is difficult because the symptoms that cattle may show could be caused by issues not related to mineral status. “Unfortunately, trace mineral deficiencies are often difficult to spot, as until they are severe there often are not obvious signs. The most practical way is for ranchers to assess their feed and water sources for trace minerals and for antagonists to trace minerals,” Hanson said. “It is really hard to use production performance data or health records to say that I’ve got a mineral problem,” Drewnoski said. “Most people don’t see frank deficiencies except for milk fever and grass tetany.” 164

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Along with testing forage, producers can also have their animals tested by their vet through a liver biopsy if they have that need. At different periods throughout the year (gestation, lactation, reproduction, weaning, etc.), the animals’ mineral needs may fluctuate; however, establishing and maintaining a consistent mineral program should be sufficient to supply the animals’ needs. “If you have a good mineral program yearround, you don’t need to change anything,” said Drewnoski. Establishing a mineral plan specific to a producer’s herd is key to maintaining general health. “Everybody’s situation is going to be different and it takes time to evaluate what their needs are and what is going to boost that,” Harty said.

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Red Angus Factory of the North 20th Annual Production Sale

Wednesday, February 20, 2019 1pm @ the ranch near Powers Lake, ND 90 Yearling Bulls & 25 Yearling Heifers Sell

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Smart tags KEEP A PULSE ON COWHERDS

PHOTO COURTESY OF HERDDOGG

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LED light on the Quantified AG® tag. PHOTO COURTESY OF QUANTIFIED AG.

T

BY DEANNA NELSON-LICKING

he implementation of technology in the beef cattle industry might be a little slower than other sectors, but a number of companies are developing products to bring producers into the 21st century. There are a number of com-

HerdDogg was first designed to support grass-fed beef cattle out in the pasture, day and night. It gives the user access to the animal’s welfare at all times. This is especially helpful for ranchers who work off the place, enabling remote monitoring of herd health to boost livestock profitability and sustainability.

HerdDogg, “The Internet of Herds,” an award-winning company based in Ashland, Oregon and founded in 2015 has been developing an ear tag system for ranchers. “Our goal is to improve the things producers do regularly. Innovation that excites people, everyone wants to know enhanced access methods and we provide deeper insights into the animals they love,” said Melissa Brandao, CEO and founder of HerdDogg. “I developed it by studying the challenges of gathering data from RFID tags in the pasture and came up with a system that is hands-off, using Bluetooth technology.”

The DoggTag, a Bluetooth ear tag, is placed in each cow’s ear and a moveable base with cellular connection, called the DoggBone is placed at a central gathering point in the pasture or barn, i.e. water tank, back rub, lick tub or salt lick. The DoggBone operates using Bluetooth and records each tag that comes within about 30 feet of it and sends the data to the cloud. The producer is able to access it via a smartphone app that provides anytime/anywhere access and alerts for each animal’s health record without touching the animal. Truly a no-stress gathering of data. And if looking for a specific animal, the user is able via Bluetooth to turn on a light on the tag, making it easy to identify the animal. The system can also be used to count the herd and identify missing individuals by enabling the DoggBone to

panies developing smart tags, smart collars and implants, which are gaining popularity worldwide, especially in the dairy industry. While the technology is relatively new, there are a few US-based companies working to fill the need in the beef industry.

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record all visitors that came by and reporting to the app. The HerdDogg system provides three main tools: health, heat and tracking. The tag measures biometrics, ear temperature and activity. Producers are able to know which animal is sick before seeing them and do field health checks without disturbing the herd. It also helps with AI, taking the guesswork out of heat detecting, by monitoring estrus and giving early warning for breeding. The LED light aids in locating the animal, especially at night. And it is the only one of its kind that will pick up the take rate The DoggTagÂŽ in use. PHOTO COURTESY OF HERDDOGG

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by measuring the change in biometrics and outer ear temperature for early pregnancy detection.

The entire system is engineered and made in the United States.

“I feel that the time is coming when producers will need a system to monitor livestock from birth on, to ensure the highest quality of life and health, monitoring genetics and well-being,” Brandao said.

For the feedlot sector, Quantified Ag has created a tag to improve efficiency. “These tags are a way to augment pen riders, so they can do a better job and focus their efforts,” said Vishal Singh, CEO and founder. “With our system all the data belongs to the customer. The customer decides who has access to it.”

The DoggBone is movable and the tags are reusable, with a battery life of two years, which is the average tag life. A new tag can be linked to the individual, resulting in uninterrupted data collection. But even after the tag is gone, the heath record is preserved in the cloud. The data collected is a permanent, unalterable record of each animal’s health. The producers own the raw data and they buy access to the HerdDogg service to access the information on their phones.

Singh worked for the Institute of Ag at the University of Nebraska Lincoln for a number of years. Through his work in agriculture projects and the beef industry he experimented with drones for the detection of sick animals, but there were a number of drawbacks to their use. So he changed his focus to attaching a sensor to the animal. He started his company in 2014. They are a small team but

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The Gateway of the Quantified Ag system.

everything is still produced in Lincoln, Nebraska. Since all feeder cattle have an ear tag already and the application is familiar, creating a smart ear tag made sense. The tags have gone through trials and research for retention and collection of data. The small tag is activated and attached to the ear and sends system reports to the cloud every hour, providing easy to understand, live data straight to the Precision Livestock Dashboard located at the feedyard office. The raw data is interpreted by the dashboard, exposing the weak areas of any cattle operation. Their Precision Livestock management system allows feedlot managers to monitor the cattle from anywhere.

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The tag and data system that has been developed and is being used by numerous feedyards in the Midwest includes a tag positioned to look down the ear canal that monitors body temperature and behavior. An antenna is installed, preferably on the feed mill, and one unit can cover over 50,000 head of cattle, in a 1-2 mile radius. The data is sent to the cloud and back to the Dashboard at the office. Every day a list of sick animals is sent and the tag of each one lights up to make identification easier. So instead of pen riders methodically riding and looking at each individual, they have a daily pull list, making them more efficient and reducing stress by identifying troubled animals earlier. “Cattle are creatures of prey so they are really good at hiding their symptoms. Our tags objectively monitor herd health all the


Attaching the Smart Tag.

Screenshot of what the data for an individual animal looks like.

Quantified AG® Tags. PHOTOS COURTESY OF QUANTIFIED AG.

time,” said Alex Heine, director of customer experience at Quantified Ag.

system works all the time, in all weather and never has a sick day or fails to show up.

Quantified Ag personnel work with customers in the installation process, ensuring its quality and quick completion. The system is scalable to cover the exact needs of large or small operations. It requires an initial financial investment but by improving the efficiency and herd health it can increase profits. Early detection allows for faster treatment of sick cattle, this lowers morbidity and mortality rates, not only saving time but also money in drug costs. The

Quantified Ag’s goal is to simplify animal health management. According to their website, “Our vision is to give the livestock industry a more integrated animal health platform that provides actionable information for improved outlier detection and treatment decisions. With a reliable, innovative, and clear focus we aim to transform the livestock industry with cutting edge technology on a global scale.”

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Salers cows are genetically designed to be efficient forage harvesters. Their fertility, longevity and legendary calf survivability generate the most pounds of calf possible from your pastures with the least amount of labor. And a 2001 Montana State research study demonstrated that cows of Salers genetic origin will graze higher elevations than cows of other breeds. All of which makes them the most efficient self-propelled forage harvesters you can put in your pasture! Visit our website at www.macdonaldranches.com to learn more.

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Booth’s Cherry Creek Angus 47TH ANNUAL ‘PROGRESS THROUGH PERFORMANCE’ BULL SALE

Sale Date: Thursday, February 14, 2019 At the Ranch in Veteran, WY • 1 p.m.

Selling 160 Fall and Yearling Angus Bulls

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Cherry Crk Full Power D227 M sold as Lot 27 for $5,000 to Rod Nelson, Lusk, in our 2018 bull sale

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Cherry Crk Absolute D164 M sold as Lot 31 for $3,500 to Dan Hageman, Hartville, in our 2018 bull sale

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The NEW ESTROTECT™ Breeding Indicator featuring patent pending Breeding Bullseye™ technology makes it easier than ever to identify cows that are in heat, pinpoint timing for AI and Timed AI protocols, as well as confirm successful pregnancies.

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A PROMISING

Prediction Genetic prediction continues to improve as technology advances and breed organizations compile more and more data.

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I

BY MEGAN SILVEIRA

.

n today’s world, it is more common for cattlemen to be seen struggling with the cord of a computer mouse rather than an actual lasso. With the help of modern technology, both seedstock and commercial cattlemen in the beef industry have been able to improve their herds through the use of genetic prediction. Mark Johnson, associate professor and faculty supervisor of the Purebred Beef Cattle Center at Oklahoma State University, says genetic prediction is the use of collected data and statistical analysis in beef cattle to predict how future offspring will perform for a specific trait. Through the accumulation of data of quantitative traits (yearling weights, weaning weights, marbling scores, etc.), Johnson says cattlemen are able to predict the traits of future calf crops based on the sire chosen. He claims genetic prediction is one of the reasons the cattle industry has been able to become more efficient over the years.

PHOTO COURTESY OF KROSE MARKETING

Dr. Robert Weaber, professor and cow-calf extension specialist at Kansas State University, says studying animals on a genotypical level through the use of indexes was far from normal before the early 2000s. EPDs became popular in the early 1980s, and before then, ranchers used to make breeding decisions on phenotypical traits alone. Nowadays, ranchers utilize a “sophisticated approach for optimization,” Weaber says. With this approach, he says producers aim to breed for progeny with the ability to hit peak levels of performance in their environment. As the technology of today is constantly improving, Johnson says so is genetic prediction. He says ranchers are now able to incorporate practices like DNA-typing and DNA markers to find specific genes in animals to create calves with desirable traits.

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“DNA markers have recently changed the game and taught us to think more broadly about genetic improvement,” Weaber says.

prediction, all types of cattle operations are striv-

Weaber says tools like genetic prediction are becoming more and more valuable on an industry-wide level every day. Selection indexes are becoming generalized across the breed spectrum, a move Weaber believes is helping cattle producers see improved rates of progress in identifying desirable genes in livestock.

“think bigger picture” when it comes to genetic

But this movement to join as an industry for the betterment of an overall product is not just happening at the breed level. With genetic

producers are learning to look at their selection

PHOTO COURTESY OF KROSE MARKETING.

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ing to breed for more efficient livestock. Johnson says seedstock producers have to prediction. He believes these breeders have a responsibility to the entire industry compared to commercial operations, as genetics from seedstock producers reach a broader audience. On the other hand, Weaber says commercial decisions based on how their choices will impact the rest of the production chain.

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In an industry formerly focused on the end product, Weaber says beef producers are learning to find the happy medium between both end products and cow performance. This new-found strategy is resulting in an overall more efficient industry made up of higher performing cattle.

PHOTO COURTESY OF KROSE MARKETING.

Even as the industry is seeing high-quality livestock today, Johnson says time will only help improve cattle producers’ abilities to predict the genotype of future generations of cattle. “I believe as we look ahead to the future, we will identify more and more genes that influence quantitative traits and DNA-typing will become even more significant to our generated EPDs,” Johnson says. “Continue to learn more and more about the beef genome and identify more polygenic genetic traits, and that will be a part of the genetic picture as we look ahead.”

Different producers value different traits in their livestock, but the more information is available, the more informed decisions producers can make.

Johnson says utilizing information provided through EPDs and the technology available in today’s world is allowing cattle producers to “build a cow herd as productive as possible.” With this heavy emphasis on genetic data, Weaber warns producers the information itself is useless without a solid repository of phenotypical data. He says good genetic evaluation is a delicate balance of studying animals from the ground up and on paper.

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PHOTO COURTESY OF SCOTT DIRK.

Savvy cattle producers use a combination of the latest technology and proven phenotypic observations to make wise breeding decisions.

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When looking to statistical evidence on performance through the use of EPDs, Weaber says each cattle operation will approach genetic prediction with their own strategy, depending on their own personal goals. Certain EPDs are more economically significant to some operations than others, and Johnson says genetic prediction allows ranchers to breed for cattle fitting to the goals of their individual operations. “I believe if we take a look at our program and take a look at things like when we’re going to market our calves, it helps us to identify traits

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

that are of primary importance to us and our herd,” he says. Weaber says ranchers should strive to breed for calves capable of showing genetic improvement from the previous generation. By studying genetic information and using that knowledge, Weaber says ranchers are able to select for specific genetic traits in cattle to help reach a specific endpoint. Each operation is different, from their management styles to breeding decisions. All these varying opinions and strategies have helped created the vast and incredibly diverse beef industry of today.


But with this diversity comes some challenges. According to Johnson, the sheer amount of genetic data collected in the cattle industry can be overwhelming, especially when comparing the total amount of data to the actual percentage useful to the individual producer. And collecting the wealth of data quite the process. Johnson says the gathering and analyzation of genetic data takes both time and money, inputs not always available in large quantities to ranchers. With this large amount of data, Weaber says the sad reality is only a small subset of the information is needed for each specific trait. He believes if the industry can expand the number of meaningful genetic markers available, producers will gain a better understanding of how to actually apply genetic prediction to their management decisions. Weaber admits learning to interpret genetic information to predict the traits of future progeny is a challenge all in its own. He likens the process of genetic prediction to starting a vehicle. “You know when you turn the key, the engine starts, but not necessarily how it starts,” he says. He says cattle producers know EPDs work and can be used to genetically improve cattle, but don’t always know how to use this knowledge to better their operations.

Despite these obstacles, Johnson describes genetic prediction as a tool capable of helping make the beef industry more efficient and assisting producers in putting better products on the table. As cattle producers begin to use genetic prediction on a more frequent basis, Johnson says the industry will be better able to satisfy the wants and needs of both producers and consumers.

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Disposition is one of the traits that’s difficult to quantify, but that cattle producers have been predicting for years.

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PHOTO COURTESY OF SCOTT DIRK. PHOTO COURTESY OF KROSE MARKETING.

As cattle producers begin to use genetic prediction on a more frequent basis, Johnson says the industry will be better able to satisfy the wants and needs of both producers and consumers.

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HEADin’ FOR THE PASS 1 mile South of Wyola, MTFOR on Hwy 87 or 35 miles North of Sheridan, WY HEADin’ THE PASS 1 mile South of Wyola, MT on Hwy 87 or 35 miles North of Sheridan, WY

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45th Annual Bull Production Sale

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2011 - 2018

BLACKLEAF CATTLE COMPANY Choteau, Montana 6,799± ACRES | $4,975,000

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KIMBERLY LOWRY

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RFID technology is more than just tags

L

STORY AND PHOTOS BY TODD KLASSY

ike in any industry or business, ranchers are constantly searching for ways to automate and increase productivity to reduce costs and increase profit margins. There’s one technology that has been around for years now that American ranchers are just now adopting, even though its use has been commonplace elsewhere around the globe for years. Radio-frequency identification, more commonly known by its acronym RFID, has been used in other industries since the early 1970s. It is the same technology that Amazon.com is using in its new grocery stores that have no checkout lanes. Pluck an item from the shelf, walk out the door, and the RFID tag on your milk or steak is automatically detected and your account charged.

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Whether you know it or not, you have probably used RFID technology. RFID tags can be attached to any object and used to track and manage inventory, assets, or people. For example, the retail industry has been using RFID tags for years to prevent theft. RFID tags have also been implanted into pets to locate owners if a stray pet is found. They are also used on keyless door entry systems. There are literally hundreds of thousands (if not millions) of different uses for RFID technology in the world today. Jeremy Blampied is the Marketing and Business Development Manager for Te Pari Products, a company that has been leading the way to integrate RFID technology on cattle ranches. “RFID technology has been a game changer in the cattle industry in recent years. It makes identification of animals easy, and that’s information ranchers can use to save money and protect their bottom line.” Te Pari manufactures RFID-enabled load bars that can be placed under a cattle chute to weigh livestock automatically. When a steer enters the chute during vaccination season, for example, the animal’s weight is then automatically recorded. That information is entered into an easy-to-use database and then that information can be used to analyze, make decisions, and perform other tasks automatically.

A rancher, for example, can compare an animal’s growth over time and determine whether a sire or dam is performing up to expectations. That kind of information allows a rancher to shape his or her herd and create a lot of additional revenue over time. When used with a Te Pari dosing gun or vaccination gun, a vaccine’s quantity can be automatically measured and loaded into the gun to suit the weight of each animal. For the average

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medium to large rancher in Montana than can mean a savings of many thousands of dollars each year even after the RFID equipment is paid for. At up to $2,000 per liter for some vaccines, the savings is evident. But there are other benefits to measuring vaccine doses correctly. “One of the biggest challenges in the industry is administering the correct dose of medicine, and verifying the entire herd has been treated,” Blampied said. “If you under-dose an animal you are essentially pouring that medicine down the


drain. And you can also build up resistant parasites as a result. Product resistance is a nationwide problem. And perhaps the greatest cause for resistance is under dosing.� RFID technology operates wirelessly and has three essential components: a tag (which consists of a microchip and hidden radio antenna), a reader, and a computer. Wireless readers quickly identify and track tags attached to objects. The tags contain an electronically-stored ID number and can store other information, too.

Low frequency passive tags, which are the most common RFID tags in use on ranches, will collect energy from a nearby RFID reader or wand. Because of this, their cost is relatively low; usually only $1.50 to $3 each. High frequency active tags use a local power source (such as a small battery) and may operate dozens of yards away from the RFID reader. Currently high frequency tags are not used as much in the cattle industry, but some are experimenting with them. In Canada, for example, the

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Southern Alberta Institute of Technology (SAIT) is finding exciting new uses for high frequency RFID tags. Take, for example, the not-so-uncommon occurrence of a cow and calf separating themselves from a herd. That pair could be hidden in any canyon on a 2,000-acre pasture and it might take a long time to find them on horseback. High frequency RFID tags would allow a rancher to launch a drone equipped with a RFID reader and quickly find the cow. That same drone technology could also be used during calving season. Imagine programming your drone to find cow number 4793, which is due to give birth that night. A drone with a RFID reader and infrared camera could easily find that cow, monitor its status, and beam infrared video back to your computer, tablet, or smart phone while you watch from the comfort and warmth of your home.

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The USDA proposed requiring electronic tags for all call cattle by 2006, but many ranchers resisted. Arguments included the expense and intrusiveness of the regulation. As a result, the proposal died. The electronic tracking of beef cattle had been required in places like Australia, New Zealand, and Brazil for many years. Similarly, electronic tracking for sheep is required in Europe and Canada. However, attitudes are changing, according to those working with the technology behind the scenes. Louis Dubs, a rancher near Bridger, Montana said that weighing animals, recording that information, and then analyzing it has allowed him to save a great deal of money. “I can easily tell which animals are performing and which animals are not,” Dubs said. “And information is valuable, even in ranching. With that data

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I can change breeding programs and remove certain animals who are underperforming.” Another reason ranchers are adopting RFID technology is because of changes in the marketplace. Recent studies have shown that millennials, for example, are willing to pay much more for food that is marketed as “sustainable,” with the source identified. RFID technology in New Zealand is allowing consumers to know the backstory of every piece of meat on their plate. Millennials crave that

knowledge and it is likely to become increasingly important in years to come. Millennials are the first generation willing to consciously spend more money for sustainability and traceability. And restaurants and grocery stores are willing to pay ranchers extra for that information. RFID technology makes that possible.

Lastly, and perhaps more importantly, ranchers are beginning to realize that RFID technology can also help isolate the outbreak of certain diseases that could potentially cripple an industry for years, if not decades. In 2003 a case of BSE, breeDing reg. anguS Cattle SinCe 1898 also known as mad cow disease, was discovered in a dairy cow in Washington state. It took 13 days to trace the cow back to the farm where it was born in Canada. RFID technology today could trace the 1pm MDT at the Ranch SW of Harrison, NE origin of that animal in hours, not days. And as a result, elecSelling Yearling Bulls tronic tagging could prevent the spread of a disease that has 2 Year Old Bulls the capability of destroying an Angus Bulls Females for Sale Private Treaty entire industry.

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Blampied said he didn’t know if the United States government would ever try to make RFID technology mandatory again but said the benefits of RFID technology may appeal to ranchers even if the government doesn’t require it. “The management of data on a ranch will become much more important in the future and RFID technology makes that possible,” he said. “Having more information can make ranchers more profitable. And saving money is what makes RFID technology so attractive.”


Join us for these upcoming events: 2019

President

Secretary

19640 367th Ave St Lawrence, SD 57373 605-461-1494 jackpotcattle@yahoo.com

38393 US Highway 14 Wolsey, SD 57384 605-350-5517 klarsen1041@jacks.sdstate.edu

23447 Rocky Rd Pukwana, SD 57370 605-894-4464 hdcable@midstatesd.net

Vice President

Treasurer

Chris Effling

10752 BIA Road 15 Veblen, SD 57270 605-237-4663 stavicx@tnics.com

PO Box 294 Salem, SD 57058 605-240-0015 kblagg@firstdakota.com

Clay Duxbury

Mike Stavick

Keith Larsen

Kevin Blagg

Harley Cable

PO Box 23 Highmore, SD 57345 605-769-0142 ceffling@tsln-fre.com

January 23

Sioux Empire Farm Show and Sale, Sioux Falls

January 31

Black Hills Stock Show & Sale, Rapid City

February 8

Watertown Winter Farm Show and Sale, Watertown

Cam Fagerhaug

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Ross Demers

28381 318th Ave. Colome, SD 57528 605-840-4188 demersranch@goldenwest.net

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Revamping conservation legislation

STEPPING OUT

16, 2018 Saturday, June

rtson Act Pittman-Robe to boost amendments funding preservation

Saturday, July

28, 2018

‘I WANT TO COME BACK’ Volume 56 • Issue 30

rton By Traci Eathe ock News 2 Sections for Tri-State Livest a House NatuLast February, at a panel looked ral Resources land and wildpublic of ing number n bills, includ life conservatio America’s Wildthe Recovering 4647). The bill Fedlife Act (H.R. d parts of the would amen ife Restoration beral Aid in Wildl the Pittman-Ro Act, known as ertson Act. 1937, the PittEnacted in tes son Act alloca man-Robert ammu taxes from The Agriculture federal excise and firearm , arrow Department has announced fe nition, bow, fund state wildligh plan to provid a “short-term” purchases to e programs. Throu in emergency up to $12 billion conservation aid to farme , hunters and affected by this mechanism ers have proPresident Donalrs Trump’s trade shoot d n in war. recreational billio $15 The help, annou than fe vided more nced by Agriculture Secret based wildli terrain to graze. ary elevaand mountainous funding for statein a call to reportSonny Perdue management. travel up rocky slopes and higherBailey restoration and Secretary Ryan out which ones to graze steep noon, will come ers this afterby Derek on cattle to find cattle are more willing cattle. Photo through a direct U.S. Interior this year more assistance progra tracking collars te that are university that are placing GPS markers that could indicaprivately owned, but some m said design rchers bed help Zinke distri Resea to are with food purch will be ed some gene in the study ase and distribution ies than $1.1 billion They have identifi said most of the cattle and wildlife agenc Bailey ted equal. promoting trade. geared toward tions. Derek uted to state cows are crea select for ated by the Pit“The actions from taxes gener Act, along with ents, ‘Not all can statement thattoday are a firm I tell my stud l and some don’t.’ If we tman-Robertsonnson Sport Fish other nation cannot bully s Some will trave the Dingell-Joh e.” rcher producers to our agricultural e a differenc ration Act. ssor and resea mak force Resto profe can the rsity we Unite it, States to cave d State Unive put in,” Perdue on Page A6 , New Mexico reporters, accord told less likely to - See Wildlife Act Derek Bailey re, they are any ing to The New York Times. find- pastu g pressure in nt his latest too much grazin “This admin nt He will prese veme area. cows Beef Impro stand by whileistration will not ings at the ntion in one tell my students, ‘Not all ing agricultural our hard-work“I annual conve 20-23. . Some will travel Federation producers , from June the brunt of created equal select unfriendly andbear Loveland, Colo. distri butio n re- are some don’t.’ If we can gal tariffs.” illeng ence,” Fellow grazi Thomas with Colo- and it, we can make a differ When he finishe searcher Milt rsity also will talk for - See Plan on Page s his Animal N.D. Courtesy Science degree A2 he said. observed photo Bailey , at rado State Unive NDSU, study Trey Klain looks forwar In his first tainous range d to returning to BIF attendees. collars to record grazing moun red up the to the family GPS cattle uses d ranch Bailey near Turtle Lake, eim cattle in ruggeit in Montana and gathe traveled to By Carrie Stadh that movements of exhib the half cows ely re. ximat Editor n to learn which characteris- appro es of the pastu and terrai of three the further reach bunch in half to one or more erek Bailey split that crton r Then he d the same chara By Traci Eathe By tics: News Lensegrav his cohorts have ockShaley to travel to highe see if they showe • Willingness ng: for Tri-State Livestfor Tri-Sta . te Livestock News re At the time, been wonderi to elevations to graze graze steeper teristics again er weather rolls isal of the pastu As the summ mothe years old, but Klain was only 5 or 6 to r-nature Visual appra the cows n 2006 y he recalls that “It’s really cool • Willingness Trey Do cows like that indeed, in, a very mood natura led day as see to think back grazl weather Klain’s grandfa- “one of the coolest things revea ns? ther ntai for and slopes areas furto travel when that ever got that (my grandpa) is the be it him the best gift happened.” sets the stage most states,gave were willing bunch of cattle, we gness to graze one that hike in the mou me started,” ct any ranch By Heather Willin in • aspe cation Flash forwar that one Smith modifi etc., but kid could red 12years: Klain’ ing. “With Klain is the he said. water for Tri-State Livest Thomas e in riparian ng, hail, This is just ceive has significantly son s —deNew ther fromsaid ghout the west,, saw a lot more forag his first cow. drought, floodi a, a progr ock News the am steep throu of increased fromherd Darcy Klain and grewof Durnell and that use He remember grandpa’s gift. Bailey Foot rot is an his older siblin up with of research on federal lands in North Dakot se rainfa , and more evenit is possible ll ands his grandpa He is an active infection that gs on the family his two ber in the ranch d out areas causes swelli ing saye University but particularly increa said mem“I y sprea to think Stat d to g Baile near ico ’s ranch signe ng, some Trey needs a ing community Ruso, N.D. willin Mex d to do the flammation betwe heat and inble. slopes.” damage has cow— Simmental Association and researcher, cattle that are e The family can be valua d cattle could be traine one decrease hail I’ve got can scienc ers picke the . He servin a ranch d does cloven -hoofe en the toes of enjoy ioning if out” professor andothers has and travel to graze,don’t g on the s ing, some being so excite and get graze residents quest thing, but that that ing in severe d animal, resultd he wasn’t sure team and showingjunior leadership has raises Simmental cattle farmweather modade “A lot of areas far from water. same e bulls will sire offspring man-m lamen his d along with sinc e the , had cattle and grand sess. Nearly behin an . too pa every cattle He also still was even seriou d choos e are bull sale for annua l regist ered genetically predifiproducer has has cows out s. areas get graze ification. herd starter likely to be this situation, seen worked on determine —som the past 30 reap of his County resi— No. 578. finding an anima years. And then some close to riparian are ,” they might an Some Hettinger suddenly very l posed to “hike without any extra trying to put 1990s to help much — the lame. ds dents have been a Cloud ModiDr. Bill Lias, genetic vari- too - See Klain on Page nancial rewar ,” he said. Interstate Vet Dakot A2 if there are aren’t fully Clinic, Brand end to North cattle that areas large pastures on, South Dakot for several years. tu- labor. een ct When oppor betw Proje n said s the a, the main organ ficatio ance A5 By Carrie Stadh A8 “work for utilized, ranchers lose said. Addiism that causes foot - See Grazing on Page eim g on Page rot Seedin Editor is are willing to and those nity for income, Bailey Baxter Cloud Fusob - See entire Anders, who acterium necrop horum which lives cattle use the southeast of Ander r dinner” anaer is tionally, when

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83 YEARS YOUNG

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STALLION ROW PAGE 92 | CATALOG PAGE 106

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an obe, meaning it thrives in environmen ts without oxyge “It usually n. gains entry to the foot through a between the nick in the skin two ganism is found claws. This orin see more cases feces, and we conditions in in muddy, wet tures,” he said. feedlots or pas-

Wall, S.D., junio captures NHS r Hay and flies; RA mini bron Saddle Bron cs; c Indian relay Championship. s; county fairs . B4

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Ranch & Farm

MANAGEMENT

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Ranch & Farm MANAGEMENT THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

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THE

GOOD STUFF Customer gifts customers actually want

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B

BY AMANDA RADKE

ull sale season is right around the corner, and seedstock producers will spend the next couple of months collecting data — every-

Sale dates will be set; auctioneers booked; videos and photographs taken; footnotes written; catalogs printed; mailing addresses double-checked; rolls of stamps purchased; and

— to compile into sale catalogs that will make

phone calls answered in the days and weeks

their way to mailboxes across the country.

leading up to the sale.

PHOTO BY KAROLINE ROSE.

thing from genomics to carcass information

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Customer gifts

In Canada, Riverstone Cattle Company has a variety of customer appreciation gifts, but their most popular is their branded silk wild rags, information folders and thermal face shields. PHOTO BY KIM MATTHEWS

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On sale day, food will be prepared; coffee served; jeans starched; bulls cleaned and bedded in viewing pens; and trucks and trailers lined up with buyers filling the stands ready to bid-off against their peers to purchase their favorite new herd sires.

for seedstock producers, and each year, ranchers

As checks are written and bulls make their way to their new homes, the final step for the seed-stock producer is to provide the bill of sale and a certificate of a passed breeding soundness examination before commercial cattlemen hit the road back home.

er myself based out of Mitchell, S.D., our fami-

Traditionally, a bull or heifer sold not only comes with a receipt and vet papers, but branded merchandise, too. Customers make great advertising

from my sister Courtney Coughlin’s boutique,

TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS

stamp their brands on everything from can koozies to sweatshirts. Great customer swag can create a lot of hype for a ranching enterprise. As a seedstock producly’s brands — Nolz Limousin and Radke Cattle Company — typically stick to traditional fare such as ball caps, stocking caps, calving books and sorting sticks, but we’ve also gifted jewelry CCXO, as well as copies of my children’s book, “Levi’s Lost Calf.”

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


This year, we wanted to up our game in the customer swag department, so I sought ideas on Facebook, asking my friends to share their favorite items they’ve given to customers or received as buyers. As you read through some of the responses, you’ll notice a common theme — cattlemen love to gift items with their brands on them, be it after a sale or during the holiday season. “One family we bought a bull from buys wreaths that the 4-H program sells as a fundraiser, which are then delivered to the customers a couple weeks before Christmas,” said Maria Tibbetts, Tri-State Livestock News digital & sections editor. “The wreaths arrive with a nice thank-you note and a brief reminder of their upcoming bull sale.”

Insurance information on the bull purchase is also kept in this folder.” Matthews also offers her customers hand-made barbecue scrapers, boot jacks, calving books, beer koozies, cookies, post-it notes, magnet calendars, hats and gloves. “Our assorted pure silk wild rags feature a custom logo and our name in the scarf design,” said

HELBLING HEREFORDS

Kim Matthews, owner of Riverstone Cattle Company of Olds, Alberta, believes branding is an important part of being in the seedstock business. Riverstone merchandises Limousin, Simmental and Angus cattle, and with each purchase, customers receive everything from wild rags to barbecue scrapers to magnets. “I will admit I have a branding addiction,” said Matthews. “Each bull buyer receives a custom folder with contact information and our business card, a photo of the bull, copy of registration papers, semen evaluations and custom breeding sheets.

CLI DOMINO 2215Z

For Sale by Private Treaty 75 YEARLING & TWO-YEAR-OLD LINE ONE BULLS Also E AL FOR Sw No

55 HEREFORD BRED HEIFERS 65 100 F1 BLACK BALDIE HEIFERS All bred to low birth weight Black Angus bulls. Registered bred and open heifer calves also available

Visitors Always Welcome!

4785 County Road 83 Mandan, ND 58554

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

Jim

701-663-7123 701-516-7479

Fred

701-663-0137 701-400-1880

Wayne

701-471-4391

helbling95@msn.com

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Customer gifts Matthews. “These are a hot item with our customers. We also have custom-made summer and winter thermal-lined face shields that are a big hit.” “Riverstone Cattle Company has the best scarves and silks and chocolates, too,” said Kaye Woolam Kaufman, a customer from Harrodsburg, Ky., who recommends Old Kentucky Chocolates, LLC of Lexington, Ky. for personalized candy treats. To order, check out oldkycandy.com. “Our chocolates are wrapped in a custom-printed card stock casing with our logo imprinted on the chocolates,” said Matthews. Nolz Limousin and Radke Cattle Co. gift caps, cups, CCXO jewelry and copies of “Levi’s Lost Calf.”

Raw Deal Knife & Hatchet Set

Cold weather gear is a popular gift for many seedstock producers. Items range from

Serialized collectable Knife & Hatchet sets available with our matching Tippmann Rolling Block in .357, .44, & .45-70

• 5 3/4” Full Tang Bowie Knife • 12 3/8” Field Hatchet • Case hardened for unique design • Hand fit American Black Walnut handles • 100% hand s�tched Bridle Leather sheath

Tippmann Armory Fort Wayne, Indiana 800-671-1498 TippmannArmory.com

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branded cotton gloves to stocking caps to sweatshirts and other layering items.

30TH ANNUAL

Friday, Feb. 8, 2019

“We have done sweatshirts or jackets the past couple of years,” said VeaBea Thomas, of Thomas Ranch in Harrold, S.D. “They are great advertising as we see these jackets all over the U.S.” “Our stocking caps are really loved by moms with little kids because they fit so well,” said Cam Fagerhaug, owner of Fagerhaug Cattle in Wessington Springs, S.D. “Our calving books are a big hit, too. As a buyer, I love getting flag whips, and we got a hitch pin one time, which I thought was really unique!” Food items are a fan favorite with gift boxes being a popular item that serves as a meal or snack for buyers as they travel home from a sale. Jason Boyer, of Boyer Family Farms in Weldon Iowa, has a second business, called the Harvest Barn Marketplace, where he sells gift boxes in the shape of barns that include beef sticks, cheese, honey, jams, coffee, salsa and fudge. Boxes can be purchased at www.harvestbarnmarketplace.com. “Harvest barn gift boxes make a great gift,” said Boyer, whose family raises Limousin cattle. “They include our own beef sticks and other goodies.

WCR Polar Vortex 324 Homozygous Polled Sires calving ease with outstanding weaning and yearling performance. His bull calves are thick with good bone, big scrotals and super dispositions. He has been used successfully on first-calf heifers and has a very good selection of bulls available on our Feb. 8th sale.

DCR Morton Y15 Homozygous Polled Sires cattle that perform and grow from the time they’re born to the time they are finished. His progeny calve very easily and have good dispositions. His daughters are making good cows. He’s a son of No Doubt and a 3/4 brother to DCR Solution. If you are looking for good calving–ease bulls and top performance. Take a look at his offspring in the Feb. 8th sale.

OW Maximizer 4253 Homozygous Polled Here’s an exciting new herdsire that is adding calving ease with tremendous growth. He was used on all 3-year-old cows and his calves came off with some of the biggest weaning weights of any sire group. They are the right kind, and we think you will like them. He has an outstanding selection of bulls in our sale Feb. 8th. Come take a look!

For a sale booklet or more information, call, write, or e-mail us:

Ryan & Rhonda Honeyman

Thank you to everyone who bid and bought bulls at our 28th Annual Sale last February! Thanks to our many repeat customers and new customers, it was a huge success! Wishing everyone a blessed and prosperous 2019!

1006 11th St., NW • Reeder, ND 58649 701-853-2870 • honeymancharolais@hotmail.com Blake Honeyman 701-206-0272

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Tips for choosing

Customer gifts

swag

1. Consider local options— honey, jams, beef products, artwork, calendars, signed books, etc. It sends a positive message when you support local small businesses, and they can often offer custom options on a smaller scale. 2. Think about supporting local cause, like the local 4-H or FFA program. They often are selling items as fundraisers, but in many cases, a buyer might appreciate a nice note telling them a donation has been made in their name to these programs. 3. While the branding and marketing element of appreciation gifts is always a consideration, keep your customer’s needs in mind and consider giving something that they won’t feel compelled to keep around forever. A subscription to your favorite ag publication will re-mind them periodically of your thoughtfulness. 4. Don’t underestimate the power of a thoughtful thankyou note. Get some branded note cards, and once the dust has settled from the sale, sit down and write a personal note to buyers.

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Wienk Charolais of Lake Preston, S.D., gifts t-shirts from baby to adult sizes, which feature their winking bull logo on the front. PHOTO BY WIENK CHAROLAIS.

Customers call and tell us how much they like them.”

Jason Boyer offers his customers Barn Gift Boxes, which include fan favorites such as beef sticks, fruit jam, roasted coffee, salsa and homemade fudge. PHOTO COURTESY OF HARVEST BARN MARKETPLACE.

“We have received meat and cheese boxes and gourmet cookie boxes as appreciation gifts in years past,” said Michelle Weber, of Weber Land & Cattle in Lake Benton, Minn. “We have given breed specific art prints from MichelleWeberStudio.com the last couple of years, and they have been very well received.” Other swag items mentioned in my unofficial Facebook survey included visors, sunglasses, phone wallets, calendars printed with the producers’ sale date and customized caps with leather patches from Branded Bills Hats. Brand recognition is an important part of marketing, and customized swag that is useful to buyers is a fun and easy way to promote a cattle program.

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The gift of a

QUALITY CATALOG

W

hile “swag” is always fun to give and receive, one of the best gifts you can give your buyers (and your business) is a quality, timely catalog. You may spend a few extra dollars, but if it gets even one more buyer in the seats or in front of the computer, it will pay off. These tips are from Kim Hoffman, who has years of experience photographing cattle and compiling catalogs.

-Use only good photos. A good photo will always help; a bad photo will always hurt. Having no photo is better than using a bad photo. Always shoot with the sun to your back. Shade can provide a uniform light, but the entire animal has to be in even shade for it to have a positive effect. -Use the right tools A camera should be viewed as a tool like any other tool you would use on the ranch. Buy the best you can afford and learn to use it well, or hire someone else who has the correct equipment and knowledge. -Pay attention to the pen.

-Respect deadlines. Keep your deadlines in mind when putting together your data – how much turnaround time does your printer need? Allow for mailing time. Don’t mail catalogs so early that they get lost amidst the hundred other sale catalogs, but don’t wait until the last minute either. Usually two to three weeks, up to a month, is ideal. -Keep the information clear and simple. Make sure it’s obvious in your catalog which photo, pedigree, EPDs and description go with which lot. -Be easy to find.

It’s worth a little extra effort to make sure the pen has clean straw, that the pen is well-maintained and the background isn’t distracting. Everyone understands that these aren’t necessarily show animals, but trying to plan for photos when the animals are relatively clean can help too. -Edit carefully. Never alter the structure of an animal. Rule of thumb is to remove only imperfections that aren’t permanent (flies, mud, manure, etc.). Only alter photos if you are sure the changes won’t be noticed. Obvious edits make buyers question what else might have been edited. -Minimize supplemental information. Get your data early so there isn’t a lot of important information on a supplement sheet. There’s no shame in a supplement sheet, but don’t make your buyers look for the really important stuff at the last minute.

Make your website, phone number, sale date, time and location easy to find, and don’t be afraid to repeat it often. -Keep it relevant. Does anyone really care if a cow’s great grandsire’s half sibling sold for a ton of money? Keep the information relevant and try not to just repeat what they can see in the pedigree information. While you may be proud of certain aspects of your programs, give the buyers what they need-- this is a tool for them. -Get a second (and third) opinion. Have friends and family review it. Pick people who aren’t afraid to give you their opinion. Ask them to watch for typos, incorrect information and poor quality photos.

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H T 6

Bull & Female Sale

I

L

April 6, 2019

P

R

at the ranch Hardin, MT

A

Selling

G

40 Yearling Bulls 20 Eighteen Month Old Bulls 20 Females

L

I

N

Sires Used:

L

Reisig EZ Money 802

S

E

CED +8 • • • •

214

BW +1.1

WW +69

YW +122

MILK +31

MARB +.10

AAA#19176423 RE $W $F +.52 +73.83 +79.55

This royally breed herd sire prospect is moderate framed with add muscle and soft middle. Reisig EZ Money 802 is low birth high growth that stems back to the elite donor cow Buford Elba 9000 802 epd’s are in the top 10% of the breed in WW, YW, SC, MILK, CW AND $W Birth weight 70lbs. • Weaning weight 820lbs.

ReisigCattle.com TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS

HA CowboyUp LD Capitalist 316 Brooking Banknote Reisig Intrigue FF EZ Money Buford Oklahoma SAV Platinum

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

Contact us for a Sale Book!

Dustin Reisig 406-350-1800 David Reisig 406-665-6057 Scott Reisig 406-665-6059


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E

Creative Ag Entrepreneurs Diversify To Increase Ranch Income BY AMANDA RADKE

oe and Stephanie Nussbaum know a thing or two about hard work. The millennial ranchers live near Plevna, Mont. and are determined to make their way in the cattle business. While diversification has always been a way to have multiple revenue streams in production agriculture, the next generation of producers are going beyond raising multiple species of livestock and a variety of crops. Today’s young producers are entrepreneurs who aren’t afraid to market their skills to bring additional income to the ranch.

as possible. It was the best way to quickly get a lot of cow-calf numbers together without going broke or lending further past our ears.” Nussbaum says the calf check each year goes back into the ranch, and the town jobs pay off student loans and living expenses, with any surplus applied to loan principle and savings. This young ranching couple isn’t alone in seeking supplemental income off the ranch to cash flow expenditures, pay off debts and take advantage of health insurance coverage offered by employers.

The Nussbaums have embraced this idea. By day, the couple work as feed sales and feed managers for the local Beach Co-Op Grain Company. Nights and weekends are spent running the ranch, S Bar 7 Livestock, LLC.

Stephanie Nussbaum graduated with an animal science degree from South Dakota State University (SDSU) in 2012 while Joe studied agricultural business. The two have put their educations to use in countless other ways, all of which have supported their ultimate goal of running cattle in Montana.

“We get our health insurance through the coop,” said Stephanie Nussbaum. “On the ranch, we’ve taken in share cattle to run alongside our herd, so we are getting as much out of our acres

“We lease out part of our farm ground for extra income, and we help our folks on their ranch in return for the use of haying and farming equipment to help keep our input

Joe and Stephanie Nussbaum, of Plevna, Mont., have gotten creative in ways to increase income and keep inputs down in their ranch business, S Bar 7 Livestock, LLC. PHOTO BY SHAWNNA STEFFES

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costs down,” Stephanie said. “We also are looking at turning part of our herd into recip cows to raise embryo calves for a premium bull producer in our area. And we clip and torch bulls for sales in our area, as well. All of these extra things have allowed us to continue to grow and weather through the recent tough years in agriculture.” According to journalist Craig Myrhe in a recent article published in the Wall Street Journal, “Most U.S. farm households can’t solely rely on farm income, turning what was once a way of life into a

part-time job. On average, 82 percent of U.S. farm household income is expected to come from offfarm work this year, up from 53 percent in 1960, according to the USDA.” “My husband uses his carpentry skills each day on the ranch, but also on the side flipping houses,” said Justine Kougl, a rancher from Lodge Grass, Mont.

Jarrod Montford, who owns Montford Cattle Service in Bridgeport, Texas, said, “I have used my AI skills, which I learned from my dad, to create a fulltime off-farm job, which includes serving as a semen rep for Genex, teaching AI schools and transferring embryos for clients. Now the ranch supplements my reproProduction Sale ductive business.”

Lehrkamp Livestock 46th Annual

Saturday, March 30, 2019 NEW SALE DATE

1:00 pm at the ranch

Caputa, SD

SELLING: 40 Angus Bulls • 5 Angus Heifers Sires Represented

Buford Pathfinder C304 KM Broken Bow 002 McConnell Altitude 3114 LL Gun Powder 600 RCL Activate 4282

CALL FOR A CATALOG:

Mill Bar Hickok 7242 GS Cash D 028 Capitalist A368 Deep Creek Willson 201 LL Next Generation 630

Mike & Jodie Lehrkamp Home: 605-993-6171 Cell: 605-441-5532 Carl: 605-993-6541 Cell: 605-441-7427 EMAIL: grammyj02@hotmail.com Ranch located 35 mi. SE of Rapid City on Hwy. 44 or 6 mil. NW of Scenic on Hwy. 44. Ranch signs on Hwy. 44.

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Boyd Dvorak, owner of Dvorak Herefords in Pickstown, S.D. said, “I started selling cattle handling equipment for Daniels Manufacturing in 1997; at that time, I had graduated with an ag business degree from Mitchell Technical Institute, had 30 cows and needed another source of income to help get through the lean years and make ends meet.” As the next generation looks into careers in production agriculture, they are also looking for ways to obtain the necessary skills and training needed to be marketable on and off the farm or ranch. Heather Gessner, SDSU Extension livestock business management field specialist, says there are many ways


she’s seen local producers and their spouses cash flow their ranch enterprises in creative ways including custom harvesting, custom feeding, contract heifer development, selling feed or seed, working for the local co-op, putting up a hog finishing unit, starting a daycare, providing in-home health assistance to elderly neighbors, cleaning houses in the community, learning how to AI cattle or set up recip cows, as well as getting training for welding, mechanics, electricians, accounting, photography, marketing, or precision agriculture, just to name a few. “We are seeing more young people pursue careers in agricultural business,” said Gessner. “This adds value to the ranch because the individual can then do things like handle the bookwork or market grain and livestock more efficiently. This is a good way to add value to the farm without adding more cows or land to grow the business up instead of out.” Gessner says an entrepreneurial spirit can assist producers in not only bringing in additional in-come, but lowering input costs, as well.

“We are seeing more partnerships between neighbors to share the costs of equipment and labor,” she said. “Everybody needs decent equipment to cover their ground, but it requires so much capital outlay. The technology is at a point where we can cover a lot of acres, so why not spread the cost out over shared acres with the neighbor to do things right but to share the expense?” Of course, these creative partnerships needeto be in writing to keep everybody on the same track.

“There’s a lot more to farming than just driving a tractor, so bring home additional skills that will benefit you and the operation down the road,” said Heather Gessner, SDSU Extension livestock business management field specialist. PHOTO COURTESY SDSU

“Whether it’s with family or the neighbors, handshakes are good, but they don’t remember much,” she said. “If you’re going to pursue any types of partnerships, write everything down and make sure everybody is on the same page. Communication is becoming increasingly important, and that applies to talking to Dad or Grandpa about their retirement and transition plans or visiting with the neighbor about potentially working together. These conversations can be tough, but a young person needs to factor out the details before jumping into production agriculture with both feet.”

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Earlier this year, SDSU developed a compensation calculator to provide families with a way to value wages, salaries and benefits to employees and family members in the business. Benefits may include health insurance, retirement allocations, monthly value of housing and utilities, transportation, equipment, and boarding or feed of livestock. Gessner said, “We often think of the obvious things, but what about Mom serving everybody dinner everyday at noon? How about when Dad covers the rent when the kid runs short at college? I had one producer call me upset because his son had presented him with a bill for labor, yet the kid had never paid for any feed for his cattle on the ranch. I advised the dad to put together a feed bill to cover the same period of time, and perhaps that would start a conversation about the perceived and real values of both labor services and ranching expenses.” The calculator allows producers to plug in the obvious, and not so obvious, value-added benefits and expenses to determine the full value of

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labor not necessarily seen on the paycheck. View the calculator here: http://igrow.org/livestock/ profit-tips/compensation-calculator/ Punching the numbers on a farming enterprise may help the young producer make more concrete plans about whether off-farm income is needed when they come home to the operation. According to the South Dakota Center for Farm/Ranch Management’s 2017 South Dakota Annual Report, published by Mitchell Technical Institute, the average net farm income for farms in South Dakota was $53,708, with the bottom 20 percent losing $97,455 and the top 20 percent earning $255,010. Meanwhile, the average farm family living expense was $63,161 ($56,718 for the bottom 20 percent and $90,068 for the top 20 percent of farming families). Gessner says understanding the performance of the ranch business and keeping the family’s standard of living expenses in check are critical, and it

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


“If your dad and siblings all went for agronomy, it might benefit you to look at another field of study,” said Gessner. “There’s a lot more to farming than just driving a tractor, so bring home additional skills that will benefit you and the operation down the road.”

all goes back to communicating — with spouses, parents and grandparents. “I know producers get tired of hearing it, but it really is all about communication,” said Gessner. For young people to have a shot in production agriculture, she advises seeking a skill set that adds value, creates new revenue streams or improves an area of weakness in the existing business. “If your dad and siblings all went for agronomy, it might benefit you to look at another field of study,” said Gessner. “There’s a lot more to farming than just driving a tractor, so bring home additional skills that will benefit you and the operation down the road.”

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TRUE LEADERS DON’T CREATE FOLLOWERS. THEY CREATE MORE LEADERS. - TOM PETERS

EMBRYO TRANSFER • IN VITRO FERTILIZATION • SEXED SEMEN • RECIPIENT OPTIONS • FRESH SHIP PROGRAM • CLONING & GENETIC PRESERVATION • WEANED CALF PROGRAM With our toolbox of reproductive technologies, exceptional team of professionals, and more than 30 years of experience, it’s no wonder we’ve become the industry leader. Our real job however - is creating future leaders in cattle operations across the United States. Whether it’s advancing and extending superior genetics or empowering the next generation of livestock producers, we’re here to help you Multiply Success. ®

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WWW.TRANSOVA.COM MULTIPLY SUCCESS ® TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS

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At Ellingson Angus, we utilize real-world experience to raise profit-oriented cattle for our valued customers.

SATURDAY, FEB. 2, 2019 At the Ranch • St. Anthony, ND

:

Offering

210 Powerful Bulls, 25 Top-Quality Registered Females & 500 Fancy Commercial Angus Females ELLINGSON POWERPOINT 8155: Powerpoint x Capitalist • BW: 78 • WW: 911 BW: +1.6, WW: +78, YW: +134, M: +21, MB: +.62, RE: +.43, $W: +68.35, $B: +146.75

ELLINGSON HOMESTEAD 8202: Homestead x Advance • BW: 92 • WW: 924 BW: +2.3, WW: +70, YW: +118, M: +28, MB: +.26, RE: +.40, $W: +68.57, $B: +97.26

ELLINGSON HOMESTEAD 8062: Homestead x Chaps • BW: 87 • WW: 986 BW: +3.1, WW: +84, YW: +147, M: +27, MB: +.43, RE: +.60, $W: +75.21, $B: +144.38

ELLINGSON ROUGHRIDER 8218: Roughrider x Identity • BW: 98 • WW: 934 BW: +3.7, WW: +73, YW: +128, M: +23, MB: +.69, RE: +.35, $W: +58.98, $B: +140.42

ELLINGSON TRANSCEND 8007: Transcend x Earnan • BW: 89 • WW: 1006 BW: +3.8, WW: +86, YW: +144, M: +26, MB: +.11, RE: +.73, $W: +72.38, $B: +152.22

Broody heifers like this sell!

Chad & Julie Ellingson • St. Anthony, ND 701-445-7309 • 701-361-3606 www.ellingsonangus.com

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Mark your calendar for

Where the genetics makes the difference

▲KEYS MAINEVENT 4C

Sandmeier Sires included: LT JJ LEDGER 4606 PLD LT SUNDANCE 6389 PLD LT AFFINITY 6221 PLD DCR BUCKLE ASSERT Y222 KC DAKOTA BOB 4235 SCR SIR REFRESH 5017 SCR SIR ALL FLASH 5537 SCR SIR ROCKY TOP 6448P KEYS MAINEVENT 4C WC INNOVATION 6283 WC LEDGER 5634

Sandmeier Charolais Sires produce a sale offering of 

▲LT JJ LEDGER 4606

75 Virgin Twos 40 Fall Bulls 75 Yearling Bulls 15 Yearling Heifers

Sandmeier Charolais bulls sire calves that perform like these Sandmeier Feedlot

for customers.

Sandmeier Feedlot

Sandmeier Charolais

Contact us:

Breeding performance Charolais since the 60’s, Selling Charolais bulls since the 70’s Hosting annual production sales for over 30 years.

Calvin: 605-285-6179 Cell-281-1259

Matthew: 605-281-1564 sandchar@venturecomm.net

Boarding and delivery arrangements available

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An Event You Do Not Want to Miss!

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2019 • VALENTINE’S DAY At The Ranch (White Lake, SD)

Selling: 130 Angus Bulls and 15 Sim-Angus Bulls

Mohnen General 548 Reg. # 19183097

Mohnen Renown 288 Reg. # 19188210

Mohnen Prime Cut 908 Reg. # 19206122

Sire: Colonel Dam: SAV Madame Pride 5290 (004) CED +2 BW +2.1 WW +79 YW +128 MM +21 ACT BW – 84# ADJ. WW – 954#

Sire: SAV Renown Sire: HA Prime Cut Dam: SAV Madame Pride 5290 (004) Dam: Mohnen Jilt 1501 (Final Answer) CED -2 BW +3.6 WW +72 YW +128 MM +28 CED +9 BW +1.4 WW +75 YW +118 MM +25 ACT BW – 83# ADJ. WW – 874# ACT BW – 85# ADJ. WW – 875#

Mohnen Prime Cut 1228 Reg. # 19206124

Mohnen Homegrown 3758 Reg. # 19205241 Mohnen Cowboy Up 818 Reg. # 19197420

Sire: HA Prime Cut Dam: Mohnen Jilt 2486 ( Apollo) CED +6 BW +2.6 WW +71 YW +116 MM +27 ACT BW – 82# ADJ. WW – 861#

Sire: Ellingson Homegown Sire: HA Cowboy Up Dam: Mohnen Couquette Pride 1126 (Resource) Dam: Mohnen Jilt 1221 (Final Answer) CED +10 BW +.9 WW +65 YW +128 MM +30 CED +10 BW +.5 WW +71 YW +120 MM +19 ACT BW – 70# ADJ. WW – 832# ACT BW – 88# ADJ. WW – 909#

POWER OF GENETICS ANNUAL BULL SALE View catalog online at mohnenangus.com Steve & Kathy Mohnen • Josh & Katie Mohnen • John Mohnen & Tory Mohnen

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“Raising quality cattle is not our job, it’s our LIFE!” TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS

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Youth &

FUTURE

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As part of the NYBLS, attendees give their marketing presentation to a panel of judges. This group created a wrap with a Japanese twist and received second place for their efforts. PHOTO BY KORTNI BURNETT.

Youth &

FUTURE

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Participants work on their culinary creation that they later presented to a panel of judges. PHOTOS BY KORTNI BURNETT.

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Focus on the Future Symposium gives youth an in-depth look at the beef industry

Y

BY RUTH NICOLAUS

outh from Nebraska and Kentucky are getting an intensive education about beef.

For 15 years, students have gathered in Lincoln, Neb. to learn more about the beef industry and test their own skills, as well as network with others with similar interests. The annual Nebraska Youth Beef Leadership Symposium (NYBLS), a threeday program held each November, is designed to teach high school students about the beef industry, its career opportunities, current issues, and to develop communication and leadership skills.

lot, and were given a culinary project. In groups, students were assigned a cut of beef: the flat iron steak, ground beef, or the shoulder clod. After learning about marinades, palatability, tenderness, spices and flavors, and working with Chef John Kennedy from Omaha Steaks, students were to come up with a new retail product and market it to a fictitious restaurant. They had to figure a marketing strategy, price points, and make and present the dish to judges. Last year, the winning group made a Japanese dish. Their dish, made with the shoulder clod, which is a tough piece of meat, was as tender as steak, said Alli Raymond, admissions coordinator for the

To be chosen, students must fill out an application and write a 1,000 word essay. Last year, forty students were selected. For two and a half days in Lincoln, they participated in the culinary challenge track. They learned from professors, participated in a carcass breakdown demo, toured a feed

One of the groups at this year’s NYBLS created a quesa-pizza-taco with their beef item.

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NYBLS 2018 participants pose for a group picture.

Department of Animal Science at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and one of the volunteers who organizes NYBLS. NYBLS has a partnership with the Kentucky Cattlemen’s Association, and each year, Kentucky students attend the symposium. Their requirements include an interview process for applicants. Last year, eight Kentucky youth were in attendance. One of those students, J.W. Cox, from Flemingsburg, Kent., about an hour northeast of Lexington, was a participant. The 17-year-old enjoyed connecting with all kinds of different people, he said, and also enjoyed cooking and marketing the food item. His group designed and cooked their dish, named the “Cornhusker Boat,” a flatbread with a layer of ranch dressing, cheese, and a marinated chopped flat iron steak. Then the loaded flatbread was cut into triangles and served.

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His team won fourth place with their dish. Cox found many similarities in the beef industry between Nebraska and Kentucky. But one of the differences was geography and climate. “Nebraska has a lot more flatland, and it takes more acres per head (to feed a cow/calf pair) than it does for us in Kentucky. Our grasses and seasons are significantly different.” The high school senior has a herd of 25 registered Herefords and ten registered black Angus and has shown and fitted cattle at major livestock shows across the nation. He is a member of the National Junior Hereford Association and the Angus Association, has a 4.0 GPA and will attend either Oklahoma State University or Colorado State University this fall. He plans to major in animal science and pre-veterinary medicine and go

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


on to veterinary school. He’d like to do embryology work after college. He highly recommends others attend the symposium. “Without a doubt,” he said. “It was a great experience. I’m one of those people who believes no matter how much you think you know, you can never learn too much.”

J

auer Dependable Genetics 42nd Annual Angus Bred Female & Bull Sale January 26, 2019 • 1:00 p.m. At the Ranch - Hinton, Iowa

TaraLee Hudson was one of the Nebraska attendees at the symposium. It’s the second time for the Belvidere, Neb. youth to attend. She loves going because “it’s a great opportunity to strengthen your qualities and communication skills in the beef industry. And you meet new people, make new friends and see old friends.” The 17-year-old was part of the third-place team, who created an Asian-inspired rice bowl with the flat iron steak. The dish included rice, coleslaw and the marinated flat iron, with sweet potato curls on the side. Hudson has thirteen registered Angus in her herd, shows cattle, and is a member of the Nebraska Junior Angus Association. She has a 4.0 GPA and hopes to become an agricultural lobbyist after college. “I really have an interest in government and politics,” she said. She will major in animal science with a minor in economics and, if she attends the University of

JAUER DEPENDABLE GENETICS • Kurt (712) 253-8710 • Doug (712) 253-0125  www.jauerangus.com 

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Participants at this year’s NYBLS identify different cuts of meat.

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Nebraska-Lincoln, she’d like to work toward a beef industry scholar minor with an emphasis on policy. NYBLS costs $75 for each student, which includes two nights of hotel and all food. The extra expense is picked up by sponsors, who include the Nebraska Cattlemen Foundation, Cargill Corn Milling, the Nebraska Beef Council, the

Nebraska Corn Board, and the Kentucky Cattlemen’s Association. The planning committee members, who are all volunteers, include Raymond; Dr. Bryan Reiling, Associate Professor of Animal Science at UNL; Dr. Gary Sullivan, Associate Professor of Animal Science, UNL; Ashley Benes, Nebraska Extension Educator; and Cole Meador, Nebraska Extension Associate.

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


The symposium is a way to broaden horizons for its participants, Raymond said, and grow the beef industry through young people. “Nebraska is the beef state and it’s our largest industry. There are a lot of people passionate about the industry and a lot of job opportunities in the industry. We see it as an opportunity to educate students about the industry.” The volunteers who host the event know it’s worth the effort. “Every year, we think about all

the work that goes into it. But every year we are reminded of why we do it. There are always students who come back and say, this is a tremendous program and you have completely changed the trajectory of my career. They love it.” The UNL Dept. of Animal Science and Nebraska Extension also hosts a Nebraska Youth Pork Conference, similar to NYBLS, in the spring.

Performance Tested Breed Leading

Bulls!

Simmental

Annual Bull Sale February 16, 2019 // 1 PM At the Ranch // Kimball, SD

Over 45 Years of Raising Simmentals Over 55 Years of AI’ing and Performance Testing

EKR Mob Boss 026F

EKR Union Boss 104F

MRL CAPONE 130B X CCE EKR MS WILDCAT 026X

EKR Kidd 339F

SVS CAPTAIN MORGAN 11Z X CCE EKR MS VICKY 339A

MRL CAPONE 130B X CCE EKR MS TC 104Y

EKR Red Shasta 547F

MRL THE STARTER 39C X CCE EKR SHASTA 547C

Contact us for more information!

For more information go to www.ekstrumsimmentals.com Videos online & live sale broadcast at www.dvauction.com

Ekstrum Simmentals & SimGenetics 36220 257th St. Kimball, SD 57355 Email: clayekstrum@midstatesd.net Clay Ekstrum John Ekstrum 605-730-1511 (C)

605-778-6414

Raising Simmentals since 1970

w w w.eks trumsimment als. com South Dakota’s source for outcross performance Simmentals specializing in red breeding stock

Find us on Facebook: Ekstrum Simmentals THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

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Upstream Ranch

ANNUAL PRODUCTION SALE • SATURDAY, FEB. 2, 2019 SELLING 300 BULLS • 50 BRED HEIFERS

Perks 0003 Easy Money 4003

NJW 79Z 22Z Mighty 49C ET

UPS Sensation 2504 ET

TH 403A 475Z Pioneer 358C ET

UPS Sensation 2296 ET

NJW 79Z Z311 Endure 173D ET

• BW 4.2; WW 66; YW 114; MM 22; M&G 55; FAT -0.005; REA 0.91; MARB 0.12 • Owned with Perks Ranch

• BW 6.0; WW 85; YW 143; MM 17; M&G 59; FAT 0.115; REA 0.81; MARB 0.20 • Owned with Topp Herefords, Blairs.Ag Cattle Co. and Tim Ostermeier

• BW 1.0; WW 57; YW 84; MM 29; M&G 58; FAT -0.005; REA 0.42; MARB 0.07 • Owned with NJW Polled Herefords and Perez Cattle Co.

• BW 1.8; WW 59; YW 92; MM 29; M&G 59; FAT 0.035; REA 0.75; MARB 0.21 • Owned with Andrew Orsak

• BW -1.0; WW 52; YW 80; MM 39; M&G 66; FAT -0.025; REA 0.70; MARB 0.17 • Owned with Valley Creek Ranch, Ernst Herefords and Accelerated Genetics

• BW 2.9; WW 75; YW 121; MM 27; M&G 65; FAT 0.055; REA 0.59; MARB 0.31 • Owned with NJW Polled Herefords and Fawett’s Elm Creek Ranch

Upstream Ranch

Brent, Robin and Carlee Meeks 45060 Upstream Rd. Taylor, NE 68879 308-942-3195 Brent, cell 308-214-0719 • Robin, cell 308-214-0679 • Carlee, cell 308-214-1220 upstreamranch@gmail.com www.upstreamcattle.com

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Market your livestock where a handshake still means something…

Sat, Jan 12th, Rafter T Bull Sale Sat., Mar 16th, MTR Bull Sale Wed., Jan 16th, Regular Sale & Bred Cows Wed., Mar 20th, Regular Sale & Feeders Sat., Jan 19th, Redland Angus Bull Sale Sat., Mar 23rd, Sinclair Cattle Co. Bull Sale Sat, Jan 26th, Little Goose Ranch Bull Sale Wed., April 3rd, Regular Sale & Feeders Fri., Feb 1st, TJS Red Angus Bull Sale Wed., April 10th, Regular Sale & Pairs Fri., Feb 8th, Powder River Angus Bull Sale Wed., April 17th, Regular Sale & Sat., Feb 16th, Crump Red Angus Bull Sale Open Consignment Bull Sale Wed., Feb 27th, Regular Sale & Bred Cows Sat, April 20th, Open Consignment Horse Sale Sat., Mar 9th., Cowboy Classic Bull Sale Regular Cattle Sales Every Wednesday • Sales Start at 12:30 www.buffalolivestock.com 44 T W Road | P.O Box 427 | Buffalo, Wyoming 82834 | 307-684-0789 Office | office@buffalolivestock.com

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Technically Speaking New Belle Fourche Career & Tech Center designed as career launch pad

The newly-opened Career & Technical Education Center in Belle Fourche, S.D.

L

STORY AND PHOTOS BY TAMARA CHOAT

ast fall as students in the Belle Fourche high school and junior high started classes, they opened the doors of a brand-new $2.9 million facility for the first time. The Career and Technical Education Center is a two-story structure of 100 by 100 feet, enclosing a state-of-the-art welding lab and classroom, a family and consumer science

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lab and classroom that has a focus on culinary arts, an ag lab and classroom, and a business classroom that has a focus on the hospitality industry and business and accounting practices. The new center complements a previous facility that houses carpentry, woodworking, CAD, architectural drafting and ag mechanics.

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Belle Fourche high faculty oversee six focus areas of technical education, including STEM, construction management and drafting, welding and metal fabrication, family and consumer science, business and computer science, and agricultural education. The district also buses all 125 eighth graders to the center once a day where they can experience each CTE cluster in a six-week rotation. Despite shiny, new computer screens and AeroGardens bursting with lettuce and herbs, the building is more than just a new learning center. It also represents a focus shift backward – or should it be forward – to preparing students for skilled trades that are seeing a drastic lack of workers in South Dakota, and the nation.

learning new skills needed for a rapidly changing work force.” Across the nation this changing work force is being felt. Career fields of health care, manufacturing, electricians and plumbers, construction and agriculture, among others, struggle to fill jobs despite relatively high wages and the ability to bypass an expensive, four-year college degree plan. The Association for Career and Technical Education works to

Dr. Steven A. Willard is the superintendent of schools for Belle Fourche School District. He points out that what used to be referred to training for “vocational trades” is now called career and technical education, and students are learning skills needed for a rapidly changing work force. Computer driven machines, robotics and drone technology are just a few of the focus areas appearing in what used to be “shop class.” “Career and technical education is moving our next generation of students further than ever dreamed in the past,” says Willard. “They are operating new equipment and

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Production Sales • Livestock Events Feeder Cattle Listings

Sales • Events Broadcast Online

FrontierLiveSale.com

Scott: 406.860.6548 Sam: 406.860.0590

CONCRETE BUNKERS 2.5 x 2.5 x 5

promote schooling in these areas and notes the future looks bright for CTE workers, but bleak without them. More than 80 percent of manufacturers say talent shortages will impact their ability to meet customer demand. Approximately 3 million workers will be needed to build and maintain the nation’s infrastructure in the next decade. Almost half of the energy workforce may need to be replaced by 2024, and demand for solar and wind energy technicians will double, all according to the ACTE.

• Bunker for silage, byproducts, grain storage, retaining wall and many other uses. • Interlocking blocks for increased stability.

Stuart Call for prices and delivery Don’t wait...call ahead so you’re ready! 244

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concrete E. Hwy 20 Stuart NE 68780

402.340.1307

Mike Rowe of noted “Dirty Jobs” fame made his name showcasing America’s hard workers. These days he works to champion their fields, formerly referred to as “blue-collar.” He recently joined South Dakota Governor Dennis Daugaard to launch a state initiative called Dakota Works. The program will offer limited

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


Students in the Belle Fourche ag classes will be seeing curly parsley growing soon, as they put their agronomy and plant science learning into action.

full-tuition scholarships at South Dakota technical colleges for those completing CTE schooling. Recipients are required to work in their designated field in South Dakota for three years following college. On his blog at MikeRowe.com, Rowe notes the widening skills gap is a symptom of society’s insistence on promoting one form of education at the expense of all others. “This lopsided, cookie-cutter approach to learning has led to a mountain of myths and misperceptions that discourage millions of people from exploring many viable opportunities that don’t require an expensive four-year degree,” he says. “To close the skills gap, we need to affirmatively debunk the misinformation surrounding these opportunities and stop treating whole categories of jobs like vocational consolation prizes.” THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

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Rowe’s foundation, mikeroweWORKS offers “work ethic scholarships” to learn what he calls “a skill that’s actually in demand.” One student interested in a field of need is Belle Fourche sophomore Laney Mackaben. A local ranch girl, Mackaben says she has always been involved in ag and was thankful to see the school bring back the ag-ed and FFA program after an eight-year hiatus. Mackaben now has many v

LONE TREE E E R T E N LOanch BROWN JYJ REDEMPTION Y1334

opportunities to don her blue corduroy jacket. Besides serving as the FFA chapter reporter, she competes on the agricultural communications and range and land judging teams. She’s also competed in creed speaking, conduct of meetings, vet science and livestock evaluation.

Mackaben is eying a career in veterinary engineering, which, although requiring substantial education, will also fill a gap in a demanding field. She notes the skills learned in ag classes and FFA prepare all students for future success. “The MONDAY, FEBRUARY 25TH, 2019 leadership and speaking really 12:00 P.M. MST NEW TIME! prepare you for the future, no AT FAITH LIVESTOCK matter what career path you’ll FAITH, SD be in,” she says. “The new center is beyond wonderful; I’m Selling Yearling Bulls, fortunate I get to spend time Open Heifers, and Bred

Females

HXC CONQUEST 4405 P

R

5L DEFENDER 560-30Z

PIE CINCH 4126

The benefits of making us your seed stock source include: • Our bulls are backed by a two year breeding guarantee, one of the best in the business! • The bulls are allowed to roam on 25 acres, in belly-deep grass, which enhances their athleticism and longevity.

LONE TREE RED ANGUS LONE TREE RANCH BRAD& BROOKE SCHECHER • BISON, SD BRAD SCHECHER Home: 605.244.5972 • Cell: 605.430.2787 schecherlonetreeranch@hotmail.com

Call, text or email for a catalog LoneTreeRedAngus@hotmail.com www.lonetreeredangus.com FIND US ON FACEBOOK

HOME: 605-244-5972 • CELL: 605-430-2787 • BISON, SD

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here in this facility. It just makes sense to have an ag program in such a strong ranching community.” Austin Bishop is the ag ed instructor at the new center, where he teaches classes and advises the FFA chapter. He says the six-member team of career tech teachers is excited about the opportunities for their students through the center. “If we can prepare these students who aren’t choosing secondary education to hit the workforce coming right out of high school, that’s huge for our society.” Bishop says his faculty team works together with the goal of 100 percent placement for every student that walks through their doors. “This means we either want them to have a job waiting, or be accepted into a 2-year or 4-year institution. I think we can definitely achieve that, but it takes a lot of planning and opportunity.”

The support is currently there from the locals – Bishop says not just for ag and FFA, but he sees it for all six focus programs. Willard says the new facility was the end product of school district funds, a grant from the South Dakota Department of Education and a loan from the USDA through Butte Electric. “We are very fortunate to have a school board and community in Belle Fourche that is looking into the future to prepare students for new challenges and growing a skilled workforce for South Dakota.” Because of that support, on any given day pupils at Belle Fourche can be found testing recipes, sparking a welder, writing a business plan, or building a fullsized house that will be sold in the community. For these students, it’s just another day on their future job.

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Bulls Born & Raised Where Corn Don’t Grow!

Powder River Angus

Annual Bull Sale Friday, February 8, 2019 Buffalo Livestock Auction • Buffalo, WY Lunch - 11 a.m. • Sale - 1 p.m. MST

Sires Represented: Barstow Cash • AAR Windy 1205 • Nichols Extra K205 Kramer’s Apollo • HF Tiger • Musgrave Aviator • May Way Equity • WMR Infinity

Powder River Angus Neal & Amanda Sorenson • Spotted Horse, WY 307.736.2260 (h) • 307.680.7359 (c) • nasorenson@rangeweb.net

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L Bar W c A T T L E C O M P A N Y THE PINNACLE OF HEREFORD GENETICS T H I R D ANNUAL

production sa le

M A R C H 8 , 2 0 1 9 • A B S A R O K E E , M O N TA N A

SEM EN PA CKAGE

CHOIC E HEI FER L O T Mating is HH Advance 5044C ET by HH Miss Advance 9228W We are offering a special sale feature this year. Buyers’ choice of one heifer out of the HH Advance 5044C ET x HH Miss Advance 9228W flush. We are able to purchase the right to flush 9228W out of the 2016 Hoffman Female Sale. 5044 was our choice to use on this exciting mating. These beautiful 5044 heifers are going to be ones to build a program around. They have all the bells and whistles; calving ease, growth, maternal and carcass.

All cattle selling have genomically enhanced EPD’s. Please check out LBarW.com for more details, videos and to request a catalog.

SONS

I f you have been waiting for the opportunity to purchase semen on CL 1 Domino 776E here it is. We will only be offering 2 chances for semen in 2019, and this is one of them. 776E caught the eye of top producers in the nation this spring as he sold for $85,000 in Cooper’s 2018 Production Sale. He’s a phenomenal bull backed by a pedigree of breed leading genetics. Phenotypically, you won’t find many bulls marked up better than him. He’s short marked, red necked with 100% pigment, and his EPD profile shows excellence in maternal power, performance, and carcass merit. He currently ranks in the Top 5% of the breed for Scrotal, Top 15% CED, and Top 40% or better for WW, Udder, Teat, and REA. Selling 3 packages of 5 units each

YEARLING AND 2 YEAR OLD BULLS YEARLING HEIFERS YOUNG BRED COWS DONORS SE L L

HH Advance 5044C ET Reg. #43578992

CL 1 Domino 402B Reg. #43465721

HH Advance 4126B Reg. #43470169

Other Sire Groups include: CL1 Domino 6153D 1ET Reg.# 43691837, HH Advance 6237D ET Reg.# 43688572, LW 4163 Domino 606D Reg.#43683071, Churchill TSC First Rate 6206D Reg.#43715321

Carl & Denise Loyning cdloyning@gmail.com 406-425-2484 (c)

21 Red Barn Lane | Absarokee, MT 59001 (406) 328-4095 ranch

WWW.LBARW.COM | Find Us Facebook THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

Mike & Jeannette Walen L87772@aol.com 281-413-2455 (c) TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS

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31st Annual

Selling 75 Reg. Bulls, 40 Comm. Heifers

Monday, February 11, 2019 1:00 PM MST Faith Livestock Commission • Faith, South Dakota Producing cattle that will be less work and more profitability for the commercial cattleman.

KCF BENNETT THEROCK 17849954

BALDRIDGE BRONC

CED BW +10 +1.9

CED 15

WW 83

YW 147

MILK +20

RE +.62

$B 179.16

BW -2.7

WW 67

YW 113

MILK +30

18229425

SYDGEN ENHANCE

RE +.49

CED +12

$B 103.67

BW +0.2

WW 77

YW 146

18170041 MILK +34

RE +.84

$B 224.14

Performance tested through efficiency. Genetics produced from 32 years of extensive AI. Other Sires: GAR Sure Fire, SF Speedway A187, KR Cadillac Jack, Basin Excitement, Angus Hill Steadfast 854B, Cowboy UP 5405.

77% of bulls qualify for the CAB targeting brand program 52% of bulls qualify for the Top Dollar Angus Program

Videos online mid-January at

www.billpelton.com or slettenangus.com

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RANCHING HITS THE BIG SCREEN IN OCEAN OF GRASS:

Life on a Nebraska Sandhills Ranch

S

BY MARIA TIBBETTS

cientists believe the Nebraska Sandhills were formed by an ocean. When polar ice caps melted, the water rose, then receded, forming beaches. The hills that are left are the remains of those beaches and that ocean. PHOTOS BY GEORG JOUTRAS

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Today it’s grass that undulates in the sun—big bluestem, lovegrass, needleandthread, prairie sandreed are among the more poetic. The “ocean of grass” sparkles with the blossoms of penstemon, pricklypoppy, spiderwort, yucca and coneflower. And around the edges, a froth of wild plum blossoms.

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documentary about the McGinn ranch in northeast Custer County. After sharing a gallery in Lincoln with Joutras, rancher and artist Laron McGinn invited Joutras to visit the family ranch near Dunning. “I was going to stay one night, and I stayed a week,” Joutras said.

It’s this “ocean” that photographer Georg

Joutras initially worked with the McGinn family

Joutras captured in “Ocean of Grass: Life on a

on a photography book called “A Way of Life,” pub-

Nebraska Sandhills Ranch,” an hour-and-a-half

lished in 2007.

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THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


“In the back of my mind I thought there was a bigger story to be told, a long-term view of the land, ranchers dealing with the animals in their care,” Joutras said. “I wanted to counteract some of the bad press ranching seems to get.” The friendship that started with the book idea remained after it was published, and Joutras continued to visit the ranch from his home in Lincoln, helping out as he was able and increasing his knowledge of the ranch, the people, the Sandhills and ranching in general.

In 2014 his family gave him a GoPro camera and with that and his DSLR camera he put together a short trailer about the ranch. “People really gravitated to the trailer and encouraged me to keep going. I kept getting better equipment. I shot for a year with the first generation of equipment, then invested in a professional-grade camera and drone and shot everything over again,” Joutras said.

LOGTERMAN LOGTERMAN FAMILY FAMILY Monday, February 11, 2019 • 1:00 CST Hereford & Angus Production Sale SELLING:

SELLING: SELLING: - 2-Year-OldHEREFORD Hereford BULLS Bulls 8080 - 2-YEAR-OLD

50 YEARLING AND 50 - 2-YEAR-OLD ANGUS BULLS 30 Yearling Angus Bulls And 80 - 2-YEAR-OLD HEREFORD BULLS

70- -2-YEAR-OLD 2-Year-Old Angus Bulls Monday, February 9, 2015 • 2:00 CST 50 YEARLING AND 50 ANGUS BULLS

Hereford Hereford & & Angus Production Sale

Valentine Livestock Auction • Valentine, NE

Monday, February 9, 2015 • 2:00 CST

Valentine Auction Livestock • Valentine, NE Valentine Livestock • Auction Valentine, NE

Northern High Plains Cattle Raised the Ranchers’ Way – 18 SONS SELL 20 SONS SELL 19 SONS SELL No Creep, No Frills, High Expectations. KC Mr Ribstone 10071 “Freckles” CL 1 Domino 032X VDAR Really Windy 4097 BW .2 • WW 54 • YW 85 • M 27 M&G 54 • REA +.35 • MARB .24

Curve bender. 146 calves average birth ratio 98, nursing ratio 101. Leader in ten EPD traits, including marbling. Thick, deep, gentle, and pigmented with perfect feet. Heifers in production have the best udders and teat quality we’ve raised.

20 SONS SELL

BW -1.2 • WW 61 • YW 98 • M 11 REA +.11 • MARB .16

BW 3.1 • WW 59 • YW 85 • M 36 M&G 66 • REA .05 • MARB .29

032X has been used successfully on more than 100 heifers at our ranch and at Feddes, plus he works great on cows. He takes off white, adds body length and marbling. His heifers are very promising.

SELLING! 18 ALSO SONS SELL 30 - Bred Registered

Really Windy 4097 offers exceptional calving ease and an outcross pedigree. He has been used extensively on commercial and purebred heifers with great results. The calves are born light, vigorous and unassisted.

19 SONS SELL

Hereford Heifers 3 year old Dam of Lot 7011 June 2018 steer calf & dam 9 year old dam of Lot 7288 For a catalog or more information, contact: Bred F1way, Black and her 2018 calf. by the and• her 2018 SONS BW .2 • WW 54 • YW 85 • M 27 BW -1.2 • WWDwight 61 YWLogterman 98 • Mbull11calf. BW bull 3.1 10 • WW 59 SELL • YW 85 • M 3650 – Oh, Face Heifers Efficiency matter! crossbreeding PAYS!! She• MARB is a herd producer! H: 605-429-3209/C: 402-389-1165 Apex does Windy 078• REA .05 • MARB .29White M&G 54 • REA +.35 • MARB .24 REA +.11 .16bull M&G 66 BW 3.9 • WW 71 • YW 111 • M 37 Curve bender. 146 calves average birth ratio 98, nursing ratio 101. Leader in ten 032X has been used successfully on more than 100 heifers at our ranch and at 10 – Bred Angus Really Windy 4097 offers exceptional calving ease and an outcross pedigree. REA +.18 • MARB .30 LOGTERMAN.COM 078 combines phenotype with superior performance, fertility and EPD traits, including marbling. Thick, deep, gentle, and pigmented with perfect aWindy Feddes, plus he works great on cows. He takes off white, adds body length and Heifers He has been used extensively on commercial and purebred heifers with Commercial great disposition. He puts it all together in a moderate frame, muscular Online buyers must register with cattleusa.com package with an outcross pedigree. feet. Heifers in production have the best udders and teat quality we’ve raised. marbling. His heifers are very promising. great results. The calves are born light, vigorous and unassisted.

KC Mr Ribstone 10071 “Freckles”

CL 1 Domino 032X

VDAR Really Windy 4097

SOME SIRES REPRESENTED:

CHURCHILL RED BULL 200Z CL 1 DOMINO 215Z CHURCHILL GALLATIN 5211C ET K 88X RIBEYE 383

HOOVER DAM W R A MIRROR IMAGE T10 R B Tour of Duty 177

ALSO SELLING! For more information, contact:

30 - BredDwight Registered Logterman: H: 605-429-3209/C: 402-389-1165 Hereford Heifers LeRoy Logterman: H: 406-282-7359/C: 406-580-0019

10 SONS SELL

Apex Windy 078

BW 3.9 • WW 71 • YW 111 • M 37 REA +.18 • MARB .30

Windy 078 combines phenotype with superior performance, fertility and a great disposition. He puts it all together in a moderate frame, muscular package with an outcross pedigree.

Rob Logterman:For C: 402-389-1328 a catalog or more information, contact:

50 – Bred F1 Black White Face Heifers Sale Bull

Videos can – Bred Angus be 10 found Commercial Heifers on our website!

Dwight Logterman H: 605-429-3209/C: 402-389-1165

LOGTERMAN.COM Onlinebuyers buyersmust mustregister register with with cattleusa.com Online cattleusa.com

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He wanted the capture the people, landscape, mentality, how they look at life.

Sale: 2:00 PM

At the Ranch 5 1/2 miles North of Drake, ND, 2 miles East, 1/2 mile South

17th Annual Production Sale

Sunday, February 17th, 2019

Offering:

Yearling Bulls - Two-Year Old Bulls - Bred and Open Heifers Home: (701)465-3023 Blaine’s Cell: (701)721-4754 Travis’s Cell: (701) 626-2070 bkbruner@gondtc.com

www.brunerangusranch.com Facebook: Bruner Angus Ranch

Joutras grew up on the fringe of the Sandhills, in Ogallala. “I knew people who were ranchers, but didn’t know anything about cattle ranching. I knew they raised cows. That’s all I knew,” he said. After spending time on the McGinn ranch, he knew a little more. “When I got into the guts of it, you can see what all is involved. Thousands of details, and they (the ranchers) know what all has to happen. Every day is a different day, you never know what you’re going to have to deal with, whether pulling a calf or dealing with water that isn’t there. It’s a myriad of details that I thought was really interesting.” Laron McGinn, who is a co-owner in the ranch, with his dad, uncle and cousin, appreciates that the film portrays a real view of cattle ranching, especially in light of skewed and negative publicity that has become mainstream. “This genuinely shows how we in this business take care of our livestock. There’s genuine compassion. We do our best in tough times, in storms, we keep them well-fed, doctor them when they’re hurt and chop water every day. There’s never a moment that we don’t try to be on top of the well-being of every creature in our care. Mother Nature throws things at us sometimes, but our heart is in what we do.” Joutras had more than 100 hours of video when he was done with the videography. He cut that down to 84 minutes.

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He credits his background as a photographer with giving him the critical eye to find the most powerful imagery for the video. “Every frame is really important. In photography, you’re trying to tell a story with a single frame. I looked at video production the same way,” Joutras said. “It’s definitely a very pretty film, but it’s more about the details of a certain ranch.” In video, the story also has a voice. In this case, a lot of voices from the fifth-generation McGinn ranch and the surrounding ranch community.

Laron McGinn spent time studying art and being a professional artist in Arizona and Los Angeles. But he missed home. “Mingling, you discover that, in some places, some people just don’t seem to know who they are. In this part of the world, you really have no choice but to be genuine. Your word is everything. If you’re not honest, it doesn’t take long for people to learn that. Your integrity is probably what defines you. You have to be true to that. It’s nice that we come from a place that a handshake is honored, and your word is your bond. The film brings that out.”

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While the focus is on the McGinn ranch, many neighbors make an appearance in the film, simply because ranching is a community job. “We need each other,” Laron said. “We’d have a hard time making it without relying on our neighbors, and our neighbors are also our

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friends. They’re the people we socialize with in town. It’s a great big community and everyone’s success is intermingled. I don’t know, this day and age, how often you see that on this scale. I also love the way it depicts how genuine everyone is, how comfortable they are in who they are.”

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


That observation wasn’t lost on Joutras. “They’re very interesting, very quirky people,” Joutras said. “They’re all their own bosses. They don’t have to change who they are to get along with people in the corporation.”

It’s that authenticity that tends to make ranchers a little uncomfortable in front of a lens. “Back when Georg first showed up with his camera, in 2003, he was just taking pictures all the time,” Laron said. “It’s natural for most people, to be outside of their comfort zone a little, having their picture taken. He was always

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260

snapping away, taking pictures of everything, es-

“Because of that experience, when he picked

pecially the busy stuff that takes place. We were

up a video camera, that’s just Georg being Georg.

just a part of it.”

We were pretty at ease with it. The sit-down in-

Laron’s dad was most uncomfortable with it, he

terviews were harder to get people to participate

said. But as they got to know Georg, and when

in, just because of the comfort level. But it was

the book came out, and they were able to see how

just them talking about whatever they wanted to

Georg portrayed ranching, it was reassuring.

talk about.”

TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


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261


Selling Sons of: Come join us for the 10th annual Black Granite

March 9th, 2019 SAV Resource 1441

LD Capitalist 316

AND OTHER INDUSTRY LEADING SIRES

kretschmanangus.com

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THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


Laron said it’s an honor to have been part of the project. “All of us who were anxious to see how he put it together were all very pleased with what he created. It’s a legacy piece for our family, and that’s something we will have forever. Nothing was exaggerated. It’s a very honest portrayal of who we are and what we do.” Joutras said the film gives viewers a look at how ranches work, but doesn’t tell how to be a cattle rancher. “It shows how they take a long-term view of dealing with the landscape. These ranches have been out there since the 1870s and ’80s. They definitely take a long-term view.”

a score written by fellow Nebraskan Tom Larson—four years after he first shot video for it—the film was done. The film has been screened across Nebraska and beyond, including the Kansas City Film Festival, where it debuted to a sold-out crowd. In Broken Bow, after initially selling out, it expanded into all three theatres and sold out over and over again through the week. Though it resonates especially with rural audiences, it also saw sold-out crowds in Lincoln. Word of the film is spreading and more screenings are scheduled well into 2019.

After 22 months in post-processing, doing editing and color grading, and getting

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ith 73,200 readers in South1-877-347-9100 Dakota, Nebraska, Wyoming, feed, retail, grocery and building material businesses. Plus hundreds • www.tsln.com North Dakota, Montana, and Minnesota, the Farmer & of seedstock cattlemen utilize the only weekly agricultural publication ith 52,800 readers in South Dakota, Ne- antique dealers, realtors, auctioneers, seed, feed, retail, Rancher Exchange is the largest advertising with 100% advertising to promote their annual production sales. 1-877-347-9100 grocery and building material businesses. Plus hundreds braska, Wyoming, North weekly Dakota, Mon-• www.tsln.com publication distributed free in the upper Midwest region. published in 1981 the Farmer & weekly RancheragriculExchange offers a of First seedstock cattlemen utilize the only tana, and readers Minnesota, the Dakota, Farmer Ne& antique dealers, realtors, auctioneers, seed, feed, retail, ith 52,800 in South vastpublication potential customer base with the largest tural with 100% advertising to geographical promote coverage Rancher Exchange North is the largest braska, Wyoming, MonHundreds of businesses and individuals rely on Dakota, the “buyweekly and sell grocery and building material businesses. Plus hundreds any South Dakota-based publication. their annual production sales. agricultural First published in 1981 Many of the free the upper of seedstock cattlemen utilize the only weekly agricultana, agriculturalists. and distributed Minnesota, the in Farmer & of bibleâ€? advertising to reach the publication region’s These loyal advertisers verypublication first advertisers consistently placed ads in the Farmer & the Farmer & Rancher Exchange offers a vast potential with have 100% advertising to promote Rancher Exchange is the largest weekly includeMidwest region. livestock markets, vehicle dealers, farm machinery and tural Rancher Exchange for over 30First years.published in 1981 customer base with the largest geographical coverage of annual production sales. advertising distributed free auctioneers, in rely the on upper equipment dealers, dealers, realtors, seed, their Hundreds ofpublication antique businesses and individuals the

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EIDE LIKE I’D LIKE AN ADVISOR WHO UNDERSTANDS MY INDUSTRY

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Dvor ak

Herefords

Annual Bull & Heifer Sale F e b r ua r y 1 , 2 0 1 9 1 p m at t h e r a n c h — N o r t h e a s t o f P i c k s t o w n , S D

Selling 50 bulls and a select group of elite open heifers DVOR 554 4216 WEINEKE 7208E — Reg #: 43789035

DVOR 502 S351 HULK 710E — Reg #: 43777661

B oy d D v o r a k 6 0 5 . 4 9 1 . 7 0 9 0 Jeff Dvorak 605.491.2068 2 9 7 3 8 3 8 3 r d Av e L a k e a n d e s , S D 5 7 3 5 6 w w w. d v o r a k h e r e f o r d s . c o m - L i k e u s o n fa c e b o o k

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Koupals B & B Fix It 8117 AAA:19246542 EPD’s BW +2.2, WW +67, YW +116, Milk +28

Koupals B & B Pedigree 8041 AAA:19277475 BW +1,WW +52,YW +95, Milk +26 Maternal brother to Koupals B & B Identity - Dam is 14 yrs old and still going

Other Sires: Koupals B & B Fix It 6072 • McCumber Steadfast 635 • Koupal Cedar Winds 6000 Koupals B & B DiNero 6021 • Koupals B & B Full Metal 3443 • Koupals B & B Metallic 6018 • Koupals B & B Nikon 5035 Koupal Omaha • Koupal Czech • Koupal Olympian • SAV Regard • LT Enterprise

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267


KRAYE ANGUS

28TH ANNUAL PRODUCTION SALE

April 6, 2019

At the Kraye Sale Facility, Mullen, Nebraska

Selling 110 Performance Bred Registered Yearling Angus Bulls Also selling 20 - 2017 Fall Bulls Featuring sons of SAV Topsoil, Renown, Bank Note, Unlimited, Kraye Valor, and more.

Kraye Angus

35791 Antelope Valley Rd Mullen, NE 69152 John 308-546-2524 Cell 308-546-7309 David 308-546-7015 jkraye@neb-sandhills.net www.krayeangus.com

All Performance Data Available Also selling 20 Purebred Commercial Yearling Heifers

Family Owned..... Nebraska Grown

Process Hay Bales and Roughage P Mix in your By-Products M Make a complete Total Mixed Ration M Reduce Feeding Costs R IImprove Herd Health

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WWW.GROSSENBURG.COM 268

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Because it’s more than a deal.

View complete listings, videos and interactive maps at hewittlandcompany.com

NEW LISTING

Schelling West River Farm Martin, Bennett County, SD

Flat Top Ranch - Squaw Gap, ND

9,031 Acres | $14,100,000 Highly productive cropland, over 90% tillable, Complete set of HQ improvements with Lodge style Home, Shop, and 400,000 bu grain storage. Exceptional access.

4,867 Acres | $3,900,000 Situated on western edge of the Little Missouri National Grasslands in western ND, with productive & fertile hay meadows, heavily-sodded grassland, timber- and brushfilled draws and canyons, and well-kept improvements.

Tres Crosses Ranch - Spearfish, SD

1,592 Acres | $3,150,000 Level lowlands and pine & oak covered ridges. Black Hills views from the Elkhorn Ridge, Centennial Valley to Crow Peak and beyond. No covenants. Offered as: 1,592 acres (130 acre HQ plus 1,400 acre grassland)$3,150,000 or 130 acre HQ - $2,150,000.

NEW LISTING

Goff Ranch - Newell, SD

1,394 Deeded Acres + 1,200 Acres BLM $2,100,000 Located northeast of the Black Hills, the Goff Ranch offers live water, irrigated hay and farmland, pipeline system, grass cover, custom log home & out-buildings.

Coalbank Creek Grassland- Mill Iron, MT 1,880 Acres (1,240 acres Deeded - 640 acres Private Lease) | $1,067,725 Corrals, Cross-fenced, Wells and Pipeline. This property makes an ideally sized tract of grassland with enough scale to make it efficient and yet very affordable.

Powell Road Ranch Philip, Haakon County, SD

Hefner North Ranch- Sturgis, SD

1,027 Acres | $1,729 Spectacular Property! Heavily timbered, live water, productive hay meadows, exceptional wildlife populations and easy access.

405 Acres | $1,090,250 Fantastic views, strategically placed water and pasture fences. Excellent Bear Butte and Black Hills views – strategically-placed livestock water – cross-fenced – convenient access. $2,690/acre.

Glad Valley Ranch- South Ziebach County Unit, Glad Valley, SD

Glad Valley Ranch- North Ziebach County Unit, Glad Valley, SD

2,111.08 deeded acres|$1,995,000 Excellent ground, fantastic home site with well and mature shelterbelt, plus 661 acres of hayland and the balance in exceptional grassland.

JD Hewitt 605-347-1100

Tyson Hewitt 605-206-0034

Tanner Hewitt 605-490-7952

Dan Todd 605-280-9214

1,975.7 Acres (1061 tillable) | $1,880,000 Fantastic HQ with home, barn, mature shelterbelt, corrals, 2 electric wells, and four dams.

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269


THORSTENSON’S

Lazy TV Ranch

38th Annual

REAL WORLD RANCH GENETICS

PRODUCTION SALE SATURDAY, MARCH 2, 2019 AT THE RANCH – SELBY, SD

CULLED FOR DISPOSITION TOP PERFORMANCE EXCELLENT UDDER QUALITY AND FERTILITY

SELLING 200 BALANCER, ANGUS AND GELBVIEH BULLS OFFERING PROGENY FROM THESE LEADING AI SIRES: Plattemere Weigh Up K360 -- Angus BW: 1.6 WW: 76 YW: 138 Milk: 26 $W: 90.18 $B: 182.53

KCF Bennett Fortress - Angus

* UNCONDITIONALLY GUARANTEED through first breeding season * Volume DISCOUNTS * FREE Delivery * Feed-Efficiency tested

BW: .3 WW: 78 YW: 139 Milk: 28 $W: +79.82 $B: 157.52

Also featuring progeny of Cowboy Up, Conneally Big Money, Sitz Dividend, Schiefelbein iBull, Lazy TV Rapture, Bieber Hard Drive

RANKED #2 IN THE GELBVIEH BREED FOR DAMS OF MERIT IN 2018 #1 AND #2 MOST HEAVILY USED SIRES IN THE GELBVIEH BREED LAST YEAR WERE BRED AND RAISED BY LAZY TV RANCH — LAZY TV SAM U451 AND LAZY TV WATCHMAN 270

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Like us “Lazy TV Ranch” on Facebook

VAUGHN & WENDY 605.649.6262

BRIAN & DEDEE 605.649.9927

12980 Cedar Rd, Selby, SD 57472

Lazy TV Ranch

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

vwthor@sbtc.net

BALANCERBULLS.COM


Mrnak Hereford Ranch Mrnak Hereford Ranch 52nd Annual Production Sale 52nd Annual Production Sale

Sunday, February 10, 2019

1:00 p.m. (MST) - Bowman Auction Market - Bowman, ND 1:00 p.m. (MST) - Bowman Auction Market - Bowman, ND

GET THE MRNAK ADVANTAGE • 100 Performance Tested 2 Year Old Bulls • Proven Genetics on Grass & in the Feedlot • Enhanced Growth Efficiency • All Bulls Developed on Grass to Promote Longevity & Sustainability

Maximum Results = Maximum Profit

Wayne Mrnak • 701.523.6368 • Terry Mrnak • 701.523.6386 Brent Mrnak • 701.206.0604 • Andy Mrnak • 701.206.1095 Mrnak Hereford Ranch: 14501 91st St. SW • Bowman, ND 58623

View more information at • www.mrnakherefords.com THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

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Annual Benda Ranch Production Sale Simmentals

Monday, FEBRUARY 11th

1:00 pm

KimBall liveStocK exchange • KimBall, Sd

BullS had no cReep feed. Will WinteR the BullS until apRil 15 and Semen teSt. many leading a.i. Simmental and anguS SiReS aRe RepReSented in the offeRing.

Benda Ranch

JBS Mr. Domination 112F

DCR Domination (Welsh’s Warsaw) x Club King  PB SM ASA# 3500248  Adj. WW: 824 Ratio: 123  Rank #1/101

SimmentalS

Jim Cell: 605-730-6703 Jay Cell: 605-730-0215 Home: 605-778-6703 26106-366th Ave. Kimball, SD 57355

44 YEARS OF RAISING SIMMENTAL CATTLE

JBS Mr. Renown 504F SAV Renown x Dew It Right 1/2 SM ASA# 3500159  Adj. WW: 747 Ratio: 111  Rank #14/101

Contact us for a sale catalog.

email: bendaranch@midstatesd.net www.bendaranch.com

Bull mortality and ASD coverage—in case you need it. We offer a unique one-year policy for 10.3% of the purchase price on bulls valued up to $500,000 with 100% mortality payout, 80% accident sickness or disease (ASD infertility) claim payout. Visit with your PayneWest farm and ranch specialists today. PayneWest.com/Ag.

TOM HOLLAND (406) 683-6882

272

JOSH BOKA (406) 660-6100

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2019 Production Sale

Saturday, April 6 12:00 P.M. MST Bowman Auction Market Bowman, North Dakota

Selling

150 Registered Angus Bulls 1000 Commercial Angus & Black Baldy Heifers

Sires Represented

SS NIAGARA Z29

CED +4 BW +1.2 WW +72 YW +138 MILK +26 MARB +.68 RE +1.11 $W +66.41 $B +168.22

TEX PLAYBOOK 5437

CED +11 BW +0 WW +61 YW +106 MILK +40 MARB +.69 RE +.44 $W +77.77 $B +149.53

BALDRIDGE COMPASS C041

BASIN ADVANCE 3134

CED +9 BW +.8 WW +71 YW +118 MILK +37 MARB +1.07 RE +.60 $W +81.43 $B +163.94

CED +9 BW -0.2 WW +60 YW +106 MILK +32 MARB +.87 RE +.65 $W +68.52 $B +138.16

MILL BAR HICKOK 7242

KCF BENNETT FORTRESS

CED +11 BW +.2 WW +78 YW +139 MILK +29 MARB +.67 RE +.76 $W +80.64 $B +155.64

SITZ INVESTMENT 660Z

CED +1 BW +1.2 WW +71 YW +138 MILK +29 MARB +.23 RE +.50 $W +69.31 $B +138.75

VAR HERITAGE 5038

CED +14 BW +11 WW +69 YW +114 MILK +25 MARB +.87 RE +.70 $W +70.69 $B +148.08

CED +4 BW +2.4 WW +72 YW +128 MILK +32 MARB +.94 RE +1.09 $W +71.43 $B +195.63

Cattle bred to perform on the range, in the feed yard and on the plate.

Cattle are not creep fed. Cattle are developed realistically for soundness and fertility.

Free delivery of bulls to ND, MT, SD, WY.

Steve Brooks 701-523-5391 701-523-6732

7206 - 146th Ave SW • Bowman, ND 58623 brookssa@ndsupernet.com www.brookschalkybutteangusranch.com THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

Ryan Brooks 701-523-3730 701-523-6731 TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS

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Ag

EVENTS

PHOTOS BY SCOTT DIRK

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Ag

EVENTS

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Ag Events

& January

Sales

2019 SHOWS Have an event coming up? Call 877-347-9100 to list it here free–or email editorial@tsln-fre.com

4

Angus Partners (Spickler & McCumber) Commercial Female Sale, Kist Livestock, Mandan, ND 5 ND Angus Assn. State Sale, Kist Livestock, Mandan, ND 7 MacDonald Ranches Annual Genetic Partners Female Sale, Nepoleon, ND 7-8 Diamond Ring Ranch Commercial Heifer Sale, Billings, MT 12 Rafter T Angus Bull Sale, Buffalo Livestock Auction, Buffalo, WY 12 Bruhn Incredible Female Sale, Dunlap, IA 12 SD Quarter Horse Assn. Hall of Fame and Legends Banquet, Pierre, SD 14 Edgar Bros. Two Year Old Angus Bull Sale, Faith Livestock, Faith, SD 14 Elshere Herefords Bull Sale, Faith, SD 17-19 MAGIE Agricultural and Indutrial Show, Great Falls, MT 18 Knippling Herefords online Bull Sale opening day, Gann Valley, SD 18 Urlacher Angus Ranch Bull Sale, Bowman, ND 19 Rohrichs Cutting Edge Genetics Production Sale, Kist Livestock, Mandan, ND 19 Redland Angus Bull Sale, Buffalo, WY 19 Orton Ranch Red Angus Annual Production Sale, Bassett, NE 19 Jauer Dependable Genetics Bull Sale, Hinton, IA 19 Ingalls Centennial Angus/Turtle Creek Angus Bull Sale, at the ranch, Faith, SD 20 Jallo Angus, Fordville, ND 21 Miller Angus Ranch Sale, St. Anthony, ND Sale at Kist Livestock, Mandan, ND 21 VanNewkirk Herefords Bull Sale, Oshkosh, NE 21 Sodak Angus Bull Sale, at the ranch, Reva, SD 21 Joseph Angus Ranch Bull Sale at the ranch, near Winner, SD 21 Strand Sim/Angus Bull Sale, Platte, SD 22 Churchill Cattle Co, Manhattan, MT 22 Weigel Angus Sale, Napoleon, ND 22 Ken Haas Angus Bull Sale, LaGrange, WY 23 Forgey Angus Sale at the ranch, Dallas, SD 23 Thomas Angus Wyoming Division Bull Sale, Yoder, WY

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23 24 25 25 25 25 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 27 27 27 28 28 28 28 28 29 29 30 31 31 31 31 31

JB Angus Sale, Dickinson, ND Marcy Cattle Co. Bull Sale, Gordon Livestock, Gordon, NE Black Hills Stock Show Truck Defender Horse Sale, Rapid City, SD Soriede Charolais Sale, Bowman, ND Diamond J Angus Annual Bull Sale, at the ranch, Mandan, ND Ellingson Simmentals Annual Production Sale, Dahlen, ND Baldridge Bros. Angus Bull Sale, North Platte, NE Black Hills Stock Show Truck Defender Horse Sale, Rapid City, SD 21 Angus Ranch, at the ranch, New England, ND Black Hills Stock Show Stockman’s Ball, Rapid City, SD Little Goose Ranch, Buffalo, WY Bobcat Angus Sale, Great Falls, MT Forster Farms Annual Simmental Production Sale, Smithfield, NE J & C Simmentals Annual Bull Sale, West Point, NE Thompson Angus Ranch Sale, Kintyre, ND Triangle J Ranch Simmental and Angus Bull Sale, Miller, NE Classic Angus Ranch Annual Production Sale, Stockmans Livestock West, Dickinson, ND Black Hills Stock Show Commercial Heifer Pen Show, Rapid City, SD Black Hills Stock Show Angus Show and Sale, Rapid City, SD Black Hills Stock Show Gold Rush Genetics Sale, Rapid City, SD Apex Cattle Bull Sale, Dannebrog, NE Bullis Creek Generations of Predicatability Limousin & Red Angus Production Sale, Burwell, NE Delaney Herefords & Atkins Herefords Bull Sale, Lake Benton, MN Black Hills Stock Show Charolais Show and Sale, Rapid City, SD Black Hills Stock Show Ranch Rodeo, Rapid City, SD Black Hills Stock Show Hereford Show and Sale, Rapid City, SD Ridder Herefords Annual Bull and Female Sale, at the ranch, Callaway, NE K2 Red Angus Winter Bull & Female Sale, Wheatland, WY Black Hills Stock Show Gelbvieh Show and Sale, Rapid City, SD Black Hills Stock Show Red Angus Show and Sale, Rapid City, SD Black Hills Stock Show Shorthorn Show and Sale, Rapid City, SD

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


© Karoline Rose, KRose Marketing

One of Nebraska’s Best Sources of Quality Two-Year-Old Angus Range Bulls 51stAnnual Annual Production Sale 50th Sale

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308-372-3200 • dethlefsangus.com THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

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Ag Events

&February

Sales

2019 SHOWS Have an event coming up? Call 877-347-9100 to list it here free–or email editorial@tsln-fre.com

1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1

Maher Angus Ranch Bull Sale, at the ranch, Morristown SD McConnell Angus Ranch Production Sale at the ranch, Dix, NE Kunkel Simmentals Annual Production Sale, New Salem, ND Dvorak Herefords Bull Sale, Lake Andes, SD Baumgarten Cattle Co. Hereford Bull Sale, at the ranch, Belfield, ND Nord Angus Bull Sale, at Baumgarten Ranch Sale facility, Belfield, ND Poss Angus Bull & Female Sale, at the farm, Scotia, NE Spring Valley Ranch Angus Bull Sale, Burwell, NE TJS Red Angus Bull Sale, Buffalo Livestock, Buffalo, WY Black Hills Stock Show Limousin Show and Sale, Rapid City, SD Black Hills Stock Show Maine Anjou Show and Sale, Rapid City, SD Severance Diamond Charolais & Angus Sale at Kist’s Livestock, Mandan, ND 2 Ellingson Angus Ranch Bull Sale at Martin Schaff Sale falcility, St Anthony, ND 2 Upstream Ranch Hereford Ranch Bull Sale, at the ranch, Taylor, NE 2 Graff/Tumbling T Angus Sale, Ogallala, NE 2 Bartos/Frederick Angus Production Sale, Verdigre, NE 2 Black Hills Stock Show Chi-Influence Show and Sale, Rapid City, SD 2 Black Hills Stock Show Simmental Show and Sale, Rapid City, SD 2 Black Hills Stock Show Supreme Row, Rapid City, SD 3 Frey Angus Ranch Bull Sale at the Ranch, Granville, ND 3 Black Hills Buffalo Classic Sale during Black Hills Stock Show, Rapid City, SD 3 Hartman Cattle Co. Simmental and SimAngus Bull Sale, Tecumseh, NE 4 Pelton Ranch, Hereford, Angus and Red Angus Bull Sale, Haliday, ND 4 Mike Sitz Angus Bull Sale, Burwell, NE 4 Gateway Simmental Sale, Lewistown, MT 4 Martin Angus Ranch Bull Sale, Ogallala, NE 4 Taubneheim Gelbvieh Annual Production Sale, at the farm, Amherst, NE 4 Wicks Cattle Simmental and SimAngus Bull Sale, Richardton, ND 5 Cane Creek Cattle Co. Hereford Bull Sale, Mobridge Livestock, Mobridge, SD 5 Jungles Shorthorn Farms Bull Sale, Kathryn, ND 5 Twedt Red Angus/Ressler Angus Ranch Sale, McHenry, ND 5 Koepplin Black Simmental Sale, Kist Livestock, Mandan, ND 5-9 Watertown Farm Show, Watertown, SD 6 Begger’s Diamond V Ranch Bull Sale, Wibaux, MT 6 Seever Angus Bull Sale, Burwell, NE 7 Stroh Hereford Ranch Bull Sale, Kildeer, ND 7 Idland Cattle Co. Bull Sale, Glendive, MT

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TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS

7 7 7 7 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 10 10 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 12 12 12 12 12

Topp Angus Ranch Bull Sale, Grace City, ND Stavick Simmentals King of the Ranch Bull Sale, Aberdeen, SD Hart Simmental Power Bull Sale, at the farm, Frederick, SD Rust Mountain View Ranch Ace in the Hole Bull Sale, Turtle Lake, ND Hook Farms & Wulf Simmental, Bred For Balance Simmental and SimAngus Sale, Starbuck, MN Beta Brothers/Bell Family Simmental Sale, Rugby, ND TNT Simmental Bull Sale, Almont, ND Topp Herefords Bull Sale at the ranch, Grace City, ND Honeyman Charolais Bull Sale, Bowman, ND Powder River Angus Annual Bull Sale, Buffalo, WY Nagel Cattle Co. Bull Sale, Springfield, SD Vandenberghe Flying V Angus Sale, at the ranch, Cleveland, ND Talkington Angus Ranch Bull Sale, Belfield, ND Lemke Cattle Bull and Female Sale, Lawrence, NE Bergers Herdmaster SimAngus Hybrid Bull Sale, North Platte, NE Amdahl Angus & Hereford and Baker Herefords “Premier Performance Sale,” Rapid City, SD Kenner Simmental Ranch Annual Bull Sale, at the ranch, Leeds, ND Schaff Angus Valley Bull and Female Sale at the ranch, St. Anthony, ND Stewart Charolais and Red Angus Bull Sale, Madison, SD Heart City Bull Bash, Valentine, NE Rydeen Farms Simmental & SimAngus Bull Sale, Clearbrook, MN CK & Wager Cattle Inaugural Production Sale, Highmore, SD Mrnak Herefords Bull Sale, Bowman, ND Browns Angus Ranch Bull Sale at the ranch, Center, ND Edge of the West Simmental Bull & Female Sale, Kist Livestock, Mandan, ND Fawcett’s Elm Creek Ranch Hereford Production Sale, at the ranch, Ree Heights, SD Sletten Angus Ranch Bull Sale, Faith Livestock, Faith, SD Logterman Herefords and Angus Bull Sale, Valentine, NE Koupal Angus Ranch Bull Sale, at the ranch, Dante, SD Benda Ranch Simmental Bull Sale, Kimball, SD Felton Angus Bull Sale, Big Timber, MT Ludvigson Stock Farms Dakota Bull and Female Sale, Mandan, ND Bichler Simmentals & Red Angus Annual Production Sale, Linton, ND Wilkinson Ranch Angus Bull Sale, at the Ranch, DeSmet, SD Thorson Herefords Annual Production Sale, Philip Livestock, Philip, SD Werning Cattle Co. Production Sale, at the ranch, Emery, SD G Bar H Genetics Bull Sale, Torrington, WY

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


12 12 13 13 13 13 14 14 14 14 14 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 16 16 16

Raven Angus Bull Sale at the ranch, Colome, SD Forster Red Angus Bull Sale, Richardton, ND Jindra Angus Annual Production Sale, Creighton, NE Spear U Angus Ranch Bull Sale, at Shearer Ranch, Wall, SD Friedt Herefords Sale, Dickinson, ND Wilkenson Farms Simmental Production Sale, Montpelier, ND Wittkopp Angus Bull Sale, Glasgow, MT Booth’s Cherry Creek Ranch Bull Sale, Veteran, WY Mohnen Angus Bull Sale, at the farm, White Lake SD Lassle Ranch Simmental Bull Sale, Glendive, MT Green Valley Cattle Bull Sale, Atkinson, NE Hoffman Ranch Hereford and Angus Bull Sale, at the ranch, Thedford, NE R & R Cattle Co. Annual Bull and Female Sale, at the ranch, Chamberlain, SD Robert Birklid, R Lazy B Charolais Bull Sale, Hub City Livestock, Aberdeen, SD Black Top Angus Farms Bull Sale, at the farm, Mitchell, SD Bullerman Angus / K & J Angus Bull Sale, Rushmore, MN Dakota Express Simmental Sale, Kist Livestock, Mandan, ND Sandy Acres Simmental Bull Sale, Creighton, NE Lewis Bros. Angus Bull Sale, St. Onge Livestock, St. Onge, SD Domek Charolais Bull Sale, at the ranch, Wibaux, MT Lazy J Bar Ranch Red Angus, Flittie Simmental & Schnable Simmental Bull Sale, at Hub City Livestock, Aberdeen, SD Double T Simmental Annual Production Sale, at the ranch, Turtle Lake, ND

16 Hoffman Angus Bull Sale, at the ranch, Wheatland, ND 16 Minert/Simonson Angus Bull Sale, at the ranch, Dunning, NE 16 Carmichael Herefords Annual Proven Performance Bull Sale, at the Ranch, Faith , SD 16 Schiefelbein Angus Farms Sale at the Farm Kimball, MN 16 Varilek Angus Ranch, at the ranch, Geddes, SD 16 Crump Red Angus Annual Bull Sale, Buffalo Livestock, Buffalo, WY 16 Ekstrom Simmental Annual Bull Sale, Kimball, SD 16 Smith Saddle Butte Ranch Angus Bull Sale, Bowman Auction Market, Bowman, ND 16 Reich Angus Ranch Bull Sale, Zap, ND 17 Nathan Palm Angus, Estelline, SD, Bull Sale at Watertown, SD 17 Bruner Angus Ranch Sale, Drake, ND 18 Rennert Ranch, Heart J & Vision Cattle Performance Charolais Bull Sale, Darr Feedlot, Cozad, NE 18 Eagle Pass Ranch Bull Sale, at the ranch, Highmore, SD 18 Bulls of the Big Sky Sale, Billings, MT 18 Rausch Herefords Annual Bull & Heifer Sale, at the ranch, Hoven, SD 18 Tokach Angus Ranch Sale, Kist Livestock, Mandan ND 19 Bina Charolais Powerhouse Bull Sale, Jamestown Livestock, Jamestown, ND 19 Quandt Brothers/VJT Ranch Bull Sale, Oakes, ND 19 Bar JZ Ranches Hereford and Limousin Bull Sale at Thomas Ranch Sale facility, Holabird, SD 19 Gill Red Angus Annual Bull Sale at the ranch, Timber Lake, SD

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6 & & THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS

279


Ag Events

&February

Sales

2019 SHOWS Have an event coming up? Call 877-347-9100 to list it here free–or email editorial@tsln-fre.com

19 Cedar Top Ranch Gelbvieh, Angus and Balancer Bull Sale, at Burwell Livestock, Burwell, NE 19 Douglas Booth Family Angus Bull Sale, Torrington, WY 19 Coleman Angus & Trexler Angus, Missoula, MT 19 HoosCow Angus Bull Sale, Sheridan Livestock, Rushville, NE 19 Moke Angus Bull Sale, Corsica, SD 19 Stout Charolais Bull Sale, Philip Livestock, Philip, SD 20 Hilltop Angus Ranch at the Ranch, Bowdle, SD 20 Millar Angus Ranch Bull Sale at the ranch, Sturgis, SD 20 Barenthsen & Bullinger Red Angus Annual Production Sale, at the ranch, Powers Lake, ND 20 Ostrand Angus/ Slagle Angus Bull Sale, Sargent, NE 20 Larson Family Ranch Annual Production Sale, Presho Livestock, Presho, SD 21 Neiman 77 Ranch Bull Sale, Belle Fourche Livestock, Belle Fourche, SD 21 Mogck & Sons Angus Sale, at the ranch, Olivet, SD 21 Olson Red Power Hereford and Red Angus Sale, Argusville, ND 21 Krebs Ranch Angus Bull Sale, at the ranch, Gordon, SD 21 Symens Bros. Limousin Production Sale, at the farm, Amherst, SD

(cont.)

21 Lowell Fisher Family Herefords Production Sale, Spencer, NE 21 Chapman Cattle Co., Forage Developed Two Year Old Bull Sale, Stettler, AB, CA 22 Hyline Angus Sale, Ramsay, MT 22 Gant Polled Herefords Sale, at the farm, Geddes, SD 22 Vin-Mar Cattle Co. Angus & Hereford Sale, at Sheridan Livestock, Rushville, NE 22 Beitelspacher Ranch Angus & SimAngus Bull Sale at Mobridge Livestock, Mobridge, SD 22 Wieckorek Limousin Bull Sale, at the ranch, Mt. Vernon, SD 22 Jamison Herefords Annual Bull Sale, at the ranch, Quinter, KS 22 Skinner Ranch Seedstock Sale, Hall, MT 22 Peckenpaugh Angus Bull Sale, Mitchell Livestock, Mitchell, SD 22 Sprunk Angus/Erdman Angus Bull Sale, Lisbon, ND 22 Brenner Angus & Red Angus Bull Sale, Kist Livestock, Mandan, ND 23 Wagner Herefords Bull Sale, Redfield, SD 23 Carlson Angus Ranch Bull Sale at the ranch, Mott, ND 23 Strommen Ranch Bull Sale at the ranch, Ft. Rice, ND 23 Neel’s & Never Sweat Angus Sale, Missoula, MT

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23 Bush Angus Sale at the farm, Britton, SD 23 Profit Maker Bull Sale, Ogallala, NE 23 Johnson-Rose Angus Bull Sale, Mobridge Livestock Auction, Mobridge, SD 23 Kreth Angus & Hereford Sale at the farm, Mt Vernon, SD 24 Namken Red Angus Annual Bull Sale, at the farm, Lake Norden, SD 24 Kal-Kota Ranch Final Bull Sale, Kist Livestock, Mandan, ND 24 Raml Cattle Co. Sale at the ranch, Goodwin, SD 25 Ravenscroft Red Angus Annual Bull Sale, Valentine Livestock, Valentine, NE 25 Beastrom Gelbvieh Ranch Sale, at the ranch, Pierre, SD 25 Arrow One Angus Bull Sale, North Platte, NE 25 Foxhoven Angus Bull Sale, Crofton, NE 25 Circle L Angus Bull Sale, Dillon, MT 25 Reyes/Russell 24th Annual Sale, Wheatland, WY 25 Lone Tree Red Angus Bull Sale, Faith Livestock, Faith, SD 25 Hart Angus Farms Sale, at the farm Frederick, SD

26 26 26 26 26 26 26 27 27 27 27 27 27 28

Deep Creek Angus Ranch Bull Sale at Philip Livestock, Philip, SD JC Heiken Angus & Sons Bull Sale, Miles City, MT Connelly Angus Bull Sale, Valier, MT Geppert’s Rock Creek Livestock Sale, Mitchell, SD Frese Angus Sale, Columbus, NE Haynes Angus Ranch Sale, Ogallala, NE Landmark Angus Bull Sale, Brunswick, NE Stortz/Gibbs Angus Bull Sale, Glendive, MT Chestnut Angus Sale, at the Farm, Pipestone, MN TC Ranch Bull Sale, at the ranch, Franklin, NE Larson XL Simmental Sale, Lemmon Livestock, Lemmon, SD Mt. Rushmore Angus Annual Bull Sale, at the ranch, Hermosa, SD C Diamond Simmentals Production Sale, Dawson, ND Durbin Creek Ranch Hereford Bull Sale, Worland Livestock Auction, Worland, WY 28 Bear Mountain Angus Ranch Bull Sale, at the ranch, Palisade, NE 28 Moore Angus Bull Sale, at the farm, Artesian, SD

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281


Ag Events 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 4 4 4 4 4 4 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 6 6 6 6

&March

Sales

2019 SHOWS Have an event coming up? Call 877-347-9100 to list it here free–or email editorial@tsln-fre.com

Eichacker Simmental & JK Angus Bull Sale, at Eichacker Sale facility, Salem, SD Sandmeier Charolais Annual Bull Sale, at the ranch, Bowdle, SD Carl Dethlefs and Sons Angus Bull Sale, Rockville, NE Sutherlin Farms Red Angus Bull Sale, Stevesville, MT Reminisce Angus Bull Sale, Dillon, MT Handel Farms Annual Gelbvieh and Red Angus Bull Sale, Platte Livestock, Platte, SD Kaehler Family Simmental Sale, Mobridge, SD Bulls of the Bitterroot Bull Sale, Stevensville, MT Dubas Cattle Co. Angus Bull Sale, Fullerton, NE Smith Farms Angus Bull Sale, Hay Springs, NE Redland Red Angus Sale, at the ranch, Hysham, MT Ravine Creek Ranch Hereford Bull Sale, Huron, SD Thorstenson Gelbvieh & Angus Sale at the ranch, Selby, SD Lucky 7 Angus Bull Sale, Riverton, WY McIvers Happy Acres Hereford Bull Sale, Farewell, MN Poppe Cattle Co. Hybrid & Composite Bull Sale, Fallon, MT Graeser Bros. Simmental Sale at Winner Livestock, Winner, SD Windy Creek Farms/Melroe Farms Cattle Performance Bull Sale, at Windy Creek Cattle Ranch, Spencer, SD Harrel Hereford Ranch Production Sale, Baker City, OR Campbell Red Angus Bull Sale at Mobridge Livestock, Mobridge, SD Edgar Bros Angus Annual Bull Sale, at the ranch, Rockham SD Arrowsmith Red Angus Bull Sale, Bassett Livestock, Bassett, NE Caroway Red Angus Sale, Lake Benton, MN Hojer Gelbvieh Ranch Bull Sale, Huron, SD Schutte & Sons Polled Herefords Production Sale, Guide Rock, NE Doll Ranch Charolais & Simmental Bull Sale, Kist Livestock, Mandan, ND ZumBrunnen Angus Bull Sale, Lusk, WY Apex Angus Bull Sale, at the ranch, Valier, MT Open 8 Genetics Simmental and Sim Angus Bull Sale, Broadus, MT Nansels Flying N Ranch Angus Sale, Miles City, MT Ridl Angus Farms Sale, Stockman’s Livestock, Dickinson, ND Sandhill Red Angus Sale, Sidney, MT Cheyenne Charolais Annual Production Sale, Philip Livestock, Philip, SD Hall Ranch Angus Production Sale, Bassett, NE Pederson Broken Heart Ranch Red Angus Production Sale, at the ranch, Firesteel, SD Lonesome River Ranch Angus Sale, Anselmo, NE Ox Bow Ranch Bull Sale, Wolf Creek, MT

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6 6 7 7 7 7 7 7 8 8 8 8 8 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 10 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 12 12 12 12 12 12

Bruns Angus at the farm, Madison, SD Gaaskjolen Gelbvieh Ranch Sale, Lemmon, SD Keller Broken Heart Simmental Bull Sale, Kist Livestock, Mandan, ND Bieber Red Angus “Bieber Fever” Sale at the ranch, Leola, SD Dave Fuoss Angus Ranch Sale at the ranch, Draper, SD Split Diamond Bull Sale, Dillon, MT Infinity Angus Bull Sale, Glasgow, MT Pasture View Angus Bull Sale, Valentine, NE Flesch Angus Bull Sale, Shelby, MT L Bar W / Sidwell Ranch Hereford Sale, Columbus, MT Mogck Angus Farm, Tripp Livestock, Tripp SD Heuftle HXC Red Angus Bull Sale, Cozad, NE Leland Red Angus Annual Production Sale at the ranch, Sidney, MT I-29 Bull Run Hereford Sale, Sioux Falls, SD Like It Like That Red Angus Bull Sale, Columbus, MT Fort Keogh Livestock Bull Sale, Miles City, MT Fast Angus/Strommen Angus, Dohrmann Cattle Co. Sale, Kist Livestock, Mandan, ND Lensegrav Hybrid Angus Bull Sale, Faith Livestock, Faith, SD North West ND Select Simmental Sale, Stanley, ND Rocky Knoll Cattle Co. Annual Bull Sale, Highmore, SD Nelson Angus Ranch Sale, at the ranch, Egeland, ND Cowboy Classic Angus Bull Sale, Buffalo, WY Wiesler Angus, Orient, SD, sale at Hub City Livestock Aberdeen, SD RBM Livesock Sale at the farm, Florence, SD Tegtmeier Polled Hereford Production Sale, Burchard, NE Schauer Angus Ranch, Faith Livestock, Faith, SD Watje-Zimmerman Charolais “Pounds for Profit” Bull Sale, Faith, SD Barstow Angus Sale at the ranch, Springview, NE Holden Herefords Sale, Valier, MT Pine Coulee Angus Bull Sale, at the Wagon Box Ranch, Hardin, MT LBS Angus Ranch Bull Sale, Sitting Bull Livestock, Williston, ND Feist Gelbvieh Bull Sale, Bowman, ND 7N Simmental Ranch Bull Sale, Medina, ND Veltkamp Angus Bull Sale, Manhattan, MT Wedel Red Angus Production Sale, Leoti, KS Styles Angus Inc. Bull Sale, at the farm, Brentford, SD Cooper Hereford Ranch Sale, Willow Creek, MT MacDonald Ranches Salers and Optimizer Bull Sale, Kist Livestock, Mandan, ND Trask & Peterson Angus Bull Sale, Philip Livestock Auction, Philip, SD

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


© Karoline Rose, KRose Marketing 13 Heart River Red Angus & Open A Angus Bull Sale at the ranch, Belfield, ND 13 Sitz Angus Spring Bull Sale, Dillon, MT 13 TC Reds/Weber Land & Cattle “Red Connection” Bull Sale, Madison, SD 13 Gumbo Hill Ranch Angus & Hybrid Bull Sale, Lemmon, SD 14 Evenson Angus Bull Sale, Lemmon Livestock, Lemmon, SD 14 Kearns Cattle Co. Annual Bull Sale, Rushville, NE 14 Wheeler Mountain Angus Bull Sale, Whitehall, MT 14 Strohschein Angus Bull Sale, Belle Fourche Livestock, Belle Fourche, SD 14 Effertz Key Ranch Bull Sale, Rugby Livestock, Rugby, ND 15 Montana Performance Bull Co-op/Basin Angus Ranch Sale, Columbus, MT 15 TD Angus Bull Sale, at Rishel Ranch, North Platte, NE 15 Zeisler Charolais Annual Bull Sale, Butte, NE 15 Starmark Cattle Co. Hereford Bull Sale, Worthing, SD 15 3C Christensen Ranch Production Sale at the ranch, Wessington, SD 15 Scherbenske Angus Ranch Bull and Female Sale, Mobridge Livestock, Mobridge, SD 15 Milk Creek Reds Red Angus Sale, at the ranch, Plevna, MT 16 Gray’s Angus Ranch Bull Sale at the ranch, Harrison, NE 16 White Angus Ranch & Raymond Lee Angus Bull Sale at, Bowman Livestock, Bowman, ND 16 Gardel’s Angus Bull Sale, Kearney, NE 16 Fred Ranch Charolais Bull & Heifer Sale, Burwell Livestock, Burwell, NE 16 Altenburg Super Baldy Bull Sale, Fort Collins, CO 17 Reppe Ranch Angus Bull Sale, Bradley, SD 18 Baxter Angus Farm Bull Sale, at the farm, Rockham, SD 18 Bridle Bit Simmental Bull Sale, Walsh, CO 18 Flatwater Gang Red Angus Bull Sale, One Box Convention Center, Broken Bow, NE 18 Van Beek Angus Bull Sale, Mobridge, SD 18 TLC Angus Bull Sale, Mandan, ND 19 Wulf Cattle Oportunity 2019 Bull Sale, at Sandy Ridge Ranch, Atkinson, NE 19 Nelson Red Angus Bull Sale, Philip Livestock, Philip, SD 19 S &V Livestock Angus Bull Sale, Gordon, NE 19 Green Mountain Red Angus Bull Sale, Three Forks, MT 19 Roberts Angus, Kist Livestock, Mandan, ND 19 TSN Simmental, Platte Livestock, Platte, SD

19 Open Gate Ranch Simmental Bull Sale, Simms, MT 20 Stevenson Angus Bull Sale, Hobson, MT 20 Wagonhammer Ranches Production Sale, Shamrock Livestock, O’Neill, NE 21 Malek Angus Ranch, Highwood, MT 21 Klompien Red Angus Bull Sale, Manhattan, MT 21 Vermilion Ranch Commercial Female Sale, Billings, MT 21 Schuler Red Angus Production Sale at the ranch, near Bridgeport, NE 22 Smith Angus Ranch Bull Sale, Bassett, NE 21 Lau Angus Sale, Corsica, SD

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

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TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS

283


Ag Events

nd Sales

&

e SHOWS 2019 Have an event coming up? March nd Fo (cont.) Call 877-347-9100 to list it here free–or email editorial@tsln-fre.com

ructio Mount 21 22 22 22 22 22 22 23 23 23 23 23 25 25 25 25 25 25 25 25 25

26 26 26 26

RLV Gelbvieh Bull Sale, Belle Fourche Livestock, Belle Fourche, SD Sellman Ranch Performance Bull Sale, Crawford, NE Schurrtop Angus & Charolais Bull Sale, Tri State Livestock, McCook, NE Lisco Angus/M Diamond Angus Bull Sale, Casper, WY Roth Angus Sale, Mitchell Livestock, Mitchell, SD Vermilion Ranch Bull Sale, Billings, MT Tom Varilek Angus Sale, Platte, SD Geyer Cattle Co. Annual Bull Sale, Magnes Livestock, Huron, SD Connealy Angus Ranch Bull Sale, at the ranch, Whitman, NE Lund’s B Bar Angus Bull Sale, Baker, MT Sinclair Cattle Company Bull Sale, Buffalo, WY Croissant Red Angus Bull Sale at the ranch, Briggsdale, CO Cole Creek Angus Bull Sale, Columbus, MT Feddes/C-T Red Angus Sale, Manhattan, MT Herbster Angus Farms Bull Sale, Falls City, NE Don Miller Angus Farms Bull Sale, Huron Continental Marketing, Huron, SD Larson Ranch Angus Sale, Forsyth, MT Rhodes Red Angus Ranch Sale, at the ranch, Faulkton, SD Leachman of Colorado Bull Sale, Fort Collins, CO Weber Red Angus & Charolais Sale, at the ranch, Lake Andes, SD Hager Cattle Co. Limousin Bull Sale, Kist Livestock, Mandan, ND

26 26 27 27 27 27 27 27 28 28 28 29 29 30 30 30

C - B Charolais Production Sale, Montpelier, ND Schmidt Angus Ranch Bull Sale, Dickinson, ND Hall Stock Farm Bull Sale, at the ranch, Berthold, ND Lodoen Cattle Co. L83 Ranch Red Angus Bull Sale, Kist Livestock, Mandan, ND Fischer Red Angus Annual Spring Fling, Harlowton, MT Littau Angus Ranch, at the ranch, Carter, SD McCumber Angus Ranch Sale, at the ranch, Rolette, ND Nebraska Angus Bull Test Sale, Broken Bow, NE Randy Schmidt Charolais Bull Sale, Sheridan Livestock, Rushville, NE NJW Polled Herefords Bull Sale, Sheridan, WY Rossow Angus Ranch Sale, at the ranch, Herreid, SD Westphal Red Angus, Grass Range, MT Hurlbut Cattle Co. Bull Sale, Glacial Lakes Livestock, Watertown, SD Glasoe Angus Ranch Sale, Williston, ND Gartner-Denowh Angus Bull Sale, Sidney, MT Pieper Red Angus Spring Bull Sale, at the ranch, Hay Springs, NE Wilson Ranch Bull Sale, St. Onge, SD Lehrkamp Livestock Bull Sale, at the ranch, Caputa, SD Zender/Waage Annual Charolais Bull Sale, Greenbush, MN Pfaff Angus and Ernst Herefords Bull Sale, O’Neill, NE

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ACK ANGUS BULLS YEARLING RLING BULLS With pride and confidence we are selling registered yearling bulls. We have raised registered Angus Cattle since 1976. confidence we are selling registered yearling bulls. raised registered Angus Cattle since 1976.

ty l y to bull

February 13th 2016 uary 13th 2016 BULL SALE Base Price eaty 1PM AT THE RANCH Private Trual Sale Eq to (Volume Discounts) ity Base Opportun ry bullPrice eve February 11th, 2019 bid on

ALL BULLS IN THIS SALE HAVE BEEN (Volume Discounts) ZOETIS HD 50K TESTED

ALL BULLS IN THIS SALE HAVE traits BEEN using more than 50,000 DNA markers, providing ZOETIS HD 50K TESTED the most reliable genomic preictions today. The new HD 50K for Angus provides MVP’s on the 16

Sale The new Starting HD 50K for Angus provides MVP’s on the 16

traits using more than 50,000 DNA markers, providing the most reliable genomic preictions today.

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THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

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Quaker Hill Manning

Reg. #17918412

QuakerBaldridge Hill Manning, DL Sonic J. Edgar Waylon W34 -444, KFC Transformer, Bennett Absolute, SitzHoover, UpwardOutright, Blaster, Wilkinson Waylon Wilkinson Ranch Gameday Sons Mark, Bill & Dan Wilkinson ading Wilkinson Ranch Sires, and theseRanch A.I. Sires with Sons, carcass Mark: cell 203-0380 • Bulls can be kept free at the ranch until May 1st genetics and finishing ability a must. Bill: (605) 847-4102 or cell 203-0379 • Pay you pick up your bulls e Waylon W34 - KFC Bennett Absolute, Sitzwhen Upward Dan: cell 203-0378 • Registration papers available on Mark, request Bill & Dan Wilkinson season Mark: cell 203-0380 • All will be Semen andbe Guaranteed for one breeding • AllTested bulls will semen tested THANKS FOR YOUR BUSINESS Bulls can be kept free at bulls the ranch until May 1st Bill: (605) 847-4102 or cell 203-0379 • Pay SD-2032682R when you pick up your bulls Dan: cell 203-0378 • Registration papers available on request be Semen Tested and Guaranteed for one breeding season THANKS FOR YOUR BUSINESS

Sons leading rm from De Smet, SDSelling – 8 miles west,of 3 miles southWilkinson on 425th Ranch Sires, and these A.I. Sires with carcass genetics and finishing ability a must. h Street. Quality doesn’t cost - it pays. Bulls fed on a growing ration, not a fat cattle ration. Quality doesn’t cost - it pays. Bulls fed on a growing ration, not a fat cattle ration.

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1 1 1 2 2 2 3 3 3 4 4 4 4

Curt Miller Angus Sale, Presho Livestock, Presho, SD Gollaher Angus Bull Sale, Cascade, MT Windmill Angus Ranch Bull Sale, at the ranch, Haigler, NE WEBO Angus Bull Sale, Lusk, WY Daigger-Orr Angus Bull Sale, North Platte, NE Hinman Angus Bull Sale, Malta, MT TK Angus Spring Prodution Sale, at the ranch, Valentine, NE Nissen Angus Bull Sale, Chinook, MT Schelske Angus Sale, Magness Livestock, Huron, SD A & B Cattle Co. Bull Sale, at the ranch, Bassett, NE Fox Angus Farms Sale, SD Livestock Barn, Watertown SD Arntzen Angus Bull Sale, Hilger, MT Bar 69 Ranch Craig & Deb Kukuchka Belle Fourche Livestock, Belle Fourche, SD 4 Bowles J5 Red Angus Bull Sale, Glasgow, MT 4-5 Midland Bull Test Angus Sale, Columbus, MT 5 Kammerer Livestock Annual Bull Sale, St. Onge, SD 5 SDSU Annual Bull Sale, Cow-Calf Center, Brookings, SD 5 Dethlefs Angus Ranch Bull Sale, Loup City, NE 5 Brozik Angus Bull & Female Sale, Winner Livestock, Winner, SD 5 Roster Charolais Bull Sale, Mitchell Livestock, Mitchell, SD 6 Brooks Chalky Butte Angus Ranch Sale, Bowman Livestock, Bowman, ND 6 DeBrucker Charolais Annual Sale, Western Livestock, Great Falls, MT 6 Kraye Angus Bull Sale, Mullen, NE 6 Reisig Cattle Company Bull Sale, Hardin, MT 6 Spear J Red Angus Sale, Jordan, MT 7 Albrecht Angus Bull Sale, North Platte, NE 8 Bakers LEMAR Angus Ranch Sale, St Onge Livestock, St Onge, SD 8 Eggleston Charolais 29th Annual Bull & Female Sale at Bales CCC, Huron, SD 8 Calvo Family Red Angus Sale at the ranch, Bassett, NE 8 Nelson Livestock Simmental and SimAngus Bull Sale, Fallon County Fairgrounds, Baker, MT 9 Oakwater Ranch Charolais Bull Sale, Valentine, NE 9 Thomas Ranch Sale at the ranch, Harrold SD 9 Beckton Red Angus Bull Sale, Sheridan, WY 10 Pass Creek Angus Bull Sale, at the ranch, Wyola, MT 10 Bar JV Angus Ranch Bull Sale, Fairview, MT 10 Dybdal Charolais Annual Bull & Female Sale, Laurel Livestock Sales, Laurel, NE 10 Wiesbeck Red Angus Bull Sale at Herried Livestock, Herried, SD 11 Sonderup Charolais Ranch Annual Bull Sale, at the ranch, Fullerton,NE 11 Montana’s Northern Premier Angus Sale, Chinook, MT

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TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS

11 Reich Charolais Bull Sale, Belle Fourche Livestock, Belle Fourche, SD 12 5 L Red Angus “Right for the Times” Spring Production Sale, at the ranch, Sheridan, MT 12 Red Western Red Angus Bull Sale at Crawford Livestock, Crawford, NE 12 Regency Acres Bull Sale, Sidney, MT 13 Rambur Charolais & Angus Annual Bull Sale at the ranch, Sidney, MT 13 Thorsten Hereford & Angus Sale, at the ranch, Selby, SD 13 Hebbert Charolais Annual Bull Sale at the ranch, Hyannis, NE 13 Sonstegard Red Angus Spring Bull Sale at the farm, Montevideo, MN 13 Prairie View Farm Charolais Bull Sale, Platte Livestock, Platte, SD 13 Montgomery Ranch Angus / Hansen Cattle Co. Bull Sale, Carrington, ND 13 Ludvigson Stock Farms Spring Bull Sale, Billings, MT 15 Jorgenson Angus Farm Bull Sale, Winner Livestock, Winner, SD 16 Cottonwood Angus Bull Sale, Philip Livestock, Philip, SD 16 Treasure Test Bull Sale, Great Falls, MT 17 Schaak Ranch Bull Sale, at the ranch, Wall, SD 18 Big Dry Angus, Glasgow, MT 19 Pine Creek Angus Ranch 100th Anniversary Sale, Faith Livestock, Faith, SD 19 DeGrand Angus Annual Bull Sale, Baker, MT 19 Bartling Herefords Bull Sale, Burke, SD 19 Morgan Ranch Hereford Bull Sale, Burwell, NE 20 Lindskov-Thiel Ranch Charolais and Angus Bull Sale at the Ranch, Isabel, SD 20 Stuber Ranch Herefords Sale, at the ranch, Bowman, ND 20 Feiring Angus Ranch Bull Sale, at the ranch, White Earth, ND 22 North Dakota Angus Association Bull Test Sale, Stockmen’s Livestock, Dickinson, ND 22 Sunrise Angus Bull Sale, Faith Livestock Commission Co., Faith, SD 23 Rafter U Cross Ranch Angus Sale at Philip Livestock, Philip, SD 23 Currant Creek Angus Bull Sale, Miles City, MT 23 Vollmer Angus Ranch Sale, at the ranch, Wing, ND 24 Opp Angus Bull Sale at Stockman’s Livestock, Dickinson, ND 24 Wedge Tent Angus Ranch Bull Sale, Faith Livestock Auction, Faith, SD 25 North Country Better Beef Bulls, Glasgow, MT 25 Mangen Angus Ranch Bull Sale, Belle Fourche Livestock, Belle Fourche, SD 25 Prairie Pride Angus Bull Sale, Jamestown Livestock, Jamestown ND 26 Medicine Rock Angus Bull Sale, Bowman, ND 26 Kuhn/Crosshair/Huber “Putting the Puzzle Together” Red Angus Sale, Napoleon Livestock, Napoleon, ND 27 Wienk Charolais Annual Bull Sale, at the ranch, Lake Preston, SD 27 Wicks Angus, Carpenter, SD 29 Ma & Pa Angus Sale, Presho Livestock, Presho, SD

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


1 2 3 6 7 9 10

McDonnell Angus Bull Sale, Bowman, ND Kopriva Angus Sale, at the ranch, Raymond, SD Paint Rock Angus Spring Bull Sale, at the ranch, Hyattville, WY Spickler Ranch South Angus Bull Sale, at the ranch, Glenfield, ND Philip Livestock “Bull Day” All Breeds Bull Sale, Philip, SD Koeneg Red Angus Bull Sale, Glasgow, MT Duppong’s Willow Creek Farms, at the farm, Glen Ullin, ND

© Karoline Rose, KRose Marketing

May

11 12 13 18

Cody Wild West Days Horse Sale, Cody, WY Southwest Select Horse Sale, Bowman Livestock, Bowman, ND Wendel Livestock Bull Sale, LaMoure, ND Diamond J Angus Last Chance Turn Out Bull and Female Sale, at the ranch, Mandan, ND 19 Heuchert’s Willow Creek Angus Bull Sale, Hensel, ND

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TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS

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THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK NEWS

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Sires include:

Basin Payweight 1682, PA Valor 201, Connealy Confidence, Raven Powerball 53, Sitz Superior 10971, Musgrave Aviator 542, Connealy Gold Rush 026E, KM Broken Bow 002, & EF Commando 1366

Selling flush brothers

Selling 5 full brothers to the Sitz owned sire Powerball. Powerball was purchased by Sitz Angus in our 2014 sale and went on to have great success in our program along with Sitz’s. In Sitz’s past spring sale the Powerball sons averaged over $10,000. We calved the first Powerball daughters this spring and we couldn’t be happier with them. They have the real broodcow look, moderate, deep ribbed and perfect uddered. These 5 flush brothers are coming 2-year-olds and have the look!!

Selling 5 flush brothers to Raven Powerball 53 that are sired by PA Power Tool 9108. Also selling three bothers by MAR Innovation.

4241 is the dam of Raven Powerball 53. Her Production: 4/101 BR, 4/108 NR, 25/110 IMF, 25/103 REA

Selling sons by Payweight 1682, Powerball, and Cowboy Up.

1249 has left her mark heavily at Raven Angus. She had the top two selling bulls on the 2018 sale and the 2014 sale. One of the pick of the heifers was by her also. Dam’s Production 3/94 BR, 3/107 NR, 45/104 IMF, 45/100 REA

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: 290

www.RavenAngus.com

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THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019


61satl Annu Sale

BULL & FEMALE SALE

e H r e h f c o s r u ds a since 1946 R

Monday, February 18, 2019 - 1pm CST

Offering: 150 Bulls - (100 2-year olds & 50 Yearlings) 250 Heifers - (Reg. and Commercial)

All sale bulls are indexed for best use on Black & Red Cows • Several new bloodlines in the offering

Performance at the top of the Breed

Lot 57

R On Target 7237

Sire/MGS: On Target 936

RN 43814736

Dam: Revolution 2767

Lot 66

R Spartan 5147

Sire/MGS: UPS Spartan 2864

Rely on a Rausch Bull in your next Breeding Season.

Videos of all sale animals at

RN 43814524

Dam: SHF York Y02

Volume selection of Horned & Polled genetics

www.RauschHerefords.com

14831 Hereford Rd. • Hoven, SD 57450 Shannon & Sue: 605-948-2157 Joel, Vern & Sharon: 605-948-2375 Jerry & Vicki: 605-948-2146 38

Call or email for a catalog rauschherf@RauschHerefords.com

Rausch Cow herd has topped the Hereford breed’s Dams of Distinction List again. Over 800 Rausch Dams have qualified for the list.

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For 5 generations, Herefords have been synonymous with the Carmichael name

50th Annual Proven Genetics Sale SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2019 At the ranch, Meadow, SD

15 Yearling Bulls • 60 Two Year Old Bulls

CL1 Domino 420B 1ET CED 3.5 BW 2.2 WW 61 YW 97 Milk 18 Cooper’s top-seller in 2015 Sale. Sired Holden’s top selling bull in 2017. Owned with Cooper Herefords and Holden Herefords.

HH ADVANCE 2008Z ET BW 0.6 WW 65 YW 105 M 36 M&G 68 11-Trait EPD Leader Only bull in the Hereford breed to be a trait leader in CED, BW, WW, YW, MM, M&G and SC

plus a trait leader in CEM%, Fat and Marb. Selling Several Sons Feb. 16

See videos & catalog online at www.TheLivestockLink.com or CarmichaelHerefords.com Find us on Facebook

Carmichael Herefords

14111 SD Hwy 73, Meadow, SD 57644

WWW.CARMICHAELHEREFORDS.COM

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Keith Carmichael Home: (605) 788-2962 Cell: (605) 490-7659

THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

Bryan Carmichael Home: (605) 788-2831 Cell: (605) 490-8685


Custom Collection Facility

For All Your Bovine & Equine Reproductive Needs

We are a professional genetics and artificial insemination business located in the beautiful Black Hills of South Dakota. Conveniently located between Rapid City and Sturgis off the service road north of Piedmont. We offer a WORLD CLASS FACILITY and the highest level of Customer service for livestock customers. Our experience with cattle and horse genetics and breeding programs can give you the dominant edge!

Some of the Services Avaliable for our Cattle & Horse Customers • CUSTOM SEMEN COLLECTION • EVALUATION & PROCESSING • ARTIFICAL INSEMINATION

• EMBRYO FLUSH & TRANSFER • SEMEN STORAGE & SHIPPING • INDIVIDUAL ANIMAL CARE

Consulting Veterinarians Dr. James Myers, Bovine • Dr. W.J. Hines, Bovine Embryo • Sturgis Veterinary Hospital, Equine

Ty Hendrix - General Manager 605-787-4808 • Fax: 605-787-7127 13171 High Plains Place, Piedmont, SD 57769 Email: hpg@high-plainsgenetics.com

Visit our website for details:

www.high-plainsgenetics.com THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

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JC HEIKEN ANGUS & SONS 12th Annual Production Sale - February 26, 2019 Miles City Livestock Commission, Miles City Montana

S.AAA#Chisum 255 17298481

Sitz Asset 402C AAA # 18220552

Logo ranks #1 in the breed for heifer pregancy (HP)!

Also featuring sons of: Sitz Top Seed 539X SAV Resource 1441 HA Cowboy Up Connealy Classic 639 Sitz Investment 689b

SITZ LOGO 12964 AAA # 17746620

Call or visit the ranch anytime to find out more about our exciting program

John (406)855-7839 Brian (406)861-3151 Ben (406)860-7331 Joe (406)861-1020 www.JCHeikenAngusAndSons.com 294

Semen available on all herd sires. Call for more information! THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

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BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

21 ANGUS RANCH ..................................................... 10 3C CHRISTENSEN RANCH ....................................300 ALLTECH SOUTH DAKOTA .................................... 51 AMERICAN GELBVIEH ASSOC ...........................141 APEX CATTLE............................................................112 APT TECHNOLOGIES .............................................171 ASSMAN IMPLEMENT ...........................................235 BAKERS LEMAR ANGUS RANCH ........................... 2 BAR 69 RANCH ........................................................... 15 BARENTHSEN/BULLINGER RED ANGUS ........167 BARSTOW-ROCK CREEK ANGUS .......................165 BARTOS ANGUS .......................................................183 BAXTER ANGUS FARM ..........................................224 BENDA RANCH SIMMENTALS ............................272 BIEBER RED ANGUS ................................................... 8 BLACK HILLS STOCK SHOW................................... 77 BLAIR BROTHERS ANGUS ....................................250 BOBCAT ANGUS ........................................................ 11 BOEHRINGER INGELHEIM...................................100 BOOTH CHERRY CREEK RANCH .......................175 BRIDGER STEEL ......................................................... 13 BROKEN HEART RANCH ........................................ 89 BROOKS CHALKY BUTTE RANCH ....................273 BRUNER ANGUS RANCH ......................................256 BUFFALO LIVESTOCK AUCTION .......................239 BUTTE CO EQUIPMENT ........................................138 CALLICRATE..............................................................135 CAMMACK RANCH SUPPLY ................................101 CARGILL ANIMAL NUTRITION .........................160 CARMICHAEL HEREFORDS .................................292 CATL RESOURCES ..................................................... 95 CHAPMAN CATTLE COMPANY ..........................187 CHEYENNE CHAROLAIS .......................................139 CHS NUTRITION ......................................................126 CK CATTLE ................................................................299 CLASSIC ANGUS ........................................................ 21 COWBOY CLASSIC ..................................................262 CROSS FIVE CATTLE COOLERS, LLC. ................. 93 CURT MILLER ANGUS ............................................... 6 CRYSTALYX................................................................... 97 D7 RANCH SUPPLY ................................................... 60 DATAMARS.................................................................113 DEEP CREEK ANGUS ..............................................301 DETHLEFS & SONS ANGUS ..................................277 DIAMOND J ANGUS ................................................193 DOLL RANCH ............................................................295 296

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Advertiser Index DUBAS EQUIPMENT CO. ........................................ 65 DUSTIN CARTER ......................................................173 DVORAK HEREFORD RANCH .............................166 EIDE BAILLY LLC .....................................................266 EKSTRUM SIMMENTAL .........................................237 ELLINGSON ANGUS ................................................226 ESTROTECT................................................................177 FARM CREDIT SERVICES.......................................... 37 FAY RANCHES, INC. ................................................189 FMG FEED & SEED ...................................................181 FREY ANGUS .............................................................202 FRONTIER STOCKYARDS INC .............................244 GENEX COOPERATIVE, INC ................................201 GILL RED ANGUS ........................................................ 3 GRAYS ANGUS RANCH ..........................................198 GROSSENBURG IMPLEMENT ..............................268 HARTMAN CATTLE CO .........................................128 HEART CITY BULL BASH ........................................ 46 HEBBERT CHAROLAIS BULLS .............................256 HELBLING HEREFORDS ........................................209 HEWITT LAND COMPANY ...................................269 HIGH PLAINS GENETICS ......................................293 HOFFMAN RANCH .................................................203 HONEYMAN CHAROLAIS .....................................211 HUTCHISON WESTERN .......................................... 40 JAMISON HEREFORDS & QUARTER HORSES .......289 JASON BARTELS .......................................................173 JAUER DEPENDABLE GENETIC ..........................235 JC HEIKEN ANGUS ..................................................296 JENNER EQUIPMENT .....................................144-145 JINDRA ANGUS .......................................................... 12 JOSEPH ANGUS ........................................................215 JUSTIN DIKOFF - DVAUCTION............................194 K R RAUCH CO. ........................................................114 KELLER BROKEN HEART RANCH ......................127 KENNEDY IMPLEMENT ................................196-197 KOUPAL ANGUS .......................................................267 KRAYE ANGUS ..........................................................268 KREBS RANCH ..........................................................304 KYLE SHOBE ..............................................................281 L BAR W CATTLE CO. .............................................249 LAZY JB ANGUS .......................................................261 LEHRKAMP LIVESTOCK .......................................220 LELAND RED ANGUS .............................................129 LIENEMANN MANAGEMENT PRODUCTIONS, LLC. ................................................ 46

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What ranchers read.

LINDSKOV IMPLEMENT ......................................... 52 LIQUID PLUS FEEDS ...............................................280 LITTAU ANGUS RANCH ........................................163 LIVESTOCK MARKET DIRECTORY............154-155 LOGTERMAN FAMILY RANCH ...........................255 LONE TREE RED ANGUS .......................................246 LUCKY 7 ANGUS .................................................. 18-19 LYNN WEISHAAR ...................................................... 28 MACDONALD RANCHES ......................................174 MAHER ANGUS RANCH .......................................287 MARTIN RANCH .......................................................... 1 MASON & MORSE ...................................................... 42 MATHIS IMPLEMENT ............................................135 MATT LOWERY ........................................................170 MCCUMBER ANGUS RANCH ..............................303 MEDICINE ROCK RANCH ....................................223 MELROE FARM............................................................ 30 MEYERINK FARM SERVICE .................................... 83 MH EQUIPMENT & TRUCK REPAIR INC. .......... 27 MILK CREEK REDS ..................................................243 MILLAR ANGUS ........................................................... 5 MIX 30...........................................................................216 MOHNEN ANGUS ....................................................228 MONTANA RED ANGUS ASSOC ........................... 41 MOUNT RUSHMORE ANGUS .................................. 4 MRNAK HEREFORDS RANCH .............................273 NEOGEN ....................................................................... 88 NUTRALIX ................................................................... 93 ORIGEN INC ..............................................................151 ORWIG’S TUBS, INC. ................................................. 29 OSTRAND ANGUS...................................................... 75 PASS CREEK ANGUS RANCH ...............................186 PAYNEWEST INSURANCE .....................................272 PENNY NEWMAN/COWBOS ................................. 64 PHARMCO...................................................................106 PIEPER RED ANGUS .................................................... 9 POPPE CATTLE COMPANY .................................... 53 POSS ANGUS ..............................................................229 POWDER RIVER ANGUS .......................................248 POWDER RIVER LIVESTOCK EQUIPMENT ...... 74 PRAIRIE FEED & TRUCKING ................................. 31 PRO EARTH ANIMAL HEALTH ...........................263 QUALITY LIQUID FEEDS, INC. ............................265 R LAZY B CHAROLAIS ............................................224 RANCHERS LIVESTOCK EQUIPMENT ............... 60 RAUSCH HEREFORD ..............................................293

RAVEN ANGUS RANCH .........................................290 RBM LIVESTOCK .....................................................217 REICH CHAROLAIS ............. INSIDE BACK COVER REISIG CATTLE .........................................................214 REYES & RUSSELL ....................................................188 RIDDER HEREFORD RANCH ...............................172 RIDL ANGUS ..............................................................162 ROWDY BENSON ....................................................... 72 SAFETY ZONE CALF CATCHERS, LLC ................ 86 SANDMEIER CHAROLAIS .....................................227 SCHAFF ANGUS VALLEY ........................................... 7 SCHAUER ANGUS ....................................................298 SCHIEFELBEIN ANGUS ...................................... 98-99 SD ANGUS ASSOCIATION ................................. 64-65 SD RED ANGUS ASSOCIATION ............................. 20 SD SIMMENTAL ASSOC .........................................199 SELECT SIRES INC ..................................................... 43 SELLMAN RANCH ...................................................115 SETH WEISHAAR .....................................................122 SINCLAIR CATTLE COMPANY ....... BACK COVER SLETTEN ANGUS .....................................................251 SMITH’S SADDLE BUTTE RANCH ......................194 SODAK ANGUS RANCH .........................................140 SONSTEGARD CATTLE CO ...................................279 SOREIDE CHAROLAIS RANCH .............................. 87 SOUTH CENTRAL LIVESTOCK SUPPLY ...........284 SPEAR U ANGUS ......................................................288 STUART CONCRETE ...............................................244 TIPPMANN INDUSTRIAL.............................. 147, 210 THOMAS RANCH .....................................................152 THORSTENSON GELBVIEH & ANGUS ..............270 TOKACH ANGUS RANCH .....................................176 TOPP ANGUS .............................................................283 TOPP HEREFORDS .................................................... 76 TRANS OVA GENETICS ..........................................225 TRI-STATE LIVESTOCK................. 164, 166, 202, 285 UPSTREAM RANCH ................................................238 WEBER LAND & CATTLE ......................................239 WEDGE TENT RANCH ...........................................162 WERNING CATTLE CO ..........................................153 WESTERN SIRE SERVICES .....................................302 WIENK CHAROLAIS ........ INSIDE FRONT COVER WILKINSON RANCH ..............................................285 WILLRODT MOTOR ................................................284 WINDY CREEK CATTLE CO. .................................. 30

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“Cow herd known for outstanding maternal traits”

It’s all about the cows: Rosetta 9270 of Mc Cumber #16464978

Lassie 0101 of Mc Cumber #16684218

As a breeder we all have access to basically the same bulls to use, but what truly makes the difference is the cow herd. We have focused on breeding a cow herd that is stacked with generations of females that have proven themselves to be fertile, productive, and long lasting. We believe our cow herd makes the difference, and the bulls we produce are not only bred to consistently sire females that are functional, problem free, fertile, and possess the ability to sire the performance and carcass quality to satisfy all segments of the industry. Our focus has been the same for 55 years and 3 generations in the Angus business; keeping function in the cow herd, with the ability to adapt and be profitable for our customers. It is the cow herd that makes the difference.

Miss Wix 2002 of Mc Cumber #17338580

Miss Wix 8225 of Mc Cumber #16102266

Annual Bull Sale: March 27, 2019 Selling: Approximately 140 yearling bulls and 40 yearling heifers and 20 commercial heifers! This offering represents 55 years breeding Angus Cattle Miss Wix 2012 of Mc Cumber #17338588

Lassie 935 of Mc Cumber #16464987 The dam of two ET sons sired by Mc Cumber Steadfast 635. They will sell in 2019. Lassie 935 of Mc Cumber has produced many herd sires in the past and is also the dam of Lassie 113 of Mc Cumber.

Mc Cumber Titanium 5005 #18233036

Rosetta 9181 of Mc Cumber #16464914.

Lassie 113 of Mc Cumber # 16980799 The dam of Mc Cumber 5005 Titanium 8154, a herd bull prospect, who sells in 2019, sired by Mc Cumber Titanium 5005. 113 is also the dam of lot 1 and our high selling bull in 2018, Mc Cumber Tribute 702.

Mc Cumber Titanium 3127 #17572789

Miss Wix 2003 of Mc Cumber #17338581 The dam of Mc Cumber Armor 7148, who sold as Lot 2 and 2nd high selling bull in 2018. She is also the dam of Mc Cumber Steadfast 635 who sold in 2017 and his rst calves sell in our 2019 sale. 2003 is the dam of Mc Cumber 5005 Titanium 8177, whom will sell in 2019.

Mc Cumber Steadfast 635 #18532396

OCC Unmistakable 946U #16294218

Mc Cumber Angus Ranch 8675 37th Ave, Rolette, ND 58366 Chuck: 701/246-3366 or 701/871-9800 www.mccumberangus.com | email: mccumber@utma.com Matt: 701/246-3847 or 701/871-1072 THE CATTLE JOURNAL BEEF & BUSINESS 2019

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39th Annual

KREBS RANCH BULL SALE Thursday February 21st, 2019 | At the Ranch, Gordon, Nebraska

300 Bulls That Will Sire Thicker-Butted, Faster-Growing Calves with More Eye Appeal! Angus and Sim x Angus - Spring Yearlings and Fall 18-Month old Bulls

Think Quality. Think Krebs. Genetics from these KR Sires will sell!

TEF Outside

CED +3

BW +2.9

WW +84

YW +153

RBM Step Ahead

# 18236795

Milk CW MARB RE $W $B +24 +63 -.08 +.87 +70.48 +144.21

• One of the best new sires in our program • He’s doing everything right…maternal, growth, and elite eye appeal • Fresh, new genetics with outcross bloodlines

Panther Cr Incredible

BW +2.8

WW +74

YW +149

Milk CW MARB RE $W $B +23 +70 +.54 +.62 +60.65 +195.60

• Dominant performance…on paper and in person • Superior muscle and gain with leading carcass • Fresh, new genetics with outcross bloodlines

7/S Splash

# 18672855

CED -1

# 18336337

# 18277408

Krebs Ranch 1780 690 Road Gordon, NE. 69343

Call today for a catalog 308-282-2021 Eldon Krebs: 308-360-1949 CED +6

BW +.7

WW +98

YW +170

Milk CW MARB RE $W $B +22 +64 +.43 +.50 +92.39 +170.44

• Unmatched EPD Spread from birth to weaning • Calving ease plus growth and performance with extra look • Fresh, new genetics with outcross bloodlines

Milk CW MARB RE $W $B +30 +63 +.31 +.81 +68.20 +170.70

Jake Scott: 308-360-3223

• Exceptional quality…style and eye appeal • Thick ended and wide made with added muscle and bone • Fresh, new genetics with outcross bloodlines

Ty Krebs: 308-360-1972

CED +6

BW +1.9

WW +63

YW +118

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PRACTICAL • PREDICTABLE • PROVEN

need a more

direct path to profit?

We are here to help!

$ FOCUSED BREEDING PROGRAM

Do you

? SHINY THING SHINY THING

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ARRIVE ALIVE CALVING EASE HERD BUILDER SALE March 23, 2019 • Buffalo, Wyoming CONTACT LOGAN BAKER FOR MORE INFORMATION.

307-254-1477 or 1-800-761-2077 or email: sinclaircattle@gmail.com Duncan Smith, Owner • Logan Baker, Manager www. sinclaircattle.com Original N-Bar Genetics Working For You

Staying true to the Legacy

Reliable genetic packages result from our planned, multi-generational breeding program, which focuses on the use of proven genetics to produce a fertile cow, get a live calf on the ground and quality carcass with optimum growth.


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