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LivestockDigest
LivestockJUNE 15, 2011 • www. aaalivestock . com Volume 53 • No. 6
“The greatest homage we can pay to truth is to use it.”
– JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL
NEWSPAPER
PRIO
RIT
Y H
AN
DLI
NG
b y L E E P I T T S
MARKET
DigestRiding Herd
by Lee Pitts
The American rancher hadto be forced into the chairat the beauty salon with awild rag stuffed in his
mouth and a pair of hobbles onhis ankles so he couldn’t runaway, but the career bureaucratsand professional meeting-goerswere finally successful in com-pleting the makeover. It wasexpensive and they had to be realsneaky about it, but those per-forming the makeover have final-ly managed to change two of themost iconic figures in ournation’s colorful history, thecowboy and the cattleman, into“stakeholders” and “producers.”There’s just one BIG problem
with this makeover: the Ameri-can consumer doesn’t want tobuy her beef from a “stakehold-er,” or even a “producer.” No,according to market researcherMary Love Quinlan, they wanttheir beef from a “rancher,” oreven better yet, from a “farmer.”Ms. Quinlan found that
women make up to 93 percent offood purchases and they don’t likewords such as “feed additive” onthe package. They hate hormonesand the title “cattle feeder” turnsthem off. In fact, they don’t likeindustrialized agriculture verymuch at all. So why is the NCBAtrying to change today’s rancherinto exactly that kind of “stake-holder” that the consumer doesn’twant to do business with?
the Soybean Association, GrainsCouncil Poultry & Egg, severalstate soybean associations, theNational Pork Producers Coun-cil and other checkoff groups.Although these organizations saythey have different viewpoints onsome issues, they have this incommon: they’re all cheerleadersfor the kind of industrializedagriculture the consumer doesn’ttrust.As critics of factory farms,
genetically modified seeds, hot-
house hogs, downer cows andhormone fed steers appear onthe daytime TV shows and bookbestseller lists, those pushingindustrialized ag realized thatthey’re losing the public relationswar. In other words, they need amakeover. How ironic then that the
group that changed ranchers intostakeholders and producers,chose the trusted words “farmer”and “rancher” when they wentlooking for their own new name.But instead of looking for alter-natives to hormones, GMO’s,10,00-head dairies, lake-sizemanure lagoons and other thingsthe consumer doesn’t want herfood associated with, theUSFRA wants to continue to doall those things while hidingbehind the good name andimage of the American farmerand rancher.Members of USFRA say they
want to build trust in our current
Makeup and MirrorsWe warned you about the
merger of the NCA with thecheckoff and all the bad thingsthat could happen as a result(those things are now happen-ing) so let us now warn youabout a group called the USFarmers & Ranchers Alliance(USFRA). This group is com-posed of 33 organizations suchas the National Corn GrowersAssociation, American FarmBureau, NCBA, National Milk,
Cowboy Makeover
by KAREN BUDD-FALEN
The American public has been asking forlegislative reform of a system that paystaxpayer dollars to environmental “non-profit” attorneys who charge $650 per
hour to bring cases for statutory procedural vio-lations, and we finally have it. On May 25,2011, H.R. 1996, the Governmental LitigationSavings Act of 2011, was introduced to stop thedeficit bleeding and level the playing field for allwho seek to sue or need a permit from the fed-eral government. But the simple introduction ofthis bill in the U.S. House of Representatives isnot enough and we need your help. This bill has18 sponsors, but needs many more and we needto get Congress to hold hearings to learn thetrue extent of the abuse. This is a call to actionand a request for your help.The Governmental Litigation Savings Act of
2011 (“GLSA”) has five major sections. First, this Act eliminates the false distinction
in net worth between a “for profit” organizationand a “nonprofit public interest” organization.Currently, under the Equal Access to Justice
Act (“EAJA”), a for profit entity or person witha net worth over $7,000,000 is ineligible torecover attorney fees for litigation against thefederal government. However, an entity that
“Live a good, honorable life. Then when you
get older and think back, you'll
enjoy it a second time.”
continued on page seven
Now the real work begins — Reform of excessive litigation pay-outs
www.LeePittsbooks.com
Inspired
I’ve always wanted todeliver a commence-ment address, no, not tocollege or even high
school graduates becausethere is nothing I could tellthem that they don’talready think they know. I’dlike to address someonemore on my intellectual lev-el, like a class of graduatingsixth graders. Here’s whatI’d say to them. I promise to make this
short if you’ll just put downyour cell phones and stoptweeting, texting and Face-booking long enough to lis-ten. I really have only onething to tell you that I wishsomeone would have toldme when I was your ageand it is simply this: findsomething to be inspiredby. Every day.The world doesn’t need
any more greed, egotisticalcelebrities or even ambi-tion. No, what the world issadly lacking today is inspi-ration. It is the number onecause of greatness and isthe secret to a rewardingand happy life. My advice to you: Find
those things in life that makeyou tingle all over. Perhaps Iinspire too easily and I can’treally describe the feeling,but you know what I’m talk-ing about. It’s whateverturns you on or gets yougoing in the morning. AndI’m not talking about caf-feine, drugs, nicotine oralcohol. That’s adrenalin, notinspiration. Whatever you dowhile under their influenceyou can do ten times betterwithout them. There is inspiration all
around us and you may findyour daily dose in a song,photo, painting, beautifulflower, newborn foal, agreat bronc ride or a gradu-ation speech. Whatever it isthat makes you want totackle the world, do greatthings and live a life ofgoodness.I’m not about to suggest
what you should be inspiredby because, thankfully, it’sdifferent for everyone. Forexample, I was inspired tobe a writer by a sportswriternamed Jim Murray and acolumnist named ErmaBombeck. But you probablyhave never heard of either
has been determined to be “nonprofit” is notbound by this restriction.Thus, even though tax documents show a
great many environmental and animal rightsgroups are worth far in excess of $7,000,000,these groups can “recover” attorney fees forsuing the federal government. In other words,these “non-profit” groups get paid by the Amer-ican taxpayers to sue the federal governmentwhich results in families losing their homes andbusinesses.Under the existing EAJA, groups like the
Sierra Club, who reported its worth as$56,527,055 in 2007 can receive tax payermoney to sue the federal government, but acompany with the same net worth cannot. Sim-ilarly, if the compensation package for the Pres-ident of the Natural Resources Defense Coun-cil is $432,959.00, do they really need theAmerican citizens funding their litigationagains against the American government?Second, the GLSA places a cap on both the
hourly fees that attorneys can charge and onthe amount of money that can be awarded toan individual group in a year. Under theGLSA, the hourly fees charged by attorneys iscapped at $175 per hour and that cap can only
continued on page three
continued on page two
Page 2 Livestock Market Digest June 15, 2011
food system and to be successfuland have a bigger impact they allneeded to band together. Theyview themselves as “natural part-ners in effort to promote “new”vision of American agriculture.”And that’s how checkoff dollarsfrom a rancher producing grassfed or natural beef in Montanacould end up being used todefend and promote factory farmhothouse pigs, hormone fed beefand milk inducing hormones fordairy cattle.
Sound Familiar?One of the first warning flags
that got our attention aboutUSFRA is their structure and theway they constructed their Boardof Directors. The minimum buy-
in is $50,000 and any firm thatpays $500,000 automaticallybecomes an ex-officio member ofthe Board. That’s what passes fordemocracy these days, you buyyour way in, just like they do inWashington, D.C. How veryAmerican of them. If it all soundsfamiliar that’s because that’s howthe NCBA constructed itself anddoes business.The beef checkoff so far has
contributed $250,000 toUSFRA. Because the beefcheckoff is a government pro-gram (according to the SupremeCourt) you’d think that our gov-ernment would not condone anyeffort to promote one type ofranching system over another.But the USDA has given theirstamp of approval to USFRAjust as long as the checkoff mon-ey is used for projects and notmembership dues.We’d sure like to see where
the NCBA got the money to buytheir seat on the Board?As of this writing only two
businesses have ponied up thecash to join, Farm Credit andThe Fertilizer Institute, butUSFRA hopes to sign up bigcorporations like Archer DanielsMidland, Cargill, DuPont andMonsanto. USFRA currently has$10 million in the bank andhopes to spend $20 million in itsfirst year. They also hope to havean annual budget of $30 million,most of it coming from agri-busi-nesses and checkoffs.USFRA plans to start pre-
senting their message by mid-July and we already have a goodidea of what that message will beand the image they’ll portray oftoday’s rancher. “No longer,”says visionary ag columnist AlanGuebert, “will it resemble a LandGrant alumnus ordering GMseed or livestock antibiotics onan iPhone. Instead, tomorrow’sfarmer will look more like WalterCronkite than Walter Mitty:weathered, wise, trustworthy. Inshort, more golden fields, goldensunsets and golden hair and lesssilver hog barns, silver-sided foodfactories and silver semis haulingethanol.”
SuperGroupExecutive members of
USFRA are Bob Stallman,American Farm Bureau; PhilBradshaw, Soybean Checkoff;Bart Schott, National CornGrowers Association; Dale Nor-ton, Pork Checkoff; Gene Gre-gory, United Egg; ForrestRoberts, CEO of the NCBA.Roberts will also chair USFRA’sCommunications Advisory Com-mittee.What chance does a rancher’s
organization like R-CALF or theOrganization for CompetitiveMarkets stand in having theirmessage heard when you havethe political muscle of big farmgroups, commodity checkoff dol-lars, huge agribusiness firms and
the minions who do their dirtywork, all rolled into one Super-Group? It’s all part of that“speaking with one voice” thingthat the NCBA was foundedupon. The only problem is whosevoice the supergroup will bespeaking with. From watchingthe NCBA we already know thatanswer: it’s whoever ponies upthe most money. Even if it isyour money that was taxed awayfrom you by the USDA in theform of the checkoff.How did we ever get so far
away from the initial concept ofthe beef checkoff?To avoid confrontation
USFRA has decided to take twoissues off their agenda: biofuelsand the Farm Bill. Instead, theywill focus on “presenting a morerealistic and positive portrayal ofmodern American agriculture tothe public.” It’s a good thingthey took those two issues offtheir agenda because, as we allknow, checkoff dollars are notsupposed to be used for lobbyingor to promote political agendas.(Wink, wink.)According to Guebert, “the
groups want the face of the smallfarmer and horse-riding rancherto be the public face of agricul-ture — not confinement hogbarns, 100,000-head cattle feed-lots; not manure lagoons, erodedfields, hypoxic rivers, lakes andoceans, not GM seed, not sub-therapeutic antibiotics. In otherwords, the big money behindUSFRA wants to preserve andbuild upon the exact thing thepublic doesn’t want: modernfood production practices itviews as questionable, worrisomeand even unnecessary.”In announcing the firm of
Ketchum as their public relationsfirm USFRA said, “Reflectingthe new world of Facebook,Twitter and 24/7 tweeting,Ketchum is partnered with Zóca-lo Group, its full service word ofmouth and social media agency,and Maslansky Luntz + Partners,a research-driven communica-
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CAMILLE PANSEWICZ,Graphic Artist continued on page six
Cowboy Makeover continued from page one
The minimum buy-in is $50,000 and any firm that pays $500,000 automatically becomes
an ex-officio member of the Board.
June 15, 2011 “America’s Favorite Livestock Newspaper” Page 3
be adjusted for inflation. Underthe current Act, attorney fees arecapped at $125 per hour, butthat hourly fee can be “adjusted”to a significantly higher amount.For example, in cases involvingradical environmental “non-prof-
it” attorneys in California, attor-ney fees as high as $650 per hourhave been paid although thestatute caps the fee at $125 perhour. Originally Congress passedEAJA to put litigants back in thesame place as they were prior tothe litigation against the federalgovernment.However, radical environmen-
tal groups can legitimately arguethat prior to the ligation, theywere paying their nonprofitattorneys $650 per hour.Additionally, the GLSA caps
the total attorneys fees reim-bursement to $200,000 for a sin-gle action and allows no morethan three awards in a calendaryear. That should stop the litiga-tion gravy train for groups like theCenter for Biological Diversitywho was involved in 770 federalcourt cases between 1999 and theMay, 2011 according to researchusing the PACER data base.Importantly this reimburse-
ment cap does not apply to indi-viduals who have suffered adirect and personal monetaryinterest at the hands of an over-reaching bureaucracy.Third, the GLSA requires
reporting of all taxpayer moneyspaid out in attorneys fees,including those money paid inconfidential settlement agree-ments or consent decrees. Inapproximately 10.5 percent ofthe cases polled, the amount of
money paid to environmentalgroups for attorneys fees is notdisclosed to the public.Shouldn’t the public know howmuch of its money is being fun-neled to radical groups throughattorneys fees payments?Fourth, the GLSA requires
federal agencies to reduce theawards made for “pro bono”work and does not allow attor-neys fees to be paid in caseswhere the litigator either acts inbad faith or tries to delay the liti-gation just to rack up attorneysfees.Finally, this Act requires that
the federal government accountfor the taxpayer money it spendson attorneys fees and that asearchable data base be createdto allow the American citizens tohave the ability to search howmuch money is being paid andto whom. The American taxpay-er has a right to know how andto which groups and individualstheir money is being spent.However, accounting of themoney spent on attorney feeshas not occurred since 1995. Is itany wonder that this country isbroke?
With the introduction of thisbill, our work is just beginning.Out of 435 members of theUnited States House of Repre-sentatives, only 18 have cospon-sored this bill with Wyoming’srepresentative Cynthia Lummis.The cosponsors are Rep. RobBishop (UT-1); Rep. GlennThompson (PA-5); Rep. MikeSimpson (ID-2); Rep. JasonChaffetz (UT-3); Rep. DonYoung (AK); Rep. Scott Tipton(CO-3); Rep. Jeff Denham (CA-19); Rep. Michael Conaway(TX-11); Rep. Denny Rehberg(MT); Rep. Mike Coffman (CO-6); Rep. Trent Franks (AZ-2);
Rep. Devin Nunes (CA-21);Rep. Kristi Noem (SD); Rep.Doug Lamborn (CO-5); Rep.John Duncan, Jr. (TN-2); Rep.Steve Pearce(NM-2); Rep. WallyHerger (CA-2); Rep. Jeff Flake(AZ-6); and Rep. Greg Walden(OR-2). Please contact yourCongressman and request thatthey cosponsor H.R. 1996.This bill has been assigned to
the House Judiciary Committee,Lamar Smith Texas Chairman. Itis important that this bill beaired in open public hearings sothat America can voice its opin-ion on the spending of Americantax dollars on litigation. Pleaseurge Mr. Smith and your Con-gressional members to hold hear-ings on this bill.
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Real Work Begins continued from page one Like so many other laws inthis country, the original idea ofthe federal government reim-bursing individuals and smallbusinesses who have to fightagainst overreaching bureaucra-cy is noble. But like many origi-nal ideas, over the years EAJAand the payment of attorney feesout of the Judgment Fund onEndangered Species Act andother litigation has been distort-ed beyond recognition. It is timeto bring this Country back to itsroots, cut the deficit spendingand put American citizens backto work. I hope you will work tosupport the Governmental Liti-gation Savings Act.
Shouldn’t the public know how much of its money is being funneled to radical groups
through attorneys fees payments?
Please urge Mr. Smithand your Congressional
members to hold hearings on this bill.
Page 4 Livestock Market Digest June 15, 2011
by BETH HENARY WATSON, The Weekly Standard
Editor’s Note: This listing willhave drastic impact on the oiland gas industry as well as therange livestock industry in south-eastern New Mexico.
Athree-inch lizard scuttledinto the spotlight inDecember after the U.S.Fish and Wildlife Service
proposed moving it onto theEndangered Species List. Thedunes sagebrush lizard’s habitatcovers just eight counties on theTexas-New Mexico border, rightin the heart of the PermianBasin, a major oil-producingregion. Particularly in Texas,industry leaders and local busi-nesses see the action as hostile— another Obama administra-tion environmental policy target-ing their successful, energy-sparked economy. “This is a lizard versus fami-
lies,” says Bill Hammond, presi-dent of the Texas Association ofBusiness, the state’s largest busi-ness interest group. “Nothing ismore important than a job.”Setting 1980s Dallas stereo-
types aside, oil and gas produc-tion is between 12 and 15 per-cent of the Texas economy. It’s
more than 70 percent of theeconomy in the vast and sparselypopulated Permian Basin. The17-county basin produces nearly20 percent of all domestic crudeoil. Of the eight counties in thelizard’s habitat, four are in Texas.All those are among the top tenoil-yielding counties in the state.
In its proposal to list thelizard as endangered, U.S. Fishand Wildlife argues that severalactivities fragment the creature’shabitat. Together these consti-tute a clean sweep of the region’seconomic drivers: oil and gas(particularly exploration), windturbine erection, and agriculture.The dunes sagebrush lizardresides only in areas with sandydunes covered by low-lying shin-nery oak trees. A public comment period
closed May 9, and U.S. Fish andWildlife will decide by mid-December whether to put thelizard on the EndangeredSpecies List. An “endangered”finding triggers an assessmentperiod to define the lizard’srange and identify protectionstrategies. At that time, new sur-
face-disrupting economic activityand perhaps maintenance ofexisting wells and windmillscould be hampered.Steve Pruett, president and
CFO of Midland-based LegacyReserves LP, explains that sti-fling exploration threatens themost jobs. He hires subcontrac-
tors to operate his rigs, the tow-ering structures used to drillwells. Legacy runs just one rig inthe lizard’s presumptive habitat,but 131 other rigs are active,each of which drills two wells amonth and employs about 150people.“We wouldn’t be contracting
as many wells to be drilled,”Pruett says. “Not to mention thegeneral loss of confidence of ourinvestors. We would have lessproduction and less cash to payout.”According to Permian Basin
Petroleum Association presidentBen Shepperd, wells produce atdiminishing rates, making newexploration vital to retainingblue-collar workers like rough-necks and roustabouts. He citesa study that found a majority ofjobs even in the cities of Midlandand Odessa depend on oil andgas production.“If oil and gas were to stop
out here, these West Texastowns would just dry up andblow away,” Shepperd says.Excluding giants like Chevron,the average Permian BasinPetroleum Association memberemploys about 10 people. Texas opponents of listing the
lizard dispute the thoroughnessof U.S. Fish and Wildlife’s sci-
ence and say they will work coop-eratively to rehabilitate the popu-lation. Conservation agreements— another way to restore speciespopulations — are already inplace in New Mexico. With theagreements, private landowners,businesses, and the governmentfollow a prearranged plan,although Sheppard says signingon can cost an oil business asmuch as $20,000 per well.Texas land commissioner Jer-
ry Patterson told an industry ral-ly in Midland in late April thatthe state’s landowners and busi-nesses need a chance to workout agreements with the fish andwildlife service. The state cur-
rently enforces mitigation forturtle populations near drillingalong the Gulf Coast, anarrangement that followed acourt battle. “We can plant a lotof shinnery oak if we need to,”Patterson said. “It’s not thelizard or us. It’s both of us.” Even if Texas, with New Mex-
ico’s help, is able to avoid endan-gered species classification forthe dunes sagebrush lizard, aproposed listing for anotherspecies in the Permian Basin, thelesser prairie chicken, lurks inthe future.Hammond, with the business
association, says the effort to listthe lizard as endangered is butone grievance his group has withthe Obama administration,which he says is engaged in a“job-killing enterprise” againstTexas. Texas’s showdown with the
Environmental ProtectionAgency over air permitting is the
major concern.“Industry has spent literally
trillions of dollars to bring airquality to a level that is perfectlyacceptable,” according to Ham-mond.Industry efforts aside, last
year the EPA ruled that certainpermits issued by the TexasCommission on EnvironmentalQuality — which had regulatoryauthority under the Clean AirAct — do not comply with feder-al law. Operating under the per-mits since 1994, more than 100businesses have been left in legallimbo while Texas contests thedecision.One affected business is
EBAA Iron, Inc., a family-ownediron foundry with 250 employeesat plants in Eastland and Albany,Texas. Until last year, the
foundry ran under a flexible per-mit issued by the state environ-mental agency. The flexible per-mits emphasized results over anentire organization, while EPAconcerns itself with individualsources of emissions.Jim Keffer, president of
EBAA Iron, Inc., says his staffhas contacted EPA for guidancebut keeps getting put off. Thebusiness, which opened in 1964,may be operating illegally.Keffer runs the iron foundry
full time, but he also serves asthe state representative for hisarea and chairs the Texas HouseEnergy Resources Committee.“Everywhere you look, every
time you turn around, the federalgovernment is trying to stopexploration, to stop the use offossil fuels,” Keffer says. “We’retrying to work on self-reliance.We’re trying to explore and bringto the country the resources thatTexas has been blessed with.”While the Texas Commission
on Environmental Quality’s mis-sion requires it to consider eco-nomic impacts, U.S. Fish andWildlife and EPA don’t have to.Keffer points out EPA’s Decem-ber emergency order to a FortWorth company under the SafeDrinking Water Act. The agencyacted in response to alleged con-tamination of two drinking waterwells, even though the state’s gasregulatory agency had been onthe scene. More than a mile sep-arates the shallow wells fromRange Resources’ natural gaswells. The company says it hasspent $1.5 million defendingitself against the EPA order.“The EPA was having a press
conference before they had allthe facts,” Keffer says. “If you sitback and take in all that’s hap-pened, it’s easy to look at a con-spiracy theory.”The Texas Public Policy Foun-
dation, a free-market think tank,held a briefing last month on 10proposed and adopted rules itsays constitute an “ApproachingEPA Avalanche.” The organiza-tion is most concerned withEPA’s order that states regulate
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. . . oil and gas production is between 12 and 15 percent of the Texas economy
“The EPA was having a press conference before they had all the facts.”
June 15, 2011 “America’s Favorite Livestock Newspaper” Page 5
“Our ability to enjoy our nation-al resources has been constrained byCongress’ failure to take action onrecommendations to open up mil-lions of acres of public land forincreased use and recreation.”
Over the past three decades,our ability to enjoy ournational resources hasbeen constrained by Con-
gress’ failure to take action onrecommendations to open upmillions of acres of public landfor increased use and recreation.Most public lands across the
country are managed for “multi-ple use,” which means thatranching, grazing, recreation,tourism and energy explorationcan occur there. These decisionsare almost always made at thelocal level because those wholive, work and recreate in andaround public lands know besthow to manage them.There are some areas across
the United States that have char-acteristics deserving of specialpreservation. In order to protectthese specific areas, Congresshas designated them “wildernessareas,” and most activities arerestricted or eliminated. Howev-er, there are tens of millions ofacres across the United Statesthat do not have these specialcharacteristics but are essentiallybeing treated as if they did. Letus explain.In 1976, Congress promised
to make a choice about whichpublic lands should have specialpreservation, directing theBureau of Land Management toconduct a study to determine
which lands were suitable forwilderness designations andwhich were not. The BLM rec-ommended 6.7 million acres asnot suitable. However, becauseCongress has not acted on theserecommendations, they continueto be treated essentially as if theywere wilderness areas. Separate-ly, in 1979 the U.S. Forest Serv-ice inventoried their InventoriedRoadless Areas and determinedthat 36 million acres were notsuitable for wilderness; however,public access and use remainseverely restricted.Congress’ lax approach to
these recommendations meansthat millions of acres of publicland across our country remainin limbo; off-limits to multipleuse and set apart from the localplanning process.That’s why we introduced the
Wilderness and Roadless AreaRelease Act. Our legislationwould end the cycle of indefinitewilderness review and bringnearly 43 million acres of publiclands out of purgatory. Specifi-cally, the BLM and Forest Serv-ice lands specified above wouldbe released from de facto wilder-ness management and openedup for multiple use.Our legislation does not
direct what type of activitiesmust occur on these lands.Rather, it would return manage-ment of these lands to the localAmericans who live on andaround them and provide themthe flexibility to manage themfor a multitude of activities. In Wyoming, land that
remains locked up by Washing-
ton is being ravaged by moun-tain pine beetles. The infestationhas devastated the area, weaken-ing the recreational and environ-mental value of the land. Sincethis land remains on Washing-ton’s “do not touch” list, localland managers aren’t able to takesteps necessary to address theproblem.In California, more than 3
million acres, including tens ofthousands in the 22nd district,remain under lock and keyunnecessarily. This means manyrural and outlying communitiesthat depend on tourism andrecreation cannot maximize thepotential of the public lands intheir area. It also makes it harderfor our firefighters to battle wild-fires, which can devastate tens ofthousands of acres of forest landand release thousands of tons ofpollution into the air.Our bill will face strong oppo-
sition from environmentalextremists and their friends inthe administration. But the bot-tom line is that this legislation isjust common sense. It simplyacts on the recommendations ofthe agencies that manage theselands and allows the Americanpeople to take advantage of theirown land.It’s long past time for Con-
gress to act. Land that isn’t Con-gressionally recognized as“wilderness,” as well as deemedunsuitable for a wilderness desig-nation by the very agencies thatmanage them, should be openedup for public use and enjoyment.Washington promised to makethis choice more than 30 years
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ago. The Code of the West says,“When you make a promise,keep it.”Washington might not have
read the Code of the West, butwe have, and we’re going to holdWashington to its promises. Thisland is the people’s land. It does
not belong to the bureaucrats inWashington.Sen. John Barrasso (R-Wyo.)
is the Senate Republican Confer-ence vice chairman and Rep.Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) is theHouse Majority Whip.
Congress Should Free Public Land for Localsby SENATOR JOHN BARRASSO and CONNGRESSMAN KEVIN MCCARTHY, Roll Call
Page 6 Livestock Market Digest June 15, 2011
tion strategy firm that specializesin “language and message devel-opment.”How very sad that the Ameri-
can rancher and cowboy, whoseimage and reputation have soldeverything from cigarettes to warbonds, now has to hire a firm todevelop its “language.”
The Way Big Business Does BusinessRandy Stevenson of OCM
remembers another time whenbig business sat down to powwow. It was back in the early1900s when the Big Four meat-packers conspired to control
meat prices. Back then theychanged the face of Americanagriculture and had to be brokenup by the government. Suppos-edly, the rules written back thenprohibited meatpackers frombeing in the same room talkingabout industry matters, but it’svery easy to see them doing thisat future USFRA meetings.“Meatpackers have had a historyof collusion,” says Stevenson.“They have changed tactics andmethods when they have beencaught. The collusion is notrestricted to that of market divi-sion or of price setting. Mucheffort has, in more recent years,
turned to organizational powerused to influence the regulatoryregimen. The modern version ofcollusive power is the big andinfluential organization thatinfluences politicians and helpsto make sure that the rules writ-ten for regulating anticompeti-tive behavior don’t bother them.”
No doubt, USFRA will saytheir money will not be used forsuch diabolical purposes, butthen, who ever thought that theNCBA would be the primarybeneficiary of checkoff dollarswhen ranchers voted it in? Orthat there’d even be such a thingas the NCBA?
HijackedAll this image enhancement is
going on amidst a war that hasbeen taking place between theCattlemen’s Beef Board, theFederation of State Beef Coun-cils and the NCBA. Accordingto R-CALF, “There is an intense,lopsided, but classic power strug-gle being waged right now withinthe Beef Checkoff Program. Thisis the classic power structurebetween those who have all themoney — the NCBA and itsstate affiliates — and those whopay all the money — the hun-dreds of thousands of checkoff-paying cattle producers through-out the United States.” (Thatwould be “stakeholders for youNCBA members.) “Hinging onthe outcome is whether the BeefCheckoff Program will be con-tinually fraught with corruption,favoritism, and abuse, orwhether the credibility of theprogram will be restored.”“The beef checkoff has been
in place for some 25 years,” saysFred Stokes, of the Organizationfor Competitive Markets, “withmore than $1.6 billion collectedand spent. Just how effective hasthe program been in “promoting,improving, maintaining anddeveloping markets for cattle,beef, and beef products? Notvery!” answers Fred. “During thisperiod we have lost marketshare, downsized the domesticcow herd, drastically reduced theproducer’s share of the retailbeef dollar and put nearly500,000 beef cattle operationsout of business.“So was the Beef Checkoff a
bad idea?” Stokes asks. “I say itwas a good idea that simply gothijacked! While producers havebeen compelled to pay the sumof $80 million per year, the over-whelming benefit has accrued toorganizations controlled byopposing big meat packing andretailer interests,” according toStokes.“An examination of NCBA’s
tax form 990 reveals that 80 per-cent of its total revenue isderived from the beef checkoff,with only six percent comingfrom membership dues.” In oth-er words says Stokes, “the
NCBA, representing less thanfour percent of cattle producers,continues as the primary beefcheckoff contractor and has aprominent seat at the table whenag policy is discussed. They haveopposed cattle producer’s inter-ests at every turn. They foughtagainst cattle producers that
supported country-of-originlabeling; against cattle producersseeking mandatory price report-ing; against cattle producers thatopposed the National AnimalIdentification System (NAIS);against cattle producers thatsupported captive supply reformin a major class-action lawsuit;against cattle producers thattried to prevent the prematurereintroduction of imported cattlefrom disease-affected countries;against cattle producers thatattempted to ban packer owner-ship of livestock in both the 2002and 2008 Farm Bills.”Most recently they have
fought against ranchers who sup-port the pending GIPSA rulesthat would go a long way inreducing the packer’s power tomanipulate prices.All this is not to suggest that
there have not been BIG benefi-ciaries of the beef checkoff.There certainly have been, likeDee Likes of the Kansas Live-stock Association who the Com-stock Report said received$311,000 for one year’s work.Another employee was paid over$225,000 and yet another over$150,000. “KLA’s CEO, DeeLikes, makes more money thanGovernor Brownback runningthe 14 billion dollar state ofKansas,” said the ComstockReport. “Likes can certainly givelessons on how to rob the check-off train.”Such revelations have started
people talking about what oneeditor called “the nuclearoption.” That would be to hold areferendum and vote the check-off down. But the USDA andNCBA will never let that hap-pen. Instead the USDA willstand quietly by while the ranch-er’s pockets are picked and hisname is used to sell an ag pro-duction system that he may nei-ther condone, nor participate in.In introducing Ketchum as
USFRA’s PR firm, a companypartner Linda Eatherton, said,“With over 50 years of service tofood and agricultural organiza-tions, our firm was literally builtfor this assignment. Workingside by side with USFRA mem-bers, stakeholders and allies, weknow we can help people rethinkthe role of American agriculturein feeding hundreds of millionsof Americans every day.”So there you have it in black
and white. In the words of yournewest spokesperson you areeither an ally or a stakeholder.Which one, we wonder, are
you?
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Cowboy Makeover continued from page two
How very sad that the American rancher and cowboy, whose image and reputation have soldeverything from cigarettes to war bonds, now has to hire a firm to develop its “language.”
June 15, 2011 “America’s Favorite Livestock Newspaper” Page 7
one of them. That’s okay. There’s plenty morewhere they came from. But I would suggest thatthere is plenty to be inspired by in the writtenword. So read a lot.Your parents will hate me for saying this but
don’t listen to people who tell you what you shoulddo, or be, 20 years from now. A lawyer uncle mightencourage you to join the bar or a techno-savvycousin will say that computers are the way to makea lot of money. Pay no attention to them if suchjobs don’t inspire you. Follow your passions in life.Don’t become a dentist or a construction workerjust because three generations of your family did.Don’t be trapped into a life you don’t want to live.Here’s something else your parents won’t tell
you. All that stuff about everyone being equal is abunch of bologna. Some of you were born with ahead-start in life while others of you have had atougher road. Don’t feel sorry for yourself. You’rethe lucky ones because physical challenges andpoverty can provide great inspiration. The best love
songs were written by the brokenhearted and manygreat works were inspired by hunger. That one-armed surfer girl who had her arm ripped off by ashark would never have inspired people like me ifshe still had that arm. My favorite picture in myhouse was done by a quadriplegic friend who drewit by holding a pencil in his mouth. What goodexcuse could I possibly have? I’ll be honest: We aren’t leaving you this world
in the best shape. The American culture seems tobe on the downward side of greatness. We’ve heav-ily mortgaged your future and it’s going to requireinspired leadership on your part to keep the Amer-ican Dream alive. Thankfully, history has provideda good road map. Study the lives of Washingtonand Lincoln, the words of Thomas Jefferson andthe goodness of Sister Theresa. Read the Gettys-burg Address, watch Ronald Reagan “tear downthat wall” and listen to Martin Luther King deliverhis “I have a dream speech.” Want to have a succesful and happy life? Find
something to be inspired by every day and live yourlife so that you’ll inspire others long after you aregone.
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Riding Herd continued from page one
June 2011
15 – Deadline for advertising copyJuly New Mexico Stockman, 2011N.M. Directory of Agriculture16-18 – Western LimousinExposition, Klamath Falls OR
26-28 – NMCGA, New MexicoCowBelles, New Mexico WoolGrowers Mid-Year Meeting – NMSUShort Course, Buffalo ThunderResort, Pajaque, NM26-28 – NMWGI Annual Meeting,Buffalo Thunder Resort
July 2011
21-23 – New Mexico Farm &Livestock Bureau Summer Meeting,Inn of the Mountain Gods, Ruidoso
September 2011
9-25 – New Mexico State Fair,Albuquerque
October 2011
1 – Isa Cattle Co, Inc. Bull Sale,San Angelo, TX
25 – Strang Herefords 32nd Annual Bull Sale, Meeker, CO
December 2011
1-4 – Joint Stockmen's Convention,Albuquerque NM
Calendar ofEVENTS
For advertisingcontact,
MICHAELWRIGHT
505/243-9515, ext. [email protected]
Michael brings with himfour generations of therange livestock industryand a keen awareness ofthe issues facing ranchersand rural economies today.
Page 8 Livestock Market Digest June 15, 2011
In collaboration with theAmerican Association ofBovine Practitioners (AABP),AgriLabs is offering an award
to two veterinarians — one beefand one dairy — to encourage
and fund recent graduates intheir post-graduate continuingeducation efforts. Named as atribute to Bruce Wren, D.V.M.,each award will provide $5,000for professional-development
training so these practitionersmay better serve their producer-clients. Completed applicationsare due July 15, 2011, and thepresentations will be made at theannual AABP Awards Banquet.“The gap between the number
of veterinarians available to servedairy and beef producers, andthe actual need is increasing atan alarming rate,” says SteveSchram, AgriLabs President andCEO. “The grants will encouragethese veterinarians to remain inlarge animal medicine by provid-ing a significant resource for self-directed professional develop-ment.”
Developing the Innovative Award“We found that after gradua-
tion, there really weren’t manyindustry-sponsored awards orprofessional-development oppor-tunities for veterinarians untilthey had spent many years inpractice,” says Dr. M. Gatz Rid-dell, AABP executive vice presi-dent and member of that plan-ning committee. “Yet, the yearsafter graduation are a key timewhen veterinarians not only gainexperience, but also are likely todecide whether to continue inherd-side practice or move intoother career paths. The AgriLabs$5,000 awards will be vital inhelping veterinarians gain more
experience in individual animaland herd production medicine,helping them bring value to theirproducer-clients for years tocome.”
Create Your AwardThe grant process allows
applicants to determine how bestthey want to use the $5,000grant from AgriLabs and judgingwill be based on three primarycriteria:1) The applicants’ profession-
al-development plan, whichdescribes the skills/knowledgethey would like to improve tobecome a more valuable resourcefor their producer-clients.2) How the $5,000 will be uti-
lized to fulfill the professional-development plan.3) Letters of reference from
three individuals (including atleast one producer and one vet-erinarian) who have first-handknowledge of the applicant’spractice experience and educa-tional interest.“What is especially exciting
about the AgriLabs Dr. Wrenawards are the variety of theplans, programs and educationalgoals that applicants have submit-ted as a means of improving theirskills and becoming more effec-tive in bovine medicine,” says Rid-dell. “The professional develop-ment plans funded by the $5,000
grants from AgriLabs have includ-ed participation in technical andbusiness-oriented short courses,advanced educational training,and mentoring opportunities withan exemplary veterinarian. Whileeach applicant’s background,experience and future directionwill differ, the AgriLabs awardswill benefit participating veteri-narians, their producers and theindustry at large.”
To ApplyA full description of AgriLabs
Dr. Bruce Wren ContinuingEducation Awards and a link tothe application forms are avail-able at www.AgriLabs.com/scholarships. The applicationmay be completed online and allmaterials postmarked on orbefore July 15, 2011. The awardsare open to AABP members ingood standing; are activelyinvolved in practice; and whograduated with a DVM/VMDdegree between June 1, 2001,and June 1, 2010.The professional-development
opportunity described in theapplication can apply to eitherindividual animal medicine (e.g.,diagnosis, treatment, surgery,case management, pain manage-ment, patient welfare) or herdproduction medicine (e.g.,records analysis, disease preven-tion, production enhancement,benchmarking, biosecurity, foodsafety).
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I’m sitting here reading the newspaper aboutfarms in Missouri and Louisiana being delib-erately flooded to prevent inundation oftowns on the Mississippi River. Alabama
and Tennessee have been ripped with tornados,there’s snow on the ground in Wyoming, it’s toowet to plow some places, Texas is burning upand, at my place in Arizona, we haven’t seenrain since October!I guess it’s just another run-of-the-mill
Springtime in the Land Outside the City Lim-its. Farmers have a right to be confused. Is itgood times? Or bad? Looks like the price ofdairy products is stabilizing, but alfalfa haycosts more than a salad at Ruth’s Chris SteakHouse. The price of gas is $4 a gallon but it’s 30percent ethanol made from seven dollar and 50cents corn! Am I making money? Or losing it?Your pasture is droughted out. Should you
sell off a hundred cow-calf pairs for enough toclear your debt, remodel the house, and buy anew pickup? OR . . . ship them 150 miles awayto lease pasture for $16 per month per pair forsix months, then ship them back just in time tostart feeding them hay this fall?Even horse traders are in a quandary.
Unwanted horses are now up to $80 a head,from $40 last year, which is great, but downfrom $500 five years ago. Should he be happyor sad?It seems like we in agriculture are sitting on
a bubble. There is good demand for what we
sell but all around us we see things that makeus squirm. The economy in general continues tolag. The federal government, as well as manystate governments seem to resemble Nero fid-dling while Rome burns. They manipulate fig-ures like magicians doing card tricks. The Wiz-ard of Oz rolls and thunders and people yawn.Government, through the Farm Bill, the
EPA and the media, has always been able tomaintain a ‘cheap food policy.’ Politicians canget vicious when their constituents complainabout the high price of food. They take retribu-tion by threatening cuts to the Ag ExtensionService, county fairs, Vo-Ag in rural schools andFood Animal Medicine studies in Vet Schools.We are at the top of their lists when belt tight-ening begins.At this moment they are looking greedily at
that rare opportunity, a resilient productive agri-culture, to pillage. All it would take will be anexpression of indignant outrage from Nero, theMagicians, the Wizard, or their entitlementcronies, accusing farmers of making a . . . Heav-en Forbid . . . a Profit!But there has never been any confusion of
our status as farmers, in the eyes of the rulingclass; the politiks, barons, dictators and pundits. . . we are peasants. And as such must never beallowed to have the power over a commodity asessential as food. So enjoy your success whileyou can, my friends. They are already sharpen-ing their legislative knives.
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June 15, 2011 “America’s Favorite Livestock Newspaper” Page 9
by RONA KOBELL,www.bayjournal.com
Anew ruling by the judgesof the U.S. Court ofAppeals for the Fifth Cir-cuit may make it harder
for the EPA to track and regu-late pollution from animal farms.The court ruled that the
Clean Water Act did not give theEPA the authority to require thefarms, known as ConcentratedAnimal Feeding Operations(CAFOs), to obtain dischargepermits on the presumption theywould discharge pollution to thewaters of the state.Since 2008, the EPA has
required all animal farms thatqualified as CAFOs to get per-mits whether they discharged pol-lution to public water or not. TheEPA claimed a farm’s potential todischarge pollution was all thatwas needed to require a permit.The court disagreed. It
declared that the farms onlyneeded permits if they actuallydischarged — a violation of theClean Water Act. The likelihoodthat they would discharge wasnot enough to trigger the permit-ting process, which farmers findcumbersome and expensive.
The EPA’s assumption that afarm with no record of dis-charges would violate the law inthe future was, in the judges’words, “an attempt by the EPAto create from whole cloth newliability provisions. The CWAsimply does not authorize thistype of supplementation to itscomprehensive liability scheme.”The permits help the agency
track and regulate potential pol-luters. The court shifted the bur-den of figuring out who had thepotential to discharge, or was dis-charging, back to the government.Few farms actually propose
discharges directly to publicwater. However, discharges mayhappen if the land is such that adischarge is inevitable. That isparticularly true on the Delmar-va Peninsula, where the watertable is low and the land isditched. One heavy rainstormcan move chicken manure into astream that leads to the Chesa-peake Bay.The ruling is only binding for
now in the Fifth Circuit, whichcovers Louisiana, Mississippiand Texas. So, it’s unclear whatthe court’s decision will mean forthe areas of the watershed whereanimal farming dominates, suchas the Delmarva Peninsula, theShenandoah Valley and parts of
New York and Pennsylvania.But the National Pork Pro-
ducers Council, a plaintiff in thelawsuit, called the decision a“major victory” for farmers, whofelt the paperwork was burden-some and were attempting not todischarge in their operations.“I don’t know if it changes the
fact that farmers won’t apply forpermits, I don’t think they weregoing to anyway,” said MichaelFormica, the pork producers’chief environmental counsel.“Having a permit does notimprove the environment. If youhave a permit, you’re not allowedto discharge. If you don’t haveone, you’re not allowed to dis-charge.”The real disadvantage to
applying for permits, Formicasaid, is that paperwork errors arecommon, and environmentalgroups can seek the plansthrough a public informationrequest, comb through them,and mount legal and enforce-
ment challenges — a process hecalls “legalized extortion.”The American Farm Bureau
Federation, another plaintiff inthe lawsuit, said it was still tryingto determine the ruling’s signifi-cance.
“We feel this is an extremelysignificant decision, and we’restill analyzing the details of whatit’s going to mean,” said DonParrish, the federation’s seniordirector of regulatory relations.EPS Region 3 officials collab-
orated with those at the agency’sheadquarters to issue this state-ment on the ruling:“Region 3’s practice regarding
CAFO permitting or compliance
matters has been based on the“duty to apply” for permits (thatis, the need for permit coverage)on actual discharges from opera-tions, rather than planned orprojected discharges. Thus webelieve there is no significantimpact on the work we do in thissector that is done in close coop-eration with state permittingagencies.”The agency did not say if it
would appeal, but said it is “cur-rently reviewing” the decisionand its potential implications.The EPA has been sparring in
the courts with both environmen-tal groups and the farm lobby forthe better part of a decade overthe definition of a CAFO andhow the Clean Water Act shouldbe enforced when it comes to
animal feeding operations.In 2003, the agency defined a
CAFO as an operation thatraised more than 125,000 chick-ens, 1,000 cattle or 2,500 swine.That applied to very few farms inthe Bay watershed. But the defi-nition went a step further. TheEPA in 2008 put out a new setof regulations that requiredChesapeake Bay farmers toapply for federal CAFO permitsif they discharged, no matter thesize. It also said that if the farmdidn’t discharge now, but mightin the future, it needed a CAFOpermit.The Waterkeeper Alliance
attempted to persuade the EPA
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Ruling makes it harder to regulatelarge animal operations’ dischargesCourt says the EPA cannot require a permit just because the potential to discharge exists
The likelihood that they would dischargewas not enough to
trigger the permittingprocess . . .
“Having a permit does not improve the
environment.”
Page 10 Livestock Market Digest June 15, 2011
to make their language evenmore precise. Instead of sayingthe farms proposed to discharge,it wanted the agency to presumethat the farms would dischargebecause of their topography andthe fact that many chicken farmskeep uncovered manure on thefarms. Manure is rich in bothphosphorus and nitrogen, andwhen it runs into streams it cancause algae blooms and low-oxy-gen zones that stress fish andother marine life. The EPAdeclined to make the change.The new definition greatly
changed the number of chickenfarms designated as CAFOs in
Maryland, which did not have aCAFO law three years ago. In2008, just 12 farms in the statefit the definition. Now, theMaryland Department of theEnvironment estimates that 426farms in the state will fall underthe CAFO designation. The newrules mean more paperwork forfarmers and increased costs,because farmers now need a cer-tified nutrient management plan.Virginia and Pennsylvaniaalready had CAFO laws, sofarmers there didn’t experiencemajor changes.The pork and poultry produc-
ers were in court in Louisiana
challenging the 2008 law. Theylost part of the case; they werealso trying to forbid the EPAfrom regulating dust emissionsfrom animal operations. Thecompanies will still need permitsfor the release of dust throughtheir ventilation fans.Scott Edwards, senior attor-
ney for the WaterkeeperAlliance, said the ruling “doesn’tchange much on the ground.” Itdoesn’t give the industry permis-sion to pollute, and farmers whohave already gone through theCAFO permitting process maychoose to keep their permits cur-rent anyway because, if theyhave a discharge, the regulatorsmay go easier on them.
“If a farmer discharges withno permit, he’s in violation of theClean Water Act. If he dis-charges with a permit, he is in
violation of both the permit andthe Clean Water Act,” Edwardssaid. “The on-the-ground impactof this decision, as it relates tohow much this industry gets topollute, is unchanged. Thisindustry is not allowed to pol-lute.”The real problem, he says, is
that no one is standing out in therain to determine if a farm is dis-charging — and as a result, noone is enforcing the law. More-over, he says, the paperworkfarms had to file when theybecame CAFOs gave the EPAuseful information about pollu-tants and more control over theoperations. The agency will haveto work harder now to learnabout the operations withoutthose mandatory applications.States can also choose to
enforce their own clean waterlaws or CAFO laws and overridethe federal statute if their envi-ronmental protections arestronger. Such was the case inMichigan, where the courtsdecided to uphold Michigan’s
law on CAFOs. That law saysfarms that propose to dischargemust file for permits.“The Clean Water Act pro-
vides a floor that they can’t gobelow, but the states can alwaysbe more strict,” said TimothyLundgren, a Grand Rapids attor-ney who represents farmers andfood processors in the state. “InMichigan, the courts have said,‘we’re going to uphold Michi-gan’s law, because it’s broader.’’’Lundgren said the proposed
discharge standard never struckhim as particularly fair, because“we don’t treat other industriesthat way.”Edwards applauds Michigan
for sticking to its tougher rule.But, he worries the 5th CircuitCourt’s decision means theindustry will simply move to thestates that refuse to get tough inthe absence of an across-the-board federal standard.“Michigan got tough . . . the
states can follow suit if theywant, but they’ll need the politi-cal will to do that,” Edwardssaid. “It’s created this incentivefor this industry to shop aroundfor states where they can getaway with murder.”
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by SCOTT SONNER, AP Writer,www.sltrib.com
Crucial hearings to helpdetermine whether billionsof gallons of water will bepumped out of aquifers
beneath Utah and northernNevada to fill the thirsty taps ofarid Las Vegas are still monthsaway.But a prehearing in mid May
shows the legal battle over theproposed controversial 285-mile-long pipeline project with a pricetag as high as $3.5 billion prom-ises to be a lengthy and con-tentious one.The Southern Nevada Water
Authority alone plans testimonyfrom more than two dozen wit-nesses over about three weeks’time to present its case in sup-port of winning the necessarywater rights for the project —something it once had in handbut lost a year ago when theNevada Supreme Court sent thematter back to the state waterengineer for the new round ofhearings beginning in Septem-ber.If the authority secures
approval of all the rights it isseeking, the pipeline could endup carrying as much as 65 billiongallons of water from the northto the south on an annual basis.Daily flows would total up to 178
million gallons under that sce-nario — enough to cover an areathe size of nearly 500 footballfields with a new foot of watereach day.That’s assuming the conflict-
ing interests in the north andsouth can agree on the length ofa day — something the NevadaDivision of Water Resources’chief hearing officer wasn’t tak-ing for granted at the preconfer-ence meeting in a mock court-room at the National JudicialCollege on the campus of theUniversity of Nevada, Reno.“You are all lawyers,” Susan
Joseph-Taylor said. “You aregoing to argue what a daymeans.”They did, for about 10 min-
utes, before agreeing that a “day”in the context of giving adequatenotice on the filing of certain evi-dence didn’t necessarily mean 24hours. Rather, they decided thata party would serve such noticebefore the close of business onthe previous day.The 65 billion gallons of water
— 200,000 acre feet — would beenough to support 400,000households a year. However,SNWA officials believe it’s morerealistic to expect approval ofabout 120,000 acre feet. An acrefoot is the amount of water ittakes to cover an acre one footdeep.
Expect water for ‘Vegasbattle’ to be contentious
. . . environmental groups can seek the plans through a public information request, comb through them, and mount legal andenforcement challenges — a process he
calls “legalized extortion.”
June 15, 2011 “America’s Favorite Livestock Newspaper” Page 11
The Global Harvest Initia-tive (GHI) has publishedthe second of five issuebriefs outlining policies to
sustainably increase the rate ofagricultural productivity andaddress hunger and food securityin anticipation of a global popu-lation surge to over 9 billion peo-ple by 2050. The issue brief, “Removing
Barriers to Global and RegionalTrade in Agriculture,” highlightsthe critical importance ofimproving food and agriculturaltrade flows in the comingdecades to counter the impacton agricultural supply resultingfrom changing weather patterns,urban population shifts, and lim-itations of water, land andinputs, among other factors.“Today the balance between
agricultural supply and demandis dangerously close, whichincreases market volatility andthe potential for localized orregional events to have globalimpact on food security. To sus-tainably meet future demand wemust address counterproductivetrade policies including exportrestrictions, high tariffs andrestrictive quotas on foodimports, and restrictive importmeasures on equipment andmodern technology that wouldimprove agriculture productivityworldwide,” said Charles “Joe”O’Mara, a GHI consultativepartner who served as the Coun-sel for International Affairs andChief Negotiator for Agricultureunder U.S. Secretaries of Agri-culture Madigan and Espy, andwas responsible for negotiatingthe agriculture provisions of theUruguay Round World TradeOrganization negotiations. “The urgency of hunger issues
and food insecurity today is per-haps greater than ever, and thesealready notable challenges areexacerbated by barriers andexport restrictions that reducetrade in foodstuffs,” said SusanSechler, Managing Director ofTransFarm Africa, a GHI con-sultative partner. “Uninhibitedtrade flows allow agricultural sur-pluses to reach areas of criticalneed that are just a border awayin some cases. On the otherhand, trade restrictions amplifyprice volatility, leading to hoard-ing and even higher prices. Tradebarriers have the greatest conse-quence on the nearly one billionpeople worldwide that are strug-gling with hunger and malnutri-tion, and short-term, stopgappolicies cause years or decadesof damage to developingnations.” The policy issue brief also pro-
poses recommendations foreliminating trade barriers andcalls for a more active leadershiprole by the U.S. Government infinalizing and expediting multi-lateral, bilateral, and regionaltrade agreements. Encouragingand strengthening trade agree-ments will result in increasedmarket access and the more effi-cient production of agriculturalgoods, thereby greatly improvingglobal food security. GHI’s first issue brief
addressing the importance ofagricultural research wasreleased on April 21, 2011. Sub-sequent GHI issue briefs willaddress development assistance,science-based technologies, andprivate investment. The issuebrief released today and moreinformation about GHI can befound at http://www.globalhar-vestinitiative.org.
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greenhouse gas emissionsfrom major sources. TheLone Star State alone refusedto comply, although at least20 others are also suing theagency over greenhouse gasregulations.TPPF scholar Kathleen
Hartnett White, a formerstate environmental director,says the rules also require“Rolls Royce” emissions con-trol technologies on industri-al boilers and certain cementkilns. Unions claim the boilerrule alone could send700,000 U.S. jobs to coun-tries less concerned about airquality.EPA is also considering
tightening standards on“coarse particulate matter,”White says, and the proposedrule would drop the exemp-
tion for rural dust, a fact oflife in West Texas. Remedia-tion techniques for rural dustsuggested by EPA includewatering dirt roads and no-till days for farmers.Because of the makeup of
its economy, including thenation’s largest petrochemi-cal complex, in Houston,Texas will be disproportion-ately affected by most airquality regulations. Whitesays it doesn’t matter ifWashington is deliberatelypicking on her state, thoughthe administration’s actionsspeak to a strong desire tomake alternatives to fossilfuels more appealing.“We are a bad example,”
White says. “We are not whatthe administration would liketo see.”
Don’t Mess with Texas continued from page four
Page 12 Livestock Market Digest June 15, 2011
In early May what is nowbeing called Horseshoe Fire #2was started by illegal aliens in thearea of Burro Springs near theheadwaters of HorseshoeCanyon. Border Patrol agentstracked four aliens to the verystart of the fire. The first ForestService fire fighters to arrive atthe site observed the same tracks.Horseshoe Fire #1 was startednear the same spot almost exact-ly a year ago, also ignited by ille-gal aliens. In the last three yearsalone no less than 11 fires havebeen started by illegal aliens inthe Chiracahua Mountains andthe adjacent Peloncillo Moun-tains. No less than 120 thousandacres have burned. The cost tothe American taxpayers to fightthese fires is nearing $70 million.The U.S. Forest Service itselfadmitted that Horseshoe Fire #1cost in excess of $10 million tofight.The Three Triangle Ranch has
a forest grazing permit in Horse-shoe Canyon. In the summer of2010 the Three Triangle manag-er was told by the Forest Servicethat his permit numbers weregoing to be cut to less than 200head of cattle in a pasture thatpreviously ran in excess of 400.At this writing Horseshoe Fire#2 is still burning out of control,consuming everything in its path,but in the first stages its primaryfuel was grass, amply availabledue to under grazing on theHorseshoe allotment. The wind,blowing southwest to northeast,carried the fire at an astoundingspeed down Horseshoe Canyonand over a ridge into SulpharCanyon (another under grazedallotment). From the mouth ofSulphar Canyon it skirtedaround the foot of the moun-tains by Sanford Hill going northto the very edge of Portal itself.Three Triangle Ranch cows
saved the town of Portal. TheForest Service will claim that afire break made by their bulldoz-ers should get the credit, but inreality, as the fire reached theedge of town it burned into acorner of a large cow pasture,one of the few that had beenheavily grazed, and it simply ran
out of fuel.In 1994 there was a fire in the
area near Rustler Park thatbecame known as the Rat-tlesnake Fire. Prior to this fire,Forest Service employees hadcollected seeds from this area,and nurtured thousands ofseedlings ready to plant. Afterthe Rattlesnake Fire the ForestService proposed a sale ofburned timber to finance theplanting of these seedlings in thearea destroyed by the fire. Thefight was on. The local environ-mental community, with thehelp of The Southwest Centerfor Biological Diversity and othereco-terrorists groups, sued theFederal Government to stop thetimber sale. The court ruled infavor of the environmental com-munity, but the Forest Serviceappealed and the Ninth CircuitCourt of Appeals eventuallyoverturned the original decisionof the lower court, and ruled infavor of the U.S. Forest Service.Not long before this, the For-
est Service had proposed a small10 acre timber sale near thesame area which immediately setoff a firestorm of protest fromthe same group of enviros. With-in a matter of a few days theywere able to inspire thousands ofletters of protest against the pro-posed timber sale. The word wasput out that the Forest Servicewas clear cutting the entireChiracahua range, when in reali-ty the sale was not to exceed 10acres. Hundreds of these protestletters were written on universityletterhead paper and signed bymany PhDs from all over theUnited States. In frustration theForest Service cancelled the tim-ber sale thinking it not worth thefight. The results of this misman-agement and hatred of loggersand cowboys has produced anunnatural forest that is virtuallychoking on its own excess ofdowned timber, undergrowthand unharvested grass, that is atbest a time bomb waiting to beset off by a bolt of lightening orin this case, the match of a drugsmuggler.
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There Are No CoolHeads in Portal
continued on page thirteen
Regardless of which side of the political spectrum you reside,Portal, Ariz. is a beautiful place. Located in the mouth of CaveCreek on the eastern slope of the Chiracahua Mountains, it isnot much more than a hole in a road, which continues west to
the town of Paradise, and eventually ascends to the top of the moun-tain at a campground located at a spot called Rustler Park. The smallpopulace of Portal is partially made up of retirees, wealthy enough toown a piece of the pricey land; not a few who could be described asliberal academics. A short distance up the canyon is The SouthwestResearch Station of The Museum of Natural History. This area, andthe Chiracahua range as a whole, is the best example of neo-tropicalbird habitat in the United States. It is the home of: the greater andlesser long-nosed bat, the famous trogon, the so-called “endangered”spotted owl, and hundreds of other rare species. It is bird watcher’sparadise. It is burning down.
June 15, 2011 “America’s Favorite Livestock Newspaper” Page 13
The pendulum swings backand forth, with technique andpractice going from one extremeto the other, and common senseoften being overlooked. Our nat-ural resources should be man-aged in a case by case mannerwith decisions being made bypeople with proven experience,(including permit holders),instead of being held hostage tothe latest fad propagated bysome PhD with no practical andhands on experience. The cur-rent method of managing fires isto let them burn from road toroad or natural barrier to naturalbarrier. Fires, that twenty yearsago would have been aggressive-ly fought even in remote areaswith destruction kept to a mini-mum, are now being allowed toburn over a greater expanse. Theresult is a forest habitat that isbeing nuked, with everything inits path being destroyed. Oldgrowth timber on the CoronadoNational Forest is virtually goneas the result of fires. The enviroswant to blame the loggers forthis, but it is simply not true.As I write this on Sunday
morning May 15, 2011, I sit onthe porch and look north about10 miles and observe HorseshoeFire #2 still burning out of con-trol. The first stage of the fireburned eastward from BurroSpring, carried by a strong wind,but now after several days of rela-tive calm the fire has burnedwestward climbing to very highestpeak in the Chircahua range. Iwatch the fire from where I sitand can see that it is now aroundthe corner of the mountaintopburning on the west face of themountain. It has also burnedaround to the east side of the verytop of the mountain. This eastside where one fork of the fire isactually located is the very head-waters of Cave Creek itself. It’swhat a cowboy would call down-hill and shady from where it is atthe moment to the SouthwestResearch Station and a short dis-tance on down the creek to Por-tal. Cave Creek comes into Portalfrom a different angle than thefirst stage of the fire which I men-tioned in a previous paragraph.The town of Portal is not out ofdanger yet. I’ve been in this areafrom top to bottom gathering cat-tle and can tell you first hand thatit is choked with down timber,brush and grass, the result ofdecades of so called protection byour federal government. The peo-ple in Portal and the surroundingarea need to hope that the winddoesn’t start blowing again westto east like it has all spring or thesecond stage of this fire could beworse than the first. As of themorning of, Saturday the 14th ofMay, the fire had burned inexcess of 20,000 acres of some ofthe Southwest’s best wildlifehabitat, not to mention millionsof dollars of potential timber salesand grazable forage and on Sun-day morning the 15th there is noend in sight.Nobody around here is happy
with the fire, not even the Mexi-
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� Texas: 7,360 ac. Brewster Co. Remote hunting ranch with beautiful vistas.www.llptexasranchland.com
Missouri Land Sales� Horse Training / Boarding Facility: New, state-of-the-art, 220x60 horse facilitywith 20 stalls, back to back, offset with bull pen at end of the barn. Two large pipe out-side paddocks. 3-4 BR, 3 BA, 2,000+ sq. ft. home. All on 18+ acres. Just 5 miles northof I-44 Bois D’Arc exit. MLS #1017424. Call Paul for your private showing.� 675 Ac. Grass Runway, Land your own plane: Major Price Reduction. 3 BR, 2 BAhome down 1 mi. private land. New 40x42 shop, 40x60 livestock barn, over 450 ac. ingrass. (Owner runs over 150 cow/calves, 2 springs, 20 ponds, 2 lakes, consisting of 3.5& 2 ac. Both stocked with fish. Excellent fencing. A must farm to see. MLS #1010371� 483 Ac., Hunter Mania: Nature at her best. Don’t miss out on this one. Live water(two creeks). 70+ acres open in bottom hayfields and upland grazing. Lots of timber (marketable and young) for the best hunting andfishing (Table Rock, Taney Como and Bull Shoals Lake) Really cute 3-bd., 1-ba stone home. Secluded yes, but easy access to Forsyth-Branson, Ozark and Springfield. Property joins Nat’l. Forest. MLS#908571
See all my listings at: paulmcgilliard.murney.com
PAUL McGILLIARDCell: 417/839-5096
1-800/743-0336MURNEY ASSOC., REALTORSSPRINGFIELD, MO 65804
TYLER KARNEY, MANAGER19424 HWY. 96, ORDWAY, CO. 81063 • 719/267-3551
OrdwayCattle Feeders LLC
COMMERCIALFEEDLOT
Capacity 55,000Cattle & Feed Financing Available
Ben G. Scott, Krystal M. Nelson, Brokers1301 Front St., Dimmitt, TX 79027 • 1-800/933-9698 day/night
www.scottlandcompany.com
—— TEXAS AND NEW MEXICO ——
Check our website for other properties.
PARMER CO., TEXAS – 400-cow dairy, on 80 ac., double 12 parallelparlor, on Hwy. 60, all weather road, 3-bedroom/3-bath, 16x80 newer-model manufactured home, near Friona. Cows and rolling stockincluded.
LEA CO., NEW MEXICO – 1,400-cow dairy on 136 acres, side-by-side,double 20 parlor, beautiful 5-bedroom/4-bath home, on pavement.
CASTRO CO., TEXAS – on pavement, 1,808± acres, permitted for7,200 cows (4,000 milking), precon. pens with permit, sprinklers, irr.wells, employee housing, barns.
HEART OF THE PLAINS – 8-section ranch with new set of pens, con-crete bunks, truck/cattle scale and commodity barn, mobile home,watered by subs, mill and pipeline, on pavement, hour from Lubbock,Texas, mule deer and quail.
RANCH & FARM REAL ESTATE
THE LIVESTOCK MARKET DIGEST
Real Estate GUIDETO PLACE YOUR LISTINGS HERE, PLEASE CALL
MICHAEL WRIGHT AT 505/243-9515, EXT. 30, OR [email protected]
can outlaws who habitually packtheir dope and other contrabandover a trail that goes by BurroSprings and on north to multipledrop off spots, scattered fromPortal all the way to San Simonor Bowie. Many residents in thearea have quality radios and canlisten to outlaw scouts who driveup and down Highway 80between Portal and Douglas andrelay information via radio totheir narcotic packing counter-parts. They transmit messagesthat contain the whereabouts ofBorder Patrol agents or anyoneelse who might interfere with thesmuggling of their product. Thislast week these outlaw scoutswere heard cursing the fire thatthey started, which now tran-scends the entire eastern slope ofthe Chiracahua range. They arebeing forced to send their con-traband west to the Silver Creekarea (the home of Roger Bar-nett) and on north across thewestern slope of the mountains.While all this goes on I’m sure
our politicians will make hay lay-
ing the blame on each other andtheir respective political parties.The result of all this will be morebureaucratic quagmire complete-ly void of common sense or solu-tion, and the fire continues toburn the trogon and spotted owlout of house and home. The firestill looms uphill from Portalwhose residents are still in dan-ger of losing everything, anddozens of federal employees sitdown at their base camp sixmiles east of Portal on Highway80 staring up to the top of themountain hoping the wind willstay calm. All weather forecastscall for the wind to return onMonday the 16th.While all this goes on, Janet
Napolitano and our Campaignerin Chief assure us that our south-ern border is safer than ever. Trytelling this to a trogon or spottedowl or perhaps a homo sapien liv-ing in Portal. They’re not playingit cool any longer and they won’tbelieve you.
— Ed Ashurst, Apache, Ariz.
Superior Farms closes Iowa lamb plant
by LISA M. KEEFE
Not quite seven months after announcing the purchaseof Iowa Lamb Corp. in Hawarden, Iowa, SuperiorFarms has shut down the processing operation theredue to a shortage of available livestock, Superior
Farms spokeswoman Angela Gentry told Meatingplace.She added that at this point, Superior Farms considers
the shutdown temporary. The plant had been running atabout half capacity, due to a shortage of lambs.“We are not losing that asset,” Gentry said. “We are keep-
ing the property and equipment and our intention is to openit back up as soon as we have the livestock.”The move eliminated another 49 jobs at the plant, which
is located in a town of about 2,400. This, after SuperiorFarms cut 32 jobs at the facility in February, moving pro-cessing to a facility in Denver.The company plans to keep a half-dozen people working
in Hawarden, buying lambs from local ranchers which thenwill be shipped to Superior Farms’ facility in Denver.
Editor’s Note: As of June 2, over 80,500 acres had burned and the fire was only 75 percent contained.
Page 14 Livestock Market Digest June 15, 2011
NEVADA RANCHES and FARMS
Bottari Realtywww.bottarirealty.com • [email protected] • Ofc.: 775/752-3040 • Res: 775/752-3809 • Fax: 775/752-3021
Out West Realty Network Affiliate
Z Bar Ranch, Clover Valley Ranch: One of those ranches atthe foot of the Mountains that everyone would love to own is nowavailable. This ranch consists of 2,833 deeded acres of whichapprox. 650 acres are irrigated. Creek water to run one pivot andseveral wheel-lines plus flood water. An irrigation well suppliesanother pivot and a 50-acre grain field. The ranch has good im-provements including 3 homes, two shops, two calving barns,and corrals with hydraulic chute. Price: $3,200,000.
Tent Mountain Ranch, Starr Valley, Nevada: 3,435 deededacres at the foot of the majestic East Humboldt Range the North-ern extension of the Ruby Mountains. Several perennial Streamsflow through the ranch and wildlife are an daily part of thescenery. The owners run a Guest Ranch and Guide service outof the ranch. There are multiple fenced pastures for grazing allwith free water. Improvements are good with a large home ap-prox. 5,000. sq.ft, plus a second modular home and MountainCabin. Barn with water, hay barn, and other storage. Access ontopaved road. Price: $4,500,000.
Waddy Creek Ranch: Located in a remote valley, two creeksprovide water for approx. 138 acres of historic meadow. Thisproperty has quaking aspen groves and is quite beautiful. Accessis on a County Road. There is a BLM grazing permit attached tothe ranch for 71 head. Price: Reduced to $400,000.
Indian Creek Ranch: White Pine County, Nevada. This is a greatproperty for a hunter as it is surrounded by Public lands and has
plentiful mule deer, antelope and elk. There is a large spring aris-ing on high ground that could provide pressure for hydro-power,or gravity flow domestic or irrigation water. Approx. 200 acres inthree separate parcels. Piñon pine and Utah juniper plus someCottonwood, willows and quaking aspen. Very scenic. Approx. ½mile off county-maintained road. Price $395,000.
Mason Mountain Ranch: Great summer ranch with 3,700 deededacres plus small BLM permit. Located approx. 75 miles north ofElko. Runs approx. 89 acres of meadow irrigated with water storedin reservoir/fishing hole which also acts as Red Band TroutHatchery. Home and outbuildings for a good cow camp. Phonebut no power. Price: $1,595,000.
Steptoe Valley Farm: Nice alfalfa and grass hay farm in beautifulcountry! Approx. 1,000 acres with around 700 acres of waterrights. Six wells pump water to five center pivots and a fieldflooded or ready for wheel-line hookup. Nice manufactured homefor a residence. $3,000,000.
Elko Co. Spring Sheep Range: This should be a great invest-ment property ideal for a 1031 Exchange! Deeded SheepBase in Elko Co.: 10,705 deeded acres plus a 29 percent publicBLM permit in the mountains just northeast of Elko. Fifty percentof the mineral rights included. Good summer spring and summerrange for sheep or cattle. Annual lease income, plus inexpensiveAg taxes. Price: $1,391,650.
PAUL D. BOTTARI, BROKER
CALL JORDAN OR NICK FOR MORE INFORMATION.
Farmers & Stockmens BankP.O. Box 431, Clayton, N.M. 88415 • 575/374-8301
IRRIGATED FARM NEAR SEDAN, N.M.
960 total acres, 770 irrigated acres, brick home, large barns,
grain bins, etc. Good livestock operation. Favorable financing
and terms available to qualified buyers.
FOR SALE
New Mexico Ranches for SaleFlying Y Ranch ~ Sitting on the east flank of CooksRange under the eye of Cooks Peak is the 19,863 acre
Flying Y Ranch. One ownership for over 50 years.This holding contains 13,283 deeded acres and6,400 New Mexico State lease acres. An extraordi-nary blend of high desert grasslands balanced with
scenic hills and mountains and room for 400 animal units. Water provid-ed by 8 wells and numerous springs. Wildlife includes elk, deer, bear,lion, javalina & quail. Located northeast of Deming. $5,049,000.
Davis Gila Farm ~ Located in the heart of the Gila River Basin at Gila,N.M. Nestled at the confluence of the Gila River and Bear Creek is a veryprivate end of the road irrigated stock farm and wildlife sanctuary. 100acres with 84 water right acres, improved pastures, stock pens, and equip-ment shed all neat and tidy. $1,375,000!
Stockton Ranch ~ Located north of Deming in the high desert is a solid400 animal unit cattle ranch with a 350 animal unit BLM grazing allot-ment. Great improvements developed for function and service; steel pens,excellent water distribution and a comfortable territorial adobe residence.$2,000,000.
MJM Ranch ~ 169 animal unit BLM ranch located near Roswell. 1,525 deed-ed acres, remodeled residence, new shop and cake bins, powder river cattlesystem. RO system for the entire ranch. You need to see this one. $800,000
Los Chaparrales Ranch ~ This river ranch located along the lower reachof the Mimbres north of Deming has the river’s most pristine river bosquecomplemented with beautiful views of Cook Peak and nearby mountains.1,389 deeded acres includes water rights, old adobe residence and horsepens. Price reduced $1,500,000.
Lea County Ranch ~ located north of Jal is the Matkins Ranch and roomfor 150 mother cows. This is a no frills ranch in the mist of the oil patchbut a proven producer of 700 lb. calves, and oil field surface fees. 1,840deeded with 11,800 acres lease. $700,000.
Zia Mesa Farm ~ North of Ft. Sumner is 162 acres with 122 water rights.Nice, neat and tidy farm with center pivot sprinkler, Enclosed Morgan barn– a 1,900 sq. ft. Griffin home. $400,000.
State Lease Ranch ~ Nothing fancy, just a simple cattle ranch with 7,733lease acres. Excellent water distribution, stock pens, and three pastures.Easily accessed off highway north of Deming. $55/acre!
KEITH L. SCHRIMSHER • O: 575/622-2343 • C: 575/[email protected] • www.nm-ranches.com
SOLD
D A N D E L A N E YR E A L E S T A T E , L L C
318 W. Amador Ave., Las Cruces, N.M. 88005(O) 575/647-5041 • (C) 575/[email protected]
26.47 Acre farm for sale off Shalem Colony Road on Coral Road. Borders the Rio Grande river.13.55 acres EBID water rights/full ground water rights. $380,000.
WAHOO RANCH: Approximately 40,976 acres: ± 11,600 deeded, 6,984 BLM, 912 state, 40 uncontrolledand 21,440 forest. Beautiful cattle ranch located on the east slope of the Black Range Mountains northof Winston, N.M., on State Road 52. Three hours from either Albuquerque or El Paso.The ranch isbounded on the east by the Alamosa Creek Valley and on the west by the Wahoo Mountains rangingin elevation from 6,000' to 8,796'. There are 3 houses/2 cabins, 2 sets of working corrals (1 with scales)and numerous shops and outbuildings. It is very well watered with many wells, springs, dirt tanks andpipelines. The topography and vegetation is a combination of grass covered hills (primarily grammagrasses), with many cedar, piñon and live oak covered canyons as well as the forested Wahoo Moun-tains. There are plentiful elk and deer as well as antelope, turkey, bear, mountain lion and javelina (47elk tags in 2010). Absolutely one of the nicest combination cattle/hunting ranches to be found in theSouthwest. Price reduced to $5,500,000.
MAHONEY PARK: Just 10 miles southeast of Deming, N.M. The property consists of approx. 800 acresDeeded, 560 acres State Lease, and 900 acres BLM. This historic property is located high up in the FloridaMountains and features a park like setting, covered in deep grasses with plentiful oak and juniper cov-ered canyons. The cattle allotment would be approx. 30 head (AUYL). Wildlife includes deer, ibex,javalina, quail and dove. This rare jewel would make a great little ranch with views and a home sitesecond to none. Priced at $600,000.
SAN JUAN RANCH: Located 15 miles south of Deming, N.M. east of Highway 11 (Columbus Highway)on CR-11. Approximately 24,064 acres consisting of approximately 2684 acres Deeded, 3240 State Lease,13,460 BLM, and 4,680 uncontrolled. The cattle allotment would be approx. 183 head (AUYL). Thereare 6 solar powered stock wells with metal storage tanks and approximately 6-1/2 miles pipeline. Theranch has a very diverse landscape consisting of high mountain peaks, deep juniper & oak coveredcanyons, mountain foothills and desert grasslands. There is plentiful wildlife including deer, ibex,javalina, quail and dove. A truly great buy at $600,000.
212 ACRE FARM BETWEEN LAS CRUCES, N.M. AND EL PASO, TEXAS:Hwy. 28 frontage with 132 acres ir-rigated, 80 acres sandhills, full EBID (surface water) plus a supplemental irrigation well, cement ditchesand large equipment warehouse. Priced at $1,696,000.
50.47-ACRE FARM: Located on Afton Road south of La Mesa, NM. Paved road frontage, full EBID (sur-face water) plus a supplemental irrigation well with cement ditches. Priced at $609,600.
OTHER FARMS FOR SALE: In Doña Ana County. All located near Las Cruces, N.M. 8, 11, and 27.5 acres.$15,000/acre to $17,000/acre. All have EBID (surface water rights from the Rio Grande River) and sev-eral have supplemental irrigation wells. If you are interested in farm land in Doña Ana County, orranches in Southwest New Mexico, give me a call.
www.zianet.com/nmlandman
THE LIVESTOCK MARKET DIGEST
Real Estate GUIDETO PLACE YOUR LISTINGS HERE, PLEASE CALL MICHAEL WRIGHT
AT 505/243-9515, EXT. 30, OR EMAIL [email protected]
June 15, 2011 “America’s Favorite Livestock Newspaper” Page 15
P BAR RANCH: Rates at 1,350 AU’s including 900 mother cows outside year round – WINTER RANGE – 11,750 deeded acres plus BLM, 300 irrigated – background lot for calves – 3 homes – good improvements –CAN SPLIT – $6,000,000.
LYMAN RANCH: Rated at approximately 225 hd. year long –MEADOW RANCH – 850± deeded with 670± irrigated – FREE WATER –several interior pastures for easy management of cattle – over 1-1/2 MILERIVER THRU RANCH – would make great stocker operation for about 800 hd. – modest improvements including great shipping facilities andscales – asking $1,530,000 Rae at 208/761-9553.
LINSON CREEK: 400/500 HD. WINTER (11/5 – 5/1) with less than 1/2-ton on normal years – 1,938 deeded plus BLM – great stock water – UP-LAND GAME BIRDS, MULE DEER, ELK, FISHING – Washington/ PayetteCounties, ID – modest improvements – $1,475,000 with SELLER FINANCE.
LANDRETH: Malheur County, OR – 780 deeded acres with 180± irrigated– 1/2-MILE RIVER – quality improvements – upland game birds, waterfowl, mule deer, bass ponds – PRICE REDUCED – $980,000.
FARM/FEEDLOT: 500± deeded acres with 280 irrigated row crop – CAFO at 850-1,000 hd. – good improvements – great stocker and/or dairy hfrs. – $1,580,000.
QUARTER CIRCLE DIAMOND: Gilliam County, OR – 6,148 deeded acres with 1,078 dry farm – in addition running 125 mother cows year long– includes 40% interest in potential power generation – siting for 17 TURBINES – mule deer, elk, chukar, quail – $1,750,000 Rae at 208/761-9553 Jack at 541/473-3100.
AGRILANDS Real Estatewww.agrilandsrealestate.com
Vale, Oregon • 541/473-3100 • [email protected]
“EAGER SELLERS”
Ken Ahler Real Estate Co., Inc. www.SantaFeLand.com1435 S. St. Francis Drive, Suite 210 • Santa Fe, N.M. 87505O: 505/989-7573 • Toll Free: 888/989-7573 • M: 505/490-0220E-mail: [email protected]
Capulin Ranch, Separ, N.M.: 21,640 acres total, 7,785 deeded acres and 13,835 leased acres. 350 auyloperation has 8 pastures, 2 traps, 10 wells and drinkers,forage is in excellent condition. Good populations ofmule deer, antelope, big cats, javalina and quail. HQ home is southwest style with pool. Also find a 2 bedroom Guest home, an equipment garage, 2 rail cars, working pens and digital scales all in working order. Priced at $4,000,000
La Cueva Ranch, Las Vegas, N.M.: 3,519 deeded acres on Apache Mesa 20 minutes from Las Vegas,N.M. Caves, rimrock views, canyons, grassy mesa tops and tall pines. Smaller parcels available too. Wild west views. Priced at $$1,779,107
Trigg Ranch Parcels, Las Vegas, N.M.: 720 acre and 360acre pastures located on Apache Mesa at $612,000 and$216,000 respectively. 180 acre parcel located on Hwy84 has stunning views, several building sites on thisparcel. Go to www.SantaFeLand.com for more info.
Place your Real Estate
ad in the 2011 FME
(Including the DIGEST 25)
www.aaalivestock.com
� Special Real Estate section� Full-color, high-gloss magazine
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Chas. S. Middletonand Son
1507 13th ST. • LUBBOCK, TEXAS 79401
(806) 763-5331
RANCH SALES &APPRAISALS
SERVING THE RANCHING INDUST RY SINCE 1920
TEXAS & OKLA. FARMS & RANCHES
Joe Priest Real Estate1205 N. Hwy 175, Seagoville, TX 75159
972/287-4548 • 214/676-69731-800/671-4548www.joepriest.com
• Magnificent 90 Hunting – Cattle/Horse Ranch50 miles E. of Dallas, 35 miles W. of Tyler, Whitepipe fence along FM Hwy. 3,700 sq. ft. elabo-rate home, flowing waterway, l ake. Has it all.• 532-acre CATTLE & HUNTING, NE TX ranch,elaborate home, one-mile highway frontage.OWNER FINANCE at $2,150/ac.• 274 acres in the shadow of Dallas. Secludedlakes, trees, excellent grass. Hunting & fishing,dream home sites. $3,850/ac. • 1,700-acre classic NE TX cattle & huntingranch. $2,750/ac. Some mineral production.• Texas Jewel, 7,000 ac. – 1,000 per ac., runcow to 10 ac.• 256 Acre Texas Jewel – Deep sandy soil, high-rolling hills, scattered good quality trees, & ex-cellent improved grasses. Water line on 2 sidesrd., frontage on 2 sides, fenced into 5 pastures,5 spring fed tanks and lakes, deer, hogs &ducks. Near Tyler & Athens. Price $1,920,000.• 146 horse, hunting cattle ranch N. ofClarksville, TX. Red River Co. nice brick home,2 barns, pipe fences, good deer, hogs, ducks,hunting priced at $395,000.• 535 ac. Limestone, Fallas, & Robertson coun-ties, fronts on Hwy. 14 and has rail frontagewater line, to ranch, fenced into 5 pastures, 2sets, cattle pens, loamy soil, good quality trees,hogs, & deer hunting. Priced at $2,300 per ac.
INTEREST RATES AS LOW AS 3%. PAYMENTS
SCHEDULED ON 25 YEARS
�������������
JOE STUBBLEFIELD & ASSOCIATES13830 Western St., Amarillo, TX806/622-3482 • cell 806/674-2062
Michael Perez Assocs.Nara Visa, NM • 575/403-7970
EAST-CENTRAL NEW MEXICO CATTLE RANCH: 60,400 deededacres with approximately 6,000 acres of leased and free use land.The ranch is located near Santa Rosa and historical stocking rates
indicate a carrying capacity of 1,200 – 1,300 animal units. The ranchhas a rolling to hilly terrain with a small amount of canyon country.
The property is watered by natural lakes, submersible wells, windmills and an extensive waterline network. Improvements include
a nearly new Spanish style hacienda, two camps and several good sets of livestock pens. This working cattle ranch is very
realistically priced at $240 per deeded acre.
������������
Descriptive brochures available
on all ranches. Chas. S. Middleton and Son www.chassmiddleton.com • 1507 13th Street, Lubbock, Texas 79401 • 806/763-5331
SOUTHEAST COLORADO RANCH: 12,383 deeded acres,640 acres of Colorado State Lease, together with a fivemonth permit to run 183 animal units on adjoining ComancheNational Grasslands. This ranch has been operated as a 500animal unit cow/calf ranch and has been under the same family ownership for approximately 60 years. The terrainvaries from open plains grama grass country to rocky sideslopes and scenic high elevated mesa tops. The property has adequate improvements, is very well fenced, andextremely well watered. This is a quality cattle ranch, but also offers the added benefit of hunting. This well maintainedranch is offered at $425 per deeded acre.
������������� �������
THE LIVESTOCK MARKET DIGEST
Real EstateG U I D E
Page 16 Livestock Market Digest June 15, 2011
The New Mexico Section ofthe Society for Range Man-agement has issued an openinvitation to its July 22 sum-
mer range tour of the New Mexi-co State University (NMSU)Corona Range & LivestockResearch Center (CRLRC).The tour fee of $30 includes
lunch; proceeds will go towardsthe NM SRM Range Scholar-ship Fund awarded annually toboth an upper and lower levelRange Science student atNMSU. The tour will featurelong term and current researchincluding:
� Juniper biomass study site.Discuss harvest study, use ofjuniper as biofuel, problems andopportunities.
� Juniper sapling control plotsintegrating herbicide, VLSA
monitoring, and targeted graz-ing.
� Wildlife – Livestock interac-tions utilizing GPS tracking col-lars investigating the woodlandstructures providing optimalhabitat for both cattle and muledeer
� PJ woodland hydrologyexclosures examining soil waterdynamics in relation to woodlandcontrol
� Integrated PJ Control sitesinvolving both herbicide and pre-scribed fire treatmentsThe CRLRC is a 27,886-acre
working ranch laboratory locatednear the geographical center ofthe state of New Mexico, justeast of the village of Corona.Land within the research centeris characterized by rolling hillsalternating with undulat-ing toflat areas with the elevation rang-
ing from 5,720 to 6700 feet. Atransitional area runs the lengthof the ranch with the southernhalf predominately piñon juniperwoodland and the northern halfdescribed as a short grass prairie. The research center is operat-
ed by NMSU’s Animal & RangeSciences Department. Researchprograms, as well as graduatestudent studies are a major partof the research centers activitiesand are incorporated into thenormal production cycle of thecattle and sheep commercialoperations, a registered Angusseedstock herd, a native muledeer population and an intro-duced herd of pronghorn ante-lope.
For tour details and information on NM SRMmembership please contact NM SRM PresidentElect Les Owen (575/646-2642 or [email protected]) or visit nmsrm.nmsu.edu.
BRAND FOR SALE
Quarter Circle 9 Spear$2,800 OBO
Call: 575/461-7888, or Email: [email protected]
irish blacksPolled Purebred Cattle
THE KEY TO PROFIT = EARLY MATURITY & CONSISTENCYWe are the only breed of the major beef breeds that transmits all of gene traits rated at the highest level. All of the recorded purebred animals of the breed trace back to the first imported purebred Friesian bull and five of his daughters. Our gene pool is very small and highly concentrated transmitting extreme dominance when out crossed with other breeds.
100 HIGH PERFORMANCE BULLS FOR SALE, coming two year olds. For the past 25 years we have been selling one two-year-old bull per 70 to 75 females to be bred.
We also have BRED FEMALES FOR SALE, PLUS EMBRYOS and SEMEN
MAURICE W. BONEY, Founder of the Breed 1971
25377 WCR 17, Johnstown, CO 80534 [email protected]
970/587-2252www.irishblacks.com
• 10' & 12' Stationary Tubs• 18' Adjustable Alleys• Continuous Fence• Heavy-Duty Feed Bunks• Complete Line of Heavy-DutyLivestock Equipment
SCOTT SIDEROLL IRRIGATION SYSTEMS.www.scottmanufacturers.com
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GORDON, NEBRASKA1-800/435-0532
Scott 8' Portable Tubswith 18' Alley
Ready for Transportin Minutes
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Address: ____________________________________________ City: __________________________ State: ___________
Zip: _____________________ Phone: _________________________________ Fax: _______________________________
Email: _________________________________________________________________________________________________
Western Legacy Alliance Research SpursCongressional Action on ExposingTaxpayer Funded Lawsuit Racket of Radical Environmentalists
YOU CAN HELP —JOIN TODAY!
THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT!
I am/our organization is committed to protecting the open spaces, private property, private businesses and ensuring the responsible use of public lands. Please list me/my organization as a member of the Western Legacy Alliance.
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Individual Membership $25 � Association Membership $500 � Corporate Membership $1,000 � Other $____________
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by DAVID GARDNER, www.dailymail.co.uk
Doctors have saved the lifeof a woman car crash vic-tim with the first ever useof cow’s blood.
Tamara Coakley, 33, rejecteda life-saving conventional bloodtransfusion because of her Jeho-vah’s Witness faith despite beingclose to death.But in a world’s first proce-
dure, a synthetic blood substi-tute made from cow plasma wasused to revive the patient just asher heart was failing throughsevere blood loss. The success ofthe procedure could help combatthe worldwide blood supplyshortage.Mrs Coakley’s religion per-
Announcing New Mexico SectionSRM Summer Tour July 22, 2011
Cow’s blood saves life of crash victim in world’s
first proceduremits the use of blood substitutesand doctors in Melbourne, Aus-tralia, flew in ten unites of thehaemoglobin-based experimentalplasma — called HBOC-2-1 —from the United States where itis being developed by the mili-tary.The cow’s blood product was
painstakingly administered overtwo days to Mrs. Coakley, whohad been in a medically-inducedcoma following a horrific car col-lision last October.After a few close calls, includ-
ing a bout of pneumonia, thepatient’s haemoglobin levelsmore than doubled. Mrs Coak-ley was overwhelmed by thelengths doctors went to save herlife and respect her personalchoices.
Thanks Debbie . . . Best Wishes For The Future!
The Livestock Market Digest has been fortunateto have Debra Cisneros as our sales represen-
tative for the past several years. The time has comefor Debbie to concentrate on her health and hernew life in Colorado where she moved last fall.
The staff and management at the Livestock Market Digest appreciates all the hard work Debbie has put in the publication and the industry . . .
Caren Cowan, Marguerite Vensel, Kristy Hinds, Becky Matthews, Camille Pansewicz, Carol Pendleton, and Chris Martinez
We are proud to announce that Michael Wright willbe replacing Debbie Cisneros and continuing theexcellent service Livestock Market Digest advertisershave come to expect.
Michael was reared on a commercial F1 and purebredBrahman operation in the bootheel of New Mexico. Hebrings with him four generations of the range livestock indus-try and a keen awareness of the issues facing ranchers andrural economies today. Michael is based in Corvallis, Oregon,but will be working out of the Albuquerque office as well.
Please welcome Michael to the crew and help him alongwhen you can! You may contact him at 505/243-9515, exten-sion 30 or [email protected].
The Livestock Market Digest is proud to add Michael Wright to our team!