nms june 2014 issuu
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The Magazine for Southwestern AgricultureTRANSCRIPT
THE MAGAZINE FOR SOUTHWESTERN AGRICULTURE
Sheepman of the Year
THE MAGAZINE FOR SOUTHWESTERN AGRICULTURE
Mike CasabonneMike Casabonne
JUNE 2014
C Harland Too ET
Sitz OnWard
LT Bluegrass
F or over 40 years you’veknown us for our out-
standing Hereford cattle. Wehave also been producingtop quality Angus andCharolais cattle for 18 years.All of our breeding programsare built on the top geneticsin their respective breeds.
We provide proven cross-breeding components thatwill add pounds to your calvesand work in your environ-ment. For maternal traits, beefquality, muscle and durability,we have the options. We usethese cattle in our own com-mercial program and finishthem in the feedlot. We knowwhat they will do for you.
Selling 150 Hereford BullsOther sires include Harland Too,
C Maui Jim, C Pure Gold 4215, C New Era ET, CL1 Domino 6136S, & Ribeye 88X
Selling 100 Charolais BullsOther sires include LT Bluegrass, TR Firewater,
LT Easy Pro 3151, LT Mighty Blend 6297, LT Bravo Star 5151, & Western Edge
Selling 100 Angus BullsOther sires include UpWard, Thunder,
GridIron, TC Rito 696, X Factor, & Sitz OnWard
Proven CrossbreedingComponents
New Mexico’s Largest1 Iron Seedstock
Producer!
Hereford • Angus • Charolais
Bill King • 505/220-9909 Tom Spindle • 505/321-8808 • 505/832-0926
P.O. Box 2670, Moriarty, NM 87035 — Located 40 miles east of Albuquerque
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TAKE ADVANTAGE OF HETEROSISWITH A PROVEN BULL PROGRAM
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2 J U N E 2 0 1 4
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• 273 luxury rooms and suites• 45,000 sq. ft. of flexible meeting space• Championship golf course*• Fine and casual dining
• Full casino• Ski Apache*• Fishing*• Horseback riding*
*Weather permitting. Must be 21 or older to enter casino. The Mescalero Apache Tribe promotes responsible gaming. For assistance, please call 1-800-GAMBLER (1-800-426-2537).
Booking info: [email protected]
Meet on thewild side.
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F U L L C A S I N O | L U X U R Y R E S O R T | C H A M P I O N S H I P G O L F
M o o w
• 273 luxur• 45,000 sq. f• Championship golf course*• Fine and casual dining
Choose YWidining and unparnext meeting.
estooms and suiy r• 273 luxurt. of flexible meeting space• 45,000 sq. f
• Championship golf course*• Fine and casual dining
our Wild LChoose Y Your Wild Life.ention and meeting fedible convh incrtWi
alleled alpine scenerdining and unparnext meeting.
est. of flexible meeting space
ull casino• F• Ski Apache*• Fishing*• Horseback riding*
our Wild Life.ties, gaming action, awaciliention and meeting f
er place tts no bete’her, tyalleled alpine scener
• Horseback riding*
d-winning arties, gaming action, awour or yo go wild fer place t
*W1-800-G
Booking in
InnoftheMountainGods.com
F U L L C A S I N O | L U X U R Y R E S O R T | C H A M P I O N S H I P G O L F
o enter casino. The Mescalero Apache Tt be 21 or older ting. Musttmiher pereat*WAMBLER (1-800-426-2537).1-800-G
hemountaingods.comtzhe@innofao: jakfBooking in
InnoftheMountainGods.com
F U L L C A S I N O | L U X U R Y R E S O R T | C H A M P I O N S H I P G O L F
ibe promotes responsible gaming. For assisro enter casino. The Mescalero Apache T
hemountaingods.com
1-800-545-9011 Mescalero, NM near Ruidoso
F U L L C A S I N O | L U X U R Y R E S O R T | C H A M P I O N S H I P G O L F
ance, please call tibe promotes responsible gaming. For assis
F U L L C A S I N O | L U X U R Y R E S O R T | C H A M P I O N S H I P G O L F
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Call 1-800-447-7620 or visit www.HiProFeeds.com
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Farming and ranching build muscles, callouses and a sense of pride you won’t find in the corporate world. We know because we’ve been farmer and rancher owned since 1916. We’ve provided loans, insurance and other financial services to help generations of New Mexicans succeed. Call us and let’s build something together.
Call 1-800-451-5997 or visit www.FarmCreditNM.com
Jack Pirtle, Member Since 2012
J U N E 2 0 1 4 9
JUNE 2014
FEATURES
14 Sheepman of the Year Mike Casabonne by Carol Wilson
33 USDA Taps Molly Manzanares as State FSA Director
38 Mr. & Mrs. Jerry Maynard
39 Colostrum: Liquid gold for kid goats and lambs by Dr. Tom Earleywine, Director of Nutritional Services for Land O’Lakes Animal Milk Products
42 How Fair is the Endangered Species Act to the American Land Owners? by Locke Ann McIvor, Fort Davis High School & Sul Ross State University
51 True Tails of a Ranch Wife by Betty Martin
55 Mainstream media don’t know Big Green has deeper pockets than Big Oil by Ron Arnold, Washington Examiner
DEPARTMENTS 10 N.M. Cattle Growers’ Association President’s Letter by Jose Varela Lopez, President
12 News Update
26 New Mexico’s Old Time & Old Timers by Don Bullis
28 N.M. CowBelles Jingle Jangle
30 N.M. Federal Lands Council News by Frank DuBois
32 Aggie Notes
34 To The Point by Caren Cowan
38 In Memoriam
46 My Cowboy Heroes by Jim Olson
48 Estrays
48 View from the Backside by Barry Denton
50 On The Edge of Common Sense by Baxter Black
57 NMBC Bullhorn
60 Market Place
64 Seedstock Guide
67 Real Estate Guide
74 Ad Index
ON THE COVER . . .Sheepman of the Year
Mike Casabonne, Hope, New Mexico.
Photo by Carol Wilson
VOL 80, No. 6 USPS 381-580
NEW MEXICO STOCKMANWrite or call: P.O. Box 7127
Albuquerque, New Mexico 87194505/243-9515 Fax: 505/998-6236
E-mail: caren @aaalivestock.com
Official publication of:
� New Mexico Cattle Growers’ AssociationEmail: [email protected];
2231 Rio Grande NW, P.O. Box 7517, Albu quer que, NM 87194,
505/247-0584, Fax: 505/842-1766; Pres i dent, Jóse Varela López
Executive Director, Caren CowanDeputy Director, Zach Riley
Asst. Executive Director, Michelle Frost
� New Mexico Wool Growers, Inc.P.O. Box 7520, Albuquerque,NM 87194, 505/247-0584
President, Marc KincaidExecutive Director, Caren Cowan
Asst. Executive Director, Michelle Frost
EDITORIAL & ADVERTISINGPublisher: Caren Cowan
Publisher Emeritus: Chuck StocksOffice Manager: Marguerite VenselAdvertising Reps.: Chris Martinez,
Melinda Martinez Contributing Editors: Carol Wilson
Callie Gnatkowski-Gibson,William S. Previtti, Lee PittsPhotographer: De e Bridgers
PRODUCTIONProduction Coordinator: Carol Pendleton
Editorial & Advertising Design: Kristy Hinds
ADVERTISING SALESChris Martinez at 505/243-9515, ext. 28
New Mexico Stockman (USPS 381-580)is published monthly by Caren Cowan,2231 Rio Grande, NW, Albuquerque, NM 87104-2529.Subscription price: 1 year - $19.95 /2 years - $29.95.POSTMASTER: Send address changes to NewMexico Stock man, P.O. Box 7127, Albuquer que, NewMexico 87194.Periodicals Postage paid at Albuquerque, New Mexicoand additional mailing offices. Copyright 2008 byNew Mexico Stockman. Material may not be usedwithout permission of the publisher. Deadline foreditorial and advertising copy, changes and cancella-tions is the 10th of the month preceding publication.Advertising rates on request.
www.aaalivestock.com
T AB L E O F C ON T E N T S
10 J U N E 2 0 1 4
ESSAGEby José Varela López
José Varela LópezPresident
La Cieneguilla
Pat BoonePresident-Elect
Elida
John ConniffVice-President
At Large, Las Cruces
Randell MajorSW Vice-President
Magdalena
Ernie TorrezNW Vice-President
La Jara
Jeff Billberry SE Vice-President
Elida
Blair ClavelNE Vice-President
Roy
Shacey SullivanSecretary-Treasurer
Bosque Farms
Rex WilsonPast President
Carrizozo
Caren CowanExecutive Director
Albuquerque
NEW MEXICO CATTLE GROWERS’ ASSOCIATION OFFICERSwww.nmagriculture.org
NMCGA PRESIDENT
Dear Fellow Members and Industry Supporters,
It seems that government overreach has been in the news a lot lately on the national stage. Unfortunately, New Mex-ico took to that stage in May when President Obama, at the request of our US Senators, utilized the Antiquities Actand his pen to place a national monument designation on nearly half a million acres in Doña Ana County. While
national monuments are not a bad thing the way this one came to be certainly was.This monument designation is troublesome on many levels, not the least of which was the unilateral heavy handed
action by Washington that subverted the legislative process which could have addressed the informed input of localstakeholders. Instead, the national monument designation ignored those opinions in favor of the environmentalactivist wish list. To say that this designation was an “in your face” affront to the traditional land managers of thecounty would be an understatement. Additionally, the Organ Mountains Desert Peaks National Monument is inconsistent with the Antiquities Act which
calls for designating the “smallest compatible area” in creating a monument. The Organ Mountains Desert Peaks isactually more than five disparate areas in Doña Ana County which in my opinion should have been considered sepa-rately. The only thing these different land masses have in common is that they collectively stand to negatively impactlocal law enforcement, border security, watershed management and recreational access in those areas. There are alsoclose to 100 longstanding ranching families whose lands and livelihoods, customs and culture, will be irreparablycompromised in a taking of their property and rights by the federal government. Their losses alone heavily outweighthe purported revenues associated with increased tourism resulting from the national monument designation.Hopefully, the management planning process to be undertaken by the Bureau of Land Management for the
national monument will provide the opportunity for the citizens of Doña Ana County to provide the input they havebeen denied thus far. I would also hope that the process would merit an Environmental Impact Statement, given themajor issues which need to be fully addressed, instead of an Environmental Assessment such as what is being under-taken on the Rio Grande del Norte National Monument in northern New Mexico and is a less thorough process. Ifyou’re prone to self-aggravation, as I frequently am, you might want to read the scoping report summarizing publiccomments received about how the Rio Grande del Norte National Monument should be managed. Many of the com-ments pertain to issues which have absolutely nothing to do with the management of a national monument, whichonce again proves that a legislative process is more responsible than environmental activism.In another case of governmental overreach the United States Forest Service in the Sacramento Ranger District of
the Lincoln National Forest has decided to fence off an area of stream which has historically served as a watering placefor cattle. The fencing project, which still allows for access to deer and elk is ostensibly meant to both create and pro-tect habitat for the New Mexico Meadow Jumping Mouse. As of this writing the mouse species in question has neitherbeen listed as a threatened nor endangered species, nor does it have any designated critical habitat. What’s even worse,the forest service is preventing the allotment owner from legally accessing their private water right, and is using thatwater for their own purposes, and illegally, in my opinion. On a much more positive note, I wanted to let you know that Emily Ferranti of Datil, and recent recipient of a
Young Cattlemen’s scholarship, has just completed her freshman year at Oklahoma State University. Emily is study-ing Animal Science, making the President’s Honor Roll by maintaining a 4.0 GPA during her first two semesters ofstudy. In closing, I hope that the Good Lord continues to provide us not with what we want, but with what we need, and
that includes rain.Until next time . . .
José Varela López
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12 J U N E 2 0 1 4
900 North Garden · P.O. Box 2041Roswell, New Mexico 88201
575/622-5580www.roswelllivestockauction.com
CATTLE SALES: MONDAYSHORSE SALES: APRIL, JUNE, SEPTEMBER and DECEMBER
BENNY WOOTON RES 575/625-0071, CELL 575/626-4754SMILEY WOOTON CELL 575/626-6253
Trucks are available 7 days a week / 24 hours a day
ROSWELL LIVESTOCK AUCTION RECEIVING STATIONS
Producers hauling cattle to Roswell Live stock New MexicoRe ceiving Stations need to call our toll-free number for aTrans portation Permit number before leaving home. TheHauling Permit number 1-800/748-1541 is answered 24hours a day, 7 days a week.
LORDSBURG, NM
20 Bar Livestock Highway #90 at NM #3 – East side of high-way. Receiving cattle for transport 2nd & 4th Sunday of eachmonth. Truck leaves Lordsburg on Sunday at 2:00 p.m. (MST) Smiley Wooton, 575/622-5580 office, 575/626-6253 cell.
PECOS, TX
Hwy. 80 across from Town & Country Motel. Jason Heritageis now receiving cattle every Sunday. For information tounload contact Jason Heritage 575/840-9544 or SmileyWooton 575/626-6253. NO PRIOR PERMITS REQUIRED.Trucks leave Sunday at 4:00 p.m. (CST)
VAN HORN, TX
800 West 2nd, 5 blocks west of Court house. Steve Flippen,254/462-2028. Trucks leave 1st & 3rd Sunday at 3:00 p.m. (CST)
MORIARTY, NM
Two blocks east and one block south of Tillery Chevrolet. SmileyWooton 575/622-5580 office, 575/626-6253 mobile.Trucks leave Sunday at 3:00 p.m. (MST)
SAN ANTONIO, NM
River Cattle Co. Nine miles east of San Antonio on U.S. 380.Receiving cattle for transport 2nd & 4th Sunday of each month. GaryJohnson 575/838-1834, 575/517-0107 cell. Trucks leaveSunday at 3:00 p.m. (MST)
ROSWELL LIVESTOCK AUCTION SALES, INC.
& ROSWELL LIVESTOCK AUCTION TRUCKING, INC.
Paper suggests that climate isless sensitive to greenhousegases than previously thought by BEN SPENCER, DAILYMAIL.CO.UK
Ascientific study which suggests global warming has beenexaggerated was rejected by a respected journal because itmight fuel climate scepticism, it was claimed recently.
The alarming intervention, which raises fears of ‘McCarthyist’pressure for environmental scientists to conform, came after areviewer said the research was ‘less than helpful’ to the climatecause.Professor Lennart Bengtsson, a research fellow at the Univer-
sity of Reading and one of five authors of the study, said he sus-pected that intolerance of dissenting views on climate science waspreventing his paper from being published.‘The problem we now have in the climate community is that
some scientists are mixing up their scientific role with that of aclimate activist,’ he told the Times.Prof Bengtsson’s paper suggests that the Earth’s environment
might be much less sensitive to greenhouse gases than previouslythought.If he and his four co-authors are correct, it would mean that
carbon dioxide and other pollutants are having a far less severeimpact on climate than green activists would have us believe.The research, if made public, would be a huge challenge to the
finding of the UN’s Intergovernmental panel on Climate Change(IPCC), that the global average temperature would rise by up to4.5C if greenhouse gases in the atmosphere were allowed to double.The paper suggested that the climate might be less sensitive to
greenhouse gases than had been claimed by the IPCC in its reportlast September, and recommended that more work be carried out‘to reduce the underlying uncertainty’.The five contributing scientists submitted the paper to Envi-
ronmental Research Letters – a highly regarded journal – butwere told it had been rejected. A scientist asked by the journal toassess the paper under the peer review process reportedly wrote:‘It is harmful as it opens the door for oversimplified claims of“errors” and worse from the climate sceptics media side.’ Prof Bengtsson, 79, said it was ‘utterly unacceptable’ to advise
against publishing a paper on the political grounds.He said: ‘It is an indication of how science is gradually being
influenced by political views. The reality hasn’t been keeping upwith the [computer] models.‘If people are proposing to do major changes to the world’s
economic system we must have much more solid information.’
continued on page 13
J U N E 2 0 1 4 13
Custom Cattle Feeding at its finest
Bar-GFeedyard
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Res: 806/364-1172Mobile: 806/346-2508
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Next year the UN hopes to broker aninternational agreement on reducinggreenhouse gas emissions, a replacementfor the Kyoto Protocol which wouldimpose legally binding targets on everycountry.The last attempt, at the Copenhagen
conference in 2009, ended in disaster, withrecriminations flying and all chances of adeal in tatters.The Paris conference in December 2015
is thought by many politicians to be thelast realistic chance for a deal to be made ifdisastrous climate change is to be averted.A controversy at this stage risks putting
the science which underpins the negotia-tions at doubt, something many – not leastpoliticians in Britain and the US – will bekeen to avoid.The publisher of the Environmental
Research Letters journal last night saidProfessor Bengtsson’s paper had beenrejected because it contained errors anddid not sufficiently advance the science.A spokesman for IOP Publishing said:
‘The paper, co-authored by LennartBengtsson, was originally submitted toEnvironmental Research Letters as a
research Letter.‘This was peer-reviewed by two inde-
pendent reviewers, who reported that thepaper contained errors and did not providea significant advancement in the field, andtherefore failed to meet the journal’s
required acceptance criteria.‘As a consequence, the independent
reviewers recommended that the papershould not be published in the journalwhich led to the final editorial decision toreject the paper.’ �
Paper continued from page 12
by CAROL WILSON
SHEEPMAN OF THE YEAR
Mike CasabonneMike Casabonne
2013
“R anching today is avery challenging
environment. I don’tknow anyone who’s bet-
ter equipped to meetthose challenges than my
brother. He’s alwayslearning and dealing with
his ranching operationwhile staying abreast ofrelevant public policy
issues that others ignoreat their peril.”
–Tim Casabonne
M ike Mike Casabonne handlesthe pile of wool with surehands. He knows its grade and
staple length at a glance and can estimatethe yield of clean wool by the feel andweight of the fleece between his fingers.He has handled thousands of such fleeces,his own and those produced by his neigh-bors and friends. With his hands busyskirting the fleece, his mind stays busy. Heneeds to check the pipeline on the east sideof the ranch. Water levels are low and hecan’t afford to lose a tank. Boundary fencesneed to be ridden, because keeping coyotesout of the flock is the first priority. There isa mechanical problem in the feed pickup.If he gets the Super Cub out at first light,he can check waters before he runs intotown for a meeting.His mind returns to the shearing barn,
where the heavy winter coats are beingsheared off of his ewes and his friends,family and neighbors are helping skirt,class and bale the fleeces. Family is here,his son and daughter and nieces andnephews, cousins and aunts and uncles. Soare neighbors, the men and women who,like him, make their living from the landand the livestock.Amid the noise and controlled chaos of
the shearing shed, Mike is at home. Hegrew up in the shearing shed. He learnedin the pastures, from the saddle and at thefamily dinner table. He absorbed the loreof the stockman from the previous genera-tion and in turn has taught his childrenthe tenets of stewardship and service. Itwas a surprise to no one but him whenMike Casabonne was named the Sheep-man of the Year by the New Mexico WoolGrowers, Inc. (NMWGI).The quiet, modest man from Hope was
surprised when a gathering of Wool Grow-ers in Roswell honored him as their
that carried those ancestors through theGreat Depression and two World Wars stillcourses through Mike’s body. The bloodran true as he volunteered time andresources to better his community, hisfamily and agriculture. Hope beat in tunewith his heart as he waged war against thepredators who were slowly killing the NewMexico sheep industry.It was only three generations ago, just
over 100 years, when Mike’s grandfather,Jack Casabonne, and his brother Peteimmigrated to America. The year was 1907and Jack was 17 years old. AnotherFrenchman gave Pete and Jack their startherding sheep in the Artesia area. Justthree years later, in 1910, Felix Cauhape,Mike’s maternal grandfather, left Lescunto come to America and make a life as asheep rancher. Felix corresponded withMarie Rose, a young girl from his village,and proposed marriage through the mail.Marie Rose left the green, beautiful villageat the age of 27 to join her intended in theharsh, unforgiving landscape of New Mex-ico territory.Over the next 100 years, the Cauhape
and Casabonne families raised sheep, cowsand kids near the small village of Hope,New Mexico. Jack’s son, George, marriedFelix and Marie Rose’s daughter, MarieElizabeth. George and Marie Elizabeth seta standard of production efficiency thatthe rest of the New Mexico sheep industrytried to emulate. The Casabonne flocksconsistently had a 115 to 125 percent lambcrop and a reputation wool clip.George and Marie Elizabeth’s four chil-
dren learned by doing. Memories of thoseyears include fun times in the shearingshed and dogie lambs on the back porch.Mike knew, from an early age, that he
Sheepman of the Year. Though he hasspent countless hours – and driven evenmore miles – to provide leadership in thesheep business, his community and all ofNew Mexico’s ag industry, his service is soinnate that he doesn’t realize how muchhe gives to the rest of agriculture.
The blood of a stockman
Truly, in Mike Casabonne courses theblood of a stockman. Generations ofCasabonnes on both sides of the AtlanticOcean have cared for livestock. It is theblood that caused three of Mike’s grand-parents to leave a village in the PyreneesMountains of Southwestern France, crossan ocean and a continent, and tend live-stock in the territory of New Mexico. Thetenacity, hope, and stubborn optimism
J U N E 2 0 1 4 15
We at AC Nutrition aregrateful for your great
contribution in the livestock industry.
Congratulations!
To our FriendMike Casabonne
��������������
Congratulations MIKE CASABONNESheepman of the Year
You Richly Deserve this Award!
Alice Eppers & the Bud EppersFamily
Congratulations
Mike on Sheepman of the Year!
The late Lloyd & Ethel Treat The late Tony & Joyce Treat
— Bernarr, Dyanna, Spencer & Collin Treat
continued on page 16Future Sheepman of the Year and
one of his charges.
wanted to be numbered among the menand women who fed the world.
Young blood
After graduation from high school,Mike pursued a degree in Animal Sciencefrom New Mexico State University. He paidhis way through college by playing guitar
about being a sheepman. But Mike wantedto learn more about the lamb feeding partof the business, so after graduation fromNMSU he loaded all his belongings in a carand drove to Wyoming to work for the YORanches, a cutting-edge, vertically inte-grated sheep operation. “They were goingto haul in hay and grain and ship outboxed, frozen lamb.” Mike said. “It would
for Shelly Gaye and the Nightlifers. Themoney was good and the band got to wearpolyester suits for their gigs, but whenMike expressed his desire to further hislivestock skills as a part of the LivestockJudging Team, the band became part ofhistory.The Casabonne family had always run
sheep on pasture and sold their feederlambs in the fall, and George had taughtMike everything the young man knew
16 J U N E 2 0 1 4
Bob HomerRobert L. Homer & Associates LLC
Mike, &Congratulations
... on being named Sheepman of the Year.
Thank you ... for your many contributions to the livestock industry during the past 35 years.
Hall-Gnatkowski, Inc
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��Your a
Good Man
MIKECASABONNEThe sheep industry is most grateful for your many years of hard work on our behalf.
— Punch & Suzanne Jones
CONGRATULATIONS
MIKEWe join the rest of the livestock industry in honoring you as
Sheepman of the Year!
��� ��������������� ����������!�� � � � ��"�������� ���� �����������������
MIKECASABONNECongratulationsWe Appreciate You!
Tom & Pam RunyanRunyan Ranches
������������������������ ��
Visit us on 575-644-4074
James Sachse • Dee Sachse 3125 Doña Ana Road, Las Cruces, NM 88005
SachseRed Angus
GLADSTONE, NEW MEXICO
We’re proud of you
Mike CasabonneIt's our privilege to honor you as
Sheepman of the Year
Congratulations
Mike!Mike!...your contribution to not only the
New Mexico Sheep Industry, but the livestockindustry as a whole can not be measured.
I am proud to call you a friend & fellow sheepherder.
Scott McNally
...your contribution to not only the New Mexico Sheep Industry, but the livestock
industry as a whole can not be measured. I am proud to call you a friend &
fellow sheepherder.
Scott McNally
Thank You for your
dedication tothe industry
MikeCasabonne������� �������������
������������������������������������������ �� ����������
����������Skeen Buckhorn
Ranch The Lee’s • Hat Ranch, Alamogordo
A WELL DESERVEDHONOR FOR
THE FRENCHMAN!
“HANG INTHERE!”
continued on page 17
2013 Sheepman of the Yearcontinued from page 15
have been quite a deal if it had worked, butlike so many good ideas, funding wasdepleted before the operation really got offthe ground.”But young Casabonne had attracted the
attention of Dr. Dewey Brown, one of thetop feedlot veterinarians in the country.Dr. Brown invited Mike to work for him ina lamb feeding facility near Greeley, Col-orado. Mike stayed with the Browns fortwo years and got a first-hand look at thedifferent management systems of variousfeedlots and learned philosophies andmanagement practices which he still uses.Mike returned to New Mexico to help at
the Casabonne home place. His Aunt Mad-lyn Cauhape was president of the NewMexico Wool Growers in the late 1970s andshe put Mike on the Wool Show Commit-tee. “That was how I got started in WoolGrowers stuff,” he reminisced. “I wasn’tsmart enough to know that if you areyoung and show an interest, they will stickyou on everything.”Madalyn was also a Cattle Grower and
did a lot of traveling to represent theindustry. “She would ask me to drive herto a Livestock Board meeting or a Cattle
Growers meeting,” Mike remembers. “Shewas getting me involved in some thingsthat ended up being a big part of my lifefrom then on. She was a big influence onme.”Another individual who changed Mike’s
life was Lloyd Treat, who ranched north-west of Hope. One day, Lloyd invited theMike to come over and talk to him. Lloydand Ethel had no children, and Lloyd saidthat if Mike was still interested in finding aplace of his own, he would be willing totalk to him.“I put together some figures and came
over and shared them with Lloyd. He said,
J U N E 2 0 1 4 17
“Dedicated To ATradition of Integrity”
Mike Corn, Mgr. • 505/622-3360 • Fax 505/622-3161212 East 4th Street, Roswell, NM 88201
www.roswellwool.com • [email protected] CALL 1-800/624-WOOL
Don’t miss the 2014 New Mexico Wool GrowersAnnual Meeting, June 8-10
in Las Cruces.
WE APPRECIATEYOU MIKE.Honoring you as
Sheepman of the Year islong overdue but definitelywell deserved. Mike, you’ve
been a great personalfriend and a true and hard-working fighter for the industry.
We are honored to honor you!
2013 Sheepman of the Yearcontinued from page 16 A long friendship
. . .Mike Casabonneand Pete Gnatkowski
classing the woolin the Casabonne
shearing barn. Peteand Mike roomed
together in college.As sheepmen, theyand several other
sheepmen traveled toshearings to help
sort, grade and classtheir clips.
‘That looks pretty good. Here is what weare going to do. I’m not ready to sell yet,but I want you to go home and figure out alease deal.’”Mike went home and figured a lease and
came back to present his figures to Lloyd.Lloyd again said, “That looks pretty good.Here is what we are going to do.”Lloyd offered Mike a lease on the place
and Mike paid Lloyd and Ethel a percent-age of what he made. “The deal he mademe was better for me than my own fig-ures,” Mike recalls. “He always told me not
continued on page 18
to worry, that he would sell this place tome at a price I could afford to pay. And hedid. We leased the place for about 10 yearsand then bought it.”Mike leaned back in his chair and spoke
at a square dance. In a few years, Kamimade the couple a family. Later, Kellencompleted the family. As they raised theirfamily, Mike and Dwanna watched theyears go by in a blur of shearings andcounty fairs, family gatherings andreunions of friends disguised as a markingor a lamb working. Through it all, familyinvolvement in the sheep business was aconstant. At his last shearing, Mike’s fathernoted that all of his grandchildren wereworking together in the big barn, skirtingwool.Kami and Kellen both showed sheep.
When Kami started high school and tookon sports and FFA activities, theCasabonnes bought a little house in Arte-sia where Dwanna and the kids lived dur-ing the week. “They would get home toolate and leave too early if they tried to par-ticipate from the ranch,” Mike noted. “Itwas the only way the kids could beinvolved in high school activities.”Dwanna took a job, which she held 12years, to get both Kami and Kellenthrough college without debt. WhenKellen graduated, he moved home to theranch on the Felix River. Kellen spent two
slowly, “If it hadn’t been for Lloyd, I would-n’t have had a chance to get started,” hecommented. “I always believed that Lloydthought A.C. Hendricks had done him afavor by selling the ranch to him when hewas young, and he wanted to do the samefor me.”Another life-changing mentor was
Mike’s uncle Felix Cauhape,who had three daughters whoweren’t interested in flying anda son who was too young tolearn. Felix was a superb pilotwho told his nephew that if hewanted to fly, he would supplythe plane. Felix not onlytaught Mike to fly a Super Cub,but soloed him over the ranchbefore an instructor would lethim solo in town. Mike put theplane to good use on theranch, checking waters, count-ing sheep and killing coyotes.“We couldn’t kill all the coy-otes from the Super Cub, but ithelped,” Mike commented.In the rare moments that the
young rancher wasn’t working,he enjoyed square dancing andmet Dwanna, his future wife,
18 J U N E 2 0 1 4
WWEE HHOOPPEE TTOO SSEEEE AALLLL OOFF YYOOUU AATT TTHHEENN..MM.. WWOOOOLL GGRROOWWEERRSS CCOONNVVEENNTTIIOONN
...to be held jointly with the N.M. CattleGrowers, CowBelles & N.M. Farm & Livestock Bureau Meetings.JJUUNNEE 88--1100 •• LLAASS CCRRUUCCEESS
To Sheepman of the YearMMIIKKEE CCAASSAABBOONNNNEE
...we offer our warmest congratulations to ourgood friend on this well-deserved honor!
Joan, David, Marc, Tammy, Cole & Clay Kincaid
Convention 2014 ����%�%��� ������"�#%�� %�!��� ��������� ������� ��$����&%��� ��!���&#�#��&�%�$
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continued on page 19
2013 Sheepman of the Yearcontinued from page 17
Wool Sale at the Artesia Wool Coop. Rick Wertheimer ofthe ASPC, John White and Mike Casabonne discuss a
fleece. John White always sheared his own flock and hadthe highest selling clip in New Mexico.
seasons as the lead saw on the BonnevilleHot Shot crew, fighting fires with the bestof the best before he moved home back tothe Felix River. Mike says Kellen is now theforeman of the Treat ranch and Mike is justhis helper.
Ovine bloodlines
Mike purchased livestock as well as landfrom Lloyd Treat and continued toimprove the flock, which was based on aColumbia cross with Debouillet bloodinfused. In an average year the Casabonnesmarked a 102 to 105 percent lamb cropand weaned an 80 to 85 pound feeder.Mike is known as a man who studies
and isn’t afraid to try new things. He wason the wool council when they started theskirting and grading program and was oneof the first to implement the program onhis own ranch. “When we started prepar-ing it properly, prices started edging up toAustralian clean price levels,” he noted. “Idon’t think that would have happened ifwe hadn’t started classing and grading andbaling our wool according to internationalstandards. Competition is the name of thegame. When you sort your good stuff fromyour bad stuff, it will be to your advantage.The warehouse can sell better if the growerhas graded, sorted and baled his wool.”Neighbors and friends from sheep out-
fits hundreds of miles away shared thelabor of classing and baling wool, oftentraveling from ranch to ranch followingthe shearers. “It was a lot of work,” notedMike. “But it was a lot of fun.”Pete Gnatkowski was Mike’s roommate
in college and came often to help class thewool. “Mike was one who did a lot of workto improve New Mexico’s wool clip,” notedPete. “He brought over an Australian woolbaler and a classer to show us how to sortthe wool into uniform lots which wouldsell better as a more uniform product.That helped everyone.”The concept of selling lambs directly to
the retailer was being done by New Mexicoproducers twenty years ago, again becauseof Mike’s leadership. Fellow sheepmanSteve Lewis noted “Mike had this group ofproducers raising range raised lambs andselling those lambs to Wynn Dixie in thesoutheastern United States. Everyone isdoing it now, but Mike was the one that gotus started 20 years ago.” Mike, with typicalmodesty, wanted to make sure that Steve
J U N E 2 0 1 4 19
2013 Sheepman of the Yearcontinued from page 18
Shelly Gaye andthe Nightlifers
... complete with polyester suits and1970s hairstyles.The band made
money and got freebeer. Mike is second
from the left.
continued on page 20
got the credit for the forward-thinkingmarketing.
Blood brothers
As Mike was raising his family andbuilding his ranch, he always took thetime to help others, whether it was volun-teering as a local fireman, coaching a 4-Hwool judging team or heading to Washing-ton to testify for public lands ranchers.The men and women who helped shapehim were his father, George, from whomhe learned how to run and raise sheep.Preston Means was another good stock-man from whom Mike learned a lot oflessons. Lloyd Treat gave Mike a chance toget his own place, and Madlyn Cauhape gothim involved in Wool Growers and CattleGrowers. Bud Eppers taught him aboutpolitics and policies and federal landsissues.“All the people that I grew up looking
up to did things for others,” Mike com-mented. “My Dad was on boards andbelieved in doing your part and supportingthe ones who support the industry. I knewthat I wanted to be a rancher like theseguys that I grew up respecting, and Iwanted to give back, because that is whatmakes life worthwhile.”Mike has served as both president and
vice president of the New Mexico FederalLands Council, and received the Bud’sContract award in 2008. In 2011, he wasnamed outstanding Departmental Alumniby NMSU’s Department of Animal andRange Sciences. Mike was involved in theArtesia Wool Warehouse for many yearsand served as president of the New MexicoWool Growers from 1985 to 1986. He was
20 J U N E 2 0 1 4
Congratulations
MIKECASABONNESheepman of
the YearThank You For Your Great Work on the Board of Directors & Your Community Involvement
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CongratulationsMIKE
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FROM YOUR FRIEND & NEIGHBOR
SHAWNA SMITH,OWNER OF THE
TURQUOISE SHOP
— THE —
TURQUOISESHOP
www.theturquoiseshop.com
...on your achievement ofSheepman of
the Year!
CCoonnggrraattuullaattiioonnss
MMiikkee CCaassaabboonnnnee
CONGRATULATIONS
MIKE...ON THIS
WELL-DESERVEDHONOR!BELEN, NM
continued on page 21
continued on page <None>
2013 Sheepman of the Yearcontinued from page 19
Riann, Mikee and Sara practice Wool Judg-ing at Penasco School. Mike helped the wooljudging team through the Mt. Dews 4-H. Helooked at the photo and remembered thatSara Beth got high point individual in thejunior division.
Wool Growers president when Wool Grow-ers and Cattle Growers met together as aJoint Stockman’s convention, the secondtime ever and the first time since 1917.Mike also serves on the board of direc-
tors of the Penasco Valley Telephone Coop-erative and First American Bank in Artesiaand served two terms on the ArtesiaSchool Board.The old saying, “If you want something
done, ask a busy man,” is appropriatewhen applied to Mike. “Most people don’trealize how busy ranchers are,” notedMike’s brother, Tom. “Mike is always work-ing on livestock, machinery, wells, book-keeping, or something else. But he alsomakes time to be active in livestock andgrazing organizations. It is a big priorityfor him that ranchers work together fortheir own good.”“He is a selfless person who is always
willing to do anything that would help theindustry or the community,” noted PeteGnatkowski. “If he has a fault, it would bethat he can’t say no to people who need hishelp.”Rosemary Shafer, Mike’s sister, noted,
“Mike stays well informed on legislativeissues related to agriculture and has theability to clarify complex and confusingissues for others with an understandableexplanation.”“He has good judgment,” Rosemary
added. “He reminds me of our Dad becausehe seems to always know the right answerto most any question on most any topic.”Mike’s peers agree. Bebo Lee has had
J U N E 2 0 1 4 21
Representing the interests of the sheep industry for over 110 years... at the Roundhouse, on Capitol Hill and everywhere between.
Dues 3¢ per pound of Sheared Wool – Minimum $50
New Mexico Wool Growers, Inc.POB 7520, Albuquerque, NM 87194
505.247.0584 phone • 505.842.1766 fax
[email protected] us on the web at www.nmagriculture.org
Join New Mexico’s OLDEST Livestock Trade Organization
NEW MEXICO WOOL GROWERS, INC.
1-25.........$9.50 ea.26-50.......$9.00 ea.51+..........$8.75 ea.
Congratulations
Mike! Well done & well deserved!
������������������������
����������������������� �������
continued on page 22
2013 Sheepman of the Yearcontinued from page 20
Paul’sVeterinary Supply
Congratulations
MIKE CASABONNESheepman of the Year
You have been a leader and a hard worker for the livestock industry for threedecades. Thank you for your dedicationand consistently effective representation
over these many years!
One-stop shopping for ranchers & ropers!
Mike purchased Lloyd Treat’s sheep when he bought the ranch. Most New Mexico sheepmencrossed the fine-wool Delaine with Columbia and Rambouille and some black-faced sheep toget a fine-wool, dual purpose sheep. Mike bought a lot of his bucks from the Cauhape place.
many occasions to work with Mike on pub-lic land issues. “I am always impressed byhow well-spoken and articulate Mike is,”Bebo stated. “He can make his point verywell to whomever he is talking. I am notsaying that Mike is comfortable going outinto the public, I’m just saying that he iswell equipped. And he does it. That takesaway time from his family and his businessand everything else, yet he remains willingto do it.”Lewis Derrick is another rancher who
got to know Mike because both showed upat meetings dealing with issues of water orfederal lands. Lewis has been impressed byMike’s calm assessment of situations. “He
Wool Growers Association into the Ameri-can Sheep Producers Association. It tooklots of meetings and lots of phone calls.Mike had to be gone from home. “The kidswere little,” he remembers. “It was a lot ofwork, but Dwanna and the kids handled it.They always took care of stuff here at homewhen I had to be elsewhere.”David Kincaid grew up hearing his
cousin call Mike’s parents “Uncle Georgeand Aunt Lizzie” so David called them bythose names as well. David has neighboredwith Mike, run sheep on the same land,and been as close as “almost family” all hislife. “Mike is more diplomatic when deal-ing with the public than I am,” Davidstated. “He is fair in his dealings and prettyconscientious about what he does. I don’tknow how he finds the time he does towork on some of the stuff he does and stilltake care of his business.”“Mike just wants to make things better
for everyone,” Pete Gnatkowski continued.“He doesn’t really expect any credit forwhat he does. He is just interested in help-ing. He is progressive as far as new ideasthat might work. He also is one of thoseguys who thinks about stuff. Everyone hasa lot of confidence in his judgment, whichis why he wound up on so many boards.”
Flesh and blood
After three generations of raising sheepon American soil, the Casabonne namewas forever linked with sheep. But allacross the Land of Enchantment, coyoteswere eating sheepmen out of business, andas they focused on predators on one pas-ture, they took immeasurable losses some-where else. At the end of the 20th century,one by one, the big ranches that had forthe last 100 years each run thousands ofewes were forced out of the sheep busi-ness.
is quiet a lot of the time but when hespeaks, he has a lot to say and makessense,” Lewis stated. “He doesn’t just rep-resent himself. He does it for other people.He protects the industry as a whole.”
Steve Lewis has not only bought Mike’slambs for years, but also appreciatedMike’s leadership. “Mike is just the bestguy ever. He is one of the best ranchers wehave in New Mexico, a top livestock man, agood family man, and a strong politicalman. He takes care of all the politicalissues, his family and his ranch, and he hasa lot of country to take care of. So he is justa whipping and a spurring every day.”Mike served New Mexico as Wool Grow-
ers president and also was active nationallywhen the American Sheep ProducersCouncil was combined with the National
22 J U N E 2 0 1 4
continued on page 23
2013 Sheepman of the Yearcontinued from page 21
Mike helps Kami halter a show lamb.
J U N E 2 0 1 4 23
Our Best To
MIKE CASABONNESheepman of the YearWe sincerely appreciate your
devotion to the industry, Mike!
COOPERBROTHERS
Fine WoolCommercial Sheep
JIM COOPER,575/653-4180
Tinnie, NM 88351
PUNK COOPER,575/687-3445
Mayhill, NM 88339
JOHN COOPER • 575/653-4440
OMENICILAW FIRM. P.C.
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Congratulations
DAD &GRANDPA
We love you, Dwanna,Kellen, Kami, Stevie
& Addison
���������!��������������"������������������������ !�� ����� �
���������������������������� ���
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Congratulations
MIKECASABONNE
A well deserved honorSheepman of the Year
Lewis Livestock
R.L.YORK 575/[email protected]. Box 805, Capitan, NM 88316
Mike and Dwanna, along with all oftheir friends and neighbors, had to changetheir outfits from sheep and cattle ranchesto cattle ranches. That in itself was a chal-lenge. Cattle drink more water, so adjust-ments had to be made. Corrals had to beretrofitted because cattle are bigger. And
2013 Sheepman of the Yearcontinued from page 22
has championed, friends he has helped,and his own family.There is an old saying that “blood will
tell.” The New Mexico Wool Growers saluteMike Casabonne as one of their finestbecause, in Mike’s case, blood tells thestory of stockmen and stewardship. �
the men who had defined themselves assheepmen remembered that they hadalways been, and still are, stockmen.“Mike made the change that had to be
made,” noted Marie Elizabeth, his mother.“Change is constant.”What hasn’t changed is Mike
Casabonne’s commitment to rural life. Hestill stewards the land and helps his neigh-bor and leads the way with a studious
attention to detail. He andDwanna enjoy working withKellen on the ranch and lookforward to every visit theyget with Kami, her husbandStevie, and their grand-daughter Addison. Theyemploy cutting edge tech-nology to skype with Addi-son, who has learned to tellher grandparents to “turn onthe ‘puter!”This man who learned to
be a stockman from so manygreat role models has him-self become a role model tothe countless 4-H kids hehas taught, rural families he
Shearing bucks ...back when they thought it was a funthing to do. Pictured are Myrnie Cauhape, MikeCasabonne, Billy Brainerd and Terry Chester.
Spending money on wolf recovery, when NewMexico children cannot read, when RioArriba and other communities have no access
to doctors, when the wolf, financially speaking, isalready at the door of thousands of New Mexico
families is the depth of asininity.Wolf recovery proponents have no feeling for people who
have untreated illnesses because they lack access to doctors,for a little girl whose dog was killed by a wolf, or for a littleboy who has rotting teeth because of no access to a dentist.Unscientific, correctly describes the approach of wolf
proponents to wolf recovery. The population numbers andhealth of each species preyed upon by wolves should havebeen determined before wolves were released. Then thehealth and numbers should have been monitored as the wolf
release progressed. Emotion, not science, has characterizedthe wolf recovery program.Wolf proponents did not think about the fact that condi-
tions have changed since the wolf roamed part of the South-western United States. They did not think about the fact thatover 99 percent of all species which once lived there are nowextinct.Wolf proponents have been unscientific, unthinking,
unfeeling people. Wolves have been their expensive toys andthey have toyed with the lives of needy Americans.
Sincerely,William G. BryanCorona, New Mexico
24 J U N E 2 0 1 4
LOOKING FORCOMPETITIVELY PRICED
LOAN RATES?
Letter to the Editor
Arizona StateCowbelles MattieCowan scholarshiprecipient 2014Preston Sweatt
P reston will attend Cochise College nextyear and major in Agriculture Engineer-ing. Preston attended Benson High
School and lives in Cochise, Arizona. While inschool Preston was in the National Honor Soci-ety, 4-H and FFA and was Youth Representative
of the Cochise County Large Livestock Fair Board. He showed Market Hogs andSwine and was the Arizona State 4-H Reining Champion
J U N E 2 0 1 4 25
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26 J U N E 2 0 1 4
����������������������������������� ����������������������� ������� �������� ����������
Judge Kirby Benedict (1809-1874) wasone of the most colorful characters inTerritorial New Mexico. Born in Connecticut, Benedict prac-
ticed law in Illinois in the 1840s duringwhich he rode the judicial circuit with
part of a judge, with his habitual taciturnexpression, his backbone ramrod stiff, anda wavy beard that spilled onto his chest.”He also had a crippled right hand, theresult of a wound from a bowie knife. Eventhough he had difficulty in writing, he dis-tinguished himself by his lyrical pro-nouncements from the bench.In one 1854 case which involved some
questionable documents, allegedly stolen,in a land grant adjudication case, the jus-tice asked: “How, and when did, it [thegrant document] desert its secure abode,among the archives of El Paso, and sepa-rated from its companions upon the shelf,wander like a bird, from the arik [ark] ofher safety, to be found lost & floating,upon the revolutionary ocean, which theimagination of the defendant, has picturedin his answer?”Then there was the occasion when
Benedict was holding court in Las Vegas(New Mexico) at a time when the territory’sordinance against gambling was beingstrictly enforced. The Grand Jury returneda long list of indictments for gamblinginfractions against many of the territory’smost upstanding citizens, including sev-eral members of the bar. Most appeared andpromptly paid the statutory $50 fine. Oneof them, Tom Catron, intended to embar-rass the judge by pointing out that he, thejudge, was known to engage in poker play-ing on a regular basis. As the courtprocessed those accused, the sheriff readout the names, and at last he called, “KirbyBenedict, for gambling.”The judge promptly stood and listened
as the sheriff read the indictment. “KirbyBenedict enters a plea of guilty,” he saidloudly, and then added, “and the courtassesses his fine at $50 and cost; and, whatis more, Kirby Benedict will pay it.” TomCatron subsequently plead guilty, too.But legend holds that Benedict’s most
famous pronouncement came at the con-clusion of 1864 murder trial in Taos. Thedefendant was accused of brutally killingblacksmith Julian Trujillo. The judge issupposed to have said this upon convictionof the accused:“José Maria Martin, stand up! José
Maria Martin, you have been indicted,
Abraham Lincoln. President FranklinPierce appointed Benedict to the New Mex-ico bench in 1853 and he kept his seatthrough the administrations of JamesBuchanan and Lincoln. “Physically, Kirby Benedict looked the
New Mexico’s Old Times and Old Timers
Judge Kirby Benedict:Justice New Mexico Style
By DON BULLIS . . . DonBullis is the author
of ten books on New Mexico. Go towww.DonBullis.biz
for more info.
continued on page 27
tried and convicted by a jury of your coun-trymen of the crime of murder, and thecourt is now about to pass upon you thedread sentence of law. As a usual thing,José Maria Martin, it is a painful duty forthe judge of a court of justice to pro-nounce upon a human being the sentenceof death. There is something horribleabout it, and the mind of the court natu-rally revolts from the performance of sucha duty; happily, however, your case isrelieved of all such unpleasantness, andthe court takes positive delight in sentenc-ing you to death.“You are a young man, José Maria Mar-
tin, apparently of good physical constitu-tion and robust health. Ordinarily youmight have looked forward to many yearsof life, and the court has no doubt youhave, and have expected to die at a greenold age, but you are about to be cut off asthe consequence of your own act. JoséMaria Martin, it is now the spring time; ina little while the grass will be springing upin this beautiful valley, and on these broadmesas and mountains sides, flowers will beblooming; birds will be singing the sweetcarols, and nature will be putting on hermost gorgeous and most attractive robes,
There was a movement to removeBenedict from the bench for drunkennessin the mid-1860s, and a petition was pre-sented to President Lincoln to do so. Lin-coln, however, was not moved to do so. Hewrote: “. . . Benedict drunk knows morelaw than all other judges in New Mexico. Ishall not disturb him.”In the early 1870s, Benedict became
embroiled in some controversy with theTerritorial Supreme Court and he was sus-pended from the practice of law. In Janu-ary 1874 he petitioned the Court thus: “Ipresent this petition to your honors in thespirit of confession, respect, obedience andsupplication. I confess to have committedagainst this court, its dignity and judges,disorder, improprieties and contempts[sic] for which I should be punished . . . Inow come as a supplicant and sincerelycrave the pardon and forgiveness of yourhonors . . .”The Court declined to restore Benedict
to practice. He died on February 27, 1874.
Selected sources:West Gilbreath, Death on the Gallows: The Story ofLegal Hangings in New Mexico, 1847-1923William A. Keleher. The Fabulous FrontierHoward R. Lamar. The Far Southwest, 1846-1912Miguel Antonio Otero. My Life on the Frontier (1864-82)Marc Simmons. Albuquerque, A Narrative HistoryRobert J. Torrez, Bar Journal, Sept./Oct. 1996
and life will be pleasant and men will wantto stay; but none of this is for you, JoséMaria Martin; the flowers will not bloomfor you, José Maria Martin, the birds willnot carol for you, José Maria Martin; whenthese things come to gladden the senses ofmen, you will be occupying a space aboutsix by two beneath the sod, and the greengrass and those beautiful flowers will begrowing above your lowly head.”(Another part of this legend holds that
Martin escaped jail and was not recapturedand was thus not executed. Not so. He washanged at Taos on May 13, 1864.)For all of the elegance of the pro-
nouncement of the sentence—and there ismuch more to it—it is unlikely that Bene-dict ever spoke the words. Former NewMexico State Historian Robert J. Torrezhas tried in vain to locate any official doc-ument which contains the speech. Thisseems to be a case where legend hasbecome, more or less, fact.Judge Benedict had two character
flaws: he was known to drink too muchfrom time to time, and he cheated atpoker, and apparently he was a poor cheat.This latter item is not mere speculation.He was caught at it more than once, andon one occasion in Albuquerque in the late1850s, he had to sprinted away by friendsbefore an irate loser could shoot him.
J U N E 2 0 1 4 27
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NegraLucy
Pastura
McIntoshChilili
Escabosa
Cuervo
Isleta
NewkirkClines Corners
Montoya
Palomas
Pajarito
ColoniasDahlia
Armijo
DiliaStanley
Anton Chico
Sandia Park
Villanueva
Sena
Conchas
Sandia Pueblo
RiberaSerafinaSan Jose
Corazon TrementinaIlfeld
Algodones Madrid
Bell Ranch
Santa Ana
Cerrillos
Trujillo
RoweLamy
RomerovilleDomingo
Canoncito
SanchezGlorieta
Sabinoso
OnavaEl Porvenir
Ponderosa
SapelloSan Ignacio WatrousTererro
SolanoValmoraCowles
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OptimoGascon
La CuevaMoraCleveland Lucero
MillsHolman Ojo Feliz
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Youngsville Abiquiu
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MiamiCarsonEl RitoLa Madera
FrenchEl Prado
CanjilonAlire
Ute ParkValdezArroyo Hondo
ColfaxCanon PlazaCebolla
San Cristobal
Tres Piedras
HKoehler
Tierra Amarilla
ada
CostillaGarcia
Taos Ski Valley
Corona
VaughnWillard
Encino
Tijeras
San Ysidro
MosqueroJemez Springs
RoyWagon MoundCuba
Angel Fire
CimarronMaxwellEagle Nest
Red River
Santa Rosa
Questa
Mountainair
Estancia
Moriarty
Pecos
Springer
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Old Timescontinued from page 26
Ihope everyone had a chance to attendthe mid year meeting. I would especiallylike to thank Janet Todd of Canyon Cow-
belles for her kind invitation to their Junemeeting.I hope that there will be a chance of
showers for you as you read this edition. Irecently attended the ANCW Region VIMeeting held in Lake Tahoe and they arejust as dry. I also learned that their watersource in that particular valley is depen-dent upon the snow melt off. WOW, federallands may certainly be our issue but itseems as though their private lands take ahuge hit, too. I guess it’s just not right topursue agriculture in any state you are in.Oh, but also remember by 2055 AGRICUL-TURE will be feeding 3x our current popu-lation or maybe China will feed us. I alsolearned the huge number of exports toChina of our alfalfa . . . hmmm makes mereally question things. The most interest-ing point of all was remember 3.4 percentis exactly all of the green house gas that
scholarship this year to Quaid Muncy. Thegroup agreed to again donate $100 to theAmerican Legion to be used to purchasebeef jerky which will be sent to the troops.Beef tickets were distributed to memberspresent. Meeting adjourned at 12:10 p.m.Submitted by Cathy PierceThe Chuckwagon CowBellesmet in Jar-
ales, with 16 members present. The Cow-Belle Invocation, Pledge of Allegiance, andthe CowBelle Creed were recited. Toni Bar-row presented the glass work that JackAnderson created for Chuckwagon. Therewas discussion about the All-Indian Live-stock conference at the Route 66 Casinothis week. It was decided that the groupwould pay the hotel bills for members whowork at the conference. The mid-yearmeeting is June 8 and 9 in Las Cruces. Tonialso mentioned that the 5-States meetingwill be on October 1, 2014 in Clayton. Shecalled for silent auction items for the mid-year meeting. Carolyn Chance is willing totake any items collected to Las Cruces. Thegroup is praying for Jackie Brown. Therewas discussion June Beef Month and thegroup decided to donate $50 to CopperRose Hospice Home in honor of JackieBrown. It was also decided that the groupwill raffle off the beautiful glass engravingthat Jack Anderson made, with the ticketsat $1 each, or $5 for 6 tickets and the groupwill reimburse Toni Barrow for expenses($30) surrounding the raffle. The raffle willtake place at the mid-year meeting in 2015.The Chuckwagon CowBelles decided todonate $50 to the Pat Nowlin Scholarshipfund in memory of Wynema Tully, Toni’smother. There was discussion about dona-tions to FFA. Patsy Fitzgerald will look intowho is most worthy within the district toreceive this money. It was decided that thismoney go to FFA state officers from the dis-trict for their travel, and not to the school’sgeneral fund. The next meeting will be atElaine Aschbacher’s home. Meetingadjourned at 1:50 p.m. Respectfully sub-mitted by Babbi BakerBy unanimous vote at the May meeting,
the Powderhorn CowBelles of De Baca and
livestock emit; pretty small considering ittakes four short days for China’s fuel emis-sions to cover that valley in Tahoe andmost of California.– Maddy
The meeting of the Chamiza Cow-Belles was called to order at 11:05a.m. by President Gloria Petersen in
the atrium of the Elephant Butte Inn withseven members present. The group recitedthe Pledge of Allegiance, the CowbellePrayer and the Cowbelle Creed led byNancy Phelps. Gloria announced that thebeef tickets are ready for distribution. Sheand Cathy held a work day to get themnumbered, stapled, and perforated. Thanksto all those who helped serve lunches tothe school children during Ag Day, and toGloria who “manned” the Kids and Kowsbooth. Six scholarship applications hadbeen received. The applications werereviewed and graded by all present at thismeeting. The majority voted to award our
28 J U N E 2 0 1 4
CATTLE SALEEvery Thursday at 10 a.m.
HEREFORD LIVESTOCK AUCTIONDAIRY SALE
Every Tuesday at 2 p.m. in Hereford, Texas~TRUCKING AVAILABLE
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Calendar
June 8 - 10, Mid Year, Las CrucesJuly 30 - Aug 2, ANCW Summer
Meeting, DenverDec 4 - 7, Joint Stockmen’s Convention, Albuquerque
February 4 - 7, ANCW Winter Meeting, San Antonio
continued on page 29
jinglejangle
Guadalupe Counties became the Powder-horn CattleWomen. The move comes 28years after the American National Cow-Belles (ANCB) became the AmericanNational CattleWomen (ANCW) on Janu-ary 28, 1986. The last ANCB President said,“As American National CattleWomen, wewill be immediately recognized as theorganized women’s sector of the cattleindustry.” Powderhorn’s Dorothy Vaughanwas ANCW President in 1988. Powder-horn’s May beef promotion activitiesincluded the donation of ground beef forthe Fort Sumner Elementary HonorsHamburger Fry and participation in Kids,Kows and More in Santa Rosa. Jim andCarol Thorpe provided bumper stickers forgroup to distribute which read, “Every Dayis Earth Day for American Agriculture.”Several members purchased New MexicoCowBelle napkins to use in their personalbeef promotion efforts. Plans were final-ized for the Old Fort Days BBQ held eachJune in Fort Sumner. Active and inactivemembers alike help with this event of beefpromotion, fund raising and communityservice. The annual BBQ funds scholar-ships for students from Fort Sumner,Vaughn and Santa Rosa. This year $500
grounds. Each member is to donate fourpies. These can be brought early to theExtension office if the member is unable togo to the fairgrounds the morning of thepie sale. Pies should be fruit or pecan withno dairy products. Workers for the piebooth need to be there by 9:30 a.m. on July4. New Mexico CowBelles midyear meetingwill be held in Las Cruces on June 8-10.Registration must be in by June 2.Kathryn Malcom-Callis will donate a doorprize for Lariat CowBelles. AbrahmShapiro will be attending the Ranch Man-agement Camp this year. Lariat CowBelleswill donate $50 toward his registration.Lariat CowBelle Joyce Sowers and TerryMartin of the Union County Leader areworking on a promotion project for JuneBeef Month. The guest speaker was BrianMoore. He gave an interesting presenta-tion on changes in the grocery business,and the history of Clayton’s Ranch Market.Submitted by Marianne Rose Lariat Cow-Belle Reporter
New Mexico CowBelles: Thank you toall who have submitted their news to Jin-gle Jangle. Please send minutes and/ornewsletters to Jingle Jangle, Janet Witte,1860 Foxboro Ct., Las Cruces, NM 88007or email: [email protected] the 14th ofeach month. �
scholarships were given to Taylor Riggins,Brendon Lee and Joshua Flores. Submit-ted by Karen Kelling, Secretary
Lariat CowBellesMay News 2014. With13 members present, Lariat CowBellesmet on May 14, at the Rabbit Ears Café.Diane Mason was hostess. Donations madeby Lariat members for the scholarshipfund total $96 and for Mother’s andFather’s Day total $150. A thank you notewas received from Mindy Turner for Lariatsponsorship of the 4H Home Ec School.There were four attendees from UnionCounty. Lariats sponsored a drawing for aMother’s Day $100 Beef Certificate atRanch Market. There were 671 entrees.The winner was Annette Sisneros, who wasentered by her mother. The event was cov-ered live by KLMX radio and the UnionCounty Leader. It is time again for applica-tions for the Lariat CowBelle scholarship.It is open to any sophomore or senior whois entering a major in agriculture or familyand consumer sciences. The applicantmust be a graduate of a Union County highschool or equivalent. June is Beef Month.Ranch Market will be holding a drawingfor a grill and Lariat CowBelles will bedonating $50 worth of steaks to go with it.Lariats will have their annual pie booth atthe 4th of July barbecue at the fair-
J U N E 2 0 1 4 29
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y By By Bonvenient wonvenient wonvenient waonvenient wonvenient wonvenient wa
rotein and Mrotein and Mtein and Mtein and Mrotein and MProrororororotein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mrororororotein and Mtein and Mtein and MP tein and MP tein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and My By By B
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the mothe mothe mothe mothe mothe mothe mothe mothe mothe mo onvenient wonvenient wonvenient wthe mothe mothe mothe mothe mothe mothe mo onvenient wonvenient wonvenient wonvenient wthe mothe mo onvenient wthe mothe mothe mo onvenient wtein and M
onvenient wonvenient wonvenient wtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and M
y By By By By By By By By Btein and MPPP tein and Mtein and MroroPro
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onvenient wonvenient wonvenient wonvenient wovide mineral supplements in ca
y By By B ter IGRy By Buster IGRusy Busususususy By By By By By By B ter IGRter IGRy B ter IGRy By Bususy By Buster IGRy B ter IGRusy B ter IGRter IGRter IGRuster IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRy B ter IGRusy By Bususy Busussub
ter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRuster IGRter IGRter IGRuster IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRy By B ter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRuster IGRter IGRy B ter IGRter IGRter IGRuster IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGR
upplements in caupplements in caupplements in caupplements in caupplements in cattleupplements in caupplements in cattlettlettleupplements in cattle
y B ter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRy B ter IGRy B ter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRusy B ter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRuster IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRy B ter IGRuster IGRter IGRter IGRy By B ter IGRter IGRineral Ttein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mtein and Mineral Tineral Tineral Ttein and Mineral Ttein and Mtein and M
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ter IGRy Bineral T
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ttlettleontrol horn flieol horn flieol horn flieol horn flieol horn flieol horn flieol horn flieol horn flieol horn flieol horn flieontrol horn fliey t ol horn fliesol horn flieol horn flieol horn flieol horn flieaay tay tonvenient waonvenient wa o cy to cy ty ty tay to co co cy to co co contry t ol horn fliey to cy t ol horn flieo co cy t ol horn flieol horn flieol horn flieol horn flieol horn flieol horn flieol horn flieol horn flieol horn flieol horn flieol horn flieol horn flieol horn flieol horn flieol horn flieol horn flieol horn flieol horn flieol horn flieo co co control horn flieol horn flieol horn flieol horn flieol horn flieol horn flieol horn flieol horn flie
tein and Mtein and Mter IGR
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ter IGRineral Tubs
ter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRubineral Tubububububububineral Tubububububsssss
ter IGRtein and M
ter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRuster IGRy Bonvenient wa
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ter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRter IGRubineral Tineral Tubineral T
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Jingle continued from page 28
My column this month covers monuments,mice, wild horses and Gandhi
Another anti-rancher monument
On May 21, 2014 President Obamaissued a proclamation to create the500,000 acre Organ Mountains-
Desert Peaks National Monument. Unfor-tunately it contained the same bad grazinglanguage as was used in the Rio Grande delNorte National Monument.The proclamations say grazing can con-
tinue but it must be “consistent” with thepurposes of the monument, in other wordswildlife, recreation, science and so on. AsI’ve written before, this sets up a dual man-agement system where the items listed aspurposes become the dominant use, whilegrazing becomes subservient. This consis-tency language is a relatively new phe-
The tale of two UdallsI’m not the only one concerned about
the negative impact on grazing a monu-ment designation will bring. On the same day Senator Tom Udall
introduced his legislation (S. 1805) to des-ignate the monument, his cousin, SenatorMark Udall (D-Colo.) introduced legisla-tion (S. 1794) to do the same in Colorado.His approach to grazing is far differentthan New Mexico’s Udall.First, grazing is mentioned in the Find-
ings section with the following language:permanently protecting the valuesdescribed in paragraph (1) while sustain-ing the local ranching economy wouldenhance the economic prosperity of localcommunities that depend on the areaThen he includes grazing in the Pur-
poses section with this language:to sustain traditional uses in the BrownsCanyon area, including hunting, angling,livestock grazing, commercial outfitting,and boatingAnd in the Management section he has
the following language on grazing:. . . the laws (including regulations) andpolicies followed by the Secretary con-cerned in issuing and administering graz-ing permits or leases for the NationalMonument shall continue to apply in thesame manner as on the day before thedate of enactment of this Act. (ii) Effect of designation.–There shall beno curtailment of grazing in the NationalMonument or Wilderness simply becauseof a designation under this Act. (iii) Adjustments.–Any adjustments in thenumbers of livestock permitted to graze inthe National Monument or Wildernessshall be based on revisions in the normalgrazing and land management planningand policy setting process, giving consid-eration to legal mandates, range condi-tion, and the protection of range resourcesfrom deterioration.That’s pretty strong wording and you
won’t find the “consistency” languagebecause livestock grazing is listed as one of
nomenon. For instance there was no con-sistency language in President Clinton’sproclamation creating the huge GrandStaircase-Escalante National Monument.However, the enviros weren’t winningsome of their lawsuits against grazing inmonuments so the consistency languagehas been added. All of this has beenexplained to Senators Udall and Heinrich,but to no avail.They have now hit the northern and
southern parts of New Mexico and thoseliving in other areas of the state better getready. The New Mexico WildernessAlliance has identified over three millionacres they want to see “protected” andPresident Obama, while signing this mostrecent proclamation said, “And I am notfinished.”
30 J U N E 2 0 1 4
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continued on page 31
the purposes.The Colorado Udall wants to protect
special lands, but do so in a manner thatalso protects ranching and the local econ-omy, while the New Mexico Udall wants todesignate monuments and wilderness andis apparently unconcerned about the nega-tive impacts on our ranching families.
Ratones sí, ganado noWhat’s the big deal about a measly 23
acres in a 200 cow outfit? Well, it’s a darnbig deal when it controls your access towater.On the Lincoln National Forest the feds
have put a pipe fence around the banks ofthe Agua Chiquita to protect a riparianarea and habitat for the meadow jumpingmouse. In response, the Otero CountyCommission passed a resolution instruct-ing the County Sheriff to “immediatelytake steps to remove or open gates that areunlawfully denying citizens access to theirprivate property rights.” That made thenational news and resulted in a meeting inthe U.S. Attorney’s office in Albuquerque.According to Blair Dunn, the attorney
representing Otero County, the meetingwas a disappointment. “It was very frus-trating for the sheriff and the county com-missioners to go all that way, have thatmeeting in good faith, and nobody in thatroom from the federal government everhad any intention of compromising,” saidDunn. Otero County CommissionerRonny Rardin indicated the dispute is farfrom over saying, “Ultimately, it is incum-bent upon the commission, the sheriff andthe citizens of Otero County to stand upfor our constitutional rights.” Congress-man Pearce says, “These disputes could beeasily avoided if federal bureaucrats wouldstick to their constitutional oath andrespect property rights” and Gary Stone,President of the local cattlemen’s associa-tion says, “If we let them take over ourwater rights, that’s the first step. Then wewould have nothing left here.”A Forest Service official has explained
the fence was authorized using the NEPAprocess and to even open the gate theywould have to repeat the lengthy planningdocument. If the Forest Service reallywanted that gate open you can bet theFONSI would have already been completedand filed. In the meantime, Otero County Sheriff
Benny House says he will continue hisinvestigation to determine if the ForestService broke any state laws.
Wild horses & wild ridesIn Utah and Nevada there are con-
tentious issues over wild horses, accessroads and livestock grazing.Utah ranchers are suing BLM for not
removing the prescribed number ofhorses, which are denuding the range andcausing all sorts of resource damage. Theyare doing so with the backing of two coun-ties, state wildlife officials and the Gover-nor. One county commissioner says BLM’srecent proposal to remove 200 horses is a“joke”.Another Utah county commissioner
has fired up his ATV to take a ride on a roadthe BLM claims is on their land and hasclosed. He and an estimated fifty otherprotesters did this in spite of BLM’s threatto prosecute.In Nevada, Elko County Commissioner
Grant Gerber is reacting to BLM’s order tonot allow livestock grazing on selectedallotments for all of 2014. He is organizinga “Grass March” where individuals onMemorial Day weekend will ride theirhorses over a seventy mile trek from Elkoto Battle Mountain. Gerber says the “GrassMarch” is patterned after Gandhi’s “SaltMarch” in the 1930s. Gerber explains the
J U N E 2 0 1 4 31
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NMFLC continued from page 30
NMSU Extension horse specialistwarns of heat-related illness
Summer is the primary season for manyequine competitions, and intense exer-cise coupled with a high ambient tem-
perature can quickly put a horse in the dan-ger zone of heat-related illness.“There are several things a person can
do to prevent their horse from developingheatstroke, or hyperthermia,” said JasonTurner, New Mexico State University’sExtension equine specialist. “The mostimportant things are to prepare your horsefor a heat stress environment and to beaware of your horse’s body temperaturewhile in that environment.”Heatstroke may occur when a horse’s
body temperature goes higher than thenormal rectal temperature range of 99 to100.5 degrees. The horse’s natural ther-
Clinical signs that the horse is experienc-ing heatstroke are elevated respiratory rateof 40 to 50 breaths per minute instead of thenormal 8 to 16; heart rate of 80 or morebeats per minute compared to the normalresting heart rate of 36 to 44 beats perminute; and a rectal temperature over 103º.“Hyperthermia most often occurs as a
result of inadequate physical conditioning,extreme hot and humid conditions, aweakened thermoregulatory system, or acombination of the three,” Turner said.“The heat index, which is the temperatureplus humidity, gives a means of assessingthe danger that extreme environmentalconditions pose to horses performingintense exercise in such an environment.”If the heat index is less than 130, which
occurs at 100 degrees and 30 percent rela-tive humidity, the horse’s built-in coolingmechanisms are usually capable of dissi-pating the excess body head generatedduring exercise.“However, when the heat index is greater
than 150, which occurs at 100 degrees and50 percent or higher relative humidity, thehorse will probably need assistance in orderto prevent heatstroke,” Turner said. “Own-ers should proceed cautiously when, or seekalternatives to, exercising horse in situa-tions where the heat index is greater than170 or the relative humidity is above 75 per-cent, since these conditions severely dimin-ish the effectiveness of the horse’s ther-moregulatory systems.“Prevention is the best medicine” also
goes for heat stress for horses. With ournormal low relative humidity, New Mex-ico’s arid climate is not usually a pre-dis-posing factor to heat stress in horses.However, one needs to consider the cli-mate at the competition location. Forexample, a New Mexico-trained horse thatis shipped to North Central Texas or Okla-homa in July or August is not acclimatedto that area. Environmental conditionsthere increase the likelihood of heat stressin horses not accustomed to the heat andhumidity.“If it is possible, avoid strenuous exer-
cise of horses when the heat index is nearthe danger zone,” Turner said. “This mayrequire adjusting your training or exerciseschedule to do intense work early in themorning or late at night when ambienttemperatures are lower.”If a horse must be worked in a heat
index situation, Turner suggest ownersview the NMSU Extension guide regardinghelping horses handle heat stress locatedon College of Agricultural, Consumer and
moregulatory mechanisms are capable ofmaintaining this normal body tempera-ture except when overwhelmed by severecircumstances, such as disease or intenseexercise in hot climates.“Heatstroke is a serious condition that
can be fatal if not dealt with quickly,” saidTurner. “There are several signs that thehorse is experiencing hyperthermia. Howthe horse is acting is one of the first visualsigns.”Is it lethargic? Is it sweating profusely?
Or is there an absence of sweating alto-gether? Perspiration is the way animalsreduce their body temperature when itincreases above a normal range. The sweatthat is produced evaporates and cools thebody surface.“Some horses may suffer from a condi-
tion called anhidrosis, a disorder wherethe horse does not sweat normally,”Turner said. “These horses are especiallyprone to hyperthermia if not managedappropriately. The specific cause ofanhidrosis is unknown; however, it isthought that there is a physiological defectat the level of the sweat gland that inhibitssweating. A veterinarian can perform diag-nostic tests that can confirm this condi-tion if the owner suspects their horsemight be afflicted.”
32 J U N E 2 0 1 4
Box 266,Clayton, NM 88415
SALE BARN:575/374-2505
Kenny Dellinger, Mgr., 575/207-7761Watts Line:
1-800/438-5764
WE APPRECIATE YOUR BUSINESS!
Active buyers on all classes of cattle. Stockerdemand within excellent wheat pasture and grass demand. Supporters of vaccination
program of your choice. Four active packer buyers, supported by area feedlots on these feeder cattle. Receiving station available.
Sheep sale 2nd to last Wednesday every month!
We believe that customers, large and small, shouldreceive the highest quality service available. Our buyers and sellers are our biggest asset and we are
dedicated to serving your needs. Our top priority is toget you the best possible price for your cattle.
Operating in Union County since the 1950s, KennyDellinger has been managing the sale barn and
serving the surrounding community since that first sale21 years ago.
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From the Animal Resources Dept.Cooperative Extension Service, New Mexico State University
continued on page 33
Environmental Sciences website ataces.nmsu.edu/pubs/_b/b-711/welcome.html.“There are several means of relieving
heat stress,” Turner said. “The primarygoal is to lower the horse’s body tempera-ture as rapidly as possible, and this is doneby employing ‘active cooling’ methodsthat make the most efficient use of theheat loss mechanism that include evapora-tion, conduction, convection and radia-tion.”Those methods includes cool water
bathing, which can be done with a gardenhose or a sponge and bucket; increasingair flow by placing the horse in front of afan or in a natural breeze; shading by keep-ing the horse out of the sun; and drinkingcool water by giving the horse water torestore the body fluids lost in sweat.“Sweating results in a significant loss of
body fluid, so it is important to monitorthe horse and ensure that normal bodyfluid levels are maintained,” Turner said.“Horses that are moderately dehydrated, 4to 9 percent loss of body fluid, will showdecreased skin elasticity, poor capillaryrefill time of the gums, reduced saliva pro-duction, sunken eye sockets, muscle weak-ness and fatigue.” �
through domestic food assistance pro-grams.As the State Executive Director for the
New Mexico FSA, Manzanares will overseeall aspects of federal farm program deliv-ery for an agency that employs nearly 1700people and on average, issues more than$100 million annually in commodity, con-servation, disaster and credit benefits tofarmers and ranchers across the nation.Molly has served as a member of the
New Mexico Farm Service Agency StateCommittee since September of 2001.Molly is a native New Mexican who hasbeen involved in agriculture all her life.She grew up in a cattle ranching family. Inaddition to a mother cowherd, they ranstocker cattle seasonally in the high coun-try near Chama, New Mexico. Since 1998,Molly has been a licensed EMT-I andInstructor/Coordinator, volunteering withLa Clinica del Pueblo and working for theJicarilla Apache Nation in that capacity.After attending New Mexico State Uni-
versity and University of New Mexico,Molly married Antonio J. Manzanares, andthey started their own sheep ranchingoperation. They run one of the lastremaining herded bands in the state ofNew Mexico. On the ranch, they raisedfour children. �
J U N E 2 0 1 4 33
USDA Taps Molly Manzanares for Top Post in New Mexico
USDA, Farm Service Agency Adminis-trator, Juan M. Garcia hasannounced the appointment of
Molly Manzanares for State ExecutiveDirector (SED) of the USDA Farm ServiceAgency (FSA) in New Mexico. The Farm Service Agency administers
federal farm policy as laid out by Congressthrough a network of federal, state andcounty offices. New Mexico Farm ServicesAgency increased the opportunity for pro-ducers as a result of the 2014 Farm Bill.For more information, producers areencouraged to review the 2014 Farm BillFact Sheet, online or visit any USDA Ser-vice Center.FSA programs are designed to increase
economic opportunity and improve thequality of life for rural Americans. Some ofthe agency’s efforts include facilitatingincome support, disaster assistance andconservation programs, providing operat-ing loans for the procurement of farmequipment, seed and fertilizer, as well asoffering ownership loans to help new andveteran producers purchase a farm. FSAalso works to procure various commodi-ties to benefit low-income families
Aggie Notes continued from page 32
Some may think this is my motto. Butit isn’t. Really. I am blessed to workfor and with the best people in the
world, both within the membership of theNew Mexico Cattle Growers’ Association(NMCGA) and in all the connections thatwe have from the Legislature to Congressand back.Part of the reason I enjoy the work so
much is that these folks are family. I cansee my grandparents, uncles, aunts andparents in them every day. Sometimes it isscary, but part of the raising was to learn totake the good with the bad.What is sometimes concerning is when
the fierce independence turns to just plainstubbornness including the refusal to rec-ognize that none of us are islands. Maybethe concept and the method to address a
“threaten” listing under the EndangeredSpecies Act (ESA). Not only did this actionNOT make the environmental communityhappy, but they have already filed a noticeof intent to sue because they want more.Or maybe you should visit with the
northern New Mexico ranchers along withthose in the Lincoln National Forest whoare facing cuts because of a meadow jump-ing mouse who hibernates for more thanhalf the year, but reportedly needs a 24inch stubble height to survive. Evenstranger is the fact that the U.S. Fish &Wildlife Service (FWS) thinks the criticalhabitat for the mouse ends at the fenceline of the Valles Caldera National Pre-serve.
particular situation are not how we wouldhave tackled the same task. But if a job isgetting done, why do we want to throwrocks at it?Rachel Thomas used to end all of her
emails with “just imagine what we can doif we don’t care who gets the credit.” Oneof my favorites has been “let’s circle thewagons and point the guns OUTWARD.”
WarpathThe federal government has taken dead
aim at New Mexico and its neighbors on allsides. If you have any doubt about this, justtalk to the folks on the East Side where,despite groundbreaking work and the firstever joint conservation by five states (NewMexico, Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas and Col-orado), they are in a fight for their lives asa result of a lesser prairie chicken
34 J U N E 2 0 1 4
Io the Point NEW MEXICO
CA
TT
LE
G
ROWERS' ASSOC
IAT
ION
by Caren Cowan, Exec. Director, New Mexico Cattle Growers’ Assn.
My Way . . . Orthe Highway
continued on page 35
On the West Side folks have been suf-fering at the hands of federal predatorsthat will likely be shared with other partsof the state sooner rather than later. Adraft of an environmental impact state-ment (EIS) for the Mexican wolf isexpected in the next few months that willchange the rules of engagement for theprogram as well as a new “target” numberof the vicious beasts.Notice that I use the word “target,” not
recovery goal or delisting number. TheFWS has been unable develop a recoveryplan for the last 25 years. The number of100 was just a number used in the 1998EIS. We have learned that the numberreally didn’t/doesn’t mean anything. Thelatest recovery team effort hasn’t gatheredfor probably two years.How would you like to be living in Doña
Ana County where the President of theUnited States, with a stroke of a pen, choseto put the future of at least 95 families inDoña Ana County is in jeopardy? Those arejust the ranching families within theOrgan Mountains Desert Peaks NationalMonument. That doesn’t take into accountall the businesses those families support or
men organizations at the request of thefederal government. Don’t they know thehunters and fishermen will be next?More distressing is that we see little
protection of our rights coming from stateleaders. The Office of the State Engineerfor New Mexico is nowhere in sight.In this election year we hear a lot about
candidates who are so concerned aboutour water, our agricultural communityand our children. However, precious few ofthem are around for the fight when neces-sary. Please remember that as you helpcandidates in the months to come. Theyneed to understand that the issues we arefacing are not just about ranchers andfarmers — they are about eaters in thisstate, nation and world.
On The Other Hand . . .You can be proud of the leadership the
ranching community is demonstrating.May 31st ROR (Rally for our Rights) inAlamogordo drew “hundreds” of peopleaccording the media outlets who came.And they weren’t just the “locals.” Folksfrom all walks of life and from hundredsmiles away thought it was importantenough to be there. The ranchers were
the 9,000 head of cattle that are within thedesignation. There were 800 local busi-nesses who signed letters or petitionsopposing the designation. A non-scientificpoll conducted by the Las Cruces SunNews found that less than 50 percent ofthe folks in the area supported the action.The monument designation takes in500,000 acres. Many believe that it willtake another step in reducing border secu-rity as well. Needless to say the folks whoseland and livelihoods fall within the desig-nation are still trying to figure out whichend is up. Not far away in Otero Countyand the Lincoln National Forest the battlethat has raged for more than 20 years hasheated to a new level. Like many, manyother Western counties, the Otero CountyCommission is fed up with the federal gov-ernment harming people and eliminatingrural economic vitality. They have issuedan order for their sheriff to cut the locksoff the latest fence blocking water forranchers.Word is that the national public outcry
has not yet deterred the U.S. Forest Ser-vice that has notified a neighboring allot-ment owner that he can expect to have hiswater fenced off by the fall. Distressing isthe fact that the funding for these trans-gressions is coming from so-called sports-
J U N E 2 0 1 4 35
Plan your advertising for
the coming year!
JUNE — Sheepman of the YearJULY — Directory of Agriculture
AUGUST — The Horse Industry; CharolaisSEPTEMBER — Fairs Across the Southwest
OCTOBER — Hereford; New Mexico State Fair ResultsNOVEMBER — Cattleman of the Year; Angus;
Brangus; Red AngusDECEMBER — Bull Buyers Guide;
Joint Stockmen’s Convention PreviewJANUARY — Wildlife; Gelbvieh;
Joint Stockmen’s Convention ResultsFEBRUARY — Beefmasters; Texas Longhorns
MARCH — Limousin; Santa GertrudisAPRIL — Dairy
MAY — News of the Day
Editorial Calendar
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Point continued from page 34
joined by county commissioners fromacross New Mexico as well as supervisorsfrom Arizona. Northern New Mexico wasrepresented as were the East and WestSides.One lady from Roswell planned her
weekend to be able to be at the OteroCounty Fairgrounds for the rally.Watching the popular media and the
internet also tells us we are not alone inthis war. County commissions and boardsof supervisors from Texas west and northare standing up for the rights of their citi-zens.Just because the feds may not be at your
doorstep today, you can be sure that itwon’t be long before they are. There will bemore gatherings to protest the culturalgenocide that is at hand. We are all toobusy to add one more things to our plate.But what will happen if we don’t?
WOTUSThe U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency has come down with yet anotherrulemaking that has the potential of con-trolling ALL water in the United States byre-defining “waters of the United States”— WOTUS. Never mind that the U.S.Supreme Court has ruled twice on thisissue. Never mind that Congress hasrefused to change this definition, this fed-eral administration is hell bent on impos-ing their will on the people.Jack Field, Lazy JF Cattle, Yakima,
Washington, testified on Capitol Hill inlate May on the matter. He told membersof the House Small Business committeethat the rule could make the standards ofthe USDA’s Natural Resource ConservationServices (NRCS) mandatory for any con-servation practices on a ranch accordingto Sarah Gonzalez, Agri-Pulse Communi-cations, Inc.With the proposed rule, EPA issued a
list of 56 agricultural conservation prac-tices that would be exempt from CleanWater Act (CWA) permits. However, Fieldsaid if a conservation practice does not fallwithin that list or is not done to NRCSstandards, it could fall outside the exemp-tion for farming and ranching. He pointed to a fence he built on his
ranch to create a riparian pasture. He didnot to follow NRCS specifications becauseof the extra cost involved. If the proposedrule had been in place, he would not haverisked being in violation of the CWA orinvested in seeking a CWA permit to buildit.Alan Parks, vice president of Memphis
Stone and Gravel Company, Tennessee,
36 J U N E 2 0 1 4
and Tom Woods, owner of Woods CustomHomes, Missouri, testified that the pro-posed rule would increase risks of lawsuitsagainst their businesses, cause construc-tion delays and boost permitting costs.They said they already face local and
state regulations for potential dischargeinto waterways associated with construc-tion. Representative Scott Tipton (R-CO)echoed several committee members’ senti-ments when he called the proposed rule“the greatest water grab by the federal gov-ernment in the history of the UnitedStates.”The only witness defending the pro-
posed rule was William Buzbee, the direc-tor of the Environmental and NaturalResources Law Program at Emory LawSchool in Atlanta. He said the law fallswithin the scope of rulemaking laid out bythe Supreme Court and actually cuts backon EPA jurisdiction.Representative Kurt Schrader (D-OR)
joined the majority on the committeewhen he called Buzbee’s testimony“incredulous.”“I don’t think anybody with a straight
face can say this is anything but a hugegrab of jurisdictional power at the end ofthe day,” Schrader said.Schrader has co-sponsored a letter with
Representative. Chris Collins (R-NY)signed by 231 House members asking EPAand the Army Corps of Engineers to with-draw the rule.The rule effectively removes the term
“navigable” from the CWAs’ definitionwith the phrase “significant nexus” thatcould extend government jurisdiction intoditches and ponds.Committee Chairman Sam Graved (R-
MO) sponsored a separate letter to EPAchief Gina McCarthy and Jo-Ellen Darcy,assistant secretary of the Army Corps, say-ing that the EPA did not conduct requiredassessments of the rule’s consequences onsmall businesses.They said the rule includes several
broadly-defined terms such as “adjacent,”“riparian area” and “tributary” that couldexpand the overall definition of “waters ofthe United States” to include many moresmall bodies of water. These expanded def-initions “may result in significant addedlegal and regulatory costs for small busi-nesses,” the lawmakers said in their letter.Testimony cited a report disparaging
the rule by University of California-Berkleyeconomist David Sunding. The report saysEPA used flawed methods to arrive atmuch lower economic costs of the pro-
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A D V E RT I S E
continued on page 37
Point continued from page 35
posed rule. Sunding also concluded thatthe EPA’s analysis of the rule is not trans-parent.The American Farm Bureau Federation
(AFBF) has launched a “Ditch the Rule”campaign opposing EPA’s proposal, circu-lated Sunding’s report, which was pre-pared with the support of the Waters Advo-cacy Council, a group that representsagriculture, forestry, mining, real estate,construction, manufacturing and energycommunities.As part of the “Ditch the Rule” cam-
paign, the Missouri Farm Bureau pro-duced a parody video that has beenextremely popular on Twitter and othersocial media sites. In the video, Missourifarmers Andy and Kacey Clay, along withtheir children, point out how a dry ditchon their farm could be impacted by theproposed rule. The video is posted here:http://www.agri-pulse.com/Video-Ditch-the-Rule-EPA.aspThe comment deadline is in mid July.
We need EVERYONE in New Mexico tocomment. To that end, please watch theNew Mexico Cattle Growers’ Association(NMCGA) website www.nmagriculture.org,our Facebook pages, your mail and youremail to see help.
You may need to get out moreIf you think all of this is far-fetched, I
can tell you what IS far-fetched.On one NMCGA trip this spring there
was some extra time in an airport so I waswandering around through the shops.Everyone should take some time to dothis.In one store I found a “sandbox.” It was
not much bigger that a 9x12x3 box. As Iread the box, I found that it truly was asandbox. It was complete with sand, a littlebox and some cups to dig in the sand with.How can we be so removed from the land?
�
J U N E 2 0 1 4 37
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Financing* Available *wac, Home Source
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For Price Quotes Call 505-863-4475 or 800-559-4475
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SERVING THE COMMUNITY SINCE 1939
Point continued from page 36
2014
Call Chris Martinez 505/243-9515, ext. 28
email: [email protected]
RESERVE YOUR SPACE NOW IN THE
2014
Call Chris Martinez 505/243-9515, ext. 28
email: [email protected]
RESERVE YOUR SPACE NOW IN THE
Wendy Paul Glenn, 74, Douglas, Ari-zona passed away on May 3, 2014 inTucson following a short bout with can-cer. Wendy was born and raised at PaulSpur, Arizona. She attended DouglasHigh School and the Baldwin Schoolfor Girls, Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania.Wendy studied for a short time at theUniversity of Colorado before returninghome to marry Warner Glenn. Warnerand Wendy spent their 54 years of mar-riage ranching side by side. No workwas too hard or no day too long for thiswoman who was an all-around ranchcowgirl, a cattlewoman, a hunter and “aheck of a shot.” Wendy’s love of coun-try, heritage, history and family wereapparent in all that she embraced andaccomplished. Her true pioneer spiritcame through in her hard work anddedication to her life, her family andher friends. Wendy’s passion for arche-ology, history, preservation of the openlandscape she lived in and her familywere ever apparent. The thousands ofguests that crossed the Malpai Ranchthreshold throughout the years alwaysexperienced her gracious hospitality.Wendy is survived by her husbandWarner Glenn, son Cody (Mary Mar-giotta-Glenn), daughter Kelly (KerryKimbro), granddaughter Mackenzie,step-granddaughter Carisa Kimbro,step-grandson Kyle Kimbro, sister Bar-bara (husband, Mike) Chrisman and sis-ter-in-law Janet Glenn Varela.
Sue Johnson Melton, 57, Pinon,passed away on April 24, 2014 at herhome. Sue was born on December 6,1956 to Oliver H. Johnson and WilmothF. Newton Johnson in Roswell. Thefamily moved to the family ranch in1963. She spent her life helping on theranch. She graduated from Weed HighSchool in 1974. She was a member ofMayhill Baptist Church, Otero Countyand New Mexico Cattle Growers; sheserved as a board member for OteroCounty Farm Bureau. She enjoyed
leather crafting, gardening, her dogs,horses and cattle. She is survived by herhusband of 39 years, Bobby Melton; hersisters Dana Coupland (husband, Jack),Peggy Montgomery (husband, Danny),Kelly Hibbard (husband, Mitch) all ofPinon, and numerous nieces, nephewsand friends.
Chilton Anderson, 85, died peace-fully after a lengthy illness at the TaosRetirement Village in Taos. Born inPhiladelphia on March 10, 1929, heattended Putney School in Putney, Ver-mont and Rutgers University. He servedin the army as cellist with the SeventhArmy Symphony in Germany in the1950s. Chilton settled in Taos in 1955,bought a herd of Angus cattle, andbecame a ski instructor. In 1958 he metand married, Judith Pierson, and theyoperated the Anderson RegisteredAngus Ranch before retiring in 2005.The Andersons participated in manyshows and sales most notably inRoswell at the Annual NM Angus Showand Sale, and winning many awards foroutstanding cattle. Chilton and Judithwere inducted into the 1992 NM AngusAssociation Hall of Fame. He was afounder and Director of the Taos Schoolof Music from 1963 to 2006. In 2000,Chilton was awarded the Governor’sAward for Excellence in the Arts, and in2007 he was inducted into the NM SkiHall of Fame. He is survived by his wifeof 55 years, Judy; sons, Kenneth (wife,Paula), David (wife, Gail), and daughter,Kathleen Anderson Knox, one grand-son and one granddaughter.
Editor’s Note: Email [email protected] donations may be sent to the Cattle-growers’ Foundation, a 501(c)3, tax deductablecharitable foundation serving the rights of ranchfamilies and educating citizens on governmentalactions, policies and practices. CattlegrowersFoundation, Inc., P.O. Box 7517, Albuquerque,NM 87194. The New Mexico Stockman runsmemorials as a courtesy to its readers. If families& friends would like to see more detail, verbatimpieces must be emailed to us, & may be printedat 10¢ per word.
38 J U N E 2 0 1 4
inMemoriam
make this magazine possible. Please patronizethem, and mention that you saw their ad in ...
O UR ADVERTISERS
505/243-9515
Congratulations to MR. & MRS.
JERRY MAYNARDGlenburn, Maine
Married April 26, 2014San Jon, New Mexico
The Wagyu Breed’s First Million Dollar Sale
Lone Mountain Cattle Company Fullblood Wagyu Female Sale May 17, 2014, Albuquerque, NM
12 Bred Heifers Avg. $14,417 4 Heifer Pairs Avg. $14,250 28 Open Heifers Avg. $11,304 27 Bred Cows Avg. $10,898 15 Open Cows Avg. $10,083 3 Flushes Avg. $8,333 21 Embryos Avg. $805
Auctioneer: Butch Booker Sale Manager: James Danekas & Associates, Inc.
Are your ewes and does producing thecolostrum your newborns require?
Though colostrum is a necessary ingre-dient to newborn success, fluctuations incolostrum quality and quantity producedby the ewe or doe are probable on opera-tions. Recent research shows large vari-ability in colostrum production, with olderewes and does often producing higher lev-els of the protective first milk.[6] Researchalso indicates that ewes and does that pro-duce larger litters are often unable to nat-urally produce adequate protection forbonus lambs and kids – often leaving thesebonus lambs and kids, especially, unpro-tected.[7]Without this protection, newborns are
at risk for long-term issues. Research bythe U.S. Sheep Experiment Station inDubois, Idaho, showed that nearly two-thirds of early lamb loss is caused byscours or starvation, with lambs that didnot consume adequate colostrum beingmore susceptible to health problems.[8]Though colostrum provides necessary
protection, colostrum produced by ewesinfected with Ovine Progressive Pneumo-nia (OPP) or does infected with CaprineArthritis Encephalitis can transmit the
hinges on high quality colostrum fedimmediately following birth. Lambs andkids should receive 10 percent of theirbody weight in colostrum by 18 hours ofage. For example, a 10 pound lamb shouldbe fed 1 pound (or 16 ounces) of colostrumin its first day of life. At least half of thisvolume should be fed within 4 to 8 hours.Colostrum and colostrum replacementsshould be fed at about 105 degrees F.Researchers at the University of Mary-
land recently stated that, when feeding thefirst colostrum, within “30 minutes is opti-mum while 18 hours is a must.”[4] Timingis crucial because the protective antibodiesfound in colostrum can only cross theintestinal wall and enter the bloodstreamduring this time. The intestinal wallbegins to stop passive transfer of antibod-ies hours after birth, so immediate feedingof colostrum is desired.To ensure proper consumption in the
necessary time, colostrum can be hand-fedvia bottle or stomach tube. The necessarylevels can be fed in three incrementsthroughout the first 18 hours for adequateconsumption. Once in the system, thematernally-derived antibodies help fightoff infections, while the lamb builds itsown stable immune system.[5]
J U N E 2 0 1 4 39
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CLOVIS •
• RINCON
Colostrum: Liquidgold for kid goatsand lambsA well-planned colostrum feed-ing program can help shepherdsand goat producers minimizepre-weaning mortality ratesby DR. TOM EARLEYWINE, DIRECTOROF NUTRITIONAL SERVICES FOR LANDO’LAKES ANIMAL MILK PRODUCTS
Colostrum is often likened to liquidgold. The first feeding of antibodieshas long been associated with imme-
diate immune protection for calves, butthe power of the first feeding is sometimesoverlooked in small ruminants. This stepis just as important in newborn lambs andkid goats, as management of newborns canplay a significant role in a flock or herd’slong-term productivity potential.Colostrum, or the first milk of the ewe
or doe, is the first protection that lambsand kids receive against environmentalpathogens and bacteria. Newborns mustbe protected following birth because anti-bodies in the ewe’s or doe’s bloodstream donot cross the placenta.[1] The antibodiescan only be received by consumingcolostrum.Following birth, the lamb or kid is
exposed to bacteria and pathogens that itsimmune system is unfamiliar with. With-out protection, the new life can be in dan-ger – leading to an increase in pre-weaninghealth issues and mortality rates.In fact, industry estimates show that
nearly 20 percent of lambs die beforeweaning with 80 percent of these lossesexperienced during the first 10 days oflife.[2] Research on kid pre-weaning mor-tality rates shows similar trends. Realisti-cally, pre-weaning mortality rates in sheepflocks and goat herds should be under 5percent. [2]
The Power of Colostrum
Colostrum is key in keeping death lossnumbers in check. The ewe or doe suppliesprotection as antibodies that are concen-trated in colostrum as immunoglobulins(IgGs). These antibodies help the newbornto fend off intestinal, respiratory and otherdiseases. High energy levels found incolostrum also help newborns to staywarm while dense levels of immune fac-tors and Vitamins A and E can promote ahealthy start to the digestive and respira-tory systems.[3]This protection against the elements
continued on page 41
J U N E 2 0 1 4 4040 J U N E 2 0 1 4
2014This mega-annual edition graphi-
cally shows the strength andvitality of agriculture in the South -west. Never in the 79-year history ofNew Mexico Stockman has a singleissue stirred so much interest, pro-vided so much information ordemonstrated the diversity of agri-culture in the Southwest. It hasbecome the Agriculture Almanac of
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M. McNeill. 1990. Behavioural interactions betweenthe ewe and her young at parturition: A vital stepfor the lamb. Pages 191–205 in Reproductive Physi-ology of Merino Sheep. Concepts and Conse-quences. C. M. Oldham, G. B. Martin, and I. W.Purvis, ed. School of Agriculture (Animal Science),The University of Western Australia, Nedlands,Peth.
[8] “Care of newborn lambs.” Sheep 201: A begin-ner’s guide to Raising Sheep.http://www.sheep101.info/201/newborns.html. 10March 2014.
a USDA licensed small ruminant specificcolostrum replacer within the first 18hours, a lamb-specific or kid-specific milkreplacer should be fed until weaning.For more information, visit
www.lolmilkreplacer.com or contact Dr.Tom Earleywine at 800/618-6455 or email:[email protected].
[1] “Sheep management: Colostrum and health ofnewborn lambs.” Iowa State University Extension.June 1995. http://www.extension.iastate.edu/Publi-cations/PM989X12.pdf 18 February 2013.
[2] “Care of newborn lambs.” Sheep 201: A begin-ner’s guide to raising sheep.http://www.sheep101.info/201/newborns.html. 18February 2013.
[3] Schoenian, Susan. “Colostrum: Liquid Gold.”University of Maryland Extension.http://www.sheepandgoat.com/articles/colostrum.html. 18 February 2013.
[4] Schoenian, Susan. “Colostrum: Liquid Gold.”University of Maryland Extension.http://www.sheepandgoat.com/articles/colostrum.html. 18 February 2013.
[5] Nowak, R., and P. Poindron. From birth tocolostrum: Early steps to lamb survival. Reproduc-tive Nutrition Development. Volume 46, pp 431-446.2006. http://vetsci.co.uk/2012/01/23/the-impor-tance-of-colostrum-for-new-born-lamb/.
[6] “Sheep management: Colostrum and health ofnewborn lambs.” Iowa State University Extension.June 1995. http://www.extension.iastate.edu/Publi-cations/PM989X12.pdf 18 February 2013.
[7] Lindsay, D. R., R. Nowak, I. Gede Putu, and D.
J U N E 2 0 1 4 41
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Students can major in Animal or Rangeland Resources and are provided with the verybest of “hands on” academic instruction by our faculty. Fully equipped labs allow students access to cutting-edge research in:
LIVESTOCK NUTRITION / GENETICS / PHYSIOLOGY /ENDOCRINOLOGY / MEAT SCIENCE / WOOL / TOXICOLOGY / WATERSHED & RANGELAND ECOLOGY/ WEED & BRUSH CONTROL / PLANT SYSTEMATICS /GRAZING MANAGEMENT
The Department also offers pre-veterinary studies –our graduates have a high acceptance rate into veteri-nary medicine programs. We offer graduate degrees atthe Master of Science and Doctor of Philosophy levels.The M.S. or Ph.D. in Animal Science can emphasizenutrition or physiology, and offers a Ph.D. in RangeScience to study range management, range ecologyand watershed management.
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���������������������������� The Chihuahuan Desert
Rangeland Research Center (TheCollege Ranch) – 64,000 acreranch just outside of Las Cruces
The Corona Range & LivestockResearch Center – 28,000 acreranch & facilities in Corona, NM
Student organizations, includinga Block & Bridle Club, Pre-VetClub, Range Club, Horsemen’sAssociation, Therapeutic RidingClub, & Judging Teams
The Department of Animal & Range Sciences is part of the College of Agricultural, Consumer & Environmental Sciences
disease to their young through the milk.These diseases do not appear until the ani-mals reach maturity and can be devastat-ing to health and production. To preventthe transmission of these diseases, off-spring should not be allowed to nursefrom ewes that test positive for OPP ordoes that test positive for CAE.One way to ensure that all newborns
receive high-quality colostrum, free fromany disease, in adequate quantities isthrough a colostrum replacer. Whenselecting a colostrum replacement prod-uct, look for a product labeled to raise IgGconcentration above 10 mg/ml. Theseproducts are typically made of dried bovinecolostrum and contain at least 75 grams ofIgG per liter as well as high levels of nat-ural colostral fat, protein, vitamins andminerals needed by the newborn lamb. Inthe United States, these products are regu-lated by the U.S. Department of Agricul-ture Center for Veterinary Biologics forquality control. Look for the U.S. Veteri-nary permit on the label.Beyond this measure, selection of
colostrum replacers should be based onresearch. Analyze the product for researchresults and determine if the supplier is areputable source. In addition, the productshould be made specifically for smallruminants (lambs and kids). After feeding
Colostrumcontinued from page 39
British government “had a total monopolyon all salt. A citizen of India was even pre-vented from distilling a little salt fromocean water for his family. All salt had tobe bought from the British government.In Nevada the federal government has amonopoly on Nevada land and the grass.The government owns 87 percent of theland, but also exercises total control overmuch of the private land as well. The effec-tive control of the government exceeds 92percent of the grass in Nevada.”Let’s hope the “Grass March” is as suc-
cessful as the “Salt March”.
Frank DuBois was the NM Secretary of Agriculturefrom 1988 to 2003, is the author of a blog: The West-erner (www.thewesterner.blogspot.com) and is thefounder of The DuBois Rodeo Scholarship(www.nmsu.edu/~duboisrodeo).
NMFLC continued from page 31
FEED LAMBS& KID GOATSCOLOSTRUMREPLACEMENT
WHEN� Quality or quantity ofavailable colostrum is
inadequate� Newborns are unable tosuckle, such as in multiplebirths, first pregnancy damsand those born to sick or
weak dams� Ewes or does are
suspected to be infectedwith OPP or CAE
The fight between endangered speciesand property rights is such a widetopic that if I covered all of it, it would
take years and it would not be this seven-page report but a huge book of the effectsit has on everything. So I have narrowed itdown to just a small glimpse at the fightbetween private property and endangeredspecies. The real debate is what is more
important, the lives of human beings, orthe lives of a plant and or an animal.The Business Dictionary definition of
private property is, “Tangible and intangi-ble things owned by individuals or firmsover which their owners have exclusiveand absolute legal rights, such as land,buildings, money, copyrights, patents, etc.Private property can be transferred only
42 J U N E 2 0 1 4
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HOW FAIR is the
Endangered Species Actto the American Land Owner?
by LOCKE ANN MCIVOR, FORT DAVIS HIGH SCHOOLSUL ROSS STATE UNIVERSITY
with its owner’s consent and by dueprocess such as sale or gift” (Par1). Itstates in this definition that private prop-erty can only be transferred if it is with theowner’s consent. That means, in actuality,that what the Endangered Species Act(ESA) is doing is wrong and border lineillegal.Are you wondering if the Endangered
Species Act has ever saved any animalfrom extinction? Well, after doing somecontinuous research, I have found thatsince 1973, when the act was put in place,no species has ever been taken off theendangered list; although some have beendowngraded to the threatened list. What itmeans to be threatened is that the speciesin the future could possibly becomeendangered. When the species is deemedthreatened, it still has the same treatmentas a species that is on the endangered list,so even though it is not endangered, it isstill treated that way.The Endangered species Act of 1973 has
done some good in saving animals, butwhat are the consequences of this act. Peo-ple are being put out of jobs due to theESA. The ESA has the power to take a per-son’s land if they deem that there is anendangered species living on the property.Does it seem right to you that people’slivelihoods are being taken away fromthem just because they think some littleinsect is living on their property? Is it okfor these animals that are being reintro-duced in places to kill livestock and eatcrops while the land owners receive eithernone or very little compensation?The Endangered Species Act split up
responsibilities of animals, plants, andmarine life into three different depart-ments. The Department of the Interior issetup to take care of internal affairs; andone if the category of internal affairs isendangered species. The Department ofthe Interior is mainly supposed to be incharge of the endangered animals. Theyhelp deem which animals are consideredthreatened or endangered. The Depart-ment of Commerce is in charge of manythings, but one thing you may not knowabout the Department of Commerce isthat the National Oceanic and Atmos-pheric Administration is a branch of it.That means that the Department of Com-merce is the one that deems when amarine species is threatened or endan-gered. The Department of Agriculture is incharge of saying if a plant is threatened orendangered.The Endangered Species Act has several
ways to make people cooperate even if theydo not wish to do so. One such way is a cit-izen’s suit, which is where they can suesomeone for supposedly endangering aspecies. Another way is by saying that thatby not letting them use the land is a crimeand you could be charged, and could possi-bly serve time in prison. If someone hap-pens to accidently kill something that isprotected, he can also be charged with afine. So, if anyone is ever in a situation thatinvolves an endangered species, theyshould be careful because he can becharged with all kinds of things.One example of a successful project is
the reintroduction of the Desert BighornSheep into Texas, Which began in 1954.The Bighorn Sheep had been almost wipedout due to over hunting and diseases fromdomestic sheep. By the early 1960s, thelast of Texas’ native Bighorn Sheep weregone. Most efforts at restocking the sheepwere failures and were abandoned. TheSierra Diablo Wildlife Management Area(SDWMA) is where they began to raisepens of Bighorn Sheep so that they couldlater be released into the wild. In June1973, in Culberson and Hudspeth coun-ties, they released a pen of pen-raisedsheep consisting of four rams and threeewes; this herd grew to about one-hundredhead. The SDWMA kept releasing thesheep until May 1997, when the facilitywas shut down because of an ongoing dis-ease problem. There was also anotherheard released in Brewster County; at afacility was called The Elephant MountainWildlife Management Area (EMWMA). Theherd was a result from releasing ten ramsand ten ewes on February 4, 1987. All ofthese sheep were pen-raised bighornsfrom the SDWMA that was shut down.Since then, the sheep have increased innumber.The sheep were also released in other
places such as Culberson County; the twoherds released there were called The VanHorn Mountains herd, and The BaylorMountains herd. The release of thesesheep were different because they were notpen raised. The sheep released here weretrapped in the wild from Nevada and thentransported to Texas and released (TexasParks and Wildlife Par 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6). As of2010, the population of the DesertBighorn Sheep was 1,115 sheep: 364Rams, 569 Ewes, and 182 Lambs reside inthe area where they were released (TexasBighorn Society Par 10). During the 2008-2009 hunting season, fifteen DesertBighorn Sheep hunting permits were dis-tributed. This means that the Desert
means if they are released into the wildand a person happens to come across one,they may not be able to scare it away ordefend themselves. What this means forranchers with livestock is that if they seeone of these animals they can try to scare itaway, but it will just keep coming back andkilling their livestock. Then why not killthe animal in question? Well, this could bedone but at the cost of a large fine ormaybe even some jail time.The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has
put out a set of compensation guidelines tohelp ranchers and farmers with any lossfrom the reintroduction of species. Theprocess to get compensation for killed live-stock due to the animal the reintroductionprogram is a little bit complicated. In theguidelines, it states that in order to protectthe evidence the body of the animal is notto be moved from the place where it waskilled. The rancher is supposed to keep itlike that until an agency expert can comeand determine if it was due to one of theanimals that was released. If it is deter-mined that the cause of the animal’s deathwas due to the reintroduction program,then the farmer or rancher will get a pay-
Bighorn Sheep have successfully beenreintroduced and have now been declassi-fied to threatened instead of endangered(Texas Parks and Wildlife Par 10).The ESA has reintroduced many ani-
mals all across the United States. In manyways this has helped these animals, but insome areas it has made things worse. Inmany parts of the country they have begunto release predators in areas in which theyno longer existed. These predators werekilled off, not because people wanted to becruel, but because they were problematicfor the land owner or people in general.Predators such as bears, wolves, andmountain lions are being released into thewild again. This would be great if not forthe fact that these animals were removedfrom areas for a reason. Most of the time,the reason was that the animals werekilling livestock or in some cases people.So in order to stop this from happening,the animals were exterminated from thearea.In places that these predators have been
released, the animals have been pen raisedand then released into the wild. Most non-domesticated animals that have beenraised in a pen by humans loose all theirfear for humans. These animals are com-fortable around a human being, which
J U N E 2 0 1 4 43
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continued on page 44
How Fair Is ... continued from page 42
ment for the animal, but note that theprices that they have set for livestock islower than the price that the animal couldhave sold for at market price. Now how isthat fair when the farmer or rancher isn’teven getting back the full value of the live-stock? If someone has an animal that wasinjured due to an animal that was released,he may or may not get compensation forthe livestock. It is up to the people who areworking on the project (The U.S. Fish andWildlife Service Page1-3). Most of the timethe agencies don’t want to pay the landowner, so they try the best they can toprove you wrong.At one point in time, the Mexican Gray
Wolf roamed from Arizona to Texas, but ashumans moved in, the wolves started tocause problems. The wolves would attacklivestock and in some cases humans;therefore the wolves were dangerous. In aneffort to eradicate this problem, the Mexi-can Gray Wolf was eliminated from theUnited States and Mexico by the 1970s.Then in 1976, three years after the Endan-gered Species Act was enacted, the Mexi-can Gray Wolf was put on the endangeredspecies list as a subspecies of the gray wolf.The wolf was already fully extinct in the
to help with conflicts, such as the killing oflivestock or the endangering. The FinalRule was then set in place which, providedregulations on how the reintroduced pop-ulation would be managed by the agencies.It also covered the public’s rights andtalked about human safety and protectionof people’s property from Mexican wolves.It gave guidelines releasing wolves on pri-vate, tribal, and public lands. On March 29,1998, captive raised wolves were releasedinto the wild for the first time in the BlueRange Wolf Recovery Area (U.S. Fish andWildlife Par 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7).Well, isn’t it a good thing for the wolves
to once again thrive in this area. Not really,the wolves will now cause major issues forthe people living in these areas and fortheir livestock. The wolves were raised incaptivity, so they are less afraid of humanssince they were raised by them. There wasan article in Range Magazine about howthe ranchers are continuously losing live-stock due to the wolves, yet nothing isbeing done about it. The people runningthe recovery plan have made a new regula-tion called the three strikes rule. In thethree strikes rule, if a wolf has killed morethan three livestock in one year, it is takeninto captivity for one year. It is laterreleased back into the wild in the sameexact place as before. If the wolf kills twolivestock in one year, and then killsanother in January of the next year, thatonly counts as one. Every year the wolves’killings are reset (Range Magazine Page38-40). Even though it is said that it ismore likely for a dog than a wolf to attacksomeone, the citizens of Reserve, NewMexico might disagree. The wolves thatwere released in this area have been stalk-ing kids on their way to school; the city haseven built cages at bus stops in which thekids may wait, so they are not hassled bythe wolves (Warren Par 1, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13,18).Caren Cowan explained the process of
trying to get compensation for animalskilled by wolves. Since most ranchers owna lot of land in order to run a healthy oper-ation, they don’t normally see their ani-mals every day, so they might not knowwhen one goes missing. The organizationthat is suppose to give out the compensa-tion is the Defenders of Wildlife, but if peo-ple take the money then they are obligatedto support the wolf recovery project(Cowen). I talked to two ranchers in thearea where the wolves were released. FirstI talked to Jim Gearhart who is the RanchManager of the HRY Ranch in GrantCounty, New Mexico. Mr. Gearhart said
Southwestern United States and therewere few reports of the wolves in Mexico;this was the only reason it continued toexist in the wild. Then in 1977, and 1982, arecovery of the Mexican wolf was put intoaction. The United States and Mexicoagreed to work together in order to start abreeding program by trapping the wolvesfrom Mexico. They wanted to breed thewolves in order to save the populationfrom extinction and then later reintroducethem to the wild. In 1979, they establisheda team to map out an area where theycould set up the recovery for the wolves.The recovery plan was approved in 1982.As the program to recover the wolves
grew and the project became a success inthe 1980s, it was then time to find a placewhere they could reintroduce the wolf intoits natural habitat. In 1996, an Environ-mental Impact Statement (EIS) was fin-ished. They wanted to release the wolves inthe Apache and Gila National Forests inEastern Arizona and Western New Mexico,which was once home to the wolves beforetheir extinction. In March 1997, the Secre-tary of the Interior okayed the release ofwolves into the Blue Range Wolf RecoveryArea. They then enforced the non-essentialexperimental population designation forMexican wolves, which made it a lot easier
44 J U N E 2 0 1 4
continued on page 45
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that it was very hard to get the compensa-tion because the agencies do not want topay, so they try to blame it on other ani-mals, like coyotes (Gearhart). After talkingto Mr. Gearhart, he referred me to AlanTackman who is a rancher and attorney inCatron County. He told me about the com-pensation and how to get it. He said that aperson has to call the agency and wait foran agent to come and look at the animal.Since there are other animals around suchas bears, lions, and coyotes most of thetime the animal is half eaten and it is hardto tell what killed it. The best way to tell isby measuring the spots where the bitemarks are. The wolves’ bite marks are big-ger than a coyote’s, but smaller than abear’s. If there is hemorrhaging where thebite was made, then the animal means itwas bitten when it was still alive. It is saidthat for every one cow that is found killedby a wolf, there are eight more cows thathave not been found and killed by wolves.Mr. Tackman has tried many ways to pre-vent the wolves from killing his cattle. Hehas moved them to a different pasture far-ther from the wolves and hired a rangerider, which is a person who follows theanimals around in case a predator arrives.So far, he said none of these have preci-sions have been and the only thing that isworking is moving the cattle to a differentranch outside of the wolf territory. In thelast fourteen years, Mr. Tackman has spenttwenty to thirty thousand dollars fightingthe wolves (Tackman). These wolves areruining people’s lives and people have noidea. They just see the cute and fuzzy littlewolves that the environmental agenciesshow us.Right now the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service is requesting approval to releasewolves in Texas. One of the areas includedin this is Jeff Davis and Brewster counties.The Texas Parks and Wildlife Departmentis trying to shut this down because theyhave seen what it has done to the Arizonaand New Mexico areas (U.S. Fish andWildlife Service, Southwestern RegionalOffice and Mexican Wolf Recovery Pro-gram Page 29-30). Another reason toreconsider is by bringing the wolves backinto this area is all the work it took tobring the Desert Bighorn Sheep back tothis region may go to waste. Are reallygoing to bring in a major predator? One ofthe wolves’ major food sources is thebighorn. Another is the Pronghorn ante-lope which is also on the endangeredspecies list (Par 5). Do we really want toeradicate the sheep now that we have justreintroduced them? Do we want our chil-
dren to have to wait in cages to go toschool? Think about this and decide if it issmart to bring these cute little wolves backinto this area?Anytime the subject of endangered
species and property rights is discussed,the question always boils down to who ismore important, human beings or ani-mals? Is an animal’s livelihood moreimportant than a person’s life? In somecases we have not only endangered species,but also ourselves. After speaking to CarenCowan, who is the executive director of theNew Mexico Cattle Growers’ Association, Ihave learned some frightening thingsabout the wolves in New Mexico. She saidthat people have been so afraid or stressedout by the wolves, that they have movedaway from the area. The wolves that hadbeen released were raised by humans sothese wolves seek out the people. Peoplehave given accounts of wolves sitting intheir yards and corrals, and then findingtheir horses or pets dead. Many children ofthe area have developed Post TraumaticStress Disorder because they have beenstalked by a wolf or seen a wolf kill theirpets. There was a reason that our ancestorskilled the wolves in the first place. It is notbecause we are a cruel species, but becausethey were causing harm to us and the
J U N E 2 0 1 4 45
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other animals for which we care for(Cowan).We have learned from our past mistakes
and are now trying to make it right, byreintroducing the Bighorn Sheep. How-ever predatory animals are different in theway that they were endangering us. Inturn, we were only protecting ourselves.Whether it is a lizard shutting down anentire West Texas oil field, a little insectshutting down apple production, or a wolfruining a ranching operation, we have toask if a lizard, insect, or wolf is moreimportant than a person’s livelihood? TheAmerican land owner’s help in many ways,they provide us with the leather on ourshoes, the gas in our cars, and the food inor mouths, if we allow the EndangeredSpecies Act to destroy the livelihoods ofthese people by the reintroduction ofpredators, what will happen to our society?
Work CitedAbout the Department Of Commerce. United StatesDepartment of Commerce. N.p.n.d. Web.About NOAA. National Oceanic and AtmosphericAdministration United States Department of Com-merce. N.p. n.d. Web.Coffman, Michael S. “Taking Liberty”. Range Maga-zine. Fall 2005. 30-35. Print
continued on page 59
How Fair Is ... continued from page 44
He was partners with Gene Autry. Hewas once son-in-law to Tom Mix. Hewon the Canadian Saddle Bronc Rid-
ing Championship—twice. He spent aboutforty-five years making his living in arodeo arena. He was the legendary, HarryKnight.Born in Quebec City, Canada in 1907,
the Knight family moved west when Harrywas a young boy to Banff, Alberta. Harry’sfather had a resort on Banff’s, Lake Louise.Although the rest of the Knight familymembers were not “cowboys” so much,young Harry took an interest in animalsand cowboying early on. He entered hisfirst rodeo in Sundre, Alberta Canada in1925, thus beginning a half-century careerin rodeo.As a contestant in the rodeo arena,
Harry excelled in the Saddle Bronc Ridingevent. He also entered Bareback, SteerDecorating, Calf Roping and Steer Ridingat times. During his years as a contestant,he rode the bad bucking horse Five Min-utes to Midnight for an eternity of ten sec-onds (the required time back then, today
Florence, Arizona and Harry Knight (whoalso lived in Arizona by this time).According to author Gail Hughbanks
Woerner, “The company consisted of 150saddle horses, 150 bucking horses, 50Brahma bulls, 100 head of bulldoggingcattle, 90 calves, 50 wild cows, 110 saddlesand various other equipment.” Harrywound up selling out his interest in thecompany a few years later.Then, in 1954 legendary cowboy, Gene
Autry, purchased the late Leo J. Cremer’srodeo company and hired Harry Knight tomanage it. In 1959, when Everett Colburnretired, the World Championship RodeoCompany was merged with the Cremerstock, making Autry and partners one ofthe largest stock contractors of the day. Atone time, it was reported Gene Autry’srodeo company had over six-hundred headof stock. Knight remained the manageruntil he retired in 1968.Harry Knight was also the first Rodeo
Cowboy Association (RCA) stock contract-ing representative to serve on the Board ofDirectors (1966-76). Earlier, in his contes-tant days, he had served on the board ofthe CTA as the Saddle Bronc Riding repre-sentative.Author Clifford P. Westermeier remem-
bered Knight, “as a man who enjoyeddiverse friendships ranging from NewYork’s upper crust to the poorest ranchhands in Arizona and Texas.”Writing about Knight as a contestant,
rodeo historian Willard Porter said, “Asmost top-drawer bronc men do, Knightacquired a canny understanding of thechemistry that goes into the makeup of adead-end bad horse.”Ruth Mix (third child of the great cow-
boy actor, Tom Mix) and Harry Knightwere married in 1935. A newspaper reportfrom the day says they spent their honey-moon at Livermore, California where theywere both scheduled to compete in arodeo. Ruth Mix was a rodeo, circus andwild west show performer and an actress.By this time in his career, Knight listed his
an official ride is eight seconds).As mentioned above, he also won the
Canadian Bronc Riding Championship, in1926 and ‘32. A bad injury at the ChicagoWorld’s Fair in 1933 nearly ended his rid-ing career, however Harry recovered tocompete through the early ‘40s.As Harry’s rodeo career started to wind
down, he turned to the contracting side ofthe game—something he will forever beremembered for. In 1937 or so, Knightbecame a partner in the World ChampionRodeo Company.Back in 1936, when the cowboys went
on strike at Boston Garden (the event thatwas the catalyst for the formation of theCowboy Turtles Association or CTA),Colonel Johnson was the owner of theWorld Championship Rodeo Co. Perhapsas a result of the strike and the new cow-boy’s association, Johnson became dis-gusted with rodeo, or maybe it was justtime for him to retire. What ever the casemay have been, Colonel Johnson sold hisrodeo company to Everett Colborn ofDublin, Texas; Bill and Twain Clemens of
46 J U N E 2 0 1 4
Approx. 200 Lots
—AUCTION!—Saturday, June 14
@10:30 A.M.
WESTERN TRADING POST
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My Cowboy Heroes
“Cowboy to Contractor”
by JIM OLSON
continued on page 47
address as Casa Grande, Arizona (he actu-ally lived across the street from the firstAll-around Champion of the World, EarlThode).Tom Thode, younger son of Earl Thode,
and a former Yuma County, Arizona. Supe-rior Court Judge, grew up across the streetfrom Harry Knight. Tom related this storyto the author.“The actor Tom Mix and his son-in-law,
Harry Knight were pretty close. WhenTom died, most newspaper reports of theday claimed he was going from Tucson(after a night of wild partying) to Florenceto see his son-in-law. The truth (as told tome by Harry himself) is that he was withTom already—and they actually had leftTucson together that morning.“Tom had a flask of whiskey and was
hitting on it pretty heavily as they spedtowards Florence. He kept passing it overto Harry, who would take a little sip nowand then, and then pour a bigger batch ofit down the side of the car. Pretty soon, thewhiskey ran out, so Harry told Tom to pullover at a little country bar they wereapproaching. When Tom slid the car to astop in front of the bar, Harry jumped outand said he would go in and get morewhiskey.“After ten minutes or so, Tom Mix got
tired of waiting and went in to see what thedelay was. He went into the bar and didn’tsee anyone but the bartender. He asked thebartender if he had seen a cowboy come inthere in the last ten minutes or so. Thebartender said he had, and that the manhad walked in the front door then straightout the back—and off into the desert! Tomgot tired of waiting and soon left withoutHarry.“The rest is history. A few miles up the
road, the accident happened that killedTom Mix. Harry Knight knew Tom was notsafe to ride with, but also knew Tom wouldnot listen to reason at that point, so he gotout of the car when he could. By leavingwhen he did, it most likely saved his life.”Harry went on to live a full and accom-
plished life after that (as outlined above).In November 1985, seventy-nine-year-oldHarry Knight (who owned a ranch andlived in Fowler, Colorado by then), wasinducted into the Canadian Rodeo Histori-cal Society at Edmonton, Alberta. InDecember of that same year, he was alsoinducted into the Rodeo Hall of Fame inOklahoma City. The great Harry Knightdied April 5, 1989. �
J U N E 2 0 1 4 47
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Heroescontinued from page 46
The Commies are coming
My neighbors just finished trippingsome wild steers and tying themdown Arizona cowboy style. Yes,
they will go back and get the steers afterthey cool off. Unlike the government cowboys who
slaughtered the Bundy cattle in Nevadathey will go back and take their steershome instead of burying them. The gov-ernment must have hired some “REAL”cowboys to pull off that stunt. Were you not impressed that the gov-
ernment tore up the livestock waters onthe Bundy Ranch? What bravery theydemonstrated. How does that help thewildlife that is still there when the cattleleave? Why don’t we hear from People ForThe Ethical Treatment of Animals inregard to Cliven Bundy’s slaughtered cat-tle? Perhaps slaughtering Bundy’s cattle
was the government’s way of saving theozone from cattle emissions? We trulyhave a bunch of miseducated nuts runningthis country. Have you noticed that the people that
mer country. I asked him if he was the stu-pidest person on earth and he actuallythought he was pretty smart. We had onlymanaged this allotment successfully forover sixty years. Just to be clear the winter country has
canyons, trees, and lots of oak brush so thecattle have shelter and feed in the winter.Our summer country was a big wide opengrassy plain which responded well tospring rains with abundant forage. Sinceyour ranger can only suggest crazy ideasand cannot force you to implement themwe didn’t change. However, he came byabout once a week with some new crazyscheme.We had a natural spring that we main-
tained and it always had water when otherplaces did not. Our ranger determined thatthe cattle were ruining the “riparian area”.I asked how he had determined that? Hepointed to a cottonwood sapling near thespring and began his diatribe explainingthat they count the broken branches on asapling. If there were more than ten breaksthen there were too many cattle in theriparian area. He also pointed to all the tracks at the
base of the sapling. First I asked him if heactually believed that counting brancheson a sapling was an accurate way to deter-mine there were too many cattle at thespring. He swore he really believed it. I then asked him if he knew what a deer
track looked like. He said he did and I
preach tolerance are often the most intol-erant? Time and again the American cattlerancher gets attacked by its own govern-ment. The United States governmentresorts to gunships, armored cars, andhighly armed officers to deal with a hand-ful of cowboys who never hurt anyone? Maybe it was caused by a senator’s
greed? It was just a few years ago thatranchers worked with the government toadvance conservation. The United StatesForest Ranger was your friend and helper.However, things have changed and thegovernment has declared war on cattleranchers. Whoever thought that Ameri-cans would have to fear their own govern-ment?It started about ten years ago around
here. Our ranger of thirty years retired andwas replaced with an arrogant twenty-five-year-old city slicker that knew nothingabout grazing or cattle. One day he showsup and introduces himself as the newranger. The first thing he informed us ofwere his suggestions on how we shouldmanage our allotment. He wanted toswitch our winter country with our sum-
48 J U N E 2 0 1 4
estrays NOTICE IS HEREBYGIVEN that the following
described estray animalshave been taken underthe provisions of Chapter77, Article 13 of NewMexico StatutesAnnotated 1978, and soldfor the benefit of theowners of said estrays asprovided by law. The pro-ceeds will be subject toclaims and proof of own-ership as provided by law.New Mexico Livestock Board –Ray Baca, Executive DirectorAlbuquerque, N.M.All current estrays can now be found onthe New Mexico Livestock Board websiteat www.nmlbonline.com. Lost, missing & stolen reports will be available on ourwebsite for 30 days.
June 8, 2014
continued on page 49
The Viewfrom the back side
by BARRY DENTON
country, are key BLM resources that aren’tadequately recognized and managedthrough existing agency planning guid-ance,” said Henri Bisson, former BLMdeputy director for operations and BLMAlaska state director.Based on an initial review, the BLM
intends to target changes to, in part, createa planning process that is responsive tochange, allowing BLM to keep plans cur-rent through amendments; and to reducethe amount of time it takes to completeRMPs.“The main challenges the BLM face are
incompatible development and land use,as well as the need for well-funded restora-tion,” said Ken Mayer, former director ofthe Nevada Department of Wildlife.
The BLM is seeking comments on how it can achievethe goal of a more effective, efficient and durableplanning process. Individuals can learn more atwww.blm.gov/plan2 and can provide feedback [email protected]
BLM to review its planning processBILLINGS GAZETTE STAFF
After using the same basic planningapproach for 38 years, the Bureau ofLand Management has announced it
will review how it develops its ResourceManagement Plans.“As I’ve met with elected leaders and cit-
izens from across the West on BLM issues,I’ve consistently heard two things: first, theBLM needs to more effectively addresslandscape-level management challenges;and second, planning takes too long.” BLMDirector Neil Kornze said in a statement.The decision was hailed by the
Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partner-ship as a way to “modernize this approachand remedy its shortcomings.“For example, tracts of intact and unde-
veloped lands, commonly known as back-
J U N E 2 0 1 4 49
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Backside continued from page 48
called him a liar. With a puzzled look heasked me why I called him that. I explainedthat his riparian area was covered withdeer tracks and that cattle had not beenthere in over four months. Needless to say,that did shut him up for awhile.To make a long story short we did have
a chance to sell the forest allotment so wedid. We had other places to run our cattlewithout government interference. How-ever, many others do not have that choice.The other thing that always baffled me
about running cattle on the forest servicewas their fake concern for the land andwildlife. They would try and control therancher’s every move, but when ATV folkstore up your pasture it was of no concernto them. Vandalism of water tanks andwells was never taken seriously either. It’sfunny how the government would forgetthat they had a lease agreement with youand thought you had no rights as well.They certainly convinced me that they aretruly evil.What can we do to fight this oppression
of the rancher? I think voting in the rightfolks would be a start in turning it around,but what do we do in the meantime? I’venever seen America in such a rut of gov-ernment takeover of everything. Our free-dom guaranteed by the United States Con-stitution is being eroded on a daily basis.Political correctness does nothing butimpede free speech. Where are we going toend up? Let’s stand up for ourselves beforeit is too late. How did cattle ranchers, mil-itary veterans, and independent thinkingcitizens become enemies of the countrythey would die to support? �
VISITORS ALWAYS WELCOME!
HENARDR A N C H E SOSCAR · 575/398-6155
BOX 975, TATUM, NEW MEXICO 88267 MRS. PAT · PLAINS, TX
MRS. ROBERT · LOVINGTON, NM
HEREFORDBULLS FOR SALE
Don’t Forget theCowboy and the Horse
Sometimes, when we go to our live-stock meetings and see all the tech-nology we forget about the cowboy
and the horse.The booths and presentations show us
pages, illustrated, I will discuss the case ofa 300 lb bull calf that needs doctored orbranded and cut. Regardless of theappendage you’ve roped, you can drag himslowly till he eventually lies down.The next step is critical: Your horse
must keep the rope tight while you dis-mount, ease to the calf, and tie at least 3feet together with your piggin’ string. Asyou’re pulling back, keeping the ropetight, you throw a couple dallies aroundthe saddle horn and top it with a half-hitch(or hooey). This holds the knot as long asthe rope stays tight to the calf. Then youtoss the extra coils away from the action.Depending on how the calf is behaving,you wrap a loop of your rein around thetight rope and tie it back to the hangingrein. This keeps your horse’s head pointedat the calf.Pounce on the calf. Assure yourself the
correct side is up if you’re branding, thenfree him from the rope and horse. Now putthe slip knot of your piggin’ string over thecalf’s down-side front leg. Slide your bodyback far enough to push both his hind legsforward with your thigh. Then arrange histwo hind feet to cross over the attachedfront leg. Make three wraps around thethree feet and pull them together tight!Then one more wrap and a hooey aroundthe front leg and he is ready to be treated.This description of our skilled cowboy
making the perfect catch and tie-downholds true, unless, of course, your horselets slack out of your line when he should-n’t, gets tangled in the coils, the dally slips,you loop the piggin’ string over your wrist,the calf gets loose and runs under thehorse’s belly who then deserts you threemiles from the pickup and loses your ropesomewhere along the way.But don’t worry . . . that never
happens . . . �
injecting or collecting samples to deter-mine breed traits, DNA, source verifica-tion, average daily gain, or to treat for par-asites, disease, or to stimulate growth. Itall looks so orderly as the healthy steerstanding in the hydraulic chute smiles atthe camera while the hired hand in a cleanshirt demonstrates a procedure withmusic playing in the background. I willremind modern agriculture practitionersthere are still places where a cowboy and ahorse are an essential part of management.For example, feeder cattle on wheat grassor ranches where they still calve ‘outside’or summer mountain pastures. These areexamples where it is more expedient totreat the critter where you find it, ratherthan try and drive or haul them to asqueeze chute or trap two miles away.If you have the luxury of a two-man
crew, the method is obvious; head and heelthem. But for the lone rider, his skills mustbe at a higher level. The beast; a cow with awire around her foot or a steer with pinkeye must be 1) caught 2) restrained 3)treated 4) released.Depending on 1) the terrain, 2) the dis-
position of critter, and 3) its size, the jobcan be 1) hard or 2) harder! In real life,catching can mean the head, the horns,the heels, one hock, or the head and frontleg together. Restraining the animal usu-ally means putting them on the ground.Since this lecture could take ten more
50 J U N E 2 0 1 4
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“Real Cowboys is soaked in the piss andvinegar of the genuine cowpuncher.
It is history with the hair on!” — Don Hedgepeth, author of
20 books about the WestBooks can be purchased at Big Bend Saddlery in
Alpine, Texas, on Amazon.com or call 520-558-2303 or email [email protected]
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In 1971 when my first son, Scott, wasfive months old Charlie and his Dad,Donald, had a string of yearlings on
some leased land, and it had no rain, whichis common for eastern New Mexico, unfor-tunately. Donald had talked to everyone hecould think of, trying to find grass for theiryearlings. This was in the spring, about thefirst of June. He had learned of a smallplace in the Ocate area. In fact, it was ontop of Ocate peak. We had to wait until theoak brush had become safe before wecould move the cattle up there. By thetime we got organized and started up themountain with them, it was raining andhad been for some time! I had to drive thepickup up the mountain while the mendrove the cattle up horseback. I couldn’tgo horseback, because Scott was so young. The road up the mountain was really
steep, with many switch-backs. It had beengraded, but not in a long time. At everyswitch-back, there was a short road tradedback so that you could get a run at the nextsection. You had to give it all you had,because it was so steep, and it was veryrough! We were going to stay with the cat-tle for a couple of weeks, so I had all of ourbedding, our groceries, Scott’s play-pen touse for his bed and all of the paraphernalianeeded for a baby of this age. I also had ourtoy poodle, Flipper. He tended to be a painto travel with, becoming very restless. Istarted up that road, loaded down with allof our equipment. The road was wet andslick, and I had to go fast or I couldn’t pullthe mountain. Flipper settled down veryquietly until I reached the top. Scott, blesshim, was quiet as a little mouse. I hadplaced him in his infant carrier on thefloor, thinking this was the safest place forhim.When I finally reached the top, I started
to unpack and prepare lunch for our cow-boys. We had a little one room cabin, witha propane refrigerator, a wood cook stove,and running water. There was no room fora table or chairs. I set up Scott’s play-pen,for his bed, and made our bed. I had gath-ered some wood and some kindling, andtried to light the stove. And tried. Andtried. And tried some more. Sandwicheswere looking like a good option for thenoon meal. When I had them made andcovered, I went out to bring in water. Oh,yes! We had running water. I had to run
About that time we heard Flipper under-neath the cabin, hitting every floor joist ashe chased another one. This became ourroutine, listening to him chasing the chip-munks.After we had gotten everything squared
away at the tack shed, and at the cabin, Idecided I needed to make supper. I askedCharlie to make a fire in the stove. Heretorted that he was tired and I needed tomake it myself. Confession time. I told himI didn’t know how. He explained how to dothat. I tried. And tried. And tried. Hedemonstrated. Okay, I get it. With his roar-ing fire, I started supper. Burned the bread.Oh me! I have been cooking my whole life.It is the one thing I do really well! Butmaybe not on a wood stove.A good night of sleep . . . well I did get a
little chilly, but still slept pretty well
out to the live spring behind the house andbring it in with a water bucket. My heartwas beginning to fall. I wasn’t used to a lotof luxuries, and knew how to cope with noelectricity and no plumbing for the house.I knew how to live with no running waterin the house. We could never drink thewell water in all my years of growing upand still can’t to this day. What I had noexperience with was building a fire. And Iwas afraid of burning my baby up in thatold wood frame cabin! The men finallycame in to a meal of cold sandwiches, andall but Charlie left for their homes. Charliementioned that it was too bad I didn’t havetime to cook those hard-working cowboysa hot meal. I said that Donald hadpromised them a good hot meal in a cafeon the way home. I helped Charlie set uphis “tack room” I advised that he shouldhang everything from the rafters of theshed, since chipmunks were plentiful.
J U N E 2 0 1 4 51
continued on page 52
True Tails of aRanch Wife . . .by BETTY MARTIN
because I was tired. Charlie got up earlyand started a fire in the wood stove andstarted the coffee to boiling. Crawled backin bed until the cabin began to warm upand Scott woke. Time to get dressed andstart the day. First things first. I fed Scott,then started to work on breakfast. I cookedthe bacon while I made biscuits. All right,let’s try this biscuit cooking again! Stuckthe pan in the oven, broke eggs into theskillet. Looked in the oven. Turned biscuitsaround. Cooked eggs. Grabbed biscuits outof the oven. They look beautiful. Charlietears one open. It is doughy on the inside.I grabbed it and toasted it in the skillet. I hauled water into the cabin and
heated it on the stove to wash dishes. Fin-ished. I hauled water in and heated it onthe stove to bathe Scott. Finished. I sweptthe floor and used Scott’s bath water tomop the floor. I hauled water to heat onthe stove and wash out Scott’s dirtyclothes. While I was at it, I washed ourdirty clothes as well. I checked the time.8:00 a.m. I kept feeding a stick of wood inthe stove to keep the fire going. Now it wasgetting hot in the cabin. I opened the door
fire or of cooking bread in that old oven,but I was doing pretty well.Next morning, I beat the biscuit blues.
I made pancakes. Charlie enjoyed them,but as he was kissing me good-bye, hementioned that he would really like acoconut cream pie for dinner. I felt like abig balloon that had just been deflated. Istarted my morning routine of haulingwater . . . Dishes, Scott’s bath, diapers.Sigh. In the meantime, Flipper is spendinga hard morning of chipmunk chasing. Itseemed the only time I saw him was atmeal times and bed time. The rest of theday he was protecting us from the invasionof chipmunks!I started the pie crust. I knew I would
have to watch it close, but once it was inthe oven I started the coconut filling. Itonly scorched a little from being cooked inthe high altitude. Pulled the pie crust outof the oven. It was only burned on one side.I threw it out and started over. This time Isat next to the oven and opened it aboutevery few moments. I actually accom-plished it this time! Filled with the filling,topped with hand whipped meringue andcoconut and back in the oven to brown. Iwatched this like a hawk as well. Perfect.Now it was time to start dinner. I had beensimmering a pot of beans on the stove allmorning, and more steak and some corn-bread completed the meal . . . Except, thecornbread was a . . . little . . . runny in themiddle, and the beans, in this high alti-tude, were kind of, well, a little, umm, theyrattled on the plate. But the meat and thepie was great, that is if you like coconut pie. . . which I don’t!We stayed for two weeks before we
came home for a weekend, during whichtime Charlie’s mother and father took ourplace for three days. When we went back,Charlie got very busy as the yearlings weretaking brisket disease. I still couldn’t starta fire, but I could keep it going all day. Ipracticed with that old oven all day everyday. Soon, I could turn out biscuits andyeast rolls and loafs and cornbread andcakes with hardly ever a bobble! I wasbored a lot, but I kept busy taking care ofmy baby and baking. One day, I was out gathering wild flow-
ers to put on a plywood sheet I had foundto lay across an empty barrel that we wereusing for a table in front of the cabin.There were a row of bushes with some kindof berries between me and Flipper and thecabin where my baby lay sleeping. All atonce, Flipper started jumping toward
and sat on the door step doing someembroidery. Fed Scott again. Read on oneof my books. It was a nice day out, so I tookScott and Flipper and went for a walk.Suddenly remembered the fire in the stoveand made a mad dash back to feed anotherstick in the fire. I decided chicken friedsteak, mashed potatoes and biscuits andgravy for dinner (lunch) was in order. Itwas 10:00 by now, so I thought I wouldstart. Peeled the potatoes and set them toboil. Made the biscuits and set them tobake. Fried the steak. Turned the biscuitsaround. Made the gravy and got the bis-cuits out of the oven just as Charlie rodein. The biscuits might be a little too brownon the bottom. No, they might be a littleBLACK on the bottom. Just a touchdoughy in the center. Oh well. Charlie said,“They will eat!” But he didn’t say what. I letthe fire go out. Leftovers for supper. I started hauling water in after supper.
I filled the galvanized tub half full of coldwater and set two big pots to boiling on thestove Charlie had now built a fire in. Ihauled the water. I got the first bath.Charlie took a bath then I re-mopped thefloor. This pioneer woman stuff isn’t thatbad! I was tired from hauling water, andstill hadn’t gotten the hang of starting a
52 J U N E 2 0 1 4
True Tailscontinued from page 51
continued on page 60
J U N E 2 0 1 4 5353 J U N E 2 0 1 4
Robert L. Homer & Associates, LLC.
New Mexico Cattle Growers’Insurance Administrators
Ask for Barb:800/286-9690505/828-9690
Fax: 505/828-9679IN LAS CRUCES CALL:
Jack Roberts: 575/524-3144
WhatYou Need to Know
Now About Your Family’sHealth Insurance from Bob Homer, New Mexico Cattle Growers’ Insurance Administrators
Here are the answers to the five most asked questions I hear from New Mexico stockmen:
Q. I’m over 65 and have Medicare and a Medicare supplement policy, do I need to do anything?
A. No action is necessary. If you want to change your Medicare supplement plan for next year, you must make your change between October 15 and December 7, 2014.
Q. I’m under 65 and am currently covered by health insurance what are my options?1. If you are covered by an employer group policy, no action is required unless your employer is changing
the company plan or discontinuing the plan.2. If you are under 65 and have individual (non-group) coverage for you and your family or you have your own small group plan.
a. If your policy was purchased before March 2010 and you have not made changes to the policy [no increased deductible, etc], this policy is grand fathered and you can keep it as long as the insurance company keeps renewing that plan.
b. Your policy was purchased after March 2010. If your policy is from Blue Cross Blue Shield or Lovelace, you can keep it until Dec. 1, 2014. You will have to select a new plan after that date.
3. If you are covered under the New Mexico Cattle Growers member group policy with Blue Cross Blue Shield, your coverage will continue until August 1, 2014. You will be alerted to any proposed changes in your plan by June 1, 2014.
Q. I do not have health coverage, what are my options?a. Sign up by March 31, 2014, for a policy that will begin on April 1, 2014 with one of the following companies:
i. Blue Cross Blue Shieldii. Presbyterianiii. New Mexico Health Connectionsiv. Molina (only for those eligible for Medicaid)
b. How do you do it? Call our office: 1-800/286-9690 or 505/828-9690 or email me at [email protected]
Q. If you want to know if you & your family qualify for a government subsidy, go to www.kff.org [Kaiser Family Foundation].Q. I do not want any coverage, what are my options?
a. Penalty for 2014 = $95 per adult and $47.50 per child or 1% of your family income, whichever is greater.
b. Penalty for 2016 = $695 per adult and $347.50 per child or 2.5% of your family income, whichever
is greater.
HERE ARE THE ANSWERS TO THE FIVE MOST ASKEDQUESTIONS I HEAR FROM NEW MEXICO STOCKMEN
What You Need to Know Now About Your Family’s Health Insurance FROM BOB HOMER, New Mexico Cattle Growers’ Insurance Administrators
Dependability & service to our members for over 36 years.
54 J U N E 2 0 1 4
Mainstream mediadon’t know Big Greenhas deeper pocketsthan Big Oilby RON ARNOLD, WASHINGTONEXAMINER.COM
The “Kill Keystone XL” crowd isn’t lit-tle David up against a Big Oil Goliath.As usual, conventional wisdom isn’t
wisdom when the mainstream media askall the wrong questions with commensu-rate answers.Behemoth Big Green outstrips Big Oil
in expendable revenue by orders of magni-tude — if you know how to follow themoney.The mainstream media don’t know
how. Like most liberals, their staffs areafflicted with what 20th century futuristHerman Kahn called “Educated Incapac-ity” — the learned inability to understandor even perceive a problem, much less asolution.They’ve been taught to be blind, unable
to see Big Green as having more dispos-able money than Big Oil, so they don’t lookinto it.They would never discover that the
American Petroleum Institute’s IRS Form990 for the most recent year showed$237.9 million in assets while the NaturalResources Defense Council reported$241.8 million.Nor would they discover who started
the anti-Keystone campaign in the firstplace. It was the $789 million RockefellerBrothers Fund (established in 1940). Thefund’s program is elaborated in a 2008PowerPoint presentation called “The TarSands Campaign” by program officerMichael Northrop, who set up coordina-tion and funding for a dozen environmen-tal and anti-corporate attack groups to usethe strategy, “raise the negatives, raise thecosts, slow down and stop infrastructure,and stop pipelines.” Tom Steyer’s $100million solo act is naive underclass nou-veau cheap by comparison.Mainstream reporters appear not to be
aware of the component parts that com-prise Big Green: environmentalist mem-bership groups, nonprofit law firms, non-profit real estate trusts (The NatureConservancy alone holds $6 billion inassets), wealthy foundations giving pre-scriptive grants, and agenda-making car-tels such as the 200-plus member Envi-ronmental Grantmakers Association. Theyeach play a major socio-political role.Invisible fact: the environmental move-
You don’t need expert skills to connectthe dots linking Keystone XL to Alberta’soil sands to climate change to Big Green.On the other hand, you do need detailed
knowledge to parse Big Green into its con-stituent parts. I spoke with Washington-based environmental policy analyst PaulDriessen, who said, “U.S. environmentalactivist groups are a $13-billion-a-yearindustry — and they’re all about PR andmobilizing the troops.“Their climate change campaign alone
has well over a billion dollars annually, and
ment is a mature, highly developed net-work with top leadership stewarding a vastinstitutional memory, a fiercely loyal cadreof competent social and political opera-tives, and millions of high-demographicmembers ready to be mobilized as needed.That membership base is a built-in free
public relations machine responsive to thepush of a social media button sendingpolitically powerful “educational” alertsthat don’t show up on election reports.Big Oil doesn’t have that, but has to pay
for lobbyists, public relations firms andsupport groups that do show up onreports.
J U N E 2 0 1 4 55
MAKING YOUR VOICE HEARD;PROTECTING YOUR RIGHTS; ENSURING THE FUTURE
PRIVATE PROPERTY RIGHTS / STATE & FEDERALLEGISLATION /ANIMAL HEALTH /WILDLIFE/WATER /LAND MANAGEMENT & USE
/REGULATORY ISSUES / TAXES / INT’L. CONCERNS
NEW MEXICO CATTLE GROWERS’ ASSOCIATIONPO Box 7517, Albuquerque, NM 87194 • 2231 Rio Grande Blvd. NW
Ph. 505/247-0584 • Fax: 505/[email protected] • www.nmagriculture.org
YOU can joinNMCGA TODAY at
www.nmagriculture.org(or call, email or fax)
WE CAN’T THINKOF A BETTER
WAY TO SPENDOUR MONEY ...than supporting the New Mexico Cattle
Growers’ Association &their Litigation Fund
~ Matt Williams, Williams Windmill
The NMCGA Has Been Here Representing You Since 1914
continued on page 56
high-profile battles against drilling, frack-ing, oil sands and Keystone get a bigchunk of that, as demonstrated by theRockefeller assault.”Driessen then identified the most-
neglected of all money sources in BigGreen: “The liberal foundations that givetargeted grants to Big Green operationshave well over $100 billion at their dis-posal.”That figure is confirmed in the Founda-
tion Center database of the Top 100 Foun-dations. But how much actually gets toenvironmental groups? The Giving USAInstitute’s annual reports show$80,427,810,000 (more than $80 billion)in giving to environmental recipients from2000 to 2012.I checked the U.S. Chamber of Com-
merce and found $147.3 million in assetswhile environmental donor Gordon E. andBetty I. Moore Foundation posted $5.2 billion.Driessen pointed out another unper-
ceived sector of Big Green: governmentdonors. “Under President Obama, govern-ment agencies have poured tens of mil-lions into nonprofit groups for anti-hydro-
carbon campaigns.”Weather Channel co-founder John
Coleman adds, “The federal government iscurrently spending $2.6 billion [per year]on climate change research (and onlythose who support the ‘carbon dioxide is apollutant/major greenhouse gas’ receivefunding).”This web of ideological soul-mates, like
all movements, has its share of turf warsand dissension in the ranks, but, as dis-closed on conference tapes I obtained, itshares a visceral hatred of capitalism, a wor-shipful trust that nature knows best, and acallous belief that humans are not naturalbut the nemesis of all that is natural.Lawyer Christopher Manes wrote
“Green Rage: Radical Environmentalismand the Unmaking of Civilization.” Manesnow practices tax litigation from his lawoffice in Palm Springs, Calif., which he hasnot yet unmade.The legal branch of Big Green is varied.
Earthjustice, (formerly Sierra Club LegalDefense Fund) raked in $133.8 million inthe past five years — comparable to manysimilar law organizations. Highly litigativeattack groups receiving federal settle-ments are numerous and thriving, such asthe Center for Biological Diversity ($29.2million in the past five years).
56 J U N E 2 0 1 4
It’s not unusual for heirs of big moneyto dream of unmaking the source of theirwealth: Laura Rockefeller Chasin of theRockefeller Family Fund once said, “It’svery hard to get rid of the money is a waythat does more good than harm. One ofthe ways is to subsidize people who are try-ing to change the system and get rid ofpeople like us.”The money reported to the Federal
Election Commission is barely the begin-ning of what’s really happening. It doesn’tshow you Big Green’s mobilized boots onthe ground, the zooming Twitter tweets,the fevered protesters, the Facebook fanat-ics or the celebrities preaching carbonmodesty from the lounges of their privatejets.When self-righteous victims of Edu-
cated Incapacity insist that Big Oil out-spends the poor little greenies, keep inmind the mountains of IRS Form 990sfiled by thousands of groups, land trusts,lawyer outfits, foundations, and agenda-makers, just waiting for America to wakeup and smell Big Green’s untold hundredsof billions.
RON ARNOLD, a Washington Examiner columnist,is executive vice president of the Center for theDefense of Free Enterprise.
Mainstreamcontinued from page 55
BEEF COUNCILbullhorn
ECUADOR cont. on page 58
ProducerSupport of theBeef CheckoffHighest in 21 Years
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A Closer Look atEcuador, the LatestMarket to Reopen toU.S. Beef
Ecuador recently agreed to resumeimports of U.S. beef for the first time sinceDecember 2003
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For more information contact: New Mexico Beef Council, Dina Chacón-Reitzel, Executive Director1209 Mountain Rd. Pl. NE, Suite C, Albuquerque, NM 87110 505/841-9407 • 505/841-9409 fax • www.nmbeef.com
2013 – 2014 DIRECTORS — CHAIRMAN, Darrell Brown (Producer); VICE-CHAIRMAN, Bernarr Treat (Producer); SECRETARY, Alicia Sanchez (Purebred Producer).NMBC DIRECTORS: Bruce Davis (Producer); DavidMcSherry (Feeder); Mark McCollum (Feeder); MilfordDenetclaw (Producer); Jonathan Vander Dussen (DairyProducer); Tamara Hurt (Producer).
FEDERATION DIRECTOR, Darrell Brown (Producer)U.S.M.E.F. DIRECTOR, David McSherry BEEF BOARD DIRECTOR S, Tammy Ogilvie (Producer),Wesley Grau (Producer).
ECUADOR cont. from page 57 1@E� 91-@� 5@19?� ?A/4� -?� .112@>5<1�-:0�85B1>?��'C;�5:@>;0A/�@;>E� ?195:->?� 2;>� �/A-0;>5-:59<;>@1>?� ->1� <8-::10� 8-@1>@45?�9;:@4�G�;:1�5:�@41�/-<5@-8/5@E� ;2� $A5@;� -:0� ;:1� 5:�/A-0;>K?� 8->31?@� /5@E��A-E-=A58���//;>05:3� @;� @41� �8;.-8
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1 Markets that remain closed to U.S. beef due toBSE include China, Australia, Argentina, Brazil,Uruguay, Morocco, Israel and South Africa.Saudi Arabia reopened to U.S. beef in 2004, butsuspended imports after a BSE case was detectedin California in April 2012.
2 Per capita GDP figures are 2012 World Bankestimates, in international dollars using pur-chasing power parity rates.
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58 J U N E 2 0 1 4
Conservation. United States Department of Agricul-ture. N.p. December 31, 2013. Web.Cowan, Caren. Personal Interview. 9 April. 2014.Desert Bighorn Sheep. Texas Parks and Wildlife. N.p.n.d. Web.Endangered Species Act. National Wildlife Federa-tion. N.p. n.d. Web.Endangered Species Act by the Numbers. NationalWildlife Federation. N.p. February 1, 2006. PrintGearhart, Jim. Personal Interview.8 April. 2014.Harris, John D, and Brown, Paul L. “Wildlife:destruction, conservation and biodiversity”. NewYork: Nova Science Publishers, 2009. 328-329. PrintHistory Of the Interior. U.S. Department of the Inte-rior. N.p. n.d. Web.Male, Timothy D. “A Green Olive Branch on Endan-gered Species.” Wall Street Journal 17 Jan 2014. A13.Print.Mexican Gray Wolf. Pima County. N.p.n.d. Web.Mexican Wolf Recovery Planning. U.S. Fish andWildlife Service. N.p. April 2, 2014. Web.Michael, Jeffrey A. The Endangered Species Act andPrivate Landowner Incentive. N.p.n.d Print.Private Property. Business Dictionary. N.p. n.d. Web.Pronghorn. National Wildlife Federation. N.p. n.d.Web.Rodriguez, Shari L. Peterson, M. Nils Cubbage, Fred-erick W. Sills, Erin O. Bondell, Howard D. “PrivateLandowner Interest in Market-Based Incentive Pro-grams for Endangered Species Habitat Conserva-tion”. Wildlife Society Bulletin 36(3). Sep2012. 469-476. Print.
Regional Office, Mexican Wolf Recovery Program.Environmental Assessment For The ImplementationOf A Southwestern Gray Wolf (Canis Lupus) Manage-ment Plan For Portions Of Arizona, New Mexico andTexas Preliminary Draft Version 2. Albuquerque, NM:U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, 2012. Print.Vitter, David. “Abuse of Endangered Species Actthreatens American’s private property rights”. FoxNews. December 28, 2013. Web.Warren, Lydia. Cages Built to Protect Kids fromWolves at New Mexico Bus Stops Under Fire for‘Demonizing’ the Endangered Animals. Daily Mail.N.p. October 30, 2013. Web.
Schneberger, Laura. “Bad Wolf! Now Go to YourRoom”. Range Magazine. Winter 2006: 38- 40.Print.Southwestern Gray Wolf Management Plan FAQ.Texas Parks and Wildlife. N.p. n.d. Web.Stroup, Richard. The Endangered Species Act: Mak-ing Innocent Species the Enemy.Shaw, Jane S., ed. N.p. n.d. Print.Summary of the Endangered Species Act. UnitedStates Environmental Protection Agency. N.p. n.d.Web.Tackman, Alan. Personal Interview. 9 April. 2014.U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Southwestern
J U N E 2 0 1 4 59
CONNIFFCATTLE CO.LLC
John & Laura Conniff1500 Snow Road, Las Cruces, NM 88005
575/644-2900 • [email protected]
Casey & Chancie RobertsUpham Road, Rincon, NM
575/644-9583
www.conniffcattle.comwww.leveldale.com
CONNIFFCATTLE CO.LLC
Angus, Shorthorn, LimFlexBulls - Cows - Heifers for Sale
How Fair Is ... continued from page 45
in the New Mexico Stockman.Call: 505/243-9515.
D V E RT I S E
60 J U N E 2 0 1 4
GALLUPLUMBER& SUPPLY
1724 S. Second, Gallup, NM 87301505/863-4475 • 800/559-4475
Farm, Ranch and
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Serving the Community Since 1939
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2014
Call Chris Martinez 505/243-9515, ext. 28
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Williams Windmill, Inc.
New Mexico Ranch Items andService Specialist Since 1976 New Mexico Distributor for
Aermotor Windmills
those bushes and barking. I grabbeda stick and started towards them,thinking it was a coyote or fox orsomething. Flipper started runningfarther down the line of bushes,barking and then running behindme. I could see the bushes swayingas if something was moving throughthem. And it seemed taller thaneven a coyote. Then I realized what-ever the thing was, it was closer tothe open door of the cabin and mybaby than I was. I started runningthen, my heart pounding! I gainedthe cabin, drug Flipper through thedoor and slammed that door. I neversaw the “critter,” and I can’t provewhat it was, but I will tell you somestories tomorrow that may have you guessing.
True Tailscontinued from page 52
The New Mexico Livestock Board #,� ,��$#'!� ��'�#��-�,� (+� -"�� )(,#-#('� ( �1��.-#/�� �#+��-(+�� �"#,� )(,#-#('� #,� ��(/�+'(+3,� �1�&)-� )(,#-#('� %(��-��� #'�%�.*.�+*.�����0���1#�(���"����0���1#�(�#/�,-(�$� (�+��#,��'��!�'�2�( �� .%%�-#&��&)%(2��,� �'�� �'� �''.�%� �.�!�-� ( � ���&#%%#('���"���#/�,-(�$� (�+��"�,���,-�-.-(+2&�'��-�� -(� )+(-��-� ��0� ��1#�(� %#/�,-(�$ +(&�%(,,��-"� -��'���#,��,����"��)(,#-#('�#,+�,)(',#�%�� (+� %���#'!� �'�� !(/�+'#'!� -"��!�'�2�-(0�+�,�-"#,�,-�-.-(+2�!(�%�#'��'�� #��#�'-� �'�� � ��-#/�� &�''�+�� �"�� ,.���,, .%��'�#��-��0#%%�"�/���-�%��,-����2��+,�( �%#/��,-(�$�� +�'�"#'!� �'��(+� �!+#�.%-.+�%� +�%�-���1)�+#�'����'��)+(/�'�,.���,, .%�&�'�!��&�'-��1)�+#�'���#'��#-"�+�( �-"�,���+��,���"���#%#-2� -(� %����� �(&&.'#��-�� �'�� )+(/#���#+��-#('� #,� �+#-#��%� #'� -"#,� )(,#-#('���,.&�,� &�2� ��� ,.�&#--��� -(� �+#,�#%%���'���("',('�� ��� ��'�!�+�� ��� �� �����'���-�(������%�.*.�+*.�����0���1#�(�������2�July 1, 2014.
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J U N E 2 0 1 4 61
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2014
Call Chris Martinez 505/243-9515, ext. 28
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RESERVE YOUR SPACE NOW IN THE
J U N E 2 0 1 4 6262 J U N E 2 0 1 4
Arizona NationalLivestock ShowAwards Over $54,000 inScholarships
The Arizona National Livestock Showrecently awarded $54,000 in scholar-ships for the 2014/2015 academic
school year. The scholarship recipients willbe honored at the 67th Arizona NationalLivestock Show Dedication on December27, 2014 at the Arizona State Fairgrounds.The Arizona National Livestock ShowScholarship Program has awarded over$800,000 in scholarships.Congratulations to the following
recipients:Jessica Burson – Roswell, NMRachel Claus-Walker – McNeal, AZHaley Cooley – Gilbert, AZKaitlyn Dirkschneider – Tucson, AZKacy Drummond – Reserve, NMBrittany Gerald – Chandler, AZZane Gouker – Lakeside, AZBraelyn Henry – Tucson, AZEllen Hill – Phoenix, AZMariana Hudson – Scottsdale, AZHolly Johnson – Buckeye, AZLacy Hunt – Buckeye, AZMariah, Kerr – Goodyear, AZGarrett Lochner – Tucson, AZTiffany Maggard – Buckeye, AZKaitlyn Myers – Thatcher, AZShannon Nigh – Yuma, AZBailee Ott – Yuma, AZKaitlyn Parks – Tucson, AZTaylor Rogers – Mesa, AZShelby Rojas – Phoenix, AZAlicia Smith – Sonoita, AZKeili Summey – Cave Creek, AZCorrin Toben – Glendale, AZMolly Van Rijn – Mesa, AZBreanna Watkins – McNeal, AZLilly Webb – Goodyear, AZZane Webster – San Simon, AZScholarships are available to students
attending pursing a bachelor degree at anaccredited university or college for thecurrent academic year. Other require-ments include: High School graduation;completion of at least 12 semester hourspost High School graduation before apply-ing; currently taking at least 12 credithours; a minimum grade point average of2.5 (A=4); and prior participation in theArizona National Livestock Show. Appli-cants may reside in any State and qualify atcolleges and universities from throughout
Memorial, Bob & Miriam Boice Memorialand Everett Bowman Memorial. Applica-tions are available online and due March 15.
For more information visit www.anls.org or call602/258-8568.
the United States.Scholarships are funded through dona-
tions to the show in addition to direct con-tributions of the Arizona Horse LoversFoundation, Farm Credit Services South-west S.TA.R.T, Georgann (Ann) Maxcy
J U N E 2 0 1 4 63
--HH
NEW MEXICO 4-H FOUNDATION13008 Gray Hills NE, Albuquerque NM 87111�������������
2011-2012 NM 4-H State President
2012-2013ASNMSU Senator
representing theCollege of ACES
SenateParliamentarian
2013-2014ASNMSU Director
of GovernmentalAffairs
“4 -- AA FFaammiillyy AAffffaaiirr iinn tthhee WWiittttee HHoouussee.. 4-H wasnever a choice in the Witte household. It was a mandate.Even the choice of projects wasn’t our own: one day my
uncle showed up with a couple of goats, so the family built a littlewood house and a fence. The truth is, 4-H was the best decision thatJennifer and I never had to make. 4-H is more than an after schoolclub, it’s a lifestyle that builds lasting family values and an opportunity to build a new generation. ~ Jeremy Witte
64 J U N E 2 0 1 4
CANDY TRUJILLO Capitan, N.M.575/354-26821-800/333-9007,
ext. 6712Semen SalesSemen SalesAI SuppliesAI SuppliesAI ServiceAI Service
��� ������� ����P e r f o rman c e T e s t e d S i n c e 1 9 6 5
T. Lane Grau – 575.760.6336 – [email protected] Grau – 575.760.4510 – [email protected]
1680 CR 37 Grady, New Mexico 88120
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RED ANGUS
575-318-40862022 N. Turner, Hobbs, NM 88240
www.lazy-d-redangus.com
Bulls & Replacement Heifers
coguandazyazwwww
SUGNADER
moc.suusgnaderre-dd--yy-zal.ww.ww288MNNM,ss,bboH,renruT.N2202
6804-813-575
HtnemecceallapeepR&sllsllluB
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Available at All Times
Loren & Joanne Pratt44996 W. Papago Road
Maricopa, AZ 85139520/568-2811
Producers ofQuality &
Performance -Tested BrahmanBulls & Heifers
“Beef-type American GrayBrahmans, Herefords, Gelbvieh and F-1s.”
Wells Champlin Ranch, LLC
Polled Herefords • Reg. & Comm.Proven Performance Genetics
BULLS & HEIFERS FOR SALEP.O. Box 452, Ignacio, CO 81137
Email: [email protected] & Cliff Schmid • 970/883-5305
Please call us at
505/243-9515 to list your herd here.
SEEDSTOCKthe
�
guideThe Old Brass Bell
Ol’ Ben and I were camped belowthe ridgeline
The horses hobbled so they couldgraze at night
One wore an old brass bell that tinkled soft and low
So we could find ‘em in the morning if they drifted out of sightThat night I tossed and turned
as I usually doHalf-awake my mind finds troubles
on which to dwellOld problems, unfinished busi-ness—they all worry me awakeBut on this night a bell was tin-kling just to tell me all was wellThat sound reached out to me
across the meadowMy mind turned to the horses
in the nightI knew that they were close and
drifted off to sleepIn the comfort only found when
everything’s all rightLately I been thinking about
what it meansIf there are ways of knowing
without the bellLittle clues we can listen or
watch forThat might tell our troubled minds
—”all is well”I think the clues are subtle but all
around usIf we miss them, we are doomed to
a restless nightA baby’s smile, a pretty sunrise,
holding handsClear as bells and softly ringing
“all is right”And I hope these words have you
a-thinking someAbout all the clues perhaps you
have missed as wellSo when worries dog your heels or
invade your sleepThere will come to you—the tiny
tinkling of a bell
The bell is used by Ben Nelson on pack trips.It was originally a gag gift that he used andit works. It has a nice sound too.
J U N E 2 0 1 4 65
AGBAAmerican Galloway Breeders Association
www.AmericanGalloway.com
PUT YOUR HERD BACK TO WORK.
Galloway genetics are ideal for today’s lowinput market demands.
Feed Efficient • High Yielding carcassw/Minimal Back Fat • Easy Fleshing •Moderate Mature Size • Low BW
970-405-5784Email: [email protected]
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c.srevirdim@ABGA:liamE4875-504-079
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SLATON, TEXAS
C BarR A N C H
Charolais & Angus
BullsTREY WOOD
806/789-7312CLARK WOOD
806/828-6249 • 806/786-2078
uBnA&orahCSAXET,NOTALS
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Russell, Jamie, Whitt & Henry FreemanYoder, Colorado • [email protected]
www.freemanbraunvieh.com
Grant Mitchell • 505/466-3021
Weanlings, Yearlings & Riding Horses
www.singletonranches.com
registered
IIRRIISSHH BBLLAACCKK && IIRRIISSHH RREEDDBulls & Females For Sale
These cattle are renowned for their grade-ability, earlymaturity & growth, marbling & cut-out percentage. IrishBlack & Irish Red sired calves are a favorite among feed-ers & packers alike. Cow-calf operators like them becauseof their exceptional calving-ease & high fertility.
RAISED IN HIGH-ALTITUDE AT 7,500 - 8,000 FEET
JJAARRMMOONN RRAANNCCHHCortez, Colorado
Steve Jarmon: 970/565-7663 • Cell: 970/759-0986www.j-clivestock.com
1-877/2-BAR-ANG1-806/344-7444
Hereford, TexasJOHN THAMES STEVE KNOLL
WWW.2BARANGUS.COM
To a pasture near you
Coming Soon
Bulls - Females - Embryos - Semen
STEVE & LAURA KNOLL
RReedd AAnngguussCCaattttllee
FFoorr SSaalleePurebred
Red Angus• Weaned & Open Heifers
• Calving Ease Bulls
YOUNG BULLS FOR SALE
JaCin RanchSANDERS, ARIZONA
work: 928/688-2602cell: 505/879-3201
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432-283-1141
SEEDSTOCKthe
�
guide
Bradley 3Ranch Ltd.www.bradley3ranch.com
M.L. Bradley, 806/888-1062Fax: 806/888-1010 • Cell: 940/585-6471
Ranch-Raised ANGUS Bulls for Ranchers Since 1955
Annual Bull SaleFebruary 14, 2015
at the Ranch NE of Estelline, TX
CaseyBEEFMASTERS
S I X T Y P L U S Y E A R S
www.CaseyBeefmasters.comWatt, Jr. 325/[email protected]
Watt: 325/762-2605
66 J U N E 2 0 1 4
David & Norma BrennandPiñon, NM 88344575/687-2185
Quality Registered Black Angus Cattle
Genex Influenced
Mountain Raised, Rock-Footed� Calving Ease
� Easy Fleshing
� Powerful Performance Genetics
� DocilityZoetis HD 50K 50,000 DNA Markers
(Combined w/Angus EPDs provides the mostaccurate & complete picture of the animals
genetic potential)
Free From All Known Genetic Defects
DNA Parentage Verified AGIBVD FREE HERD
Born & Raised in the USA
RANCHRAISED
MOUNTAINRAISED
WINSTON, NEW MEXICORussell and Trudy Freeman
575/743-6904GRAURANCHCHAROLAISHEIFERS & BULLSFOR SALE
575-760-7304WESLEY GRAU
www.grauranch.com
MC A T T L EANFORD
ANGUS • BRAHMAN • HEREFORDS • F1s
F1 & Montana influenced Angus Cattle
GARY MANFORD 505/508-2399 – 505/414-7558
PRIVATE TREATYDROFNAMMA RP
YTAERTETAVIR
505–9932-805/505DROFNAMYRAG
elttaCsugnAeulfnianatnoM&1FF•SDROFEREH•AMHARB•SUGNA
DROFNAMMA
8557-414/5
decnes1F
NA
RegisteredPolled Herefords
Cañones Route P.O.Abiquiu, N.M. 87510 MANUEL SALAZAR
P.O. Box 867Española, N.M. 87532
Bulls &Heifers
FOR SALE AT THE FARM
Phone: 575/638-5434
Westall Ranches, LLCRay & Karen Westall, Owners / Tate Pruett, Ranch Manager
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Brangus needs!Registered Brangus Bulls & Heifers
SEEDSTOCKthe
�
guide
in the New Mexico Stockman.Call: 505/243-9515.
A D V E RT I S E
Wilson Receives NMSU Leadership Award
Kendal Wilson, Ancho, recentlyreceived the Dean’s Award ofLeadership Excellence from
New Mexico State University’s(NMSU’s) College of Agricultural,Consumer & Environmental Science. Wilson graduated from NMSU on
May 10 with his graduate degree — aMaster’s of Agriculture with a spe-cialization in Agribusiness.He was nominated for the award
by Dr. Ram Acharya, Associate Pro-fessor of agricultural economics andagricultural business, who is activelyinvolved in student recruitment,advising, and learning activities ofthe department as an undergraduateprogram coordinator and graduatestudent advisor. “This award recog-nizes his leadership — his achieve-ments in the department and therole he played in school as well as hisprevious volunteer work and serviceto the New Mexico livestock indus-try,” Acharya said.“As a faculty member, I have
observed Kendal grow over severalyears,” he continued. “It is always apleasure to see students succeed. It’sone thing to see their success inclass, but another to see them suc-ceed in their chosen career.”Wilson earned his graduate
degree in three semesters, commut-ing to Las Cruces one day a weekfrom Ancho where he works on theBar W Ranch and for Bartz-SpencerSolar, installing solar water pumps.He credits his boss, SterlingSpencer, for making it possible topursue his graduate degree. “Ster-ling gave me a day off each week,which allowed me the time I neededto get it done.”Wilson also helps on his family’s
ranch. He is a newly elected mem-ber of the New Mexico Cattle Grow-ers’ Association (NMCGA) Board ofDirectors. He is the son of NMCGAPast President Rex Wilson and hiswife Carol.He graduated from NMSU with a
bachelor’s degree in agriculturaleconomics and agricultural businessin the spring of 2012, and from Car-rizozo High School in 2008 wherehe was involved in 4-H, FFA andhigh school sports.
J U N E 2 0 1 4 67
REAL ESTATE G
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REAL EST
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To place your Real Estate advertising, please contact Chris at505/243-9515 ext. 28
or email [email protected]
RANCHES/FARMS
**NNEEWW** 440000 HHeeaadd RRaanncchh,, aaddjjooiinniinnggLLeesslliiee CCaannyyoonn,, CCoocchhiissee CCoo..,, AAZZ–– Highlyimproved & maintained w/4 homes;horse barn; hay barn; equipment sheds;workshop; roping arena; excellent ship-ping corrals w/scales; extensive waterdistribution w/wells, storage &pipelines. Scenic w/rolling grasslandsand mountains. Easy country. +/-7,346 deeded acres, State lease &USFS permit. This is a top quality ranch& a rare opportunity. $$33,,990000,,000000..
**NNEEWW** 115500 HHeeaadd RRaanncchh,, NNeeaarrWWiillllccooxx,, AAZZ –– +/- 3,000 deededacres, and State Grazing Leases. Onebedroom home, corrals, well, and elec-tric at headquarters. Well wateredwith about 15 miles of new pipelineand 9 storage tanks & drinkers, 8 dirttanks. Great country. Good mix ofbrowse and grass. $$11,,995500,,000000..
**RREEDDUUCCEEDD** 9900 HHeeaadd,, AAgguuaa FFrriiaa RRaanncchh,,QQuueemmaaddoo,, NNMM –– This is a scenic mid-size ranch with great prospects.Operating as a private hunting retreat,and a purebred Angus and Paint horseranch. +/-1200 deeded acres, +/-80acres of NM lease, and +/-5220 acresBLM. 4BR, 2BA, mfg. home. Trophyelk, antelope, deer. Elk and mule deerpermits. Candidate for a conservationeasement or land exchange with theBLM. $$11..6655MM $$11..5555MM
**RREEDDUUCCEEDD** 5522 HHeeaadd RRaanncchh,, SSaannSSiimmoonn,, AAZZ –– Indian Springs Ranch,pristine & private, only 12 milesfrom I-10. Bighorn sheep, ruins, pic-tographs. 1480 acres of deeded, 52head, BLM lease, historic rock house,new cabin, springs, wells.$$11,,330000,,000000 $$997755,,000000,, TTeerrmmss..
**RREEDDUUCCEEDD** 333355 HHeeaadd RRaanncchh,,GGrreeeennlleeee CCoouunnttyy,, AAZZ –– +/- 20 Deededacres, w/two homes, barn & out-buildings. 58 Sections USFS grazingpermit. Good vehicular access to theranch – otherwise this is a horsebackranch. Scenic, great outfittersprospect. $$885500,,000000 $$776600,,000000..
** RREEDDUUCCEEDD** 331144 AAccrree FFaarrmm,, PPeeaarrccee,,AAZZ –– Two pivots, three irrigationwells, charming +/- 2100 s.f. home,four car garage, large metal work-shop, both with concrete floors, tworailroad cars with cover between forhorse stalls, hay and feed storage.$$775500,,000000 NNooww $$669988,,000000..
**RREEDDUUCCEEDD** SSaann SSiimmoonn,, AAZZ –– IndianSprings Farm 162 acres w/pivot, nicehome, hay barn other utility buildings.$$775500,,000000 NNooww $$665500,,000000..
**NNEEWW** GGrraahhaamm CCoo,, AAZZ 7788 PPlluussHHeeaadd CCaattttllee RRaanncchh –– Approx. 640deeded acres, 3633 acres USFS and5204 acres BLM; 1 BR, 1 Bathhome/camp. Foothills of the SantaTeresa Mountains. $$665500,,000000
**RREEDDUUCCEEDD** VViirrddeenn,, NNMM +/-78 AcreFarm, with 49+ acres of irrigationrights. Pastures recently planted inBermuda. 3 BR, 2 Bath site builthome, shop, hay barn, 8 stall horsebarn, unique round pen with adjoin-ing shaded pens, roping arena.Scenic setting along the Gila River.Great set up for raising horses alsosuitable for cattle, hay, pecans, orpistachios, $$555500,,000000 TTeerrmmss..
**RREEDDUUCCEEDD** YYoouunngg,, AAZZ,, 6655++ AAccrreess ––Under the Mogollon Rim, small towncharm & mountain views. 2100 s.f., 3 BR, 2 Bath home, 2 BR cabin, his-
toric rock home currently a museum,shop, & barn. Excellent opportunity forhorse farm, bed & breakfast, or landdevelopment. +/- 65 acres for$$11,,007700,,000000;; home & other improve-ments. $$442244,,550000..
224400 AAccrreess wwiitthh IIrrrriiggaattiioonn RRiigghhttss,,EEllffrriiddaa,, AAZZ –– Suitable for hay, crops,pecans, irrigated pasture, homesite orfuture development. Includes 130acres of irrigation rights, partiallyfenced, with corrals, & 1200 gpmwell. $$333366,,000000 TTeerrmmss..
**NNEEWW** 990000++//-- AAccrree FFaarrmm BBoowwiieeAAZZ –– 21 registered shallow wells and4 deep wells. Good supply of qualityground water. Potential pistachio,pecan, or organic farm. Rested forsome time and as such qualifies for“organic” status. $$22,,990000//aaccrree..
HORSE PROPERTIES/LAND
**NNEEWW** 448800 AAccrreess OOrraaccllee,, AAZZ –– Oneof the last remaining large parcels ofland in the area. On the northernslope of Santa Catalina Mtns. Smallranching, development or granitemining potential. $$22,,664400,,000000..
SSaann RRaaffaaeell VVaalllleeyy,, AAZZ –– Own a sliceof heaven in the pristine San RafaelValley, 152 Acres for $$338800,,115500 &77 Acres with well for $$221177,,000000
**NNEEWW** 4400 AAccrreess BBeeaauuttiiffuull TTuurrkkeeyyCCrreeeekk AArreeaa –– An amazing opportuni-ty to own 40 unique acres in anincredibly bio-diverse location, in thefoothills of the Chiricahua Mountains,with end of the road privacy.$$334400,,000000..
Committed To Always Working Hard For You!
NNaannccyy AA.. BBeelltt,, BBrrookkeerrCCeellll 552200--222211--00880077
OOffffiiccee 552200--445555--00663333
JJeessssee AAllddrriiddggee 552200--225511--22773355RRyyee HHaarrtt 552200--445555--00663333
TToobbee HHaauugghhtt 550055--226644--33336688SSaannddyy RRuuppppeell 552200--444444--11774455
EErriinn AAllddrriiddggee TThhaammmm 552200--551199--99880000
Stockmen’s Realty licensed in Arizona & New Mexicowww.stockmensrealty.com����� � ��� � ����
SSoonnooiittaa,, AAZZ
REAL ESTATE GUIDE
68 J U N E 2 0 1 4
Stacie Ewing, Qualifying Broker/Owner575-377-3382 (O) • 575-779-6314 (C)
Rancho Del Aguila – 4738 leased acres 40 deededFenced, cross-fenced, well, water troughs in each of the7 pastures, loading pens, pipe corrals, scale, 8 miles ofwater piping, 100-300 carrying capacity, dirt tanks,native grasses, bunk house/tackroom, storage, adobehome with newer addition, 2 large bedrooms, 1 bathroom, wood stove, fireplace & wall heaters, homeis furnished, eat in kitchen
$750,000
Call Someone Who Specializes in Ranches & Farms in Arizona
MARANA BRANCH
SCOTT THACKER, Assoc. Broker • P.O. Box 90806 • Tucson, AZ 85752Ph: 520-444-7069 • Email: [email protected] • www.SWRanch.com
Arizona RanchR E A L E S T A T E
Ranches are SELLING!
We have many qualified buyers looking
for ranches. Please call us if you’re
considering SELLING!
Buckhorn Ranch – 350 headranch spread over 19,000 acreswith 2,163 deeded acres, plusState, BLM & Forest. The ranchis found in one of SoutheastArizona's prime ranching valleyswith picturesque setting &steeped in very old history.Asking $2,500,000New Listing! La CienegaRanch – NW Arizona, 500 headranch, AZ State land, BLM &adverse plus ephemeral increas-es, remodeled headquarters,home & bunkhouse, airstrip.Great Price Per AUM! Asking$1,295,000Reduced Price! BeloatRanch – 300 head year-long,plus increases with rain, Asking$599,000
Rock NV Natural Farm –Willcox, AZ, Organic or NaturalFarm w/145 acres, home, barn,possible retail shop, w/ manyirrigated pastures. Asking$580,000Reduced Price with NewPackage! Dripping SpringsRanch – Globe AZ, 194 Headyear-long, 10 deeded acres plusState & BLM. $399,000. Reduced Price: CK Ranch –Tonopah AZ, 50 acres deeded,237 head year-long on State &BLM. The waters were recentlyreworked, & ephemeral increas-es can bump the numbers withrain. This ranch makes sense.Asking $399,000
We have more ranches available,please check our websites.All properties are listed by Arizona Ranch Real Estate,
Cathy McClure, Designated Broker
SOLD
SOLDIN ESCRO
W
SOLD
C6 Ranch: Sonoita/Patagonia AZ. 165 head, 45 acres deeded,8700 acres forest lease great water, good improvements.$725,000. Sam Hubbell-Tom Hardesty
Stockton Pass: Beautiful SE AZ Ranch North of Willcox,Mountain Ranch 145 head AU, Deeded Surrounded by forest.Reduced to $975,000. Walter Lane
Red Top Ranch: 3,800 deeded acres in SE AZ. Priced at $197per deeded acre. Walter Lane
Wildhorse Basin Ranch: Yavapai county, 864 deeded, 6701State Lease, $3,900,000. Con Englehorn
Crooked H: Central AZ, 126 Sections, 450 head WinterRange/664 summer Range. $2,375,000. Traegen Knight
Lazy EH: Western AZ, 122.5 deeded, 300,000 BLM/StateLease, 17,486 AUM ephemeral/500 AU yearlong. 18 wells, 4pumps on CAP Canal. $600,000. Con Englehorn
Tres Alamos Ranch/Farm, Benson AZ: 668 acres deededW/200 irrigated, shallow water, 3 Pivots, present owners running200 head yearlong. Priced at $2,500,000. Walter Lane
Liberty Ranch: 1917 Deeded aces in SE Arizona. $950,000.Walter Lane
Turkey Creek Ranch: Yavapai Co, 130 AU winter permit Oct.through March on the Prescott Nat. Forest, base land is 59.32acres in the Bradshaw Mtns at 5,800’ that would make a pleas-ant getaway from the Metro areas. $605,000 – Paul Groseta
Providing Appraisal, Brokerage & Other Rural Real Estate Services
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Little Cayuse Ranch – This horse & cow ranch operation south of Willard has HQhome, foreman’s home, hay barn, sheds, tack room, 3 excellent wells, 4 pastures. 80acre irrigation pivot with water rights. Good fences & views. Priced reduced $798,900Villanueva Ranch – a working cow ranch on Hwy 3. Ranch has 285 deeded acres &4,450 acre NM Grazing Lease. Perimeter fenced with stock tanks and 15,000 gallonwater storage tank w/pipeline drinkers. $157 per acre or $698,900 Available Now!Sombrero Ranch – near Tremintina, NM – 1,442 deeded acres, 3 pastures, 1 solar well, 1 submersible pumped well and 1 windmill well. Traditionally carries 32 a.u. yearround. Located east of Las Vegas on Hwy 104. Owner will finance! Priced at $575,000La Cueva Canyon Ranch – 1,595 deeded acres w/240 acres of BLM attached. ApacheMesa parcel SW of Las Vegas has tall pines, canyon springs, stock tanks, new fence onNE corner. Off the grid, secluded and beautiful. Owners will finance. Price is $677,875Trigg Ranches – 720 deeded acres lies adjacent to La Cueva Canyon Ranch on ApacheMesa. Off the grid in the tall pines & power is close by! 720 acres priced at $288.900 &smaller 200 acre parcel available for $124,000! Other parcels available & owners willfinance ... Ledoux, NM – Perimeter fenced 60 acre dry land terraced farm has overhead electric,sub-irrigated pasture and good all weather county road access! Located ½ mile north of Ledoux. Price reduced $228,000 & Owner will finance ...Anton Chico – 65 acre irrigated farm w/ditch rights. Bunkhouse, storage shed, shop +irrigation & farm equipment go w/sale. Priced below appraisal at $698,900 & Ownercan finance!La Loma (near Dilia) 12.8 acre farm has 3 bedroom red tiled roof home, barns, corrals,and equipment and storage buildings. Improvements are in good condition, waterrights go with sale. Price is $248,900 – OBODilia Loop Road – This is a fenced 20+ acre parcel planted in alfalfa & grass, has 4 irri-gated sections plus ditch rights and Pecos River frontage. Price is $231,500Upper Anton Chico – This parcel has outstanding alfalfa production, it is an irrigated7.5 acres, perimeter fenced, easy to work and water. Asking $82,50058,000 Acres north of Roswell, NM, for sale, includes BLM, NM State Lease, Pecos riverfrontage & very nice HQ home! Price reduced to $204 per acre ... call for details!
KEN AHLER REAL ESTATE CO., INC.
Office: 505/989–7573 • Toll Free: 888/989–7573 • Mobile: 505/490–0220Email: [email protected] • Website: www.SantaFeLand.com
1435 S. St. Francis Drive, Suite 210, Santa Fe, NM 87505
J U N E 2 0 1 4 69
REAL ESTATE G
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Southern New Mexico-West Texas
Private/State/BLM Ranch
FOR SALEBy owner. 22+ sections, 150 mothercows year-round. Very well wateredand fenced. Nice Home. $1.2 million.
Please call: James R. Evrage, 575-963-2340 or 575-687-3455
JAMES B. SAMMONS IIIFARM & RANCH / COMMERCIAL / RESIDENTIAL
T. 915.833.9373 • M. 915.491.7382 • F. 915.975.80246006 North Mesa Street, Suite 901,
El Paso, Texas [email protected]
JAMES SAMMONS& ASSOCIATES INC.
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[email protected] PPeerreezz AAssssoocciiaatteess
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LA LUZ PROPERTIES, LLC Lucy Maez, Qualifying Broker OFFICE: 505-454-8784 • CELL: 575-799-8784
[email protected] • www.newmexicorealestatelaluzproperties.com
OFFERING THE HOOSER RANCH FOR SALEAT ONLY $465 PER ACRE
Located 18 miles South of Springer, NM – 9 miles from I-25• 18,087 ACRES IN COLFAX / MORA COUNTIES • 7 SOLAR POWER WELLS
• SEVERAL STORAGE TANKS • WORKING CORRALS WITH SCALES • SPRINGS• CARRIES 500 HEAD MOTHER COWS OR 1200 YEARLINGS
• 5000 SQ FT METAL SHOP/ WITH LIVING SPACE • 8 ANTELOPE PERMITS• MINERAL RIGHTS TRANSFERRED AT CLOSING • ATTACHED 3 CAR GARAGE
• 3000 SQ FT 4 BEDROOM 3.5 BATH HOME • EQUIPMENT & MANY TOOLS INCLUDED• 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH FOREMAN'S HOME
CALL LISTING OFFICE FOR MORE INFORMATION OR TO MAKE APPOINTMENT TO VIEW THIS ONE-OF-A-KIND PROPERTYInformation provided is deemed reliable and is not guaranteed by La Luz Properties and should be independently verified.
Sale offering is made subject to errors, omissions, changes in price, prior sale or withdrawn without notice.
MAJOR RANCHREALTY
RANDELLMAJOR
Qualifying Broker
P.O. Box 244 585 La Hinca Road Magdalena, NM 87825
Cell: 575-838-3016Office: 575-854-2150
Fax: 575-854-2150
FARMS, RANCHES, DAIRIES, HORSE & COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES— Satisfied Customers Are My Best Advertisement —
992200 EEaasstt 22nndd,, RRoosswweellll,, NNMM 8888220011 •• OOffffiiccee:: 557755//662233--88444400 •• CCeellll:: 557755//662266--11991133
Cherri Michelet Snyder Qualifying Broker������������� ������������� ���
www.michelethomesteadrealty.com
STRAIGHT SHOOTER
RANCH & FARM INSPECTIONS & INVESTIGATIONSBuyers, Sellers, Agents & Lenders... Don’t Saddle The Wrong Horse!
Allow Us A Close Look At The Property. We Go Way Beyond “Due Diligence”.
View our Services at RanchInspector.com575-533-6253 • Email: [email protected]
TERRELL LAND& LIVESTOCK CO.
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575/447-6041
We Know New Mexico...SellingRanches For 40 Years!
REAL ESTATE GUIDE
70 J U N E 2 0 1 4
SSppeecciiaalliizziinngg iinn NNMM RRaanncchheess && HHuunnttiinngg PPrrooppeerrttiieess
www.BeaverheadOutdoors.com
JJoohhnn DDiiaammoonndd,, QQuuaall ii ffyy iinngg [email protected]
Cell: (575) 740-1528Office: (575) 772-5538Fax: (575) 772-5517
HC 30 Box 445, Winston, NM 87943
JJoohhnn DDiiaammoonndd,, QQuuaall ii fyfyffyyf iinngg BBrrookkee
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RANCH SALES AND APPRAISALS
SERVING THE RANCHINGINDUSTRY SINCE 1920
1507 13TH STREET LUBBOCK, TEXAS 79401(806) 763-5331
MATHERS REALTY, INC.2223 E. Missouri, Las Cruces, NM 88001
575/522-4224 Office • 575/522-7105 Fax • 575/640-9395 Cell
“Propriety, Perhaps Profit.”
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KEITHBROWNFIELD
ASSOC. BROKER, [email protected]
mathersrealty.net
Mathers Realty,
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J U N E 2 0 1 4 71
REAL ESTATE G
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Southwest New Mexico Farms & Ranches
���“If you are interested in farm land or
ranches in New Mexico, give me a call”
19.18 acres of farm land in La Mesa, NM – Located in La Mesa, NM. Paved road frontage andEBID surface water rights. Call for aerial map & EBID water rights info. Has ground water rights butno well. Farm located west of intersection of Lister Road & San Jose Road off Hwy 28 on north sideof La Mesa. Sellers will divide. $326,060
27.50 Acre Farm – Consists of 3 tracts – 8 Acres, 8 Acres, & 11.5 Acres – will sell separately. FullEBID & shared irrigation well. Community water, electric, telephone & gas on Camunez Road toadjoining property. Beautiful farm land, great mountain & valley views. Take Highway 28 south toSan Miguel, east or left on Highway 192, first right or south on Las Colmenas, then left or east onCamunez to end of pavement. Priced at $467,000
Fancher Ranch – Located southwest of Las Cruces, NM off Afton Road. 198 head permit, 210 acresdeeded, 19,224 acres BLM and 4666 acres state land. 2 pastures, 3 wells, 1900 square foot home with3 bedrooms and 2 baths, bunk house, green house, horse barn, corrals, round pen, etc. Easy access -45 minutes from El Paso and Las Cruces. $550,000
10 acre farm – located south of La Mesa, NM. Beautiful farm with irrigation well and EBID waterrights. Surrounded by other farms. Hwy 28, east on Afton Road, farm is on the north side. $179,900$164,000
14.83 acre farm – located in the north valley of Las Cruces, NM, includes an irrigation well, EBIDwater rights (Elephant Butte Irrigation District), shop and barn. $279,900
14.39 acre farm – located in San Miguel, NM.Full EBID irrigation, electric, new irrigationwell, new cement ditches, and new canal cross-ing. $245,000
Beautiful Albuquerque South Valley Farm –78.9 acres reasonably priced at $1,762,500, con-sist of 2 parcels, owner will sell separately.North farm includes 43.0667 acres for $957,500and south farm includes 35.7908 acres for$805,000. Shown by appointment only.
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 AvenueLas Cruces, NM 88005(O) 575/647-5041(C) 575/[email protected]/nmlandman
DAVID P. DEANBroker
Ranch: 432/426-3779Mobile: 432/634-0441
www.avai lableranches.com
NEED RANCH LEASES & PASTURE FOR 2015
NEED RANCH LEASES & PASTURE FOR 2015
New Mexico/
West Texas Ranches
New Mexico/
West Texas Ranches
Campo Bonito, LLCRanch Sales
P.O. Box 1077 Ft. Davis, Texas 79734
SOLD
SOLD
SOLD
Harden Cienga Ranch, MuleCreek NM. 36,000 acres, 716head yearlong, great improve-ments. Priced at $3,500,000 withcattle Lazy NJ Ranch, Gleeson AZ. 7060acres, 150 head yearlong, stronggrass country. Priced at$1,350,000Slash TL Ranch, Tombstone AZ.14,000 acres, 300 head yearlong,improvements need attention.Priced at $1,500,000Hunt Ranch Douglas AZ. 2462acres with 2500 state lease, 103head yearlong, well watered, easyto operate, paved access. Pricedat $1,245,500If you are looking to Buy or Sell a Ranch or Farm
in Southwestern NM or Southern AZ give us a call:
Sam Hubbell, Qualifying Broker520-609-2546
Tom Hardesty – 520-909-0233
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www.kernranches.com • (575) 762-3707
Dave Kern - (575) 760-0161 (cell) • 1304 Pile St., Clovis, NM
KernLand, Inc.
REAL ESTATE GUIDE
72 J U N E 2 0 1 4
SCOTT MCNALLYwww.ranchesnm.com
575/622-5867575/420-1237
Ranch Sales & Appraisals
Bar MReal Estate
ST. JOHNS OFFICE: TRAEGEN KNIGHTP.O. Box 1980, St. Johns, Arizona 85936
Ph. 928-524-3740 • Fax 928-563-7004 • Cell 602-228-3494email: [email protected]
EEAASSTTEERRNN AARRIIZZOONNAA FFAARRMM:: Located in central Apache County, Arizona, between Alpine andSpringerville along US Highway 180 in the Nutrioso Valley at the confluence of Colter Creekand Nutrioso Creek with over ½ mile of meandering Nutrioso Creek running through theproperty. Includes over 118 acres total with grand-fathered water rights for 33.8 acres of irri-gated pasture. Farmable acreage has been utilized for livestock grazing on improved pastureand is irrigated via gravity flow dirt ditches. Beautiful views of Escudilla Mountain located inthe heart of the White Mountains. There are numerous home sites on the property with excel-lent access including over ¼ mile of paved frontage along US Highway 180. Additional accessis provided by county maintained roads on both the north and south boundaries. Price$1,200,000 REDUCED! $1,000,000
NNOORRTTHHEERRNN AARRIIZZOONNAA RRAANNCCHH:: Coconino County, Arizona between Flagstaff and Kingman justnorth of Interstate 40 in the Kaibab National Forest. The ranch contains nearly 8,000 deededacres including two “in-holding” parcels within the forest boundary. The ranch carrying capac-ity is for 267 animal unit’s year-long and varies in elevation from 5,200 feet to 6,200 feet withthe headquarters situated at 5,460 feet. Access is provided by Forest Road #142 approxi-mately 6 miles north of Interstate 40 at Ashfork, Arizona. The ranch headquarters includes aranch house with barn and corrals. The ranch is watered by over 30 earthen reservoirs scat-tered throughout each pasture. The ranch is fenced and cross-fenced into six main pastureswith nine working/holding traps. The northern portion of the ranch is behind locked gate andcould generate additional income from hunting, wood-cutting or sandstone quarries. Price:$3,800,000
EEAASSTTEERRNN AARRIIZZOONNAA RRAANNCCHH:: North of St. Johns in Apache County, Arizona, includes 1,760 deed-ed acres with State & BLM leases for 121 animal units yearlong. Newly improved with sever-al miles of new pipeline, numerous storage tanks/drinkers supplied by four wells. Total ranchis over 11,000 acres with a five pasture rotational grazing system and one small holding trap.All ranch fences have been reworked including over two miles of new fencing. The main blockof the ranch is behind locked gate providing the owner with great privacy and seclusion. Price: $700,000EEAASSTTEERRNN AARRIIZZOONNAA RRAANNCCHH:: Located two miles east of St. Johns, Arizona, runs 331 animal unitsyearlong on state, BLM and private grazing leases. The ranch includes 362 deeded acres witha full set of working ranch headquarter improvements and two houses each with a well pow-ered by on-grid electricity. There are six wells in total and over four miles of pipeline dispers-ing water throughout the ranch as well as live water in the Little Colorado River. Price: $950,000
TOMSIDWELL Associate
Broker
RICHARDRANDALSQualifying
Broker
We may not be the biggest, the fanciest or the oldest but we are reliable & have the tools.
O: 575/461-4426 • C: 575/403-7138 • F: 575/[email protected] • www.newmexicopg.com
615 West Rt. 66, Tucumcari, NM 88401
LLC
PAUL McGILLIARDMurney Associate Realtors
Cell: 417/839-5096 • 800/743-0336Springfield, MO 65804
www.Paulmcgilliard.murney.com
� CAPITAN, NM – Minutes from Ruidoso. A multi-purpose propertyw/15.6434 ac. +/-, laboratory/office, covered pens, home. Ideal for use forhorse or cattle breeding, embryo transfer facility, vet clinic or many other uses ina beautiful area of NM.
� NEW MEXICO GIANT- Central NM – Almost 200 sections, mostly deed-ed, well improved w/homes, barns, several sets of pens w/scales, watered bysolar & electric powered subs, windmills, an extensive pipeline system, springs,spring-fed draws & canyons, earthen dams & river frontage, on pvmt.
� SPRINGER, NM – TOP OF THE WORLD! Just east of town on pvmt.9,200 ac. +/- ac. deeded, state-of-the-art improvements, 5000 ft. +/- home,two guests houses, employee housing, horse stalls w/breeding station, excellentimprovements including fences, working pens, roping arena w/air operatedrelease, new old-time cook house w/out-house. A must see property!
� OLD HWY. 66. – Santa Rosa, NM – 12,718 ac. +/- deeded, 640 ac. statelease, this ranch is well improved & watered by springs, subs, windmills & earth-en dams in an excellent location w/frontage on three different hwys. (develop-ment potential).
� STATE OF THE ART! – Improved to the hilt w/homes, barns, cuttinghorse training facilities, excellent fencing, extremely well watered by wells rang-ing from 10ft to 209ft, equipped w/mills & subs, extensive pipeline system,springs & earthen dams, w/ abundance of old grass to start the season, on pvmt.w/paving to the headquarters (approx. 25 mi. from Old Hwy. 66 Ranch).
� GUADALUPE CO., NM – 1,760 ac. +/- well improved w/homes, barns& pens, well watered, pvmt. & all weather roads from the interstate.
� PICK THE SIZE RANCH YOU WANT – let’s divide this 10,432 ac. +/-ranch in north central Texas, large lake w/permits for dam & right-to-impoundin place to add tremendous aesthetic value to the ranch together w/hunting,boating, fishing, commercial & residential development potential. Can be boughtby the pasture or in multiple pastures.
800-933-9698 day/eve.www.scottlandcompany.com • www.texascrp.com
Ben G. Scott – Broker • Krystal M. Nelson • NM Qualifying Broker
Please view our websites for details on choice NMranches, choice ranches in the high rain-fall areas of OK, irr./dryland/CRP &commercial properties.
1301 Front StreetDimmitt, TX 79027
in the New Mexico Stockman.Call: 505/243-9515.
A D V E RT I S E
J U N E 2 0 1 4 73
REAL ESTATE G
UIDE
SOLD18,560 Acres
20 Miles NE of Roswell, NM
CHARLES BENNETTUUnniitteedd CCoouunnttrryy // VViissttaa NNuueevvaa,, IInncc..
((557755)) 335566--55661166 •• wwwwww..vviissttaa--nnuueevvaa..ccoomm
W-R RANCH� 680 Deeded Acres� 17,900 State Lease Acres
� 927 BLM Acres� 300 Animal Units Year Long
� Newly remodeledSouthwestern Home
� Good water; windmill & submergible tanks
� Good fences; 4-strand barbwire
� $1,800,000
Name
Old Address
City, State, Zip
New Address
City, State, Zip
HHaass yyoouurr aaddddrreessss bbeeeenn uuppddaatteedd ffoorr 991111??
If so send your new address to: NNEEWW MMEEXXIICCOO SSTTOOCCKKMMAANN
P.O. Box 7127, Albuquerque, NM 87194or FAX: 505/998-6236
or email [email protected]
Don’t Miss aSingle Issue!
Stacie Ewing, Qualifying Broker/Owner575-377-3382 ofc. • 575-779-6314 cell
35 irrigated acresin Dilia, NM – NMBorders River, mostlyfenced, ReducedPrice! $449,900
565 acres with abeautiful 2 bedroom, 2 bath home, granite
countertops, under cabinetlighting, Saltillo tile, kiva
fireplace, horse barn, ponds, 3 car garage, and much, much
more. $2,000,000
Bar MReal Estate
BAR M REAL ESTATE New Mexico Properties For Sale...
wwwwww..rraanncchheessnnmm..ccoomm
SOLD
Roswell, NM 88202Office: 575-622-5867 • Cell: 575-420-1237
Scott McNally, Qualifying Broker
UNDER
CONTRACT
UNDER
CONTRACT
SSIIXX SSHHOOOOTTEERR RRAANNCCHH –– Located approximately 15 miles west of Carrizozo, New Mexico in west-ern Lincoln County. The ranch is comprised of 640 ± Deeded Acres, 961.4 New Mexico StateLease Acres and 11, 246 Federal BLM Lease Acres. Grazing capacity is controlled by a Section3 BLM grazing permit for 175 Animal Units on a yearlong basis. Improvements include one res-idence, which has recently been remodeled, hay barn, storage sheds and corrals, all functional.Water is provided by three wells and an extensive buried pipeline system. Much of the watersystem has been replaced or installed new within the last five years. The Carrizozo Malpai lavaoutcrop forms the entire eastern boundary of the ranch. Access to the ranch is gated and lockedfrom Highway 380. Public access is by permission only. Price: $1,300,000.
BBOORRDDEERR RRAANNCCHH –– Located approximately 10 miles east of Columbus, New Mexico along theinternational boundary with Mexico along and on both sides of State Highway 9. The ranch iscomprised of 1,910 ± Deeded Acres, 11,118 NM State Lease Acres and 52,487 Federal BLMLease Acres. Grazing capacity is set by a Section 3 BLM grazing permit for 613 Animal Units.Livestock water is provided by three wells and a buried pipeline system. Five sets of working cor-rals are situated throughout the ranch. Adjoins the Mt. Riley Ranch to the west. Price: $1,100,000, but negotiable, come look & make an offer. Seller wants the ranch sold.
MMTT.. RRIILLEEYY –– Located approximately 30 miles northwest of Santa Teresa, New Mexico along andon both sides of State Highway 9. The southern boundary of the ranch is the international bound-ary with Mexico. The ranch is comprised of 160 ± Deeded Acres, 6921 NM State Lease Acresand 74,977 Federal BLM Lease Acres. Grazing Capacity is set by a Section 3 BLM grazing per-mit for 488 Animal Units on a yearlong basis. The biggest portion of the ranch is located northof the highway. The headquarters is located approximately one mile north of the highway.Headquarters improvements consist of a camp house, maintenance shop, storage sheds and alarge set of working pens with scales. Water is provided by four wells and a buried pipeline sys-tem. Adjoins the Border Ranch to the east. Price: $725,000, but negotiable, come look & makean offer. Seller wants the ranch sold.
74 J U N E 2 0 1 4
575-736-77781015 S. 1st, Artesia, NM
Southeast New Mexico’s
Only AuthorizedWells Cargo�
Dealer
The Area’s Largest
PJ TrailersDealer
Gooseneck Flat BedsDump Trailers
Car HaulersUtility Trailers
Pipe TrailersHydraulic Tilt Beds
DeckoversPickup Beds
Road Force®
MotorTrac®
FastTrac®
Financing Available
ARTESIATRAILERSALES Authorized
Big TexDealer
AAC Nutrition ..................................15Ag New Mexico FCS ACA .................6Agrow Credit Corporation...............24Ken Ahler Real Estate Co., Inc .......68American Galloway Breeders Assn ..65American Water Surveyors .............49American West Real Estate ......68, 73Arizona Ranch Real Estate .............68Artesia Trailer Sales .......................74
BKen Babcock Sales ........................61Bale Buddy Manufacturing, Inc ......51Bar G Feedyard .............................13Bar M Real Estate .........................73Beaverhead Outfitters ....................70BJM Sales & Service, Inc................61Bobcat of Albuquerque ..................11Border Tank ..................................31Bovine Elite...................................61Bradley 3 Ranch, Ltd.....................65Brennand Ranch............................66
CC Bar Ranch..................................65Casabonne Family .........................21Dwanna Casabonne.......................23Casey Beefmasters ........................65CattleMax......................................61Cattleman’s Livestock Commission .28Caviness Packing Co., Inc ..............77Don Chalmers Ford........................31Clovis Livestock Auction.................25Coba Select Sires...........................65Conniff Cattle Co., LLC ..................59Cooper Brothers ............................23Cox Ranch Herefords .....................66
DD Squared Ranch ..........................30David Dean/Campo Bonito ............71Dan Delaney Real Estate ...............71Denton Photography......................63Desert Scales & Weighing Equip. ...61Domenici Law Firm PC..................23Double DD Animal Nutrition & Supply ...................................20
EAlice Eppers ..................................15Evening Out West..........................44James R. Evrage............................69
FFBFS / Monte Anderson.................47FBFS / Larry Marshall....................20Farm Credit of New Mexico..............8Farmway Feed Mill ........................27First American Bank ......................18Five States Livestock Auction ........324 Rivers Equipment .......................79Freeman Ranch ............................65Fury Farms, Inc. ............................13
GGallup Lumber & Supply .........37, 60Genex/Candy Trujillo .....................64Giant Rubber Water Tanks .............47Grau Charolais...............................64Grau Ranch...................................66
HHall-Gnatkowski, Inc......................16Harrison Quarter Horses.................61The Hat Ranch ..............................16Headquarters West, Ltd ................68Headquarters West, Ltd./Hubbell....71Headquarters West, Ltd/Knight ......72Henard Ranches ............................51
Hi-Pro Feeds ...................................5Bob Homer ...................................16Hubbell Ranch.........................20, 36Hudson Livestock Supplements ......29Hutchison Western...........................6
IInn of the Mountain Gods ................4
JJ & S Pipe & Service Company.......61JaCin Ranch ..................................65Jarmon Ranch ...............................66Joe’s Boot Shop.............................59Punch Jones ..................................16
KKaddatz Auctioneering ...................60Kern Land .....................................71Kincaid Pump Sales & Service........23David & Joan Kincaid.....................18Bill King Ranch ..............................2Koben Pucket Invitational ..............42
LL & H Manufacturing .....................36La Luz Properties, LLC...................69Lakins Law Firm PC ......................25Lazy D Ranch Red Angus...............64Lazy Way Bar Ranch......................64Lewis Livestock .............................23
MMajor Ranch Realty .......................69Manford Cattle ..............................66Mason & Morse (Rainy Mesa) ........70Mathers Realty, Inc./Keith Brown...70Scott McNally ................................16Merrick’s Inc..................................34Mesa Feed Co ...............................39Mesa Tractor, Inc.....................26, 60Mesilla Valley Commercial Tire.......76
Michelet Homestead Realty ............69Chas S. Middleton & Son ..............70Monfette Construction Co...............60Paul McGillard / Murney Assoc.......72
NNational Animal Interest Alliance ....56NM Beef Industry Initiative.............50NM Business Coalition ...................52NM Cattle Growers Insurance .........53NM 4-H Foundation ......................63NMLB ...........................................60NM Property Group .......................72NM Purina Animal Nutrition ...........80NMSU Animal & Range Sciences ........................18, 33, 41
OJim Olson ......................................46
PPauls Vet Supply ......................... 21Penasco Valley Telephone Coop ....19Phase-A-Matic Inc .........................33Phillips Diesel................................60PolyDome .....................................75Pratt Farms...................................64
RThe Ranches..................................54Real Cowboys ...............................50Red Doc Farm.................................3D.J. Reveal....................................61Robertson Livestock.......................60Roswell Livestock & Farm Supply...16Roswell Livestock Auction Co .........12Roswell Wool.................................17Runyan Ranches............................16
SSachse Red Angus .........................16James Sammons & Associates ........69
Sandia Trailer Sales & Service........60Santa Rita Ranch...........................64Scott Land.....................................72Singleton Ranches .........................65Skeen Buckhorn Ranch..................16Southwest Red Angus Assn ............65Stockmen’s Realty .........................67Straight Shooter ............................69Joe Stubblefield & Associates..........69Swihart Sales Co. ..........................61
TT & T Trailers ................................20TechniTrack LLC............................47Terrell Land & Livestock Co ...........69Titan Machinery.............................78Bernarr Treat.................................15The Turquoise Shop .......................202 Bar Angus..................................65
UUnited Country Vista Nueva, Inc.....73USA Ranch....................................66
VVirden Perma Bilt Co. ....................36
WWells Champlin Ranch LLC ............64West Wood Realty .........................70Westall Ranches LLC ..............66, 72Westway Feed Products LLC ............7Williams Windmill Inc ..............43, 60WW - Paul Scales..........................35
YYavapai Bottle Gas..................45, 61Yocom-McColl ...............................21R.L. York Custom Leather ..............23
ADVERTISERS’ INDEX
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Bucke’s Feed530-865-4427Orland, CA
Colorado Dairy Service
970-593-9704Loveland, CO
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SOUTHWEST NEW MEXICO’S LARGESTCONSUMER, COMMERCIAL TRUCK, & AG TIRE DEALERSHIP
J U N E 2 0 1 4 77
J U N E 2 0 1 4 7878 J U N E 2 0 1 4
SATURDAYS
6613 Edith Blvd NEAlbuquerque, NM
(505) 342-2566
6613 Edith Blvd NEAlbuquerque, NM
(505) 342-2566
www.titanmachinery.comwww.titanrents.com
(505) 342-2566
www.titanmachinery.comwww.titanrents.com
(505) 342-2566
J U N E 2 0 1 4 7979 J U N E 2 0 1 4
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