A
RECORD-SETTING
BLIZZARD KILLED 75,000
COWS AND YOU MIGHT
NOT HAVE
EVEN HEARD
ABOUT IT
A pickup drives on Highway 44 as heavy snow falls in Rapid City, S.D., Oct. 4, 2013. A rare fierce October snow storm rolled out over the central Rocky Mountains on Friday, downing trees and forcing closures of state offices and more than 200 miles of Interstate 90 across parts of Wyoming and South Dakota, state highway officials said. Up to 30 inches of snow was forecast to drop in parts of the Black Hills region of western South Dakota from the storm, the National Weather Service said. (Reuters/Chris Huber/Rapid City Journal)
11
October, 2013
One
would think the death
of 75,000 cows
by upwards of five feet of snow might get some national attention,
but as one
blogger observed,
it has taken some time for the news of the precipitation massacre to
reach outside of local media.
“I
searched the national news for more information. Nothing. Not a
single report on any of major news sources that I found. Not CNN, not
the NY Times, not MSNBC,” Dawn Wink wrote Tuesday. “I thought,
‘Well, it is early and the state remains without power and encased
in snow, perhaps tomorrow.’
So
I checked again the next day. Nothing. It has now been four days and
no national news coverage.”
Wink
dubbed it “The Blizzard that Never Was.”
National
syndicated photo services also yield only a few results documenting
the storm. The Weather Channel, taking
photo submissions from locals,
seems to have the most dramatic pictures of the scene.
Snow rose up to the mail boxes in Spearfish, S.D. (Image source: iWitness guzva84/The Weather Channel)
At
least four deaths were attributed to the weather, including a South
Dakota man who collapsed while cleaning snow off his roof.
Gary
Cammack, who ranches on the prairie near Union Center about 40 miles
northeast of the Black Hills, said he lost about 70 cows and some
calves, about 15 percent of his herd. A calf would normally sell for
$1,000, while a mature cow would bring $1,500 or more, he said.
“It’s
bad. It’s really bad. I’m the eternal optimist and this is really
bad,” Cammack said. “The livestock loss is just catastrophic. …
It’s pretty unbelievable.”
A front door of a home covered in a drift in Rapid City, S.D. (Image source: iWitness Jeanne Apelseth/The Weather Channel)
Cammack
said cattle were soaked by 12 hours of rain early in the storm, so
many were unable to survive an additional 48 hours of snow and winds
up to 60 mph.
“It’s
the worst early season snowstorm I’ve seen in my lifetime,” said
Cammack, 60.
“As
the days warm, more and more carcasses are exposed. So many have lost
so much,” Wink, the blogger, wrote of her mom saying.
“It’s
the worst early season snowstorm I’ve seen in my lifetime.”
Early
estimates suggest western South Dakota lost at least 5 percent of its
cattle, said Silvia Christen, executive director of the South Dakota
Stockgrowers Association. Some individual ranchers reported losses of
20 percent to 50 percent of their livestock, Christen said. The storm
killed calves that were due to be sold soon as well as cows that
would produce next year’s calves in an area where livestock
production is a big part of the economy, she said.
“This
is, from an economic standpoint, something we’re going to feel for
a couple of years,” Christen said.
Homes outside of Ellsworth Air Force Base. (Image source: iWitness Rob Griffith/The Weather Channel)
Some
ranchers still aren’t sure how many animals they lost, because they
haven’t been able to track down all of their cattle. Snowdrifts
covered fences, allowing cattle to leave their pastures and drift for
miles.
“Some
cattle might be flat buried in a snow bank someplace,” said Shane
Kolb of Meadow, who lost only one cow.
State
officials are tallying livestock losses, but the extent won’t be
known for several days until ranchers locate their cattle, Jamie Crew
of the state Agriculture Department said.
“This
is absolutely, totally devastating,” Steve Schell, a 52-year-old
rancher, told
the Rapid City Journal.
“This is horrendous. I mean the death loss of these cows in this
country is unbelievable.”
Ranchers
and officials said the losses were aggravated by the fact that a
government disaster program to help ranchers recover from livestock
losses has expired. Ranchers won’t be able to get federal help
until Congress passes a new farm bill, said Perry Plumart, a
spokesman for Sen. Tim Johnson, D-S.D.
NBC
News reported
that State Agriculture Secretary Lucas Lentsch said
ranchers should keep a accounts of their loss with photos to use in
later claims.
More
than 22,000 homes and businesses in western South Dakota remained
without power into this week, according to utility companies.
National Guard troops were helping utility crews pull equipment
through the heavy, wet snow to install new electricity poles.
At
least 1,600 poles were toppled in the northwest part of the state
alone, and workers expect to find more, Grand River Electric Coop
spokeswoman Tally Seim said.
“We’ve
got guys flying over our territory, counting as they go. We’re
finding more as we are able to access the roads. The roads have been
pretty blocked on these rural country roads,” Seim said.
“One
of our biggest challenges is getting access to areas that are still
snowed in,” added Vance Crocker, vice president of operations for
Black Hills Power, whose crews were being hampered by rugged terrain
in the Black Hills region.
In
Rapid City, where a record-breaking 23 inches of snow fell, travel
was slowly getting back to normal.
The
city’s airport and all major roadways in the region had reopened by
Monday. The city’s streets also were being cleared, but residents
were being asked to stay home so crews could clear downed power lines
and tree branches, and snow from roadsides. Schools and many public
offices were closed.
“It’s
a pretty day outside. There’s a lot of debris, but we’re working
to clear that debris,” said Calen Maningas, a Rapid City
firefighter working in the Pennington County Emergency Operations
Center.
In
South Dakota, the 19 inches of snow that fell in Rapid City on Friday
broke the city’s 94-year-old one-day snowfall record for October by
about 9 inches, according to the National Weather Service. The city
also set a record for snowfall in October, with a total of 23.1
inches during the storm. The previous record was 15.1 inches in
October 1919.
Watch
this report about the extreme snow storm:
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