I don't think the silence is just due to the shutdown. Imagine, this had to be reported in BRITISH media.
South Dakota's cattle cataclysm: why isn't this horror news?
Ranchers
in South Dakota lost tens of thousands of cattle from a freak storm.
Thanks to the shutdown, no one is paying attention
13
October, 2013
If
you aren't in the ag world, you most likely haven't heard about the
devastating
loss
that ranchers in western South
Dakota
are struggling with after being hit
by winter storm Atlas.
For
some reason the news stations aren't covering this story. I don't
understand why they wouldn't. This story has heartbreak, tragedy and
even a convenient tie into the current
government shutdown.
Isn't that what the news is all about these days?
But
the news isn't covering this story. Instead, it is spreading around
on social media, and bloggers are writing from their ranches in South
Dakota. Bloggers are trying to explain how the horrible happened. And
now I am going to join them to tell you the part of the story that I
know, and I am going to ask you to help these people, because if you
are here reading this, I know you give a crap about these people.
Last
weekend western South Dakota and parts of the surrounding states got
their butts handed to them by Mother Nature. A blizzard isn't unusual
in South Dakota, the cattle are tough and can handle some snow. They
have for hundreds of years.
Unlike
on our dairy farm in Wisconsin, beef cattle don't live in climate
controlled barns. Beef cows and calves spend the majority of their
lives out on pasture. They graze the grass in the spring, summer and
fall and eat baled hay in the winter.
In
winter these cows and calves grow fuzzy jackets that keep them warm
and protect them from the snow and cold. The cows and calves live in
special pastures in the winter. These pastures are smaller and closer
to the ranch, and they have windbreaks for the cows to hide behind.
They have worked for cows for hundred of years.
So
what's the big deal about this blizzard?
It's
not really winter yet.
The
cows don't have their warm jackets on. The cows are still out eating
grass in the big pastures. Atlas wasn't just a snowstorm, it was the
kind of storm that can destroy the ranchers that have been caring for
these cattle for hundreds of years.
Last
weekend Atlas hit. It started with rain. The rain soaked the cows and
chilled them to the bone. Inches and inches of rain fell. The rain
made horrible mud. Then the winds started – 80mph winds, hurricane
force. When the wind started, the rain changed to snow. A lot of
snow. The cows were wet, muddy and they didn't have their winter
jackets when the wind and snow came. Wet snow. Heavy snow.
The
cows tried to protect themselves. They hid in low spots away from the
wind. The low spots where the rain had turned the ground to thick
mud. Some got stuck in the mud. Some laid down to get away from the
wind, to rest a little, they were tired from trying to get away from
the weather when they were already so cold.
The
snow came down so heavy and so fast the the low spots that the cattle
were laying in filled with snow. Not a few inches of snow, not a foot
of snow. Enough snow that the cows and their calves were covered in
snow.
The
cows and calves suffocated or froze to death.
The
caretakers of these cattle had no power to save them. They had to
stand by and take the lashings from Mother Nature. They had no
options. When it was all over, they went out to discover what they
had left.
Can
you even imagine what that would feel like? Standing with your hands
tied as your life's living, breathing and mooing work is destroyed. I
can't imagine, I don't know how I would recover from a loss like
that. This wasn't just one or two herds of cows. This wasn't just one
or two families that lost animals.
This wasn't just a few cows. Tens of thousands of cows are gone. Some
ranchers lost their entire herds. All of their cows, gone.
In
the fall, a cattle rancher sells their calves to someone who
specializes in raising them for market. It's how a ranch generates
income. Calves are the lifeblood of a cattle ranch. Most ranchers had
not yet sold their calves when Atlas hit. Their calves are gone. The
cows that made those calves were pregnant with with next year's
calves. Those cows are gone, those calves are gone.
Meanwhile
in Washington DC, the shutdown has doubly screwed the ranchers. The
people that are supposed to try to help these people are unable to do
their jobs. The farm bill is held up again. No one knows when, how or
if help is going to come.
Insurance?
Not likely.
When
a flood comes and your corn is flooded out, you have some options.
Insurance for cattle is expensive and it comes with hundreds of
loopholes that make the gamble of farming
without it the most practical choice for many.
There
is no way around it, this storm has put some ranchers out of
business. Time will tell just how many.
•
This was originally
posted on the author's blog, The
Adventures of Dairy Carrie.
The author also points out that the AgChat
Foundation has
partnered with several organizations to create a grassroots effort to
help ranchers who lost so much.
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