The Real Time Canine II

After spending 2 years writing the Real Time Canine, the adventure continues with The Real Time Canine II. Read along as I look for just the right puppy to continue the experience. After false starts with Tim and Jed, I am currently training young Tam, and Spot, which are both off to a strong start. Please visit the RTC II to read about training sessions as they occur.
Showing posts with label Ranching. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ranching. Show all posts

Sunday, March 24, 2013

Lost in Translation

I wrote this post for the 2013 USBCHA National Sheepdog Finals. They have a section of their website entitled; "In the Beginning," where handlers share funny stories from their start in the sport. Some are very funny, such as my personal favorite; "The Barn Door," by Rob Drummond where he talks about a broken barn door and a half-broke dog.

Mine is a distant memory of a dog I raised on the ranch and loved completely for sentimental reasons as much for her heart. Sadly, I don't have a picture of her, but this one's for Chica...


Chica was raised on the San Felipe Ranch

Back then, 600 miles round-trip was a long way to travel for a dog trial. And, when you’re only running 1 dog in novice? Well, you gotta crack out somewhere. I cracked out in a desolate area of central California on a barren field alongside a feedlot with a mystery-breed, black and white ranch dog named Chica.

The novice always ran last and we hardy souls, there were about 4 of us, sat around all day (think 7 hours) watching the open handlers on parade with *real* Border Collies, intimidated by their perceived skill, and waiting our turn to shine, or in my case, for a turn.

It came, and I was confident. Chica, a ranch remnant, completed the outrun, all 75 yards of it, and that’s where the trouble began. I couldn’t blow a whistle yet, but had managed to get voice flanks on my edgy little dog. Try as I might, however, and as luck would have it, she wouldn’t take them…none of them…not one.

When the sheep zigged, I flanked Chica to cover, but she either ignored me outright, or went the wrong way. My collar tightened, so I did what came naturally. I raised my voice…same result. I raised it louder to my very best “outside” voice…no change. Undeterred, Chica got sheep to my feet, and we were now to the pen!

Round and round for what felt like eternity, the sheep circled, the dog flying counter to every flank I delivered until, mercifully, the clock ran out on our run. Mortified, I began to walk off the field, alternately glaring at my dog, and staring at my boots. The imagined sound of derisive whispers rang in my ears, and that’s when I heard my name.

Our judge, George Grist, had beckoned to me. Oh Gawd! It was worse than I thought. I was so bad that I required attention!!! Did he speak to everyone after their run? Who knew?

For those of you who don’t know him, George Grist has helped many handlers get their start. He’s bred lots of good dogs, helped put working Border Collies on the map, but George is not the man you’d expect to see pictured beside the word “diplomatic” in the dictionary. Webster’s notwithstanding, in his most compassionate voice, George made me laugh when he gently asked me; “Is your dog on backwards flanks?”

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

While the Sun Shines

Haying
I've heard it said that all you have to do to grow alfalfa is water and stand back. From what I've seen this summer, that's true, but not quite that easy. First you have to have the water rights, then you have to move the side roll sprinklers at least twice a day, depending on how efficient you want to be.

Before I left for the Nicomodes Trial in July, I was practicing on a soon-to-be first cut alfalfa field. When I came back a week later, it was too tall. That's what plowing, plowing, plowing, fresh planting, fish fertilizer, and water will do for you. You should have seen it. It grew tall, thick, lush, green, fragrant, and then it flowered. I found it hard to look away.

A couple days ago ranch manager, Max, drove down the lane with the swather, a great mantis-like apparatus that mows hay, and I knew summer was drawing to a close. It took Max almost an entire day to mow the alfalfa field, and every bit of another to mow the meadow. He cut the high meadow, and the homestead, (nursery field,) a week ago. There is alfalfa curing everywhere, and the smell is heavenly.

Finished Product
Alfalfa must cure, or dry with a certain moisture content before it can be baled. Depending on the weather curing can take no time at all, or weeks. It's another matter altogether if Mother Nature brings rain. You can either use an instrument to determine readiness for baling, or years of experience, like Max does.

Next comes the baler, picking up loose hay to compress it into bales of a pre-determined size. In this case a small size, because around here it's mostly women who handle them. This is high-quality, leafy, green stuff by the time it makes it into the hay barn. Completely unlike the stemmy, dry, 4th and 5th cuttings we pay exorbitant prices for in Cali.

Last comes the stacker. This handy piece of machinery scoops up bales in rapid succession, stacking them neatly on the platform to be pushed off in sections that become those huge, tidy stacks you see surrounded by barbed wire fencing to keep the deer out. It's an efficient process, but it takes hours of monotonous labor, and timing is everything. Knowledge and experience as well, because sometimes you have to add a step called raking if the hay is green on the bottom, or gets wet. That extra step adds cost, so, with hope it's unnecessary.

Hay is curing, days and nights are warm and dry, but early morning has a crisp in the air. I can smell fall, and it smells like freshly cut alfalfa. With just 3 weeks left until the Finals, I'm wondering about home, my thoughts propelled by late summer rituals. The sprinklers are still turning here on the ranch, but now they're watering the landscaping.

Saturday, July 23, 2011

Glorious Work


The Start
It began simply enough. Load up a few horses, trailer 4 miles up the road, move a couple hundred steers farther up the mountain to new pasture. Max has worked for the Strangs for 30 years, and it was on the ranch that he leases from race car great Jeff Gordon where we worked. 30 years is a long time, and he's been on that lease ground for just as long. He knows it like the back of his hand.


Bull Elk in the Reservoir

Bridget's sister, Lori is visiting from her home and horse training business in California, so we loaded up with her daughter, Kit, and headed out. It sounded like fun, nostalgic for me right down to the steers. The terrain and breathtaking, mountain scenery was very different from what I am used to, but nothing about moving a bunch of steers was different at all. They don't like to go up hill, they do like to duck off into the brush, and for some reason completely unknown to me, they don't like to line out on the road.


Canadian Snow Geese

Fortunatly, these were not the wild and crazy variety that run off as soon as look at you. While it was a long way 16 miles up and down the mountain, the steers were well-mannered for the most part and we managed to get about half of them situated. We climbed about 2,000 feet in elevation topping out on the mesa around 9,000 feet. I thought Amelia-ville had spectacular views. From the top, they were indescribable, and pictures don't do them justice.


Slow Elk
Max has some pretty good help in the form of 2 ranch dogs named Nala and Mowgli, a Border Collie mix and a Kelpie. These dogs have clearly made the trip several times, and put out a lot of dog tracks following us all day. I had tried to help Max with his dogs a couple years ago when I was in town for Meeker, but we quickly came to the conclusion that they were useful on the ranch, and we left well enough alone. Good assessment. They are useful.

Max with Nala and Mowgli
Past the reservoir, we angled up sharply and the steers angled just as sharply back the way we came. It was steep, and they hunted and found a way to double-back. It was the only time the steers gave us trouble. Beyond that it was just up and up, and more up through thick stands of Aspen, over countless downed trees, springs and creeks, through thick oak brush along a fenceline and across a bog or two. We started around 9am, and were no where near the top at noon.


Meadow-lust
 Once we put the steers through the last gate, we stopped for lunch. I would just as soon have stopped for a nap, and to tell the truth, my idea was fairly popular with the outfit. We loosened our cinches, had a good rest, and let the horses blow. It was an extraordinarily beautiful day, warm, but at 9,000', not hot.

Is He on the Phone?
All in all, we had spent about 6 hours making the round trip. With nearly 150 head at the beginning, we counted 134 through the last gate, so we had made a good day of it. Max and signifigant other, Sonia will be back up there tomorrow gathering the rest of the steers for the trip up. Me, and Monkey, the horse I used, are each taking 800mg of Motrin and the rest of the week off.

Finish Line

Monday, July 11, 2011

Ranch Dog

Morning Chores
My dogs have been busy. Instead of training for our summer trials, though, they've been busy doing chores. Besides tending the practice sheep, there is a commercial flock of Suffolk ewes and lambs that go out in the morning and back in at night. They are beyond knowing the way, but can be tempted by nearby hay fields, or spooked in route by a tractor or loose dog, so it helps to have an extra set of legs on the job.


What's Next
The practice sheep also go in and out of an overnight pen, kept that way, because Boo, the guardian dog lives with the Suffolks. Fending for one's self isn't prudent for a ewe in this country, so they are protected as best as possible in a secure pen at night. Every morning they go out to a big pasture to hang for the day in grass to their bellies and ditch water in abundance.

All Finished
We're managing some training, usually first thing in the morning for a short time, but this is a commercial horse training facility  afterall. I have witnessed horse shows, pony summer camp, lessons and horse training  from daybreak to dark, and that is certainly the priority around here just now. Having grown up in a similar atmosphere, it's very nostalgic for me. In the meantime, the dogs are biding their time, running to train, and doing what they can to help out around here. All I can tell you is that it's our pleasure...our pleasure to be here, our pleasure to help.

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Let's Rodeo!

It is that time of year again. I wait all year long for the National Finals Rodeo to be televised from Las Vegas, and since it always takes place around my birthday, I feel like it's my real present. For 10 nights in a row I can watch the top 15 rodeo cowboys in the world go head to head in a world class competition on tough, fit livestock that is hand-picked for this event. All year long I listen to people talk about football, basketball, The Ryder Cup, college sports, but this is my time.

December 6th was the midway point, and there are 5 performances left. I have watched every minute of it that I possibly could and have already been rewarded by unbelievable feats. Hazers in the steer dogging absolutely making a winning run possible, as well as a bunch of money for themselves and the cowboy they haze for in the process. In the bull dogging, you will only see the  hazing horse's bottom half until the bull doggers gets down, and then not at all, but it's where the magic happens. Watch it, and watch the left side of your screen to see how much a hazer has to do with a run.

Every night in the bull riding you can see bull fighters, aka clowns, saving bull rider after bull rider by hurling themselves squarely in harms way. Consummate atheletes, they almost always walk away from what looks like pure suicide. I am not a big fan of Barrel Racing, but I admire the athleticism of the horses. It often looks to me that not all, but some, of the riders are hindering more than helping their mounts. The rough stock events are all very exciting, but again, in the Saddle bronc, and Bareback events, I'm watching the horses buck more than the cowboys cover. I read that a legendary rodeo stud called Night Jacket has 16 progeny in the bucking string at this year's finals. Sold for a record $200,000, the stallion is an integral part of ProRodeo's thriving Born-to-Buck program.

Another famous stud, a human one, former multiple calf-roping champion Roy Cooper has 3 sons qualified and competing at this year's finals. They say that when Roy began taking everybody's money in the calf roping, that he changed everything about the sport. With 3 sons among the top 15 calf-ropers in the world, he's apparently going right on changing things even past retirement. Calf-roping and the other timed events are where my real interest lies. And, of course, because I team rope, that is usually where I pay closest attention. As always, though, it's the animals, the horses, that capture my imagination. These horses are the best there is, at the top of their game, tuned up and readied just for these 10 days, then paired by the very best in the business at the time. Really...does it get any better than that?

Monday, August 9, 2010

Little Green Cheerios



The little green "Os" pictured here are not for breakfast. They do not make a snap, crackle or pop unless you let 'em dry out, and then they just crack. And the instrument beside them looks like something you might use to blow up a balloon, but let me tell you, it would not be appropriate for a party.

The "Os" are castrating bands, or just bands, and the stainless steel contraption is the applicator, or the bander. I used them together today to cut short the tail and reproductive life of my lamb. I banded his tail and his testicles transforming him shortly into a nice-looking wether, or castrated male sheep.


The bander opens up the cheerio wide enough to be slipped around the tail and testicles, one band at each location. Then you simply close it up, slip off the band, and all's well that ends well, as they say. You can also use a knife, and I've seen tin snips used on tails, but this is a simple, no fuss method that causes no pain, no possibility of infection, and no stress.  Blood flow is cut off from the offending danglers, and within a few short weeks, they rot and fall off. It is my preferred method of neutering and beautifying sheep.


This is what the band looks like in place on the tail. I did not photograph the private parts, because this is, afterall, a family blog. And what of the lamb? How did he take it? Ok, here's the photographic evidence taken in the aftermath...



 First a little slurp...



 And then a little nap.

Friday, April 30, 2010

Crackin' out

I saddled my horse, Alley Cat, today for the first time in a while. He's shedding his winter coat, so I spent 40 minutes or so brushing him beforehand. I have been thinking about going back to the roping pen. I haven't roped in a while either, but found a place not too far from home where they rope on Tuesday nights. Over the course of the next few days, I'll start riding him, get him legged up and shod, and go back to the dummy for practice.

I just love to rope.

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Enter through the Dead Horse

This is Bob. More accurately, it's what's left of Bob, and the tweeties have selected him for this year's nest. I don't have any ideas what type of bird is trying to nest here, so I have used the ubiquitous "tweetie" as we did during hunting season to distinguish every bird that wasn't a quail or a dove...or a hawk, eagle or buzzard.

Bob was a little, brown rope horse that came to us from Arizona, and died one day in the middle of the roping pen just after completing a run. Luke took his rope off the steer, turned to walk back, and Bob simply fell out from under him and lay dead on the ground. We would never bother with an autopsy on the ranch. Dead is dead after all, and in fact, we just got the tractor and drug him to the back of the horse pasture, but we think it was probably a heart attack or something like that.

Any-hoo, I collect stuff like this, and after some months, went and collected parts of Bob that the coyotes left behind, and his skull now hangs on my house. Is that weird? I don't care, but sometimes I wonder...

This stuff is testament to how hard the tweeties have been working on their nest. Compared to what is actually inside the Bob-nest, this is a lot of stuff. Apparently it takes 10 times as much material to build a nest than what comprises the final product. The tweeties should apply for a military contract, or a home loan modification, because there's an awful lot of wasted motion in those endeavors as well.

Here we see why this nest is doomed to fail. It's about 3 feet from my oft-used back door. I must have been out working dogs, or away at the Deer Creek dog trial, or somewhere when they chose this unlikely spot, because it's noisy, and it's busy. I heard somewhere that 50% of nests fail each year, and I am definitely counting this one among them.

In 4 years of living in my home, I probably have used the front door fewer than 20 times. Maybe Bob should contact relocation in the best interest of the tweeties.

This is what's left of Shotgun. Shotgun was the location of 2 failed tweetie nests last year. Each eye socket held a nest, and each tweetie got as far as laying eggs, before abandoning the nests. Shotgun hangs beside my oft-used garage door, and you can imagine how noisy that gets!

Unlike Bob, as confirmed by the tiny hole just left of his mid-line, Shotgun did not die of natural causes. He was an unmerchantable steer that we doctored to good health over months and months, then put in the freezer. My then 10 year old daughter was tasked with feeding and watering him, and so gave him his name.

There are several handmade bird houses scattered in private locations all over my property, but the tweeties have never used them. Maybe I should commission one in the likeness of a dead animal...

Thursday, September 3, 2009

A cowboy birthday

It was May and it was Button's birthday, he's third from the left in this photo. We had set out that morning to gather steers from a pasture that was leased from a neighbor. I don't remember how many steers were turned out there, but several hundred anyway, and to get ready for roundup and shipping, we were moving them closer to the home. The fact that it was Button's birthday made no difference at all, except that it was the only reason I had my camera along. I wanted to commemorate it in some small way. The other men shown here were neighbors come to help, with me in the middle, the lone woman, as was often the case.

It was Willie, on the left, who commented in characteristic style; "I thought we might get by one day without any women along." My retort was straight forward and quick, "F you, Willie," after which I calmly stepped on my horse and rode off. With that one quiet rejoinder, I forever endeared myself to Spike, second from left, who had known Willie for decades and deeply appreciated the suitability of my come back. Without saying a word, Button trotted past me shaking his head.

On a deal like this, there is a ramrod deciding who goes with whom and in which direction. Button managed the ranch, knew all of it as well as anyone ever could, and gave the directions. Second from the right, Steve and I found ourselves working together often. It was just our little cross to bear, but Steve is a good cowboy, and we almost always managed successfully. Quick to anger, and prone to yelling when things went awry, I once had to remind him that it was my backyard after all, but the lesson held over time.

The unfenced pasture was big, probably a section or so, with a seldom-traveled, two-lane highway running alongside. The water was good, consisting of 3 or 4 large ponds that were all but invisible through the tullies and brush grown up thick around them, and only the cattle knew the way in and out. We rode to the backside of the pasture and began gathering our steers, to be counted, then put through the fence onto to the home ranch.

I looked up at one point and saw Button across the highway all by himself way up on a hill. The cattle liked to work the hillsides and I saw that he had a big bunch of them headed straight down towards the road. Sometimes when you start cattle in one direction, they choose the pace, and these steers had thrown their tails up and chosen to run. I wondered what would happen if a truck came along at the wrong time. At about the same time, I saw Steve hit a gallop toward the ponds and realized he was running to stop them from diving into familiar territory where they could be lost. I took off after him. We missed, and we lost them and I can still remember witnessing the dissappearance. Thrashing and diving, it was as if they had been swallowed whole. I heard the brush rustle, then there was silence.

I went to a little rise and watched to see where the cattle emerged while Steve found a path of least resistence and rode into the thicket. Later I told him that the only thing to come out of there besides him was a duck, so we gave up and joined the others. By this time they had most of the cattle headed down a dry creek bed in the right direction, but some of the leaders broke and ran off. This time it was Button who galloped after them. Realizing he might need a little help, I was rewarded with a huge smile when just as he got them turned, I arrived to get them stopped. No one else was in sight and he had appreciated my insight.

I was selected from the group to work behind him as Button counted cattle that I pushed past him along side the cross fence into our pasture. It was high praise from a good cowboy. One or 2 slipped between us, but I kept track and the same number was confirmed when we counted them again on the way through the gate. It turned out to be one of those rewarding days where more things went right than wrong.

On our way back from lunch, we spotted the steers Steve and I lost near the water. They had finally come away from the ponds and were grazing nearby. Button backed his horse out of the trailer and went to move them to our side of the fence. He must have realized that I was worn out from the gather that morning and asked me to go home and return with his dogs to help him. The last I saw of them, they were high on another hill driving the wayward bunch home, so I wished him a silent happy birthday and drove away.

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Let's Rope!

I just l o v e to rope. Once I became involved with sheepdogs, it kind of went by-the-by for me, but I still have a nice head horse in my pasture and I have these pictures of the when I worked so hard at it. This picture was taken at a USTRC roping in Las Vegas and I'm riding one of my favorite rope horses, Dial Sunny Jack, aka Sunny. I made the trip to Phoenix and traded Mo', the horse in the picture below, for Sunny. He came from a man named Harold Baumgartner, a real character, who taught me how to make a "rodeo start" while I was trying the horse. We had gone to the home of a friend of Harold's and the young steers there had never been roped. They ran like scalded cats and I was struggling to catch them. Harold encouraged me to get out quicker on them and his demonstration of a "rodeo start" is what lingers and still makes me laugh.

I had ridden with friends to this roping, and transferred Sunny from my trailer to theirs when I got to their house. What didn't make the transfer was my luggage and every stitch of clothing I have on in the picture was borrowed, and from 2 different sources of different sexes. Right down to the belt and buckle, none of the clothes are my own, and the boots were too big by the way.

This is little Mo', with an apostrophe because his whole name was Mo' Money. Mo' was the first rope horse I owned. Before that, I just borrowed, and he forgot more about roping than I will ever know. He was backing out of a trailer the first time I saw him, and the more of him that came out, the uglier he got. He was little, well under 15 hands, with a plain head and he traveled like a Volkswagen with bad shocks. Notice in the picture that his tail is on the way up. He always flipped his tail, when you turned off with a steer and it was kind of embarrasing until I started cashing the checks. I tried to use him on the ranch to gather cattle, but he hated it and we always joked that his best event was "arena."

This is the rope horse I have now. I forget his registered name, and I call him Alley Cat, or Alley for short. He's quick on his feet and very catty. He came from Brian Fulton, a man in Nebraska who has sold lots of nice horses over the years. I bought him sight unseen off a video, which is something I had never done before. I met Brian in person when I attended a horse auction in South Dakota that he was involved in, and I called him when a mutual friend told me about this horse. I had lots of questions for him explaining that while I had bought horses without riding them, I had never bought one without actually seeing it. He laughed and patiently answered my questions. As it turned out, Alley was a better horse than Brian made him out to be.

I'm stuck at home too much of the time these days and not able to travel and dog trial like I once did. There's a few little punkin' rollin' ropin's that take place around here a couple times a week, and I think it may be time to dust off old Alley and go ropin'.

Friday, July 24, 2009

The First Time

These are horns from the first deer I ever killed back in 2002. There is an area of the ranch where I lived that we called the creek pasture, and I shot him where he was standing in a mesquite thicket with a few doe and a couple of little spike bucks. In the high desert region where this buck came from, they don't grow over large and you will never see the huge, rangy racks that come off Mule Deer in areas like Utah, Wyoming and Montana.

This was a Black Tail Deer, and a fairly good-sized one for the area. As memory serves, he weighed about 130 pounds and these horns are about 10' high and 17' across. Puny compared to North Rim, Grand Canyon standards where mineral-rich habitat creates Boone and Crockett trophys, but big enough to win the local deer pool had I been entered.

At the time, I had a young thoroughbred horse I was training for sale and every day I made a 6 mile loop on him from the house, around to one corner of the ranch, and back. The San Felipe Creek runs wide and shallow in the brush-choked creek pasture where a dike had been built to contain it from an area that had once been farmed. Part of my route took me along the dike, and I spotted this buck trotting away from me late one afternoon in the creek bottom. In that brief glance he looked like a giant, and that first season I was only interested in hunting the creek.

It's legal to hunt until an hour before dark, and we were just about to call it a day. We were walking slowly down the dike
and came around a big mesquite bush when I saw him. I always remember the scene as being cartoonish, because my ex was behind me, and I threw my hand up like something you'd see in a cop show, silently signaling him to stop. He almost ran into me. The deer was standing about 25 yards away, he was looking straight at me, and he wasn't moving. I was hunting with our very old, very worn 22.250 rifle, which I raised to aim. My ex thought my shot might be deflected by the mesquite bush and ever-so-gently nudged me forward whispering; "shoot him, he's nice." The memory of it still makes me laugh. I must have looked like Elmer Fudd. "I'm a wed-hot sportsman after wild game. Heh-heh-heh-heh."

He had taught me to aim for the heart just behind their elbow, or the area where the neck meets the shoulder. He had also taught me to inhale, then exhale halfway while squeezing the trigger. That buck just stood there while I squeezed off one round that hit him so hard he flipped completely over backwards landing on his back. With blinding speed, he righted himself and scrambled under another mesquite bush a few yards away, with both of us firing a few more rounds to be sure. My shot was clean and he died almost instantly.

A friend said he was on his way to the ranch where they were keeping track of the deer pool that year. I think it was $10 to enter, winner take all with bragging rights for the following year, and before the season began, I had asked him to put me in. We took the carcass to be recorded for the pool, but came to find out that I wasn't entered. My friend had forgotten to enter me, but had he done so, I was the winner by far. I bragged any way.

Shooting that deer is one of the most exciting things I have ever done in my life, and it took quite a while for my legs to stop wobbling after I did. As I remember it, my knees were slamming together. It was an adrenaline rush like you can't believe unless you've done it, and will always be a really happy memory. I hunted for a few more years after that, but it was never as exciting as the first time. I lost interest and eventually decided that I didn't want to kill deer any more. I've carried this mount with me through a handful of moves, and it's always one of the first things I hang. Real hunters of big deer would probably wonder why I bother, it's so small. But, a girl likes to remember her first time.

Thursday, January 8, 2009

A Good Day

Every year around this time I start thinking about home. I've lived in lots of places over the years, but when I think of home, I think of the San Felipe Ranch, which is the only place I've ever felt at home. Since I lived there it's been sold off to different government agencies, The Anza-Borrego National Park and The Nature Conservancy, but at the time, it was about 15,000 acres made up of the home ranch and 2 other big pastures, Kanaka and the Malpansada, that were scattered across the mountains. I went back for a visit recently and found that the place hasn't changed at all.
The big adobe ranch house was built around the turn of the century. The only heat was a wood stove, and we'd go weeks without a phone until we could find the break in the line. I felt warm and safe inside these 2 foot thick adobe walls where the only sound I could hear was a covey of quail, the wind whistle down the valley, and coyotes howling in the night.
This is the corner of the porch where we hung the hammock, and for the better part of 10 years, the view I woke up to every morning.
We built this ropin' pen in one corner of the horse pasture and this is where I learned to rope. The chute was made out of sucker rod and bungi cords and the ground was rough and sometimes overgrown. We roped a lot of cattle in this pen and many of my happiest memories are from days spent right here.
The crowding pen and loading chute are just to the left of the scale in this picture. Big trucks with their pot-belly doubles had plenty of room to turn around and we shipped and received cattle by the hundreds.
We processed a lot of cattle through this squeeze chute over the years and this is where we wrapped the ropin' steers 3 or 4 times a week when we roped.
Our dogs were just as primitive as the kennels we built, but, at the end of the day, they saved us putting out a lot more horse tracks
The horse pasture behind the barn was about 40 acres. Other than 3 small pastures right around the house, there was only 1 cross fence in about 7,500 acres. From here, the ranch ran all the way to the base of Granite Mountain in the background.
One last look back to a good life

Thursday, January 1, 2009

Do 1 Thing Well

These pictures were taken of an old friend of mine taken when he was 6 years old in one of the cow camps where he grew up on the 491,000 acre Boquillas Ranch in Southeastern Arizona. He's shown at the squeeze chute in the first picture with his dad, Jim, now deceased, and sister, Virginia, who was 8 at the time. These photos were taken for Life Magazine in 1954 after they came to do a story on ranching. Photographer, Allan Grant, famous as the last to photograph Marilyn Monroe before her death, went out with the wagons during branding where the boy spent early summers with the cowboys in the years before he started school. The photographer was so taken with this little boy, that he followed him home and took these pictures.

For those of you who don't notice such things, he's swinging that loop with his left hand. He told me that all he ever wanted to do was rope. He roped every chance he got all his life and grew up to be the best left-handed heeler ever. He used to joke and say; "yeah, I'm a lot better than them other 2 guys." There aren't many left-handed ropers and he is, by far, the best of them. But, in his day, he was as good as most of the right-handers, which made him even more unique.

In team roping, you always turn cattle left for the heeler after you head them, so lefties have to heel. The interesting thing about this man is that he's almost as deadly heading cattle right-handed as he is heeling with his left. We were at a ropin' one time when he headed for a guy just for fun, and they were a very fast 6 seconds and won the roping. He was fairly humble about his gift and when he came out of the arena afterwards, he quietly told me with a sly smile on his face that that was the first time he'd ever been 6 heading. It was important to him. After 40 years of roping, I saw him watch videos of himself roping and replay parts of his run over and over simply trying to figure out a way to be even faster.

A horse was tied to a fence at the ranch one day when we were shipping cattle. He was a-horseback across the fence when something spooked it. Before it could even hit the end of the rope it was tied with, and before any of us realized what was happening, he had his rope down from the saddle and the horse caught, which avoided a wreck and left those of us who saw it completely dismayed. He is blindingly quick with a rope. He did that for our entertainment, for fun and because he could.

I was driving past a pasture where we had some cattle turned out and saw him lope across a low ridge shaking out a loop. I wondered what he was doing and stopped to watch. He kicked up on a steer and heeled him, took a dally and let the rope come tight for an instant, before pitching it off. He got a little red-faced and said "did you see me?" when I asked him later why he roped that steer. He just loves to rope, the cattle were fat, the grass was green and it was a beautiful day.

Saturday, October 18, 2008

A lot has been said

More photos and related story from the NY Times
It took only 13 days for Hurricane Ike to wreak devastating havoc among several countries including Cuba, Haiti, and the United States. 114 deaths and damage estimates topping $10 billion are attributed to the disaster. Shoreline communities in Texas such as Galveston, Gilchrist, Winnie and Orange were wiped from the map by the winds, 8' high storm surge and walls of debris washed along by Ike.
This photo was particularly poignant to me and reminded me of something that my Uncle told me once when I was a kid. He and my mother's family ranched in the Billy the Kid country of southeastern New Mexico between Portales and Roswell in Kenna, which is little more than a ghost town today. Sometime in the 40's my mother came to California and Uncle Mack followed shortly after and began working for the Gill ranch in San Luis Obispo. He ended his career as a brand inspector for the state of California.
I can remember sitting behind him on his horse and riding through pens at the feedlot in Templeton where he worked. He spent his entire life cowboying and this is what he had to say shortly before he died.
"A lot has been said about it, poetry, movies and stuff, but the main thing is we take care of cattle."

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Michael Pollan on "The Cattle "Bidness"

Power Steer MICHAEL POLLAN / NY Times 31mar02 Garden City, Kan., missed out on the suburban building boom of the postwar years. What it got instead were sprawling subdivisions of cattle. These feedlots -- the nation's first -- began rising on the high plains of western Kansas in the 50's, and by now developments catering to cows are far more common here than developments catering to people.
You'll be speeding down one of Finney County's ramrod roads when the empty, dun-colored prairie suddenly turns black and geometric, an urban grid of steel-fenced rectangles as far as the eye can see -- which in Kansas is really far. I say ''suddenly,'' but in fact a swiftly intensifying odor (an aroma whose Proustian echoes are more bus-station-men's-room than cow-in-the-country) heralds the approach of a feedlot for more than a mile. Then it's upon you: Poky Feeders, population 37,000. Cattle pens stretch to the horizon, each one home to 150 animals standing dully or lying around in a grayish mud that it eventually dawns on you isn't mud at all. The pens line a network of unpaved roads that loop around vast waste lagoons on their way to the feedlot's beating heart: a chugging, silvery feed mill that soars like an industrial cathedral over this teeming metropolis of meat.
I traveled to Poky early in January with the slightly improbable notion of visiting one particular resident: a young black steer that I'd met in the fall on a ranch in Vale, S.D. The steer, in fact, belonged to me. I'd purchased him as an 8-month-old calf from the Blair brothers, Ed and Rich, for $598. I was paying Poky Feeders $1.60 a day for his room, board and meds and hoped to sell him at a profit after he was fattened.
My interest in the steer was not strictly financial, however, or even gustatory, though I plan to retrieve some steaks from the Kansas packing plant where No. 534, as he is known, has an appointment with the stunner in June. No, my primary interest in this animal was educational. I wanted to find out how a modern, industrial steak is produced in America these days, from insemination to slaughter.
Eating meat, something I have always enjoyed doing, has become problematic in recent years. Though beef consumption spiked upward during the flush 90's, the longer-term trend is down, and many people will tell you they no longer eat the stuff. Inevitably they'll bring up mad-cow disease (and the accompanying revelation that industrial agriculture has transformed these ruminants into carnivores -- indeed, into cannibals). They might mention their concerns about E. coli contamination or antibiotics in the feed. Then there are the many environmental problems, like groundwater pollution, associated with ''Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations.'' (The word ''farm'' no longer applies.) And of course there are questions of animal welfare. How are we treating the animals we eat while they're alive, and then how humanely are we ''dispatching'' them, to borrow an industry euphemism?
Meat-eating has always been a messy business, shadowed by the shame of killing and, since Upton Sinclair's writing of ''The Jungle,'' by questions about what we're really eating when we eat meat. Forgetting, or willed ignorance, is the preferred strategy of many beef eaters, a strategy abetted by the industry. (What grocery-store item is more silent about its origins than a shrink-wrapped steak?) Yet I recently began to feel that ignorance was no longer tenable. If I was going to continue to eat red meat, then I owed it to myself, as well as to the animals, to take more responsibility for the invisible but crucial transaction between ourselves and the animals we eat. I'd try to own it, in other words.
So this is the biography of my cow. The Blair brothers ranch occupies 11,500 acres of short-grass prairie a few miles outside Sturgis, S.D., directly in the shadow of Bear Butte. In November, when I visited, the turf forms a luxuriant pelt of grass oscillating yellow and gold in the constant wind and sprinkled with perambulating black dots: Angus cows and calves grazing.
Ed and Rich Blair run what's called a ''cow-calf'' operation, the first stage of beef production, and the stage least changed by the modern industrialization of meat. While the pork and chicken industries have consolidated the entire life cycles of those animals under a single roof, beef cattle are still born on thousands of independently owned ranches. Although four giant meatpacking companies (Tyson's subsidiary IBP, Monfort, Excel and National) now slaughter and market more than 80 percent of the beef cattle born in this country, that concentration represents the narrow end of a funnel that starts out as wide as the great plains.
The Blairs have been in the cattle business for four generations. Although there are new wrinkles to the process -- artificial insemination to improve genetics, for example -- producing beef calves goes pretty much as it always has, just faster. Calving season begins in late winter, a succession of subzero nights spent yanking breeched babies out of their bellowing mothers. In April comes the first spring roundup to work the newborn calves (branding, vaccination, castration); then more roundups in early summer to inseminate the cows ($15 mail-order straws of elite bull semen have pretty much put the resident stud out of work); and weaning in the fall. If all goes well, your herd of 850 cattle has increased to 1,600 by the end of the year.
My steer spent his first six months in these lush pastures alongside his mother, No. 9,534. His father was a registered Angus named GAR Precision 1,680, a bull distinguished by the size and marbling of his offspring's rib-eye steaks. Born last March 13 in a birthing shed across the road, No. 534 was turned out on pasture with his mother as soon as the 80-pound calf stood up and began nursing. After a few weeks, the calf began supplementing his mother's milk by nibbling on a salad bar of mostly native grasses: western wheatgrass, little bluestem, green needlegrass. Apart from the trauma of the April day when he was branded and castrated, you could easily imagine No. 534 looking back on those six months grazing at his mother's side as the good old days -- if, that is, cows do look back. (''They do not know what is meant by yesterday or today,'' Friedrich Nietzsche wrote, with a note of envy, of grazing cattle, ''fettered to the moment and its pleasure or displeasure, and thus neither melancholy or bored.'' Nietzsche clearly had never seen a feedlot.) It may be foolish to presume to know what a cow experiences, yet we can say that a cow grazing on grass is at least doing what he has been splendidly molded by evolution to do. Which isn't a bad definition of animal happiness. Eating grass, however, is something that, after October, my steer would never do again.
Although the modern cattle industry all but ignores it, the reciprocal relationship between cows and grass is one of nature's underappreciated wonders. For the grasses, the cow maintains their habitat by preventing trees and shrubs from gaining a foothold; the animal also spreads grass seed, planting it with its hoofs and fertilizing it. In exchange for these services, the grasses offer the ruminants a plentiful, exclusive meal. For cows, sheep and other grazers have the unique ability to convert grass -- which single-stomached creatures like us can't digest -- into high-quality protein. They can do this because they possess a rumen, a 45-gallon fermentation tank in which a resident population of bacteria turns grass into metabolically useful organic acids and protein.
This is an excellent system for all concerned: for the grasses, for the animals and for us. What's more, growing meat on grass can make superb ecological sense: so long as the rancher practices rotational grazing, it is a sustainable, solar-powered system for producing food on land too arid or hilly to grow anything else.
So if this system is so ideal, why is it that my cow hasn't tasted a blade of grass since October? Speed, in a word. Cows raised on grass simply take longer to reach slaughter weight than cows raised on a richer diet, and the modern meat industry has devoted itself to shortening a beef calf's allotted time on earth. ''In my grandfather's day, steers were 4 or 5 years old at slaughter,'' explained Rich Blair, who, at 45, is the younger of the brothers by four years. ''In the 50's, when my father was ranching, it was 2 or 3. Now we get there at 14 to 16 months.'' Fast food indeed. What gets a beef calf from 80 to 1,200 pounds in 14 months are enormous quantities of corn, protein supplements -- and drugs, including growth hormones. These ''efficiencies,'' all of which come at a price, have transformed raising cattle into a high-volume, low-margin business. Not everybody is convinced that this is progress. ''Hell,'' Ed Blair told me, ''my dad made more money on 250 head than we do on 850.''
Weaning marks the fateful moment when the natural, evolutionary logic represented by a ruminant grazing on grass bumps up against the industrial logic that, with stunning speed, turns that animal into a box of beef. This industrial logic is rational and even irresistible -- after all, it has succeeded in transforming beef from a luxury item into everyday fare for millions of people. And yet the further you follow it, the more likely you are to wonder if that rational logic might not also be completely insane.
In early October, a few weeks before I met him, No. 534 was weaned from his mother. Weaning is perhaps the most traumatic time on a ranch for animals and ranchers alike; cows separated from their calves will mope and bellow for days, and the calves themselves, stressed by the change in circumstance and diet, are prone to get sick.
On many ranches, weaned calves go directly from the pasture to the sale barn, where they're sold at auction, by the pound, to feedlots. The Blairs prefer to own their steers straight through to slaughter and to keep them on the ranch for a couple of months of ''backgrounding'' before sending them on the 500-mile trip to Poky Feeders. Think of backgrounding as prep school for feedlot life: the animals are confined in a pen, ''bunk broken'' -- taught to eat from a trough -- and gradually accustomed to eating a new, unnatural diet of grain. (Grazing cows encounter only tiny amounts of grain, in the form of grass seeds.)
It was in the backgrounding pen that I first met No. 534 on an unseasonably warm afternoon in November. I'd told the Blairs I wanted to follow one of their steers through the life cycle; Ed, 49, suggested I might as well buy a steer, as a way to really understand the daunting economics of modern ranching. Ed and Rich told me what to look for: a broad, straight back and thick hindquarters. Basically, you want a strong frame on which to hang a lot of meat. I was also looking for a memorable face in this Black Angus sea, one that would stand out in the feedlot crowd. Almost as soon as I started surveying the 90 or so steers in the pen, No. 534 moseyed up to the railing and made eye contact. He had a wide, stout frame and was brockle- faced -- he had three distinctive white blazes. If not for those markings, Ed said, No. 534 might have been spared castration and sold as a bull; he was that good-looking. But the white blazes indicate the presence of Hereford blood, rendering him ineligible for life as an Angus stud. Tough break. Rich said he would calculate the total amount I owed the next time No. 534 got weighed but that the price would be $98 a hundredweight for an animal of this quality. He would then bill me for all expenses (feed, shots, et cetera) and, beginning in January, start passing on the weekly ''hotel charges'' from Poky Feeders. In June we'd find out from the packing plant how well my investment had panned out: I would receive a payment for No. 534 based on his carcass weight, plus a premium if he earned a U.S.D.A. grade of choice or prime. ''And if you're worried about the cattle market,'' Rich said jokingly, referring to its post-Sept. 11 slide, ''I can sell you an option too.'' Option insurance has become increasingly popular among cattlemen in the wake of mad-cow and foot-and-mouth disease.
Rich handles the marketing end of the business out of an office in Sturgis, where he also trades commodities. In fact you'd never guess from Rich's unlined, indoorsy face and golfish attire that he was a rancher. Ed, by contrast, spends his days on the ranch and better looks the part, with his well-creased visage, crinkly cowboy eyes and ever-present plug of tobacco. His cap carries the same prairie-flat slogan I'd spotted on the ranch's roadside sign: ''Beef: It's What's for Dinner.''
My second morning on the ranch, I helped Troy Hadrick, Ed's son-in-law and a ranch hand, feed the steers in the backgrounding pen. A thickly muscled post of a man, Hadrick is 25 and wears a tall black cowboy hat perpetually crowned by a pair of mirrored Oakley sunglasses. He studied animal science at South Dakota State and is up on the latest university thinking on cattle nutrition, reproduction and medicine. Hadrick seems to relish everything to do with ranching, from calving to wielding the artificial-insemination syringe.
Hadrick and I squeezed into the heated cab of a huge swivel-hipped tractor hooked up to a feed mixer: basically, a dump truck with a giant screw through the middle to blend ingredients. First stop was a hopper filled with Rumensin, a powerful antibiotic that No. 534 will consume with his feed every day for the rest of his life. Calves have no need of regular medication while on grass, but as soon as they're placed in the backgrounding pen, they're apt to get sick. Why? The stress of weaning is a factor, but the main culprit is the feed. The shift to a ''hot ration'' of grain can so disturb the cow's digestive process -- its rumen, in particular -- that it can kill the animal if not managed carefully and accompanied by antibiotics.
After we'd scooped the ingredients into the hopper and turned on the mixer, Hadrick deftly sidled the tractor alongside the pen and flipped a switch to release a dusty tan stream of feed in a long, even line. No. 534 was one of the first animals to belly up to the rail for breakfast. He was heftier than his pen mates and, I decided, sparkier too. That morning, Hadrick and I gave each calf six pounds of corn mixed with seven pounds of ground alfalfa hay and a quarter-pound of Rumensin. Soon after my visit, this ration would be cranked up to 14 pounds of corn and 6 pounds of hay -- and added two and a half pounds every day to No. 534.
While I was on the ranch, I didn't talk to No. 534, pet him or otherwise try to form a connection. I also decided not to give him a name, even though my son proposed a pretty good one after seeing a snapshot. (''Night.'') My intention, after all, is to send this animal to slaughter and then eat some of him. No. 534 is not a pet, and I certainly don't want to end up with an ox in my backyard because I suddenly got sentimental.
As fall turned into winter, Hadrick sent me regular e-mail messages apprising me of my steer's progress. On Nov. 13 he weighed 650 pounds; by Christmas he was up to 798, making him the seventh-heaviest steer in his pen, an achievement in which I, idiotically, took a measure of pride. Between Nov. 13 and Jan. 4, the day he boarded the truck for Kansas, No. 534 put away 706 pounds of corn and 336 pounds of alfalfa hay, bringing his total living expenses for that period to $61.13. I was into this deal now for $659.
Hadrick's e-mail updates grew chattier as time went on, cracking a window on the rancher's life and outlook. I was especially struck by his relationship to the animals, how it manages to be at once intimate and unsentimental. One day Hadrick is tenderly nursing a newborn at 3 a.m., the next he's ''having a big prairie oyster feed'' after castrating a pen of bull calves.
Hadrick wrote empathetically about weaning (''It's like packing up and leaving the house when you are 18 and knowing you will never see your parents again'') and with restrained indignation about ''animal activists and city people'' who don't understand the first thing about a rancher's relationship to his cattle. Which, as Hadrick put it, is simply this: ''If we don't take care of these animals, they won't take care of us.''
''Everyone hears about the bad stuff,'' Hadrick wrote, ''but they don't ever see you give C.P.R. to a newborn calf that was born backward or bringing them into your house and trying to warm them up on your kitchen floor because they were born on a minus-20-degree night. Those are the kinds of things ranchers will do for their livestock. They take precedence over most everything in your life. Sorry for the sermon.''
To travel from the ranch to the feedlot, as No. 534 and I both did (in separate vehicles) the first week in January, feels a lot like going from the country to the big city. Indeed, a cattle feedlot is a kind of city, populated by as many as 100,000 animals. It is very much a premodern city, however -- crowded, filthy and stinking, with open sewers, unpaved roads and choking air. The urbanization of the world's livestock is a fairly recent historical development, so it makes a certain sense that cow towns like Poky Feeders would recall human cities several centuries ago. As in 14th-century London, the metropolitan digestion remains vividly on display: the foodstuffs coming in, the waste streaming out. Similarly, there is the crowding together of recent arrivals from who knows where, combined with a lack of modern sanitation. This combination has always been a recipe for disease; the only reason contemporary animal cities aren't as plague-ridden as their medieval counterparts is a single historical anomaly: the modern antibiotic.
I spent the better part of a day walking around Poky Feeders, trying to understand how its various parts fit together. In any city, it's easy to lose track of nature -- of the connections between various species and the land on which everything ultimately depends. The feedlot's ecosystem, I could see, revolves around corn. But its food chain doesn't end there, because the corn itself grows somewhere else, where it is implicated in a whole other set of ecological relationships. Growing the vast quantities of corn used to feed livestock in this country takes vast quantities of chemical fertilizer, which in turn takes vast quantities of oil -- 1.2 gallons for every bushel. So the modern feedlot is really a city floating on a sea of oil.
I started my tour at the feed mill, the yard's thundering hub, where three meals a day for 37,000 animals are designed and mixed by computer. A million pounds of feed passes through the mill each day. Every hour of every day, a tractor-trailer pulls up to disgorge another 25 tons of corn. Around the other side of the mill, tanker trucks back up to silo-shaped tanks, into which they pump thousands of gallons of liquefied fat and protein supplement. In a shed attached to the mill sit vats of liquid vitamins and synthetic estrogen; next to these are pallets stacked with 50-pound sacks of Rumensin and tylosin, another antibiotic. Along with alfalfa hay and corn silage for roughage, all these ingredients are blended and then piped into the dump trucks that keep Poky's eight and a half miles of trough filled.
The feed mill's great din is made by two giant steel rollers turning against each other 12 hours a day, crushing steamed corn kernels into flakes. This was the only feed ingredient I tasted, and it wasn't half bad; not as crisp as Kellogg's, but with a cornier flavor. I passed, however, on the protein supplement, a sticky brown goop consisting of molasses and urea.
Corn is a mainstay of livestock diets because there is no other feed quite as cheap or plentiful: thanks to federal subsidies and ever-growing surpluses, the price of corn ($2.25 a bushel) is 50 cents less than the cost of growing it. The rise of the modern factory farm is a direct result of these surpluses, which soared in the years following World War II, when petrochemical fertilizers came into widespread use. Ever since, the U.S.D.A.'s policy has been to help farmers dispose of surplus corn by passing as much of it as possible through the digestive tracts of food animals, converting it into protein. Compared with grass or hay, corn is a compact and portable foodstuff, making it possible to feed tens of thousands of animals on small plots of land. Without cheap corn, the modern urbanization of livestock would probably never have occurred.
We have come to think of ''cornfed'' as some kind of old-fashioned virtue; we shouldn't. Granted, a cornfed cow develops well-marbled flesh, giving it a taste and texture American consumers have learned to like. Yet this meat is demonstrably less healthy to eat, since it contains more saturated fat. A recent study in The European Journal of Clinical Nutrition found that the meat of grass-fed livestock not only had substantially less fat than grain-fed meat but that the type of fats found in grass-fed meat were much healthier. (Grass-fed meat has more omega 3 fatty acids and fewer omega 6, which is believed to promote heart disease; it also contains betacarotine and CLA, another ''good'' fat.) A growing body of research suggests that many of the health problems associated with eating beef are really problems with cornfed beef. In the same way ruminants have not evolved to eat grain, humans may not be well adapted to eating grain-fed animals. Yet the U.S.D.A.'s grading system continues to reward marbling -- that is, intermuscular fat -- and thus the feeding of corn to cows.
The economic logic behind corn is unassailable, and on a factory farm, there is no other kind. Calories are calories, and corn is the cheapest, most convenient source of calories. Of course the identical industrial logic -- protein is protein -- led to the feeding of rendered cow parts back to cows, a practice the F.D.A. banned in 1997 after scientists realized it was spreading mad-cow disease.
Make that mostly banned. The F.D.A.'s rules against feeding ruminant protein to ruminants make exceptions for ''blood products'' (even though they contain protein) and fat. Indeed, my steer has probably dined on beef tallow recycled from the very slaughterhouse he's heading to in June. ''Fat is fat,'' the feedlot manager shrugged when I raised an eyebrow.
F.D.A. rules still permit feedlots to feed nonruminant animal protein to cows. (Feather meal is an accepted cattle feed, as are pig and fish protein and chicken manure.) Some public-health advocates worry that since the bovine meat and bone meal that cows used to eat is now being fed to chickens, pigs and fish, infectious prions could find their way back into cattle when they eat the protein of the animals that have been eating them. To close this biological loophole, the F.D.A. is now considering tightening its feed rules.
Until mad-cow disease, remarkably few people in the cattle business, let alone the general public, comprehended the strange semicircular food chain that industrial agriculture had devised for cattle (and, in turn, for us). When I mentioned to Rich Blair that I'd been surprised to learn that cows were eating cows, he said, ''To tell the truth, it was kind of a shock to me too.'' Yet even today, ranchers don't ask many questions about feedlot menus. Not that the answers are so easy to come by. When I asked Poky's feedlot manager what exactly was in the protein supplement, he couldn't say. ''When we buy supplement, the supplier says it's 40 percent protein, but they don't specify beyond that.'' When I called the supplier, it wouldn't divulge all its ''proprietary ingredients'' but promised that animal parts weren't among them. Protein is pretty much still protein.
Compared with ground-up cow bones, corn seems positively wholesome. Yet it wreaks considerable havoc on bovine digestion. During my day at Poky, I spent an hour or two driving around the yard with Dr. Mel Metzen, the staff veterinarian. Metzen, a 1997 graduate of Kansas State's vet school, oversees a team of eight cowboys who spend their days riding the yard, spotting sick cows and bringing them in for treatment. A great many of their health problems can be traced to their diet. ''They're made to eat forage,'' Metzen said, ''and we're making them eat grain.''
Perhaps the most serious thing that can go wrong with a ruminant on corn is feedlot bloat. The rumen is always producing copious amounts of gas, which is normally expelled by belching during rumination. But when the diet contains too much starch and too little roughage, rumination all but stops, and a layer of foamy slime that can trap gas forms in the rumen. The rumen inflates like a balloon, pressing against the animal's lungs. Unless action is promptly taken to relieve the pressure (usually by forcing a hose down the animal's esophagus), the cow suffocates.
A corn diet can also give a cow acidosis. Unlike that in our own highly acidic stomachs, the normal pH of a rumen is neutral. Corn makes it unnaturally acidic, however, causing a kind of bovine heartburn, which in some cases can kill the animal but usually just makes it sick. Acidotic animals go off their feed, pant and salivate excessively, paw at their bellies and eat dirt. The condition can lead to diarrhea, ulcers, bloat, liver disease and a general weakening of the immune system that leaves the animal vulnerable to everything from pneumonia to feedlot polio. Cows rarely live on feedlot diets for more than six months, which might be about as much as their digestive systems can tolerate. ''I don't know how long you could feed this ration before you'd see problems,'' Metzen said; another vet said that a sustained feedlot diet would eventually ''blow out their livers'' and kill them. As the acids eat away at the rumen wall, bacteria enter the bloodstream and collect in the liver. More than 13 percent of feedlot cattle are found at slaughter to have abscessed livers.
What keeps a feedlot animal healthy -- or healthy enough -- are antibiotics. Rumensin inhibits gas production in the rumen, helping to prevent bloat; tylosin reduces the incidence of liver infection. Most of the antibiotics sold in America end up in animal feed -- a practice that, it is now generally acknowledged, leads directly to the evolution of new antibiotic-resistant ''superbugs.'' In the debate over the use of antibiotics in agriculture, a distinction is usually made between clinical and nonclinical uses. Public-health advocates don't object to treating sick animals with antibiotics; they just don't want to see the drugs lose their efficacy because factory farms are feeding them to healthy animals to promote growth. But the use of antibiotics in feedlot cattle confounds this distinction. Here the drugs are plainly being used to treat sick animals, yet the animals probably wouldn't be sick if not for what we feed them.
I asked Metzen what would happen if antibiotics were banned from cattle feed. ''We just couldn't feed them as hard,'' he said. ''Or we'd have a higher death loss.'' (Less than 3 percent of cattle die on the feedlot.) The price of beef would rise, he said, since the whole system would have to slow down.
''Hell, if you gave them lots of grass and space,'' he concluded dryly, ''I wouldn't have a job.'' Before heading over to Pen 43 for my reunion with No. 534, I stopped by the shed where recent arrivals receive their hormone implants. The calves are funneled into a chute, herded along by a ranch hand wielding an electric prod, then clutched in a restrainer just long enough for another hand to inject a slow-release pellet of Revlar, a synthetic estrogen, in the back of the ear. The Blairs' pen had not yet been implanted, and I was still struggling with the decision of whether to forgo what is virtually a universal practice in the cattle industry in the United States. (It has been banned in the European Union.)
American regulators permit hormone implants on the grounds that no risk to human health has been proved, even though measurable hormone residues do turn up in the meat we eat. These contribute to the buildup of estrogenic compounds in the environment, which some scientists believe may explain falling sperm counts and premature maturation in girls. Recent studies have also found elevated levels of synthetic growth hormones in feedlot wastes; these persistent chemicals eventually wind up in the waterways downstream of feedlots, where scientists have found fish exhibiting abnormal sex characteristics.
The F.D.A. is opening an inquiry into the problem, but for now, implanting hormones in beef cattle is legal and financially irresistible: an implant costs $1.50 and adds between 40 and 50 pounds to the weight of a steer at slaughter, for a return of at least $25. That could easily make the difference between profit and loss on my investment in No. 534. Thinking like a parent, I like the idea of feeding my son hamburgers free of synthetic hormones. But thinking like a cattleman, there was really no decision to make.
I asked Rich Blair what he thought. ''I'd love to give up hormones,'' he said. ''If the consumer said, We don't want hormones, we'd stop in a second. The cattle could get along better without them. But the market signal's not there, and as long as my competitor's doing it, I've got to do it, too.''
Around lunch time, Metzen and I finally arrived at No. 534's pen. My first impression was that my steer had landed himself a decent piece of real estate. The pen is far enough from the feed mill to be fairly quiet, and it has a water view -- of what I initially thought was a reservoir, until I noticed the brown scum. The pen itself is surprisingly spacious, slightly bigger than a basketball court, with a concrete feed bunk out front and a freshwater trough in the back. I climbed over the railing and joined the 90 steers, which, en masse, retreated a few steps, then paused. I had on the same carrot-colored sweater I'd worn to the ranch in South Dakota, hoping to jog my steer's memory. Way off in the back, I spotted him -- those three white blazes. As I gingerly stepped toward him, the quietly shuffling mass of black cowhide between us parted, and there No. 534 and I stood, staring dumbly at each other. Glint of recognition? None whatsoever. I told myself not to take it personally. No. 534 had been bred for his marbling, after all, not his intellect.
I don't know enough about the emotional life of cows to say with any confidence if No. 534 was miserable, bored or melancholy, but I would not say he looked happy. I noticed that his eyes looked a little bloodshot. Some animals are irritated by the fecal dust that floats in the feedlot air; maybe that explained the sullen gaze with which he fixed me. Unhappy or not, though, No. 534 had clearly been eating well. My animal had put on a couple hundred pounds since we'd last met, and he looked it: thicker across the shoulders and round as a barrel through the middle. He carried himself more like a steer now than a calf, even though he was still less than a year old. Metzen complimented me on his size and conformation. ''That's a handsome looking beef you've got there.'' (Aw, shucks.)
Staring at No. 534, I could picture the white lines of the butcher's chart dissecting his black hide: rump roast, flank steak, standing rib, brisket. One way of looking at No. 534 -- the industrial way -- was as an efficient machine for turning feed corn into beef. Every day between now and his slaughter date in June, No. 534 will convert 32 pounds of feed (25 of them corn) into another three and a half pounds of flesh. Poky is indeed a factory, transforming cheap raw materials into a less-cheap finished product, as fast as bovinely possible.
Yet the factory metaphor obscures as much as it reveals about the creature that stood before me. For this steer was not a machine in a factory but an animal in a web of relationships that link him to certain other animals, plants and microbes, as well as to the earth. And one of those other animals is us. The unnaturally rich diet of corn that has compromised No. 534's health is fattening his flesh in a way that in turn may compromise the health of the humans who will eat him. The antibiotics he's consuming with his corn were at that very moment selecting, in his gut and wherever else in the environment they wind up, for bacteria that could someday infect us and resist the drugs we depend on. We inhabit the same microbial ecosystem as the animals we eat, and whatever happens to it also happens to us.
I thought about the deep pile of manure that No. 534 and I were standing in. We don't know much about the hormones in it -- where they will end up or what they might do once they get there -- but we do know something about the bacteria. One particularly lethal bug most probably resided in the manure beneath my feet. Escherichia coli 0157 is a relatively new strain of a common intestinal bacteria (it was first isolated in the 1980's) that is common in feedlot cattle, more than half of whom carry it in their guts. Ingesting as few as 10 of these microbes can cause a fatal infection.
Most of the microbes that reside in the gut of a cow and find their way into our food get killed off by the acids in our stomachs, since they originally adapted to live in a neutral-pH environment. But the digestive tract of the modern feedlot cow is closer in acidity to our own, and in this new, manmade environment acid-resistant strains of E. coli have developed that can survive our stomach acids -- and go on to kill us. By acidifying a cow's gut with corn, we have broken down one of our food chain's barriers to infection. Yet this process can be reversed: James Russell, a U.S.D.A. microbiologist, has discovered that switching a cow's diet from corn to hay in the final days before slaughter reduces the population of E. coli 0157 in its manure by as much as 70 percent. Such a change, however, is considered wildly impractical by the cattle industry. So much comes back to corn, this cheap feed that turns out in so many ways to be not cheap at all. While I stood in No. 534's pen, a dump truck pulled up alongside the feed bunk and released a golden stream of feed. The animals stepped up to the bunk for their lunch. The $1.60 a day I'm paying for three giant meals is a bargain only by the narrowest of calculations. It doesn't take into account, for example, the cost to the public health of antibiotic resistance or food poisoning by E. coli or all the environmental costs associated with industrial corn.
For if you follow the corn from this bunk back to the fields where it grows, you will find an 80-million-acre monoculture that consumes more chemical herbicide and fertilizer than any other crop. Keep going and you can trace the nitrogen runoff from that crop all the way down the Mississippi into the Gulf of Mexico, where it has created (if that is the right word) a 12,000-square-mile ''dead zone.''
But you can go farther still, and follow the fertilizer needed to grow that corn all the way to the oil fields of the Persian Gulf. No. 534 started life as part of a food chain that derived all its energy from the sun; now that corn constitutes such an important link in his food chain, he is the product of an industrial system powered by fossil fuel. (And in turn, defended by the military -- another uncounted cost of ''cheap'' food.) I asked David Pimentel, a Cornell ecologist who specializes in agriculture and energy, if it might be possible to calculate precisely how much oil it will take to grow my steer to slaughter weight. Assuming No. 534 continues to eat 25 pounds of corn a day and reaches a weight of 1,250 pounds, he will have consumed in his lifetime roughly 284 gallons of oil. We have succeeded in industrializing the beef calf, transforming what was once a solar-powered ruminant into the very last thing we need: another fossil-fuel machine. Sometime in June, No. 534 will be ready for slaughter. Though only 14 months old, my steer will weigh more than 1,200 pounds and will move with the lumbering deliberateness of the obese. One morning, a cattle trailer from the National Beef plant in Liberal, Kan., will pull in to Poky Feeders, drop a ramp and load No. 534 along with 35 of his pen mates.
The 100-mile trip south to Liberal is a straight shot on Route 83, a two-lane highway on which most of the traffic consists of speeding tractor-trailers carrying either cattle or corn. The National Beef plant is a sprawling gray-and-white complex in a neighborhood of trailer homes and tiny houses a notch up from shanty. These are, presumably, the homes of the Mexican and Asian immigrants who make up a large portion of the plant's work force. The meat business has made southwestern Kansas an unexpectedly diverse corner of the country.
A few hours after their arrival in the holding pens outside the factory, a plant worker will open a gate and herd No. 534 and his pen mates into an alley that makes a couple of turns before narrowing down to a single-file chute. The chute becomes a ramp that leads the animals up to a second-story platform and then disappears through a blue door.
That door is as close to the kill floor as the plant managers were prepared to let me go. I could see whatever I wanted to farther on -- the cold room where carcasses are graded, the food-safety lab, the fabrication room where the carcasses are broken down into cuts -- on the condition that I didn't take pictures or talk to employees. But the stunning, bleeding and evisceration process was off limits to a journalist, even a cattleman-journalist like myself. What I know about what happens on the far side of the blue door comes mostly from Temple Grandin, who has been on the other side and, in fact, helped to design it. Grandin, an assistant professor of animal science at Colorado State, is one of the most influential people in the United States cattle industry. She has devoted herself to making cattle slaughter less stressful and therefore more humane by designing an ingenious series of cattle restraints, chutes, ramps and stunning systems. Grandin is autistic, a condition she says has allowed her to see the world from the cow's point of view. The industry has embraced Grandin's work because animals under stress are not only more difficult to handle but also less valuable: panicked cows produce a surge of adrenaline that turns their meat dark and unappetizing. ''Dark cutters,'' as they're called, sell at a deep discount.
Grandin designed the double-rail conveyor system in use at the National Beef plant; she has also audited the plant's killing process for McDonald's. Stories about cattle ''waking up'' after stunning only to be skinned alive prompted McDonald's to audit its suppliers in a program that is credited with substantial improvements since its inception in 1999. Grandin says that in cattle slaughter ''there is the pre-McDonald's era and the post-McDonald's era -- it's night and day.'' Grandin recently described to me what will happen to No. 534 after he passes through the blue door. ''The animal goes into the chute single file,'' she began. ''The sides are high enough so all he sees is the butt of the animal in front of him. As he walks through the chute, he passes over a metal bar, with his feet on either side. While he's straddling the bar, the ramp begins to decline at a 25-degree angle, and before he knows it, his feet are off the ground and he's being carried along on a conveyor belt. We put in a false floor so he can't look down and see he's off the ground. That would panic him.''
Listening to Grandin's rather clinical account, I couldn't help wondering what No. 534 would be feeling as he approached his end. Would he have any inkling -- a scent of blood, a sound of terror from up the line -- that this was no ordinary day?
Grandin anticipated my question: ''Does the animal know it's going to get slaughtered? I used to wonder that. So I watched them, going into the squeeze chute on the feedlot, getting their shots and going up the ramp at a slaughter plant. No difference. If they knew they were going to die, you'd see much more agitated behavior.
''Anyway, the conveyor is moving along at roughly the speed of a moving sidewalk. On a catwalk above stands the stunner. The stunner has a pneumatic-powered 'gun' that fires a steel bolt about seven inches long and the diameter of a fat pencil. He leans over and puts it smack in the middle of the forehead. When it's done correctly, it will kill the animal on the first shot.'' For a plant to pass a McDonald's audit, the stunner needs to render animals ''insensible'' on the first shot 95 percent of the time. A second shot is allowed, but should that one fail, the plant flunks. At the line speeds at which meatpacking plants in the United States operate -- 390 animals are slaughtered every hour at National, which is not unusual -- mistakes would seem inevitable, but Grandin insists that only rarely does the process break down.
''After the animal is shot while he's riding along, a worker wraps a chain around his foot and hooks it to an overhead trolley. Hanging upside down by one leg, he's carried by the trolley into the bleeding area, where the bleeder cuts his throat. Animal rights people say they're cutting live animals, but that's because there's a lot of reflex kicking.'' This is one of the reasons a job at a slaughter plant is the most dangerous in America. ''What I look for is, Is the head dead? It should be flopping like a rag, with the tongue hanging out. He'd better not be trying to hold it up -- then you've got a live one on the rail.'' Just in case, Grandin said, ''they have another hand stunner in the bleed area.''
Much of what happens next -- the de-hiding of the animal, the tying off of its rectum before evisceration -- is designed to keep the animal's feces from coming into contact with its meat. This is by no means easy to do, not when the animals enter the kill floor smeared with manure and 390 of them are eviscerated every hour. (Partly for this reason, European plants operate at much slower line speeds.) But since that manure is apt to contain lethal pathogens like E. coli 0157, and since the process of grinding together hamburger from hundreds of different carcasses can easily spread those pathogens across millions of burgers, packing plants now spend millions on ''food safety'' -- which is to say, on the problem of manure in meat.
Most of these efforts are reactive: it's accepted that the animals will enter the kill floor caked with feedlot manure that has been rendered lethal by the feedlot diet. Rather than try to alter that diet or keep the animals from living in their waste or slow the line speed -- all changes regarded as impractical -- the industry focuses on disinfecting the manure that will inevitably find its way into the meat. This is the purpose of irradiation (which the industry prefers to call ''cold pasteurization''). It is also the reason that carcasses pass through a hot steam cabinet and get sprayed with an antimicrobial solution before being hung in the cooler at the National Beef plant.
It wasn't until after the carcasses emerged from the cooler, 36 hours later, that I was allowed to catch up with them, in the grading room. I entered a huge arctic space resembling a monstrous dry cleaner's, with a seemingly endless overhead track conveying thousands of red-and-white carcasses. I quickly learned that you had to move smartly through this room or else be tackled by a 350-pound side of beef. The carcasses felt cool to the touch, no longer animals but meat. Two by two, the sides of beef traveled swiftly down the rails, six pairs every minute, to a station where two workers -- one wielding a small power saw, the other a long knife -- made a single six-inch cut between the 12th and 13th ribs, opening a window on the meat inside. The carcasses continued on to another station, where a U.S.D.A. inspector holding a round blue stamp glanced at the exposed rib eye and stamped the carcass's creamy white fat once, twice or -- very rarely -- three times: select, choice, prime.
For the Blair brothers, and for me, this is the moment of truth, for that stamp will determine exactly how much the packing plant will pay for each animal and whether the 14 months of effort and expense will yield a profit.
Unless the cattle market collapses between now and June (always a worry these days), I stand to make a modest profit on No. 534. In February, the feedlot took a sonogram of his rib eye and ran the data through a computer program. The projections are encouraging: a live slaughter weight of 1,250, a carcass weight of 787 pounds and a grade at the upper end of choice, making him eligible to be sold at a premium as Certified Angus Beef. Based on the June futures price, No. 534 should be worth $944. (Should he grade prime, that would add another $75.)
I paid $598 for No. 534 in November; his living expenses since then come to $61 on the ranch and $258 for 160 days at the feedlot (including implant), for a total investment of $917, leaving a profit of $27. It's a razor-thin margin, and it could easily vanish should the price of corn rise or No. 534 fail to make the predicted weight or grade -- say, if he gets sick and goes off his feed. Without the corn, without the antibiotics, without the hormone implant, my brief career as a cattleman would end in failure.
The Blairs and I are doing better than most. According to Cattle-Fax, a market-research firm, the return on an animal coming out of a feedlot has averaged just $3 per head over the last 20 years.
''Some pens you make money, some pens you lose,'' Rich Blair said when I called to commiserate. ''You try to average it out over time, limit the losses and hopefully make a little profit.'' He reminded me that a lot of ranchers are in the business ''for emotional reasons -- you can't be in it just for the money.'' Now you tell me.
The manager of the packing plant has offered to pull a box of steaks from No. 534 before his carcass disappears into the trackless stream of commodity beef fanning out to America's supermarkets and restaurants this June. From what I can see, the Blair brothers, with the help of Poky Feeders, are producing meat as good as any you can find in an American supermarket. And yet there's no reason to think this steak will taste any different from the other high-end industrial meat I've ever eaten.
While waiting for my box of meat to arrive from Kansas, I've explored some alternatives to the industrial product. Nowadays you can find hormone- and antibiotic-free beef as well as organic beef, fed only grain grown without chemicals. This meat, which is often quite good, is typically produced using more grass and less grain (and so makes for healthier animals). Yet it doesn't fundamentally challenge the corn-feedlot system, and I'm not sure that an ''organic feedlot'' isn't, ecologically speaking, an oxymoron. What I really wanted to taste is the sort of preindustrial beef my grandparents ate -- from animals that have lived most of their full-length lives on grass. Eventually I found a farmer in the Hudson Valley who sold me a quarter of a grass-fed Angus steer that is now occupying most of my freezer. I also found ranchers selling grass-fed beef on the Web; Eatwild.com is a clearinghouse of information on grass-fed livestock, which is emerging as one of the livelier movements in sustainable agriculture.
I discovered that grass-fed meat is more expensive than supermarket beef. Whatever else you can say about industrial beef, it is remarkably cheap, and any argument for changing the system runs smack into the industry's populist arguments. Put the animals back on grass, it is said, and prices will soar; it takes too long to raise beef on grass, and there's not enough grass to raise them on, since the Western range lands aren't big enough to sustain America's 100 million head of cattle. And besides, Americans have learned to love cornfed beef. Feedlot meat is also more consistent in both taste and supply and can be harvested 12 months a year. (Grass-fed cattle tend to be harvested in the fall, since they stop gaining weight over the winter, when the grasses go dormant.)
All of this is true. The economic logic behind the feedlot system is hard to refute. And yet so is the ecological logic behind a ruminant grazing on grass. Think what would happen if we restored a portion of the Corn Belt to the tall grass prairie it once was and grazed cattle on it. No more petrochemical fertilizer, no more herbicide, no more nitrogen runoff. Yes, beef would probably be more expensive than it is now, but would that necessarily be a bad thing? Eating beef every day might not be such a smart idea anyway -- for our health, for the environment. And how cheap, really, is cheap feedlot beef? Not cheap at all, when you add in the invisible costs: of antibiotic resistance, environmental degradation, heart disease, E. coli poisoning, corn subsidies, imported oil and so on. All these are costs that grass-fed beef does not incur.
So how does grass-fed beef taste? Uneven, just as you might expect the meat of a nonindustrial animal to taste. One grass-fed tenderloin from Argentina that I sampled turned out to be the best steak I've ever eaten. But unless the meat is carefully aged, grass-fed beef can be tougher than feedlot beef -- not surprisingly, since a grazing animal, which moves around in search of its food, develops more muscle and less fat. Yet even when the meat was tougher, its flavor, to my mind, was much more interesting. And specific, for the taste of every grass-fed animal is inflected by the place where it lived. Maybe it's just my imagination, but nowadays when I eat a feedlot steak, I can taste the corn and the fat, and I can see the view from No. 534's pen. I can't taste the oil, obviously, or the drugs, yet now I know they're there.
A considerably different picture comes to mind while chewing (and, O.K., chewing) a grass-fed steak: a picture of a cow outside in a pasture eating the grass that has eaten the sunlight. Meat-eating may have become an act riddled with moral and ethical ambiguities, but eating a steak at the end of a short, primordial food chain comprising nothing more than ruminants and grass and light is something I'm happy to do and defend. We are what we eat, it is often said, but of course that's only part of the story. We are what what we eat eats too.