Archive for the ‘Raising Animals’ Category

Farmers Sharing Farmer Stories

Tuesday, April 3rd, 2012

A while back, we shared a post about a Utah farmer’s visit to the almond orchards of central California with farmer Brent Boersma of 4th Generation Farms. Trent Bown, a dairy farmer, and his wife Holly attended the World Ag Expo in Tulare, and used that trip out to the Golden State as an opportunity to experience some of California’s amazing agriculture sights and sounds. For each farm or ranch they visited, they produced a beautiful video, paired with a will-written post about it. The almond video was the first one.

Trent and Holly have since released two more videos of their California agriculture production. The second video featured Ray Prock, a Modesto-area dairyman, committed to good land and animal care so that the farm may continue to the next generation. Ray discusses how he began working on the farm as an adolescent, and the joy he has in seeing his son becoming more involved.

The most recent video that Trent and Holly have shared through the blog UsFarmGuys.com features Jeff Fowle, a cattle, sheep, and horse rancher at the extreme north end of California. Family values, tradition, and a strong bond with the animals and environmental all matter deeply to Jeff.

These videos all show distinctly different sides to California’s agriculture, but they all have a few things in common. Trent and Holly capture just how dedicated these three men are to good stewardship of the land, so that their families may continue the business. They show a deep passion for the trade they do, and a love of their work. It’s great to see such candid videos with scenes from the daily life of these three dedicated producers!

Thank you so much to Trent and Holly for working alongside California farmers and ranchers to share their stories. And thank you for your dedication to agriculture as a whole!

Trent can be contacted via his Facebook profile and his dairy’s fan pageGoogle+, and Twitter.

Many Birds of a Feather: What’s in a Breed?

Tuesday, March 6th, 2012

These days, dining is all about options—from “do you want fries with that?” to “mild or spicy?”—but rarely do you ever get to select your breed. But while for most it might not seem to matter when ordering a side of bacon whether it came from a Berkshire, Hampshire or Yorkshire, such details mean a lot to those raising what ends up on your plate. Should it matter to you?

The history of domestication stretches back thousands of years, resulting today in hundreds of livestock breeds all stemming from only a handful of wild ancestors. Jersey Giants weigh in at thirteen pounds whereas their diminutive feathered cousins, the Bantams, hardly tip a pound. Texas Longhorns flaunt, as you might guess, horns that reach lengths rivaling their own bodies whereas some cattle breeds have been polled, naturally de-horned by selective breeding.

True Grass Farms was founded upon a herd of Waygu cattle of Kobe renown, a Japanese variety bred with a focus on quality over quantity, a patient practice of slow-growth husbandry that results in meat that is densely marbled, high in essential fatty acids, and uniquely delicious.

With that in mind, a few days ago we finished building a brooder for a new flock of chicks that we plan to raise come March and the question arose: with over a hundred breeds, which do we choose?Just a bit of research and after gathering tips from neighboring farmers, we suddenly found ourselves immersed within a heated dispute, the most divisive topic coming down to just one question: to Cornish-cross or not to Cornish-cross? On one side of this debate sit the majority of poultry producers who depend upon this docile, fast-growing breed to sustain their operation within a competitive market. On the other side stand advocates of more robust, better foraging but often less profitable “barnyard breeds,” those like Harvey Ussery to whom the Cornish-cross embodies “the very heart of the industry’s flawed system.”

But if you never know the breed of your chicken caesar or drumstick or mcnugget, why should it matter to those who raise the animal from which it came? Can you taste the difference? How does it effect the overall food system? And what if one breed can reduce the price to, say, your average 90 cents per pound at mega-chain grocery stores while those more suited to small-scale, free-range conditions (like those here at True Grass Farms) might require a price tag nearer to four dollars? When is a chicken just a chicken?

Evan Wiig

www.truegrassfarms.com

A real California sheep producer in the eastern Sierra Nevadas

Wednesday, February 22nd, 2012

We raise sheep in the eastern Sierra Nevadas at an elevation of about 5,000 feet. It’s dry up here. Summers are hot and winters are cold. Seventy percent of our annual precipitation comes in the form of snow. Due to the climate and historical overgrazing, there’s not a lot of grass. But there is plenty of sagebrush and coyotes—coyotes who would like to think that lamb is on the menu! Oh, and did I mention the occasional mountain lion? This may not sound like the ideal place to raise sheep. But if you are willing to work at it, it can be done, quite successfully.

First, let’s talk about the climate. While not conducive to thick, tall, green pastures, our climate is also not conducive to the internal parasites that plague sheep in less arid regions. Larval stages of parasitic worms need moist grass to hatch from eggs and pass from one sheep to another. Not a problem here! We practice a method called FAMACHA, which involves examining the inner eyelids of the sheep to determine the level of anemia caused by the parasite load, to determine if and when a sheep needs treatment. While flocks in milder, more humid climates must be dewormed as often as monthly, many of our sheep are able to go years without being treated.

Cold winters (frequently well below freezing) certainly present some challenges. Ice covered water troughs must be broken free several times a day to allow animals to drink.  Hoses must be drained to prevent them from freezing solid.  Newborn lambs must be watched closely to prevent them from freezing to death.  And there are many mornings and evenings spent tromping through snow to feed.   However, the long cold winters do also help reduce parasite problems by breaking their life cycle.

If we don’t have much grass, then what do our sheep eat? Unlike cattle, sheep are browsers and well as grazers. This means that they will readily eat brush as well as grass. Our sheep will consume the small amount of annual grass that comes up each spring, but they will also browse on sagebrush and bitterbrush. During the fall and early winter, this brush makes up a major portion of their diet. In this way, the sheep form a symbiotic relationship with our land. The brush feeds the sheep, but the sheep also help control the brush that compete with the more desirable grasses. Over time and with proper management, we are able to use the sheep to actually improve our pastures.

During the worst part of the winter, the sheep are kept penned with access to a barn. During this time, feed must be brought to them. We provide them with locally grown hay and we’ve also recently begun feeding spent brewers grain. This high quality feed is what’s left over after making beer. While low in carbohydrates, brewers grain is an excellent source of high quality protein and fat, perfect for ewes raising lambs. Many breweries simply send tons of this spent grain to the landfill each week. By us feeding this grain, we are not only providing our sheep with high quality feed, but are also keeping it out the landfill. It is ultimately recycled back into our soil as composted manure.

Now, what about those pesky coyotes? We’ve got lots and lots of them here. Every dusk and every dawn, we can their yelping from literally every direction. And we see them plenty often too. I’m a little odd from a shepherd standpoint. I actually like coyotes. I appreciate their beauty and intelligence. Plus there are the mountain lions. We haven’t ever seen them but we know they’re there. We’ve seen their tracks and our neighbor had a colt taken by one a couple years ago. I can’t help but admire these predators; however, I do NOT appreciate them trying to eat my sheep. So this could leave me in a bit of a quandary. Enter Luke. Luke is a two year old Great Pyrenees/Anatolian Shepherd cross livestock guardian dog. These special dogs, of various breeds, have been bred for centuries to bond with and protect sheep from predators. It’s not something they’re trained to do. It’s something they do instinctively. They are gentle as a lamb (no pun intended) with their sheep, but absolutely fierce when a predator threatens their charges. We’ve never lost a sheep to a predator with Luke on duty and have actually witnessed him chasing coyotes out of the pasture. We will very soon be adding a female Maremma puppy to guardian team as well.

Luke and his sheep

Autumn tranquility in the eastern Sierra Nevada

Raising sheep up here really isn’t for the faint of heart. We’ve been snowed in for days at a time in the winter and we’ve evacuated more than once when wildfires got too close for comfort in the summer. But this is home and we love our animals. Sleepless nights tending to newborn lambs, aching muscles from hauling feed through knee deep snow, it’s all worth it when you see these gentle animals safely, peacefully grazing at the foot of towering mountains.

You Never Stop Learning

Thursday, August 25th, 2011

I’m not a farmer. I will preface this post with that fact. I am, however, a farmGIRL. The difference therein lies that my roots are in farming, I have spent many years in and around agriculture. My life has progressed as such that I am not the person who climbs onto the tractor to nurture the crops or feed the livestock. FarmGIRL, not farmER. In fact, I am not even from California. So why am I posting here?

Many of the farmers and ranchers involved with Know a California Farmer know me as Kelly the Intern. I was brought on as a summer intern. Growing up in the midwest (northern Illinois), I knew that California would be a major learning experience for me. Coming here has opened my eyes to many things about life, work, and ag. I have walked in fruit and nut orchards, vineyards, and fields, the likes of which I had never experienced prior to being here. I thought I knew ag pretty well back home…California has completely changed my outlook. I have visited dairies that dwarf Illinois operations and have walked the intricate man-made canals that enable California’s bountiful harvests.

Libby Hall (KACF speaker and digital strategist), Dino Giacomazzi (Hanford dairyman), myself, and Josh Lysne (KACF speaker and digital strategist) -- during a KACF roadtrip, we stopped at Dino's dairy for a tour!

Saturday morning, I leave California. While I say I will come back (and intend to someday, even if just for a visit) it’s hard to leave. I don’t know if/when I’ll ever walk the canals and groves and orchards and fields of California’s diverse agriculture communities again. However, the lessons learned around the farms and ranches of this great state will stick with me forever.

Central Valley is probably one of my most favorite places on Earth. It's hard not to be moved by its beauty!

I guess the point of this post is to tell you, the reader, than California agriculture presents an amazing opportunity to learn, grow, and experience new things. I thought I was well-versed in American agriculture. I know all about the Illinois agricultural mainstays of corn, soybeans, wheat, pumpkins, and specialty flowers. It wasn’t until I really got to know the great farmers and ranchers of the Left Coast that I really developed a stronger understanding for how vital and amazing agriculture is. If I learned so much as a well-established farmgirl, imagine what someone with no farm background could soak up!

I guess the moral of this story is that the world is a huge, big, awesome, interesting place. You never, ever stop learning, and even when you are an “expert” in something there is something new to be learned each and every day. I encourage you all to continue learning and experiencing new things, especially in agriculture. California is blessed with an amazing and diverse agricultural community, and I feel blessed to have been welcomed into it for the summer.

In-N-Out Burger was also a big part of my important California education.

Thank you to all the wonderful communicators, volunteers, and community members involved in Know a California Farmer. And thank you to the folks who take time to read this blog, view the pictures, and watch the videos. Taking the time to get to know California’s wonderful producers means you are that much more connected to the sources of your food, fuel, fiber, flowers, and who knows what else!