Whiners

As Dennis Miller used to say on his TRV show, “I hate to get off on a rant here”, but……

We get a three day doozy of a blizzard. How long has it been since we had one of those in this country at Chriustmas? Been awhile. Setting here this morning reading all the comments and talk on the internet from blogs and Facebook, of people I read and know who have just went thru’ this. And what do I read? Whine, whine, bitch, bitch and moan, moan! “Woe is me!”

Oh how sad that your poor little lives have been upset by Mother Nature. On all the farm/ranch blogs I read, I never saw one person who whined about the extra work to feed the stock. Just the satisfaction of knowing they got the stock all fed and taken care of. Mostly (sorry town and city dwellers) all I read was whine, whine, cry, cry. because we can’t get somewhere we WANT to go. Oh my!

Things didn’t go your way!

How sad!

In most cases, no one had to go or be anywhere, they just WANTED to be somewhere else. They were all warm and dry and well fed. Was that good enough? NO! Oh hell no!

We are going to pout and stomp our widdle feet and act like the spoiled rotten little brats we are because we didn’t get our way

What a bunch of crybabies.

Here’s a thought. Maybe instead of whining about what you don’t have ,you ought to count your blessings that you are not in a war torn country as a soldier or a person who’s country is being torn apart by strife and war. Or that you are not living on the street tryingto stay warm and get food for you and your family. Or that you live in a country where you still have the right to whine and carry on like brats.

What a bunch of whining, bed wetting, spoiled little brats we have in this country. No wonder they voted in the pin heads we have in Congress! Like begets like I guess.

Grow up people and think about someone else besides your own selfish self!!!!

Sorry, but I am tired of your whine.

Maybe it’s just cabin fever. Guess I will go feed my hungry cows and horses.They don’t whine and are just happy to have what they have.

Still a blizzard

This is the 3rd day of this. Just talked to a friend down south west of here not far from Cheyenne Wy and it sounds like they only have about an inch of snow and lots of wind.

We have a drift almost as high as the box on my Dodge Ram 3/4 ton pickup. And they re pretty high! Drift off the steps goes a long ways. Drift behind my pickup that is pretty tall also. So when I go out to feed this afternoon as this is supposed to start slackening, I will have some fun digging.

Cindy of course stayed in town again yesterday and when she went to go to work this morning they tried to come and get her with some little 6 wheeled or tracked vehicle that they buried in the parking lot of the apartments Cindy is staying at. So they had to call for a big loader to come dig it out. Sounds like they have some pretty big drifts in Sturgis.

A friend from Nortyh West Iowa sent an email and sounds ike they re having funalso.

Why do people feel the need to go out in these conditions?

Your second gift

Feeding in the snow and blowing and cold with a tractor with no cab reminded me of this poem. It’s an oldie but a goody! Hope you like it! I wrote it back in 1993 at Christmas time. It’s all true.

The Gift

It had been bitter cold, for three long days
The wind blew sharp and swirled snow
So I bundled up, with lots’a clothes
‘Cause I had somewhere I needed to go

I caught and harnessed my work mares
The harness was so stiff, it wouldn’t bend
I warmed up the bits, ‘fore I hung ‘em on
On a cold day, you’ll do that for a friend

And them ol’ mares, are good ol’ girls
They give me, everything that they’ve got
Not too many friends would go willingly outside
Then line right out, in a trot

Those hungry cows was sure glad to see us
They went right to work, on their hay
You know, when it’s 24 below and breezy
You ain’t just feedin’ them cows for the pay

At least not the pay that the bankers loan out
But there are rewards, in the job that you do
So I drug out extra feed, ‘cause it’s Christmas eve
And I hummed a Christmas carol or two

When the cows were fed, we jogged on home
I poured a good feed of grain for the team
Most folks wouldn’t enjoy my kind of lifestyle
That’s O.K., ‘cause I’m livin’ MY dream

And I think about a babe in a manger
As I fill my manger, full of hay
I think about all the people in the world
And how they all celebrate this day

Some folks enjoy Christmas, because of the gifts
And I sure don’t think that’s all wrong
But most’a the gifts, they give and receive
Are forgotten, ‘fore the New Year comes along

The gift that I’m most thankful for
Is gettin’ to ranch, not punchin’ a time-clock
And strangely enough, goin’ out in the cold
With a good team, to feed my hungry stock

Still Wintry

Blowing good out there with gusts up to 40 mph.

Here’s some pictures from today. I went up west with the tractor and got two old bales and hauled them home and the cows followed me just like I planned. We were without power from 12:30 pm until a while ago. I had the generator running to pump water for the cows so I didn’t know until they called back from the Electric Company. Hopefully it will stay on, but it was as thick of frost as I have ever seen.

Wintry!

Southeast breeze blowing and they are always cold. I hauled a bale out to the calves and unrolled part of it with the re-built bale unroller yesterday. Seemed to work great. I unloaded the left over part of it at the corral for the colts and team or who ever is in the corral. Sounds like we may get up to 7 inches of snow and the wind is supposed to blow a pretty good clip tomorrow night. Cindy went in yesterday afternoon as she hates bad roads and they sounded like they will be this morning. She said they weren’t bad but everyone was driving slow. At least some have good sense!

As cold as it is I don’t think I will be working on any sled for the grandkids right now. That’s okay, I have plenty to do in the leather shop. It’s just  matter of doing it. Aye, there’s the rub!

12/22/09

I got Gramma to go along with me to feed calves with the team yesterday. We even drove up the crick and looked at the bean to see if I needed to take more up.

Worked on my bob sled and some leather too. For supper I made tortilla’s (smiling country’s recipe) and Cindy made enchilada’s. Mmmm boy, as Andy Griffith used to say!

W got some big ol’ silver dollar snowflakes yesterday for a bit and I tried to take pictures of them as they were falling, but they didn’t work very well. We are supposed to get from 1 to 3 inches out here it sounds like with more in the Hills and to the eastern part of the state. I don’t know why people are getting so excited. It is after all December and almost the first of the year. We’ve had a good run and I hope the cows can keep on grazing, but if they can’t, we have feed. This is South Dakota and I have spent more winters feeding in December than I haven’t, in my half century plus in this great state.

I bet them who want a White Christmas will be happy. I am thinking of trying to build a sled for the grandkids, to pull behind the bob sled or wagon with the team. That would be fun. I found all kinds of pictures of dog sleds and such. Now, to get it done!

Ranch economics

First off, this will be a rough look and just hit averages as to my opinion.

Land in my area recently sold for a high of $560 an acre. This land will take about 20 acres to run a cow/calf pair for a year, tho’ maybe with these newer larger cows, it might take a few more, so you are looking at over $10,000 to $11,000 per cow/calf unit at a minimum.

Part of that land will be in hay ground to put up the hay to feed the cows over the winter. Seems like most around here sell their steers and cull heifer calves in the fall. Then they winter their cows and heifer replacement heifers and also the yearling heifer who will calve for the first time in the spring. So if you ran 200 cows you would probably figure about a 10 % cull rate on your cows so you would need that many bred heifers to replace them and then that many heifer calves to use for next years replacements. You will need at least another 10 % of the heifer calves and replacement heifers as some will not calve and some will lose calves when they calve. So figure 25 bred heifers and that would make about 30 head of  heifer calves. So you got to sell 100 steers and about 70 heifer calves. Of course there was some death loss so you only probably had about 195 head of calves that were sold or weaned in the fall.

Depending on how you figure your costs and if your land if paid for or if you summer cattle out and pay rent or per head charges, you will have from a minimum of $300 per cow/calf pair charge per year, to a high of $600 at least. Most probably fall in the middle some where. I don’t think too many actually figure this. Might scare them!

So if you sell an average weight of 525 pound calves at $1.00 per pound you would have $525 per head, times 165 head of calves, to pay the bills. Now, if your cost of production was higher than that, you lost money, if it was less, you made money. And of course these are all averages. I am sure there were people who got more per calf this year, but there were some who got less.

Nailing down costs is hard to do as most people have different ways of charging themselves. Most figure if they made a profit they had a good year and worry about having to pay income tax. But I think too many worry about gross and not net. But then again, that is their business. My net is usually pretty gross!

How do you charge yourself or come up with a cost per ton of hay? When you pay $50,000 for a swather and $25,000 for a baler, $50,000 for a tractor to pull the baler, you have a lot of expense tied up in that years hay crop. Of course the swather and tractor and baler will be used for more than one year and the tractor will be used for other work besides haying. Most people have to do some farming to get the ground in shape to raise hay. And most will use the tractor to turn around and feed the hay back out.

I’ve asked neighbors what it cost them to put their hay up and have gotten figures of $25 per ton to $60 per ton. Many do not charge themselves a labor charge. They seem to figure if they made it for the year and got all the bills paid, they must have made some money somewheres!

We have just a few cows and mostly run yearling’s thru’ the growing season for people and get paid per head per month. They paid $19 per head per month this year. They all came in the first week in May and some went out in mid August, some in mid September and the balance in October. My most difficult problem is establishing how many I should take in. I want to use as much grass as possible so I need to run as many as possible, but at the same time I need to not run out of grass for my yearling customers or our little cow herd. Luckily I have been doing this for about 10 years now so am getting it fine tuned. But I worry about hail and fire tho’ I do have insurance, but don’t know how well it will pay in those instances.

Drought is always in the back of your mind in this country. We are always 3 weeks away from a drought it seems like. Our annual average moisture for a year is about 15 inches. Some years a lot of that comes as snow and then maybe hard rains that run water off  which fills dams but doesn’t soak in as good. This year was way above normal for moisture. A year or so back we only got about 10 inches. It seems like it’s not so much how much we get as WHEN  we get it, making the difference between a good, bad or great year.

I graze my hay ground and if it works out I pay a man to come and cut and bale some of the hay. I pay so much per bale and I have to pick them up from the field and stack them. These are large rounds weighing about 1000 pounds. This year we got 80 and then turned around and bought and traded for some more. And Chance also bought hay for his share of the cows. My hay cost about $50 a ton this year whether I bought it or had it put up. I bought a tractor a couple of spring ago. An old tractor and loader with no cab. $6000. It’s alright, but more of a stand by and then I don’t have that many cattle to feed in the winter, so I love my team of horses. Especially this year as they are older and better trained.

That is about it. If you have any questions just fire away. Please remember I am shooting at averages here. Some will be higher and some lower. Most would be in the mid range.

Bottom line, most ranchers do not ranch for the money, but for the job, love of the land and the work. Silly? Maybe, but there is more to life than money, tho’ it seems to make some things easier. Like paying the ever increasing bills!

A question for my readers

I was just over at Linda’s blog and there was a comment about cost and expense and income of a rancher. Would anyone be interested in a rough over view of that, for this area?

Also, I went to Punkin Center today for a part and some other doo dads and ran onto our state Rep. He and another gentleman( and I use that term pretty loosely, Ross) and I got to visiting about the cost of raising and butchering your own beef, as compared to buying at the butcher shop or grocery store. I now realize why our taxes are going up, according to how my rep figures! Sheesh!

I’d say buying a whole, a half , or a quarter of a prime fed beef, all cut and wrapped to your wants, at $2.25 a pound, for hamburger, steaks, roasts and all, is a pretty good deal for both the person buying it and also the person selling it, if done right. He claimed it was cheaper to buy at a store. Remember, at a store it will cost you from $5 to $7 a pound for all the steak and roasts. Sure the hamburger will only cost about $1.80 or so, but the cost of the steaks and roasts more than makes up for that. And this guy is responsible for spending my tax dollars?

Sorry Larry, but I ain’t never voting for you any more!