Posted on 10/14/2013 3:19:18 PM PDT by yoe
Last Wednesday, the weather was sunny and warm at Bob Fortune's cattle ranch in Belvidere, S.D. On Thursday, it started raining. By Friday night, the rain had turned to snow. By the weekend, the snow turned to a blizzard with 60 mile an hour winds. By the weekend, Fortune says, "the cattle just couldn't stand the cold anymore, and they just started dying."
Only a year after sweeping drought left ranchers across South Dakota desperate for feed, this week they're just beginning to reckon with a freak early snowstorm, dubbed Winter Storm Atlas, that wiped out an estimated 10 percent of the cattle in the state's western region, up to 100,000 animals. In the coming weeks they will dig through the mess to try to tally the damage to an industry worth $5.2 billion statewide, that also killed an unknown number of horses, sheep, and wildlife. Fortune, president of the South Dakota Stockgrowers Association, says losses like this would be enough to cripple many ranchers even in the best of times, especially with the loss of future calves next spring whose would-be mothers were killed. But with the federal Department of Agriculture still shut down, ranchers are cut off from the livestock insurance that would normally keep them afloat following a disaster like this.
"We have no idea if there'll be federal aid for these ranchers," Fortune says.
After catastrophes, livestock producers typically turn to the federal Farm Service Agency's livestock indemnity program, which offers compensation for lost cattle, pigs, sheep, chickens, and other livestock. As long as the government stays shut, FSA offices nationwide will be shut too, leaving ranchers without support. A spokesperson for the state's Department of Agriculture said the most their office can do is offer advice on how to document and carry out a cleanup effort. Even before the shutdown, the insurance program was already threatened by delayed passage of a new federal farm bill, which allots money for a range of food and ag-related programs from food stamps to incentives to go organic. While the shutdown debate rages, the Senate and House are still hashing out the farm bill, leaving the livestock indemnity program in midair.
The weekend blizzard, which dumped up to five feet of snow in some places, was "very historic," according to meteorologist Darren Clabo at the South Dakota School of Mines and Technology's Institute of Atmospheric Sciences. Rapid City, the largest city in the state's western half, received the most snowfall ever recorded in October, and the third-highest one-day snowfall for any time of year. While South Dakota residents and ranchers are accustomed to brutal winters, Clabo said, "we don't get these kinds of storms in the first week of October." That means that cattle were still covered in thin summer coats, and left out in exposed summer pastures.
The storm, Clabo said, was the result of a strong high-altitude storm that pushed in quickly from the Pacific, gathered energy over the Rockies, and peaked just over Rapid City. While it's too early to say what role climate change might have played in this particular storm, higher levels of heat trapped in the atmosphere can result in more frequent and severe storms. Last month's IPCC report found it "very likely" that extreme precipitation events like blizzards will increase over this century.
For now, the South Dakota state Department of Agriculture is picking up the slack as best it can, urging ranchers to fully document their losses so they can get aid if and when it reappears, said spokesperson Jamie Crew. Meanwhile, Fortune and his peers will continue to dispose of dead livestock, which state law requires be cleaned up within 36 hours for public health reasons.
"The more snow melts," he says, "the more dead cattle they're finding."
Raising cattle or growing grapes takes real risk takers and mighty hard workers.
Western SD needs more shelter infrastructure.
The average MotherJones reader thinks a single cheeseburger contributes to global warming. This story must leave them horribly conflicted.
I feel sorry for that poor cow. Leaned on a pole and froze to death, I guess. Wish I knew more about ranching; I would deduce there was no shelter arrangement for the animals where they were. In the older days cowboys would literally walk herds of cattle over long distances and dangers like this were inherent, but I’d have thought in modern times with motor transportation the beef would be kept from freezing till it had been to the slaughter house? Anyhow I “wouldn’t wish that on my worst enemy.” Surprised PETA isn’t screaming.
Need a barf bag to read the comments over there at Muthu Jonzes !
This article is exactly why the FRAUDS ON THE LEFT changed from calling their scam global warming to climate change. Mother Jones quoting from the frauds at IPCC is beyond a joke.
Seems like it would be relatively cheap for ranchers to build sections of wall or storm fence on the rangeland. It won’t save all the cattle but those who can reach it would probably be OK.
I don't think these ranchers up north were prepared....
Yes, Al Gore warned us that Global Warming could cause Planetary Cooling, but you just have to be a Liberal to understand the concept.
Yep. They explain this “climate change”—more heat produces more cold. Who’d have guessed it?
Kind of the sense I am getting. Bare bones operation, no emergency provision for the critters? To be fair, that storm was a freak, and no economic sense carrying around provision for the 1% freak occurrence at a cost of over 1%. (Still if I was a rancher and had the choice, I’d do it because I’d care about the cows. Don’t mind turning them into beef and leather, but want to do it humanely.)
So now they're naming snow storms?
So now they're naming snow storms?
>> Western SD needs more shelter infrastructure.
Why do they care if the cattle freeze when the taxpayers bail them out? Building shelters takes effort and money.
Just another example of how government interference in the marketplace — in this case, subsidizing any downside — actually ENCOURAGES scaling up production in unsuitable areas with no provision for cold weather.
Kind of like federal flood insurance encourages building, and rebuilding, and re-rebuilding in flood- and hurricane-prone areas.
If the dxmn government would stay out of it, the market would take care of dumb homeowners (and reckless ranchers) and there’d be less of this crap happening.
>> Western SD needs more shelter infrastructure.
Why do they care if the cattle freeze when the taxpayers bail them out? Building shelters takes effort and money.
Just another example of how government interference in the marketplace — in this case, subsidizing any downside — actually ENCOURAGES scaling up production in unsuitable areas with no provision for cold weather.
Kind of like federal flood insurance encourages building, and rebuilding, and re-rebuilding in flood- and hurricane-prone areas.
If the dxmn government would stay out of it, the market would take care of dumb homeowners (and reckless ranchers) and there’d be less of this crap happening.
That seems to be what is commonly built, but now too much of it visible from I-90.
>> Whod have guessed it?
It *is* counterintuitive... but have a hit on this bong and attend that Organizing For America rally and take that university/teevee-station/NGO job, and you’ll get in the groove...
The killing winds and storms come from one direction one day and another day the next.
In addition, the capacity of the rangeland may be as little as 2 or 3 mother cows per section (one square mile).
How do you do that?
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.