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Drought Leaves Ranchers Watching Lifestyle Fade
The Albuquerque Journal (subscription required) ^ | August 5, 2002 | Brendan Smith

Posted on 08/06/2002 12:56:55 PM PDT by CedarDave

Monday, August 5, 2002

Drought Leaves Ranchers Watching Lifestyle Fade

By Brendan Smith Journal Northern Bureau


    In 1878, Isidore Ferran built a homestead in northern New Mexico and started a family ranching tradition that has lasted more than a century — but perhaps for not much longer.
    Elsie Hays, Ferran's granddaughter, still raises 20 head of cattle on her property in Llaves in Rio Arriba County and on a grazing allotment in the Santa Fe National Forest. But her five brothers and sisters no longer ranch, and her two grown daughters have no interest in raising cattle.
    "I'm 71 years old, and I'm still kicking it for how many years I don't know having to fight the environmentalists, the Forest Service and anything else that comes along," Hays said. "I stay in it only because I love it."
    Faced with the worst drought to hit New Mexico in 50 years, many ranchers have been forced to liquidate all or part of their herds this year.
    The U.S. Forest Service has ordered most of the 275 grazing permit holders in the Santa Fe forest to remove some or all of their cattle from about 40 grazing allotments. Forest officials say drought-stricken forage has been overgrazed, threatening next year's range and riparian areas near rivers and streams.
    Hays may have to sell the 13 cows she keeps on the Jarosa allotment in the Santa Fe forest because she cannot afford to feed them hay or find alternate pasture for the rest of the year.
    "If I sold everything, I doubt I would get back in it. It would just be another rancher down the drain," she said. "(Ranching) was still a traditional, cultural thing with me. I would like to keep it alive."
    Cattle country

    For many ranchers in northern New Mexico, cattle are part of the family. The calves born each spring are the physical embodiment of an ongoing struggle to eke out an existence in a harsh but beautiful land, a land where the unrelenting sun and lack of life-giving moisture can kill both plant and animal and the hopes of man.
    Ranching has been shaped here by the climate and topography of the arid high country, forcing small herds of cattle onto pockets of suitable grazing land. The culture of Hispanic settlers has created a ranching tradition stretching back 400 years, but it is a dying tradition in some families.
    Even before the drought struck, more than half of the roughly 14,000 ranches and farms in New Mexico were failing, losing an average of $7,500 a year, according to the federal Census of Agriculture from 1997, the latest year available.
    Net losses from all failing ranches and farms in New Mexico totaled more than $57 million in 1997.
    Ranchers point to many culprits for their plight, but the final arbiter of success or failure is a force no one can control — Mother Nature.
    While farmers can use acequias or other means to water their crops, ranchers cannot irrigate large expanses of range land. Cowboys and cowgirls depend on Mother Earth for green grasses and Father Sky for rain and snow to replenish creeks and springs.
    Recent monsoon rains have helped, but New Mexico, like most of the West, is still in the grip of a severe drought.
    Raised on the range

    Hays learned to ride when she was 5 or 6 years old, practicing first on burros and then with an old, gentle horse before moving up to more spirited steeds.
    When her family went to town, Hays stayed behind to help her father, Isidore Ferran Jr., manage about 100 head of cattle.
    "We didn't have a lot. My dad was land-rich and money-poor," she said. "Most of us grew up during the depressive years, but it was a good life. We all grew up without ever going to jail or getting in any serious trouble."
    Hays said her mother, Flossie Cortez of Santa Fe, traced her Hispanic ancestry back to Juan de Oñate's group of settlers who colonized New Mexico for Spain in 1498.
    French Mesa in the northwestern corner of the Santa Fe forest is named for Hays' grandfather, who grew up on farmland in France before moving to California and then New Mexico, she said. He raised about 200 steers on the mesa until his death in 1927, when Hays' father took over the business.
    As each generation passes, the number of cattle dwindles because siblings sell off their share of the herd. Now Hays is the last one ranching.
    "To understand it, you have to grow up in it," she said. "That's as close as I can come to tell you why we do it because it certainly doesn't pay."
    Hays sold 10 cows at a reduced price this year because her husband, Howard Hays, had surgery and couldn't help with the cattle. She said her cows and chickens "eat before I do," but she checks on her herd in the Santa Fe forest now by vehicle rather than horseback.
    "Once I got on a horse, it took me three days to recover," she said. "I'm not a young chicken anymore."
    Hays believes the Forest Service has been heavy-handed with the grazing closures in the 1.6-million acre Santa Fe forest.
    "Only because they have the authority does not give them the moral authority to do this to people," she said. "It's not going to affect me as hard as a lot of people (with more cattle)."
   
Some grazing closures still could be lifted or modified based on an independent evaluation of range conditions by the New Mexico Range Improvement Task Force. But that report, which was supposed to be completed July 26, still hasn't been released.
    Forest officials did not return phone calls Friday seeking their comment.
    The U.S.A. Ranch

    The closures have created a dilemma for the U.S.A. Ranch in Cañones. With 270 head of Hereford cows on two grazing allotments, ranch foreman Cornelio Salazar is struggling to find enough alternate pasture. He hasn't moved his family's herd yet because he is waiting for the results of the task force report.
    "(Forest officials) are not giving a damn about who they get off this forest," he said. "They have you up against the wall any which way."
    Salazar believes his family's 320-acre homestead, which is surrounded by the Santa Fe forest high in the Jemez Mountains, could support the herd for about a month. The pasture is usually used later in the year before the Salazar family drives their cattle down from the high country to their 3,000-acre ranch near Cañones.
    At the homestead off F.R. 100 south of Abiquiu Lake, a one-room tin cabin, a wooden outhouse and a corral fashioned from ponderosa pine logs border a large meadow fringed with pine and aspen.
    Severiana Salazar — the 84-year-old matriarch of a family of seven sons and five daughters — fried diced potatoes on a cast-iron stove in the cabin Thursday with pans of beans, ground beef and red chile. Her husband, Jacovo Salazar, died 22 years ago.
    The entire family is still involved in ranching, although Cornelio is the only one who works the ranch full time. The branding of calves in late August serves as a family reunion at the homestead. The ranch was named the U.S.A. Ranch because the family's brand is comprised of those three intertwined letters.
    Elk problem

    Cornelio saddled a horse and strapped on a pair of leather chaps Thursday before riding with his 10-year-old nephew to check on some cows. In good years, grass grows as high as the stirrup on a saddled horse, but this year "has been drier than hell" and the forage is stunted, he said.
    "One season (of drought) I think you can handle. You can't handle two," he said. "If the rains keep on, at least there's hope. There's more and more hope."
    Cornelio Salazar, Hays and many other ranchers blame an overpopulation of elk for overgrazing. Under state law, Cornelio could shoot any elk that damage his family's homestead, but he believes that would be a waste of meat. He sometimes fires a rifle in the air to scare elk away, but they return and often damage fences.
    "Anything you try to save, the elk are there first," he said.
    Fewer ranches

    More ranches existed in New Mexico in the 1960s than today. In 1964, 8,908 ranches or farms sold cattle, compared with 8,094 in 1997.
    Economies of scale and small profit margins make it difficult for small ranchers to succeed, said Dennis Braden, general manager of the 600-cow El Sueño del Corazón Ranch in Abiquiu. The ranch was bought from local operators in 1994 by a Texas woman.
    In New Mexico, large ranching and farming operations account for most of the state's agricultural market. Only 6 percent of the state's farms and ranches had sales of more than $250,000 in 1997, but they accounted for 82 percent of the total market.
    By contrast, 61 percent of the ranches and farms in New Mexico sold less than $10,000 worth of agricultural products, counting for only 1.4 percent of the market.
    Hays fears small ranchers "will be choked out, just like the loggers." Her two daughters have no interest in ranching because they have their own jobs or families.
    "They have actually told me, 'Mom, I will never work as hard as you,' '' she said. "Unfortunately, as farmers and ranchers get older, the children find they can work for a salaried job and not work as hard as their parents did. Little by little, the ranching becomes a sideline."
    Loss of land grants

    Grazing on public lands has been at the center of a land-grant controversy in New Mexico dating to the 1848 Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, which ended the Mexican War.
    The treaty — which ceded New Mexico and large parts of the Southwest to the United States — promised to recognize community land grants already deeded by the Mexican or Spanish governments. But land-grant heirs across New Mexico say they have lost much of their holdings through questionable court rulings in the late 1800s, bogus surveys, unscrupulous land deals or outright seizure by the U.S. government.
    In Rio Arriba County, about 70 percent of the land is now under federal control. The Census of Agriculture lists 265 Forest Service grazing permits in Rio Arriba, more than four times the total for any other county in New Mexico.
    If the U.S. government hadn't seized community land grants, "these people would be managing their own (grazing) allotments" instead of depending on the Forest Service, Hays said.
   
Rio Arriba County Commissioner Moises Morales, a rancher born and raised in Canjilón, traces the area's high rates of poverty, unemployment and substance abuse to the loss of land.
    When he was 20 years old, Morales joined 19 other armed land-grant activists who raided the Tierra Amarilla courthouse in 1967. The men shot and injured a jailer and a State Police officer and took two men hostage who later escaped.
    Morales said he didn't shoot anybody, but he was jailed for about six months for his part in the raid, which he admits "got a little bit out of hand."
    Morales and some other ranchers still resent the Forest Service because much of the land in the Santa Fe and Carson national forests used to be part of land grants. Morales now grazes 84 cattle in the Carson.
    At a meeting of ranchers last month in Abiquiu, Morales said the closure of grazing allotments in the Santa Fe forest "is going to be our last battle."
    Morales' prediction may prove true for Hays and some other small ranchers. Hays said she might liquidate her herd this year or continue to raise a few head on her own property next year.
    "I really don't see myself keeping it going," she said. "It's a from morning-till-night job. I find even with the few head I have, it's very difficult."

Copyright 2002 Albuquerque Journal



TOPICS: Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events; US: New Mexico
KEYWORDS: drought; economicterrorism; enviros; forestservice; landgrab; ruralcleansing
Reprecussions from an 1800's land grab by the Feds. These folks have been ranching the land in NM for hundreds of years, and due to the drought, the enviros and the Forest Service, they won't be ranching much longer.
1 posted on 08/06/2002 12:56:55 PM PDT by CedarDave
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To: Grampa Dave; madfly
Ping
2 posted on 08/06/2002 12:57:50 PM PDT by CedarDave
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To: CedarDave
In this case I'd cut the forest service some slack. We flew over AZ and NM in June. The difference this year from last was astonishing and scary. It really is incredibly bad. The restrictions seem reasonable to me until the rainfall situation improves. I understand the monsoons have started, though, at least in northern NM. That should help.
3 posted on 08/06/2002 1:03:29 PM PDT by mewzilla
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To: mewzilla
The restrictions may be reasonable or even necessary but the ranches will still be gone.

They told us: "One day, there was a fire." -- Luís Chama
4 posted on 08/06/2002 1:15:27 PM PDT by Doctor Stochastic
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To: Doctor Stochastic
I know. And I feel for the ranchers. We talked to some folks who said that the sense of helplessness they felt was the worst part, since who were you going to see about the weather. Doesn't the Dept. of Ag. have help for ranchers? I know that farmers can be eligible for drought relief. Or if so, is it the kind of help that only leaves them deeper in debt?
5 posted on 08/06/2002 1:22:22 PM PDT by mewzilla
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To: mewzilla
It's just going back to normal though. There's been a several hundred year wet spell. It is a desert out here.
6 posted on 08/06/2002 1:27:29 PM PDT by Doctor Stochastic
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To: Doctor Stochastic
Northern NM is mostly forest and grassland, not desert....droughts are a part of the normal cycle and have nothing to do with global warming.
7 posted on 08/06/2002 1:36:06 PM PDT by kaktuskid
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To: kaktuskid
No global warming involved. The West just doesn't have much water.

Actually global warming would probably just accentuate the swings in weather. More rain in wet years and less in dry.
8 posted on 08/06/2002 1:42:01 PM PDT by Doctor Stochastic
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To: Free the USA; Libertarianize the GOP; Ernest_at_the_Beach; Stand Watch Listen; freefly; expose; ...
ping
9 posted on 08/06/2002 3:39:12 PM PDT by madfly
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To: mewzilla
They could just tell the fed that they won't be planting this year, That should qualify them for Farm Bill subsidy somhow or another.

EBUCK

10 posted on 08/06/2002 3:47:49 PM PDT by EBUCK
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To: CedarDave
A similar story from colorado:

Drying Up

"In 169 years of ranching in the San Luis Valley, Demetrio Valdez's family has survived Indian raids, the U.S.-Mexico war, Manifest Destiny, urban flight, coyotes and mountain lions and bears, cloud seeding, environmentalists, poverty and isolation. But 2002 may produce a lethal mix of elements the Valdez family cannot weather.

... Now, the dry summer - 0.64 of an inch of rain has fallen in two months - along with last winter's meager snowfall, threatens his dwindling cattle and horse business.

...The reality is Antonito will probably not get its annual 8 inches of rain, just as it has not for three years. This year's total is a paltry 1.63 inches, according to the National Weather Service.

...If Valdez gives up ranching, a chapter in Colorado history ends. His great, great, great grandfather Seledon Valdez was among four families who signed the Conejos land grant in 1833 with the Mexican government, which ceded the families 2.5 million acres in the San Luis Valley. As far as anyone knows, Demetrio Valdez is the last remaining descendant of those four families who is still ranching."

11 posted on 08/06/2002 4:47:31 PM PDT by Vince Ferrer
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To: madfly
It's too bad the ranchers can't easily move their ranching to another state...like, say, Florida! We have plenty of rain, lots of cows, and while it wouldn't be the family ranch of old, we sure could use some more Floridians who understand the importance of property rights.
12 posted on 08/06/2002 6:06:49 PM PDT by Ragtime Cowgirl
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To: madfly
Thanks for the heads up!
13 posted on 08/06/2002 7:45:17 PM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: CedarDave
Is there anything that can be done to help? Truck water in? What?
14 posted on 08/06/2002 8:16:02 PM PDT by hedgetrimmer
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To: hedgetrimmer
Not sure about specifics for this story, but with my rancher friends the problem is feed, not water. It is very costly to feed cattle when there is no grazing to be had because of drought. A lot of ranchers have made improvements (such as watering troughs or windmills) on the Federal lands they graze their cattle on, but there is no way to make grass grow without rain. And I know of cases where downed fences are left down so that the cows can move to another section of land where grazing may be available. Most of these folks are very honest, but when they're livlihoods are at stake they aren't above bending the rules.
15 posted on 08/06/2002 8:46:49 PM PDT by CedarDave
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To: CedarDave
Truck feed in? It was done for the Klamath farmers
16 posted on 08/06/2002 9:02:45 PM PDT by hedgetrimmer
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To: madfly
BTTT!!!!!!
17 posted on 08/07/2002 3:15:43 AM PDT by E.G.C.
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To: Doctor Stochastic
There's been a several hundred year wet spell.

WOW! We are having a terrible drought right now (Virginia) We have a river that is drying up. I will soon be mud. Usually this time of year, even tho' it is low we can play in it and be refreshed all summer long.

Not so this year. The water is unsafe and the fish and critters are dying. We have not had a good winter snow in quite a while either. Makes ones spirit feel oppressed. I'll be glad for a good long rainy spell. Our forecast shows no rain in sight. Of course it is hurricane season upon us but the land will not soak it up if we get heavy rains that leave quickly. But, of course we all know these things. I'm just feeling sad for the land and the farmers. Helpless is a good word.

18 posted on 08/07/2002 6:00:24 AM PDT by Jackie222
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To: CedarDave
New Mexico BTTT
19 posted on 08/07/2002 6:04:23 AM PDT by Tijeras_Slim
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To: mewzilla
I know a lot of ranchers and NONE of them will overgraze pasture land BECAUSE it hurts next years growth. They MUST think ahead if they want to stay in business.
20 posted on 08/07/2002 7:55:17 PM PDT by B4Ranch
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