Western South Dakota

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Here are a couple posts I put elsewhere.

He!! hath no fury compared to a northern plains blizzard, but the Herefords survived it.

I am not even sure what to say, but I will give you an update. 2-4 inches of rain at 40 degrees and dropping until it started to snow. Anywhere from a foot to 4 feet of snow, the heavy wet kind. The whole time the wind was from 40-60. Lasted all of 2+ days. We hadn't even had a frost yet. A week ago it was 90 degrees and with the fall moisture there was some green grass. Cattle didn't have the winter hair and most were still is summer pasture. With the rain first it really didn't matter. I moved some to winter pasture and they drifted to the fence anyway. There is also a lot of crop left in the field and the trees did all have the leaves. Now most leaves don't have trees.

Losses are devastating. I was on the Eastern edge. East of me the losses were minimal. Close by here they will average 10-20%. North and West,,,,,,,?????????? I know of cattle that drifted 15 miles, dead ones at every fence before they broke through. Every snowbank also. I know of more than one bunch that just walked into a dam because the water was warmer than the air. A couple dams they drifted into and walked across after it was full of deads. There are some that were unlucky and lost over 50% some were lucky and didn't. I herd of a guy that locked his in where he feeds calves all winter and lost 30 crowding in an open shed. I only know of 3 that lost nothing and I am one. Almost feel guilty. I am helping a neighbor tomorrow sort. Every bunch has several owners after the drift. It will be a long and slow process to sort owners. Calves without mothers won't want to go any direction.

I do think the Hereford blood saved me. Thicker hides and less likely to tear things down saved them. My herd bulls were out as open as anything and even though they walked over one fence they just stood it at the next one. Cows and bred heifers just stood it where they were. Not 300 yards from where my cows stood it there was a black bunch drifted to the creek where they couldn't cross and 4 dead there out of 50.

Not sure what else to say, my mind is mush. I am sure the Colorado flood was every bit as bad or worse. Seems like there was somwhee else devastated by sudden death also but we will just do what all our forefathers did, pick ourselves up an keep on. Some will be done and that is too bad. I am sure that will mean more land farmed up but progress will happen. I plan on standing in the way of farming progress as long as possible though.

Post #2

I am back. If today ever comes back around, shoot me. Everything I said last night was with rose colored glasses.

We sorted all day with a big crew and got 1700 back to where they belonged. Only problem is there should have been 2500.

Sorry, I wrote 6 paragraphs about what I saw today and then deleted them. What I really saw today was a group of great cattlemen (and women) who worked their ass off all day to get the job done and never once got on the grouch. At the end we had 15 riders who went and raised a glass to life on the northern plains.I couldn't be prouder of the people I workeed with today. 20 Miles in both directions and just like I did, we showed up to help just because. Life is good and today I worked with some of the greatest people in the world. I wouldn't wish today on my worst enemy but I was a part of something that few will ever expierience.

Character is not formed when you are walking on the mountaintops among the roses but on the valleys it takes to get to them.
 
Doug I walked thru a similar valley once with my feedlot cattle, keep your head up the sun will shine on your face another day. After the natural disaster that effected me I looked out at what laid before me, and as terrible as it was I also realized this planet has brought even worse pain and suffering to others. I did not watch my entire family be swept away by a tsunami like some folks have, my family survived and were by my side thru the aftermath. My thoughts are truly with all of you as I know your pain personally.
 
Doug.
I am glad to hear that someone has made it through OK and I know what you are going through. It is saddening and disheartening to hear of everyone's losses.The hardest part is having to admit that you made it through just fine when the neighbor across the fence lost more than not. I think it's some sort of survivors guilt. I guess the best that can be done is to help out where we can that is what South Dakota people are made of. I am fearful of what will happen to smaller operations that are running so close to the edge anyway that any hit will force them to sell out and subdivide. But I guess we will just keep plugging along.
April
 
I just saw a report on thebaze.com nothing on any of the major networks, figures. upwards of 75k animals :cry: we pray for you guys up there.
 
Why is this not showing up in the national news? I am trying to remember if I have seen it mentioned once. Surely it has, and I missed it.
 
HDRider":15aoxke8 said:
Why is this not showing up in the national news? I am trying to remember if I have seen it mentioned once. Surely it has, and I missed it.
Don't be so sure you missed it HD. I did a Google News search and one of the very few things I found was this:
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/10 ... -about-it/

I'm a news junky--I read the major news websites several times/day, and if it had not been for Cattle Today, I wouldn't have known about this blizzard.
 
greybeard":3va1hdg0 said:
HDRider":3va1hdg0 said:
Why is this not showing up in the national news? I am trying to remember if I have seen it mentioned once. Surely it has, and I missed it.
Don't be so sure you missed it HD. I did a Google News search and one of the very few things I found was this:
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/10 ... -about-it/

I'm a news junky--I read the major news websites several times/day, and if it had not been for Cattle Today, I wouldn't have known about this blizzard.
Same here,, i even talked to a man in the seedstock business. and he hadnt heard about it..and this was days after.. but let some gay celebrity come out it gets world wide coverage....nobody interested in the common working man
 
ALACOWMAN":9g2isxqj said:
greybeard":9g2isxqj said:
HDRider":9g2isxqj said:
Why is this not showing up in the national news? I am trying to remember if I have seen it mentioned once. Surely it has, and I missed it.
Don't be so sure you missed it HD. I did a Google News search and one of the very few things I found was this:
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/10 ... -about-it/

I'm a news junky--I read the major news websites several times/day, and if it had not been for Cattle Today, I wouldn't have known about this blizzard.
Same here,, i even talked to a man in the seedstock business. and he hadnt heard about it..and this was days after.. but let some gay celebrity come out it gets world wide coverage....nobody interested in the common working man

Glen Beck is talking about it on his radio program this morning and he's outraged at the lack of coverage this tragedy has garnered on the national level.
 
I don't even know about the cattle deaths till it shows up on my Facebook page yesterday. None of my AG families/friends knew about it.
 
And we wonder why there is a disconnect between food producers and food consumers. Nobody cares about food production because there has always been food in the stores.
 
I think if it happened in a slow news period it would have received more coverage, but the government shutdown is dominating the news. Also, was there loss of human life? I haven't heard if there was or not, but I am guessing that because few if any people died is also a big part of it. Cattle being killed is probably only of interest to the 2% of Americans involved in agriculture so that doesn't help either.
 
Don't laugh, but I watch NBC news each evening. To my knowledge they have not broadcast anything on it. That is what I was thinking about when I made my comment.

I also watch Morning Joe on MSNBC and have not heard those communist mention it either.
 
I saw it on facebook shared from a news site...

the blizzard itself didn't look too terrible, but it sure wreaked havoc on the cows.. sounds like many people lost 40% of their herd, and some lost all their herd.. really terrible.

I reshared it...
 
Taurus":2bpenomf said:
That said, I wish I can donate the heifer calves to the unfortunate ones that lost their herd.
Taurus, if you could, I think the SD Cattlemen's group is setting up something; Wyoming Cattlewomen, also. WY folks just across the border from Belle Fourche were also hard hit. I feel the same way.
 

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