HomeMy WebLinkAbout2005 DroughtWith 84 counties in Texas requesting aid due to the drought,
� many are wondering how they will get by during winter
WAITNG FOR RAIN
ndy Scasta, manager of Box S Ca le ranch near Bryan, pushes blocks of
iIfalfa hay to bred Braford heifers. Forage in the ranch's pasture is at
Lack of fall precipitation has ranchers on hunt for hay
By BEVERLY MOSELEY
Eagle Staff Writer
inding a needle in a haystack might
I prove easier right now than finding a
roll of hay for sale in Texas.
Cattle ranchers in much of the state are
facing hay shortages due to drought condi-
tions that cut into this year's hay production.
"The calls are definitely picking up. We
' started getting phone calls during the hurri-
canes with folks looking for some hay, and
they have been picking up since then," said
Allen Spelce, assistant commissioner for
communications at the Texas Department of
Agriculture in Austin. "Most farmers and
ranchers plan for a hot, dry summer, and
when the fall rains didn't come, that's when
we started getting those calls. It's dry out
there."
Spelce said that statewide, about 72 per-
cent of the pastures and rangeland are in
poor to very poor condition, and 28 percent
are in fair to good condition.
View from a window
The extent of the drought's
viewed from a truck window
Cattle ranch outside Bryan.
Normally, lush, tall forage
Eagle photo /Beverly Moseley
least 9 inches tall in a g ood year. Instead, drought conditions have creat-
ed a pasture of crackling, stubby grass.
damage can be
at the Box S
covers the
ranch's expansive: pastures, where cow-calf
pairs and replacement heifers graze. When
owner W.C. Scasta rides the ranch now, it's
over brown pastures crackling with stubby
grass.
To add insult to injury, the oats and rye
grass he planted for winter grazing haven't
come up, and his water tanks are going dry.
"This is the worst drought we've seen in
this area so far since 1953. We have less for-
age and water on the place," Scasta said.
"We know we'll be feeding through the win-
ter months until sometime in March. My
See DROUGHT, Page E2
Drought
room El
concern is, if we don't have a
turnaround by the end of the
normal feeding season."
Scasta estimated that
ranch has received only
inches of rain this year.
hay cutting is all he was
to harvest.
"Normally we get two to
three cuttings," Scasta said.
This year, he made about
275 round bales of hay —
roughly half his normal hay
production. He has had to buy
some rolls of hay.
Scasta's normal hay feeding
routine also includes 3x3x8
blocks of alfalfa that he
bought in June.
He started feeding hay to
some of the ranch's cattle in
October. January is the nor-
mal start date for feeding hay.
Scasta meets wintertime
nutritional needs of young
cattle, calves and replacement
heifers with hay, Beefmaker
grain mix and breeder cubes.
Cows are supplemented
with breeder cubes and hayed
as needed.
"We do have some cattle in
normal years we don't even
hay," he said.
It normally costs Scasta an
average of $75 to $85 per head
for winter feeding.
However, given the
drought, Scasta projected that
cost could increase $50 per
head this year.
In September, he began
culling his cow herd in antici-
pation of prolonged drought
conditions.
State of drought
A drought line crosses the
State from Del Rio to Wichita
Falls with varying degrees of
the
9
One
able
drought conditions east and
south of that line, according
to the U.S. Drought Monitor.
These conditions have cre-
ated a situation where the
amount of acreage of cut hay
and the yields off that acreage
are down.
"Our normal production
statewide is normally around
12 million tons of hay. Last
year we were at 12,295,000
tons. This year we are at
9,710,000, which makes us
about 2 1/2 million tons below
last year," said Robin Roark,
state director of the Texas
office of the USDA's national
agricultural statistics service.
"There's two reasons that's
off — because of the 500,000
acres less being cut, and then
the other thing is it looks like
yields are three - tenths of a
ton an acre less than last
year."
Eighty -four of Texas' 254
counties have requested
USDA drought assistance,
and 28 of those requests have
been granted, according to
Gov. Rick Perry's press office.
Brenda Carlson, Southwest
regional public affairs spe-
cialist with the USDA Farm
Service Agency, said the only
assistance program available
is through the emergency
loan program.
"For those producers who
do not currently carry the
NAP [Noninsured Crop Disas-
ter Assistance Program,
which deadlined Dec. 1] cov-
erage, low- interest emergency
loans are the only assistance
available. That's not to say
that as the need grows, policy -
makers won't consider addi-
tional assistance programs."
Hunting hay
Whether they grow their
own hay or buy it, ranchers
share one common problem
— having enough hay to get
through the winter.
"We normally do sell some
hay, and we've been getting a
lot of calls from people want-
ing to get hay," said Steve
Densmore, cattle manager at
Circle X Land and Cattle Co.
in Bryan. "Due to the lack of
rain and not being able to
have the normal production
we'd normally have, we don't
have any excess hay to sell."
A buoy rests on a
dry area of Lake
Lavon in
Farmersville.
Texas got only
21.5 inches of
rain in the first
11 months of
2005, prompting
burn bans in half
of its 254
counties.
Farmers and
ranchers are
scrambling for
water for their
crops and hay to
feed their cattle.
AP photo
Densmore said they usually
make 6,000 to 7,000 rolls of
hay a year.
"This year we put up
maybe 4,500 — if that much,"
Densmore said.
He estimated that the ranch
has received 4 inches of rain
since the beginning of sum-
mer. They got one hay cutting
from nonirrigated land and
two cuttings off irrigated hay
meadows.
Cattle on the ranch are sup-
plemented with whole cotton-
seed purchased by the truck-
load.
"We're using cottonseed to
help stretch hay out through
the winter," Densmore said,
adding that he started small-
scale supplemental feeding in
early November and will have
to be conservative with his
hay.
M &M Farm Supply in
Franklin has seen an increase
in the amount of dry -based
feeds and range cubes they're
selling.
"I think people are resigned
to the fact they are going to
have to spend a little extra,"
said Steve Conrad, president
of M &M Farm Supply. "They
want to take care of these
cows. Calves are still bringing
good money."
He echoed Scasta's concern
about drought conditions
extending into spring.
"Another six months and
we don't get rain this spring,
people are going to be selling
cows," he said.
Linda Galayda, owner of
Jordens Cattle Company in
Palestine, doesn't produce
hay on her ranch. She con-
tracts with a commercial hay
producer to provide the 1,300
rolls of hay needed to get her
500 -head commercial Brangus
herd through the winter and
into spring.
This year she was able to
purchase only 800 rolls of hay.
"These hay producers are
just as stressed as the people
looking for hay. They put all
that money into fertilizer and
didn't get any production
because of no moisture,"
Galayda said.
"They're in as much hurt
and bind financially as any-
body. The producers have
worked very hard to keep up
with their commitments."
She has purchased 200 hay
rolls from the Crockett area.
The search continues for 250
more rolls.
"I have made over 50 phone
calls looking for that 250
rolls," she said.
She's received quotes for
fertilized quality hay ranging
from $30 to $60 a roll, adding
that the problem is twofold —
finding hay and finding good -
quality hay.
Galayda makes supplemen-
tation decisions based on the
quality of her hay.
"If I've got good quality hay
at 10 to 12 percent, I use a 20-
percent breeders cube. Any-
thing less, I use a 38- percent
cottonseed cube," she said.
She also keeps out a miner-
al supplement.
The drought also has affect-
ed her stocking rate deci-
sions. She had planned to buy
50 replacement heifers. She's
now buying 30.
"I cut back, but I can't cut
back too much because it will
affect my future," she said.
• Beverly Moseley's e -mail
address is beverly.moseley@
theeagle.com.