2008 JANUARY 10.pmd
Transcription
2008 JANUARY 10.pmd
Holiday Hangover Keeping Sheep Market Queasy The sheep trade has been slow since the third week of December as buyers and sellers turned their attention to making Christmas bright. San Angelo sold Tuesday for the first time this year, and the market was bearish with weaker undertones on all offerings except slaughter ewes. Other markets were in the same situation, post-holiday trading reflecting a weaker undertone. The market drivers, packers and feeders, have had reduced schedules and full pens. Movement to Mexico continues to help the slaughter ewe market. Imported lamb for the week ending November 24 totaled 963 metric tons or about 2.12 million pounds. Domestic production for the same period was 2.9 million pounds. Sheep slaughter for the week ending January 5 totaled 39,000 head compared to 37,000 the previous week and 43,000 head for the same period a year ago. Feeder lambs at San Angelo, medium and large 50-75 pounds, brought $103-106 and 80-90 pounds $100-101. Fredericksburg had just a few weighing 66 pounds at $115. Billings lambs weighing 50-60 pounds were $113-116, 60-70 pounds $120-123.50, 70-80 pounds $105-116, 80-90 pounds $103-108.50, 90-100 pounds $95102, 100-110 pounds $91.50-97, 115-120 pounds $93, and 123 pounds $90. Feeders at Sioux Falls weighing 33 pounds made $132, 65 pounds $106, 70-80 pounds $106-108, 80-90 pounds $9697, 90-95 pounds $94.5097.50, and 110-115 pounds $86.25-89.75. At Hamilton 6080 pound lambs were $80-95, 100 pounds and up $80-98. San Angelo’s slaughter market had choice lambs weighing 90-140 pounds bringing $8091, good and choice 40-90 pounds $90-105, 90-105 pounds $95-103, 40-60 pound hair lambs $90-100, and 60-90 pounds $95-112. Fredericksburg choice and prime lambs weighing 90110 pounds brought $96-107, good and choice 40-85 pounds $112-129. In Missouri, 60-80 pound lambs earned $90-110, hair lambs weighing 60-70 pounds $120-122. Sioux Falls shorn lambs weighing 140-145 pounds were $90-90.50, wooled 125-155 pounds $85-88.25. In Virginia wooled lambs 90-110 pounds were $107, 110-130 pounds $101.50. Direct trade on slaughter lambs included 2800 head weighing 120-145 pounds that brought $92.16-99.64. The Eastern Cornbelt reported on 700 head with choice and prime weighing 110-130 pounds, shorn, at $92-94 and wooled 110-130 pounds at $88-94, good and choice 60-90 pounds $115. Good slaughter ewes at San Angelo sold for $33-44, utility and good $44-55, utility $3344, cull and utility $21-33, and culls $12-20. Fredericksburg ewes weighing 100-150 pounds were $40-50, cull 90-110 pounds $1834. Billings had good ewes for $26-31, utility $18-26 and culls $12. Hamilton slaughter ewes were $40-60. Sioux Falls good ewes were $26-29, good $3136.50. In Virginia good and choice were $34-40.25, utility $33.50 and culls $33.25. According to a piece in the January issue of Sheep Industry News, New Zealander Emily Welch, 27, is the new women’s record holder for shearing sheep ... 648 of them in nine hours. Livestock Weekly ® VOL. 60 - NO. 1 SAN ANGELO, TEXAS THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 2008 LIVESTOCKWEEKLY.COM $30 PER YEAR A FULL SPECTRUM of income sources can be seen in this photo taken near Snyder. In the foreground are cattle grazing pasture that is supplemented when necessary with underground water applied through the pivot irrigation system in the midground. And visible at a distance are wind tur107.75 f.o.b.; for March 520 steers to weigh 750 at $110.10 f.o.b., bines harvesting energy from the air. All that’s missing is a 260 steers to weigh 800 at pumpjack or two. $106.35 f.o.b., 525 heifers to weigh 650 at $105 delivered, and 490 heifers to weigh 700 at $103 delivered; for February 130 steers to weigh 750 at $108.35 f.o.b., 325 steers to weigh 800 at $106.35 f.o.b., Plains direct fed cattle trade Amarillo’s 1803 head were and 700 heifers to weigh 700 had yet to get untracked at mid- steady. Elsewhere in the state, at $103.40 delivered; for cur- week after a strong performance Three Rivers called no trend on rent delivery 140 steers weigh- last week that saw prices jump $3 1387 head and Industry was ing 700 at $103 f.o.b., 350 to $95 with tops to $95.50. mum on 1009. steers weighing 750 at $99 At presstime, feedlots were Oklahoma City receipts f.o.b., 122 steers weighing 630 asking $96-97 and packers had came to 12,865 head, the marat $110.20 delivered, and 65 not made a solid bid. ket $2-5 lower than three weeks steers weighing 750 at $106 The Texas Cattle Feeders As- ago on feeder weights, steady delivered, also 119 heifers sociation counted 38,653 head to $2 lower on steer calves and weighing 595 at $114.20 deliv- on area showlists, up 1530 $3-5 lower on heifer calves. Best ered and 225 heifers weighing head. Captives were up 2437 400-450 pound steer calves 650 at $102-103.50 delivered. at 37,497 head. brought $123-131; 450-500 Northwest direct feeder Direct trade elsewhere was pounds $122-129.50; 500-550 cattle trade as confirmed by limited to a couple of thousand pounds $115-125.50; 550-600 USDA totaled 1650 head, all head in Iowa and Nebraska at pounds $109.75-116.50; 600-650 f.o.b. basis for current delivery, $92 live and anywhere from pounds $99-105, a few calves $99including 200 medium and $147 to $151 dressed. Midwest 105; 650-700 pounds $102large 1-2 steers weighing 575 auctions paid $86-89, strictly 105.50; 700-750 pounds $99.50pounds at $105, 200 similar Choice to as much as $93.50. 102.25; 750-800 pounds $99steers weighing 651-670 at Stocker and feeder cattle 102.25; and 800-850 pounds $98$101-102, 400 steers weighing price trends were sketchy as 102. 751-780 at $99-100, 75 steers trading resumed after the long weighing 800 at $98, and 150 holiday hiatus. Many market FUTURES TRADE steers weighing 900 at $98, reporters declined to call a also 200 heifers weighing 575 trend. Among those who did, a CHICAGO — (USDA) — at $98, 200 heifers weighing few were higher but others Beef futures trading at the close 651-685 at $96-97, 75 heifers found prices generally lower on Tuesday and Wednesday on weighing 750 at $94, and 150 than at the last comparable test. the Chicago Mercantile ExJoplin, Mo. offered 9350 change: heifers weighing 840 at $94. head and found feeder weights Wed. Tue. New Mexico direct feeder steady with three weeks ago, Feb. 93.28 94.08 cattle trade by USDA count steer calves steady to $2 higher Apr. 95.88 96.83 came to 2200 head, all f.o.b. and heifer calves steady to $2 June 93.95 94.43 basis for February delivery, in- lower. A roundup of four Aug. 96.48 96.08 cluding 1470 medium and large Florida auctions with 3687 Oct. 100.65 100.28 No. 1 steers to weigh 725 head between them was $1-2 Dec. 101.10 101.05 pounds at $107.40 and 700 higher on steers and unevenly Feb. 102.25 102.15 heifer mates to weigh 700 at steady on heifers. La Junta, Apr. 101.30 101.00 $101.40. June 98.80 98.95 Colo. called no trend on 2617 Feeder Cattle USDA reports 850 head of head offered in active trading. Jan. 100.15 100.23 In Texas, Tulia sold 3444 feeder cattle selling direct off Mar. 103.40 103.13 Oklahoma range, all f.o.b. ba- head at prices mostly $2-5 Apr. 106.53 106.33 sis, including 525 medium and lower than three weeks ago. May 108.70 108.30 With 2042 head on offer, Gralarge No. 1 heifers to weigh Aug. 109.98 109.38 650 pounds at $102 for March ham was $2-3 lower on weights Sept. 109.50 109.10 delivery and 325 similar steers under 500 pounds and steady Oct. 109.50 109.10 weighing 775 at $105.85 for to $2 lower on heavier kinds. Nov. 109.55 109.05 Compared to three weeks ago, current delivery. Range Sales USDA reports 22,100 head of feeder cattle selling direct off Texas range, including 80 medium and large No. 1 steers to weigh 700 pounds at $111 f.o.b. for July delivery, also 70 heifer mates to weigh 700 at $104; for April 80 similar steers to weigh 600 at $114 f.o.b., 130 steers to weigh 800 at $110.45 delivered, and 160 heifers to weigh 600 at $107.25- Slaughter Meat Goat Prices Mixed In Post-Holiday Sales Slaughter meat goat prices were mixed in recent trading as markets resumed following the holidays. Goldthwaite was steady to firm and Junction steady, but San Angelo quoted a weaker undertone and Fredericksburg was $5-7 lower. On the other side of the ledger, New Holland, Pennsylvania called prices $5-10 higher per head. Goat meat imports for the week ending November 24 totaled 29 metric tons, all from Australia. Goat slaughter under federal inspection for the week ending December 22 totaled 18,725 head. At Goldthwaite on Friday, selection 1 kids weighing 4060 pounds brought $114-125 and 60-80 pounds $113-123, selection 2 40-60 pounds $104110 and 60-80 pounds $100109. Selection 1 nannies 80125 pounds were $33-45, billies 90-175 pounds $80-87 and muttons 90-110 pounds $100110, selection 2 muttons 100125 pounds $86-88. New Holland, Penn., selling by the head Monday, quoted selection 1 kids of 40-60 pounds $62-88, 60-80 pounds $76-102, 80-100 pounds $86110, and 100-120 pounds $102-120; selection 2 20-40 pounds were $34-48, 40-60 pounds $46-74, 60-80 pounds $60-90, and 80-100 pounds $82-94. Selection 1 nannies 80130 pounds made $76-92 and 130-180 pounds $70-86, selection 2 50-80 pounds $50-72, 80-130 pounds $52-78 and 130-180 pounds $78; selection 1 billies 100-150 pounds were $110-166 and 150-250 pounds $130-192, selection 2 100-150 pounds $96-152 and 150-250 pounds $150. Junction on Monday sold fat kids for $110-120, small kids $100-122 and thin kids $92105. Fat nannies were $38-46, fat muttons and billies $78-104 and straight muttons $90-110. Also on Monday, Hamilton kids weighing 20-40 pounds earned $90-110, 40-70 pounds $90-110 and 70 pounds and up $90-115. Thin nannies were $15-30 per head, medium $2540 and fleshy $45-80, billies $70-100. Fredericksburg on Tuesday reported selection 1 40-60 pound kids at $112-123 and 60-80 pounds $112-121, selection 2 40-60 pounds $106-110 and 60-80 pounds $108-111. Selection 1 nannies 80-130 pounds were $35-45, billies 100200 pounds $80-88 and muttons 85-125 pounds $112-118. At San Angelo Tuesday, selection 1 kids weighing 25-40 pounds brought $105-111, 4080 pounds $105-115 and 80100 pounds $100-112, selection 1-2 25-40 pounds $100110, 40-80 pounds $95-105 and 80-100 pounds $95-105. Selection 1-2 nannies 80-130 pounds were $33-47, 130-195 pounds $37-47 and thin 70-115 pounds $25-34, selection 1-2 billies 80-100 pounds $95-105, 100-150 pounds $80-95 and 150-250 pounds $75-94. Plains Fed Cattle Trade Quiet After Strong Showing Last Week Page 2 Livestock Weekly January 10, 2008 400-500 pounds $104-112, 500-600 pounds $94-107, 600Slaughter sheep: lambs, 700 pounds $90-96, 700-800 Angelo Sheep Weak, choice 2-3 shorn and wooled pounds $86-94.50. Feeder Cattle Firm 90-140 pounds $80-93, good Heifers: medium and large SAN ANGELO — (USDA) and choice 1-2 40-90 pounds No. 1 500-600 pounds $102— No recent sheep or goat $90-105, 90-105 pounds $95- 106; medium and large No. 1market trends were available 103, hair lambs 40-60 pounds 2 400-500 pounds $100-112, due to holiday closings, but a $90-100, 60-90 pounds $95- 500-600 pounds $95-102.50, weaker undertone was noted 112; ewes, good 2-3 $33-44, 600-700 pounds $95-99; meon slaughter lambs, feeder utility and good 1-3 $44-55, dium and large No. 2 300-400 lambs and all classes of goats, utility 1-2 $33-44, cull and util- pounds $105-110, 400-500 a higher undertone on slaugh- ity 1-2 $21-33, cull 1 $12-20; pounds $91-100, 500-700 pounds ter ewes. Sheep and goat re- slaughter bucks $20-48. $85-95. ceipts totaled 8602 head. Replacement goats: nannies, Slaughter cows: breakers Feeder steers and heifers selection 1-2 60-115 pounds 75-80 percent lean 1300-1550 sold firm Thursday, slaughter $50-65. pounds $43-47, boners 80-85 cows firm, bulls $2-3 higher. Slaughter goats: kids, selec- percent 850-1550 pounds Receipts totaled 650 head. tion 1 25-40 pounds $105-111, $45.50-51, high dressing $53Replacement sheep: lambs, 40-80 pounds $105-120, 80- 55, lean 85-90 percent 800medium and large No. 1-2 50- 100 pounds $100-112; selec- 1100 pounds $43-45, 85-90 75 pounds $103-106, 80-90 tion 1-2 25-40 pounds $100- percent 700-900 pounds low pounds $100-101; medium and 110, 40-80 pounds $95-105, dressing $36-43; bulls, yield large No. 2 40-90 pounds $90- 80-100 pounds $95-105, selec- grade 1 1500-2100 pounds $60-65.50. 100. tion 2 40-80 pounds $80-95; Replacement cows: medium nannies, selection 1-2 80-130 and large No. 1-2 $880-910 per pounds $33-50, 130-195 head, medium and large No. 2 pounds $37-47, thin 70-115 $740-830, aged 560-660; stocker BITS•SPURS•CONCHOS•KNIVESand•GUNS pounds $25-34; billies, selec- and feeder cows, medium and Johny Weyerts, instructor, tion 1-2 80-100 pounds $95- large No. 1-2 middleaged cows furnishes GRS equipment 105, 100-150 pounds $80-95, 1000-1200 pounds $49.50-56 and tools during a one week 150-250 pounds $75-94. cwt. Steers: medium and large Representative sales: intensive course which he Sheep: Dean McMullan, teaches eleven times a year in No. 1-2 400-500 pounds $116120, 500-600 pounds $107.50- Iraan, 86 wooled lambs, 66 Alpine, Texas. Detailed info: 114, 600-700 pounds $100- pounds $106.50; Baker Farms, 1-800-687-2969 106; medium and large No. 2 Lubbock, 77 wooled lambs, 74 www.engravinginstruction.com 300-400 pounds $119-128, pounds $103; 11 wooled lambs, 66 pounds $107; E.H. Brosig, Paint Rock, 15 wooled lambs, 78 pounds $108; 11 wooled lambs, 65 pounds $112; Floyd Wilde, Garden Livestock Roundups A Specialty City, 20 wooled lambs, 71 pounds $104; Denton Farms, Winters, 73 wooled lambs, 103 pounds $100; 16 wooled lambs, 82 pounds $106; 146 ewes, 137 pounds $55; 33 Mackey McEntire ewes, 149 pounds $51.50. Third Generation Rancher — Over 15 Years Experience Goats: Schwartz Ranch, (325) 378-2051 Sterling City, Texas Garden City, 22 goats, 42 LEARN TO ENGRAVE Concho Aviation H H Producers Livestock Auction Co. HH pounds $113; Slaughter Ranch, Sheffield, 32 goats, 48 pounds $115; 74 goats, 41 pounds $113; Wayne Dusek, San Angelo, 21 goats, 65 pounds $105; Brent Heinze, Miles, 25 goats, 51 pounds $115; Bradshaw Ranch, Paint Rock, 63 goats, 94 pounds $109. Cattle: Don Young, Carlsbad, three steers, 305 pounds $128; Hugh Edmondson, Ballinger, two steers, 430 pounds $120; Lisa Brown, Menard, four steers, 510 pounds $114; Loyd Mitchell, Rocksprings, five steers, 585 pounds $110.50; four heifers, 510 pounds $105.50; Y Bar Ranch, Big Spring, five steers, 603 pounds $108; Darrell York, Fort Davis, two heifers, 410 pounds $112; two cows, 1095 pounds $55; Billy Reynolds, Eldorado, seven heifers, 569 pounds $102.50; Runge Ranch, McKavett, four heifers, 483 pounds $109; two heifers, 643 pounds $96; Moore’s Ranch, Eldorado, seven cows, 1192 pounds $56; bull, 1770 pounds $64; Hill Cattle Co., Andrews, cow, 1160 pounds $53. Pleasanton Cattle Receipts 876 Head PLEASANTON — (TDAJan. 8) — No market trends were available due to holiday closings. Receipts totaled 876 head. Steers: medium and large No. 1 200-300 pounds $122.50125, 300-400 pounds $102-111, 400-500 pounds $103-111, 500600 pounds $96-105, 600-700 pounds $91-102, few 700-800 pounds $88-89; medium and large No. 2 300-400 pounds $101-111, 400-500 pounds $105-115, 500600 pounds $101-109, yearlings $93, 600-700 pounds $94-101, calves $86-87, few 700-800 pounds $78-82; feeder bulls, medium and large No. 2-3 700875 pounds $66-80. Heifers: medium and large Livestock Weekly® (ISSN 0162-5057), USPS 676-280 San Angelo, Texas 325/949-4611 800/284-5268 325/949-4614 FAX www.livestockweekly.com Special Cow Sale Published weekly except for the weeks of Christmas and New Year. Publisher reserves the right to refuse any and all advertising. Subscription Rate — $30/Year Thursday, FEBRUARY14 Call now on your pairs, bred cows and heifers, replacement quality open heifers or breeding bulls. Established February 10, 1949 By Stanley R. Frank 1916-1994 Editor: Steve Kelton Office Manager: Paula Rankin Publisher: Robert S. Frank Periodicals Postage Paid San Angelo, Texas 76902 Spring Cow Sales Postmaster: Please Send Address Changes To: Livestock Weekly® P. O. Box 3306 San Angelo, Texas 76902 Street Address: 2601 Sherwood Way San Angelo, Texas 76901 Thursday, MARCH 13 Thursday, APRIL 17 Texas' Largest Cattle Market WE For BUYPrivate AND SELL SHEEP DAILY Treaty Sales H H H H BENNY COX Contact:Weekly Sales — Regular Benny — 325/653-3371 Office • 325/234-4277 Mobile SheepCox • TUESDAY 9 a.m. — WEDNESDAY (if necessary) Cattle • THURSDAY 9 a.m. — FRIDAY David Quam — 325/656-8506 Mobile(if necessary) Fredericksburg Sheep Steady, Goats Decline FREDERICKSBURG — (TDA-Jan. 8)— Stocker and feeder lambs were steady on a light test, slaughter lambs steady, slaughter goats $5-7 lower. Receipts totaled 2478 head. Replacement sheep: stock and feeder lambs, medium and large 1-2 few 66 pounds $115; stock wool ewes, medium and large No. 1-2 solidmouth 120-125 pounds $50; Dorper bucks 100140 pounds $79-94; Barbado bucks $100-250 per head. Slaughter sheep: lambs, choice and prime 2-3 90-110 pounds $96-107, good and choice 1-3 40-85 pounds $112129; ewes, utility 1-3 medium flesh 100-150 pounds $40-50, thin and very thin cull 90-110 pounds $18-34; bucks 150-200 pounds $40-55. Replacement sheep: nannies, selection 1 80-130 pounds $4065; billies, selection 1 80-150 pounds $104-131. Slaughter goats: kids, selection 1 40-60 pounds $112-123, 60-80 pounds $112-124, selection 2 40-60 pounds $106-110, 60-80 pounds $108-111; nannies, selection 1 80-130 pounds $35-45; Angoras 80-100 pounds $27-36; billies 100-200 pounds $80-88, muttons, selection 1 85125 pounds $112-118. TULIA LIVESTOCK AUCTION TRAILER SALES TULIA, TEXAS Complete Line Of Ranch Trailers By Hughes Trailers • Canyon, Texas Ranch Tough — Made To Your Order — ON HAND — NEW 5x14 Bumper Pull — Hughes — DEMO NEW 5x16 Gooseneck — Hughes USED 6x32 Gooseneck — Hughes Barn: 806/995-4184 Mark Hargrave: 806/236-3021 Reporting AQUIFER DEPTH AND YIELD Geophysicist approved 1311 NORTH BELL SAN ANGELO, TEXAS 325/653-3371 CHARLEY CHRISTENSEN, General Manager JODY FREY STAN NEWSOM No. 1 few 300-400 pounds $97101, 400-500 pounds $88-98, 500-600 pounds $90-98, yearlings $86-89, 600-700 pounds $80-91, few 700-800 pounds $83-94; medium and large No. 2 400-500 pounds $94-101, 500-600 pounds $86-91, 600-700 pounds $82-90, 700-800 pounds $77-80; replacement heifers, medium and large No. 3 760 pounds $114. Slaughter cows: breakers 75-80 percent lean 1000-1600 pounds $44-47, low dressing $38, boners 80-85 percent 1200-1600 pounds $47.50-52, low dressing $54-55, lean 8590 percent 1200-1600 pounds $47-49.50, high dressing $50, 8590 percent 1000-1200 pounds $43-44, high dressing $46-47, low dressing $39.50-40.50, 85-90 percent 800-1000 pounds $4043.50, high dressing $44.5045, low dressing $33-38, 8590 percent under 800 pounds $37.50, low dressing $27-30; bulls, yield grade 1-2 12551870 pounds $56-59, high dressing 1785-2265 pounds $59.50-64.50, low dressing 1020-1395 pounds $47-51.50. Replacement cows: medium and large No. 1-2 young cows 865-1350 pounds 3-7 months bred $61-80, middleaged to aged cows 865-1355 pounds 37 months bred $48-59; cowcalf pairs, medium and large No. 1-2 young to middleaged cows 1110 pounds with calves 100 pounds $790 per pair. Avoid a dry WELL, let us locate the WATER before you begin drilling! See our continually updated website: www.producersandcargile.com JOHN CARGILE “He got plumb embarrassed when the show judge asked him whether that steer would ever git big enough to wean!” Seismoelectric technology SERVING; residential clients, realtors, land developers, municipalities, well drillers, the agricultural community and engineering firms -Anyone in NEED of WATER- 1.866.740.6446 — 1.888.379.7091 Leading the industry since 2001 Testimonials online www.findwellwater.com January 10, 2008 ORDAN J Livestock Weekly Page 3 M Weekly Sales Held At 11 A.M. • Monday — Mason • Thursday — San Saba Cattle Auction Start Time @ 10:00 A.M. Over 2500 head Consigned JANUARY SPECIAL REPLACEMENT FEMALE SALE Saturday, JANUARY 26 @ 10:00 A.M. — San Saba Bred Cows, Pairs, Bred And open Heifers Will Be 0ffered Come see what keeps your neighbors coming back to Jordan Cattle Auction. Quality, uniformity and honesty in representation will show you why they do. We welcome you to join us and become another satisfied purchaser of quality replacement cattle. Plan now to attend. 35 fancy, open Premium Black Gold Brangus heifers, — one raising, not carrying any brands or earmarks, OCV, weight 725-825 pounds. This group is consigned by the McKinnerney Ranch which has been raising and selling some of the top Brangus heifers throughout the years — you won't find them much better than this group, will sort into uniform groups. 30 Angus heifers, weight 1100 pounds, long bred to proven, low birthweightAngus bulls, all OCV, very gentle, easy to handle — this is a good set of bigAngus heifers. 40 one raising set of Angus heifers (going back to Gardiner bloodlines), long bred to solid black ½ Angus, ½ Jersey bulls, all OCV, gentle, broke to cake — these heifers will make someone a good set of mamma cows. 30 Angus heifers, long bred to Jersey bulls for easy calving, all OCV — a good uniform set , broke to cake. 165 Angus cows along with a few baldies, three to five years old, long bred to Angus or Charolais bulls — this set is uniform, gentle and will come to cake. The baldies will be sorted from the group. You will be proud to take this group home — these good young cows are becoming more difficult to find. 25 yellow, red baldy, and Charolais /Angus cross cows, bred to Angus bulls for spring calving, four to five years old. 300 fancy, open Angus heifers, weight 675 to 725 pounds. These heifers, were all raised on three ranches and go back to Sitz New Design, Sitz Alliance, Traveler and Jennaway Angus genetics, weaned since October, OCV. The heifers will be sorted according to the ranch raising — you won't find them much better than these. 100 choice Angus cows, long bred to Angus bulls with a few calves possible by sale day, three to five years old, will come to feed — a good set of gentle, youngAngus cows. 40 big Brangus heifers, long bred to solid black Longhorn or low birthweight Angus bulls, weight 1200 pounds, will come to cake, very gentle — there could be a few calves on the ground. 60 Angus cows, long bred to Angus bulls, a few calves on the ground by sale day, three to five years old, very gentle. 35 Hereford heifers, long bred to low birthweight Angus bulls, OCV, weight 950 pounds, dehorned. 15 Angus and black whiteface pairs — with Angus calves at side, selling back open for your choice of bulls. 20 Angus and black whiteface heifers, medium to long bred to low birthweightAngus bulls, OCV, gentle. 16 Brangus heifers, bred to registered low birthweight Angus bulls to start calving in March, OCV, weight 10001050 pounds. 5 tigerstripe heifers, running with low birthweight registeredAngus bulls for approximately 60 days — selling as exposed. 20 open Brangus heifers, ready for the bull, weight around 800 pounds, OCV. 65 one raising set of black baldy and blacks with a few red baldies, long bred to low birthweight Express Ranch Angus bulls — (the bred heifers also go back to Express Ranch Angus genetics) — OCV, uniform, will come to cake, will be sorted into uniform groups. 13 Angus pairs — with calves at side by Angus bulls, three to four years old. 85 Angus cows, medium to long bred to Angus bulls, three to four years old with a few fives, pregnancy checked , sorted and shaped into uniform groups. 20 open Angus plus heifers, weight around 700 pounds plus, ready for the bulls, OCV, wormed, Lepto-Vibrio, and Bovi Shield. 7 first-calf Angus and black baldy pairs — with calves at side by Angus bulls, sell back open so that you can breed them to the bull of your choice. 40 Brangus heifers, long bred to either Brangus or Brangus/Jersey cross bulls, gentle, broke to cake. 30 Charolais heifers, long bred to registered Angus bulls (Circle A or Gardiner bulls), all one raising, OCV, weight around 1000 pounds. 20 Charolais cows, long bred to registered Angus bulls (Bradley or CircleAbulls), three to five years old. 29 Charolais cows, six to seven years old, long bred to Charolais bulls. 35 Angus and Brangus cows, long bred to Charolais or Angus bulls, three to five years old. 50Angus cows, long bred to Charolais orAngus bulls, three to five years old , will come to cake, easy to work. 35 Santa Gertrudis cows with 7 calves at side, balance will be long bred to Griswold Charolais bulls, solidmouth, year branded. 42 good Brangus or Brangus type cows with a few baldies, long bred to Angus bulls with a few calves on the ground by sale day, gentle — will be a good set of calf raisers. 18 Brangus or Angus heifers, selling open for bull of your choice, running on wheat for 60 days, OCV, weight 750 pounds — will sort according to kind. 7 Angus/Beefmaster cross heifers, weight 750 pounds — selling as open heifers, OCV, running on wheat for 60 days. 13 one raising set of Angus heifers, long bred to low birthweight Polled Herford bull whose calves average 60 pounds — heifers are OCV, have had Viro Shield 6 with VL5, 8-Way Black Leg, dewormed, gentle, will come to feed. 10 one raising set of Angus heifers, long bred to low birthweight Polled Herford bull whose calves average 60 pounds, OCV, have had a Viro Shield 6 with VL5, 8Way Black Leg, dewormed — easy to work. 34 Brangus and Brangus type cows with 20 calves on the ground by Angus or Charolais bulls, balance long bred the same way, three to five years old. 2 tigerstripe pairs — with Angus calves at side, three and four years old. 4 Charolais cross pairs — with Angus and Charolais calves at side, four to five years old, not been running back with bulls. 15 open Brangus heifers, weight 700-750 pounds, OCV, very gentle, will call anywhere. 75 Angus cows with a few black whiteface cows, three to six years old — approximately 25 Angus calves at side, balance medium to long bred to Angus bulls, gentle — will follow you anywhere. 45 red and red baldy cows, three to six years old — approximately 15Angus calves at side, balance medium to long bred to Angus bulls, will come to cake, easy to handle — will be shaped and sold in uniform groups. 15 Charolais cross cows, three to six years old, with a few calves at side, balance medium to long bred to Angus bulls — a good set of ranch cows. 8 Charolais cows, three to five years old with a few calves at side, balance long bred to Charolais orAngus bulls. 9 one raising, second-calf cows, 7 Angus and 2 black whiteface, long bred toAngus bull, young and gentle. 2 registered Angus pairs — with bull calves at side by Pinnacle which is one of the top sires in theAngus breed, six to seven years old, papers will be furnished. 11 Brangus and baldy heifers, open and ready for the bulls, OCV, four are baldies with the balance being black, gentle, come to feed. 15 Angus and black baldy cows, long bred to Angus bulls, three to five years old. 25 Charolais/Angus cross cows along with some red and yellow baldy cows, long bred to Angus bulls, three to five years old — will be sorted into uniform groups. 40Angus plus heifers, long bred to low birthweight Angus or Brangus bulls, OCV. 42 tigerstripe F1 cows, long bred to Dink Wilson Ranch Angus bulls, mostly five, six and seven years old (just in the prime of their life), all dehorned as heifer calves, will come to a horn and cake — this consignment will make someone a good set of calf raisers. 20 Angus heifers, long bred to solid black ½ Angus, ½ Jersey bulls, some babies could be at side by sale day. 10 black and black whiteface heifers, medium bred to black bulls. 50 tigerstripe cows, short to medium bred to Charolais bulls, recently had big calves pulled off of them in November, mostly six and seven years old, will be sorted into uniform groups, broke to cake and a horn. 10 black baldy (English) heifers, long bred toAngus bull. 14 home raised tigerstripe heifers, long bred to proven low birthweight RedAngus bulls, OCV, will call anywhere. 10 one raising set of tigerstripe heifers, shortbbred to proven low birthweight Red Angus bulls, home raised,easy to handle. 8 Angus plus heifers, short bred to low birthweight Red Angus bulls, OCV — will fit any herd. Ken Jordan • Willard Jordan — Owners and Operators Jeffrey Osbourn • Jody Osbourn • Al Johnson P.O. Box 158 San Saba, TX 76877 San Saba: 325/372-5159 H Mason: 325/347-6361 H www.jordancattle.com H info@jordancattle.com Page 4 Livestock Weekly January 10, 2008 chase of livestock in commerce, charge, demand or collect from the seller in the form of commission, yardage, or other service charge,” says the regulation. It was published Dec. 28 (1962) in the Federal Register and is to become efin a fective 60 days from that date. A P&S spokesman in Washington told this writer over the telephone that the new regulation was prompted especially by practices at various hog buying stations in the Cornbelt. Choice gleanings from 45- ers and make livestock traders It seems buyers at the stations have a habit of paying a certain price plus years of Unregistered fighting mad. The most recent regulation, for a farmer’s hogs, less certain Bull. The USDA’s Packers & Stock- called Section 201.98, prohib- “service charges” such as yardyards Division may be falling its livestock packers and deal- age, commission, etc. behind in its work since it has ers from charging sellers for The regulation says: “A become so much more active any “service” rendered in con- packer or livestock dealer who in recent years, but it’s doing a nection with their purchase. maintains his own yardage fagood job of enacting regula- “No packer or dealer shall, cilities to conduct buying options designed to help produc- in connection with the pur- erations does so for his own benefit, not for the benefit of producers. Charging a fee for 1ST ANNUAL such unperformed service is ... an unfair practice in violation of the P&S Act.” How the new regulation will Consign Or Register Now — premierinternetlivestockauction.com affect the average sheep and Unregistered Bull Hotel Lobby BULL, COW and BRED HEIFER SALE JANUARY 13-17 WESTERN LIVESTOCK AUCTION COMPANY 2203 East County Road 90 • Midland, Texas 432/570-0040 • Fax: 432/570-0242 SALES EVERY TUESDAY AT 11 A.M. Representative Sales From Tuesday, January 8: 24 black steers Lamesa, Texas 6 Charolais cross steers Goldsmith, Texas 2 black steers Midkiff, Texas 5 black steers Pecos, Texas 3 black steers Pecos, Texas 8 black heifers Van Horn, Texas 7 black heifers Monahans, Texas 8 black heifers Verhalen, Texas 5 black heifers Midland, Texas Packer Cows — $40.00 To $60.00 467 Pounds 325 Pounds 280 Pounds 400 Pounds 580 Pounds 360 Pounds 410 Pounds 640 Pounds 740 Pounds $122.00 113.00 139.00 128.50 105.00 115.00 109.00 93.00 87.00 Packer Bulls — $54.00 To $65.00 EARLY CONSIGNMENT Tuesday, JANUARY 15 Advance Consignment Includes: 100 weaned Angus steers and heifers, from Eunice,New Mexico. 1ST REPLACEMENT FEMALE SALE Tuesday, FEBRUARY 12 cattle dealer in the range country remains to be seen. However, the man in Washington said this: An operator of a stockyards facility or a packer buyer who goes out to the country and buys livestock at a certain price “less a commission” is violating the regulation. Thus, if you’re a packer or if you have a set of pens and you say to some old boy, “I’ll give you $18 less 25 cents commission,” you’ve had it if the P&S people catch you. Presumably you could send an independent commission man out to buy the stock for you, but you can’t do it yourself. Maybe you could sidle up to the seller and say, “I’ll give you $17.75 net,” and get away with it. But as any trader knows, “$18 less 25 cents commission” sounds better to some people than “$17.75 net.” This sort of thing is bound to make traders quiver with rage; or, to quote Roget’s Thesaurus on other synonyms for being hot under the collar: “storm, rave, rant, bluster, carry on, fume, stew, foam, boil at the mouth, breathe fire, stand on one’s hind legs, chafe, fret, burn, seethe, simmer, sizzle, smoke, smoulder, have a conniption ...” A man who’s gone to the trouble and expense of building his own pens and who now finds himself unable to buy livestock and pocket the standard commission is likely to do everything Roget mentions, plus using language Roget can’t publish. Maybe it won’t be so bad as it sounds. It depends on how it will be enforced. But if everybody is held strictly to the letter of the regulation, those hog buyers in the Cornbelt who brought it on will earn the sincere hatred of a host of sheep and cattle operators out west. However, far be it from me to be too critical of the Packers & Stockyards people. They’re for the producer, and I’m a producer, of sorts. Producers are in the majority, you see. Every once in a while I try grazing or feeding a little dab of steers. It looks to me like when I buy them, even from a good friend, I get hooked around something awful, and the same thing happens when I sell ‘em. Apparently friend- ship ceases when trading begins. Like other producers, I’m a simple-minded, incompetent, naive character who needs a guardian. The P&S stands between us producers and the unprincipled traders with whom we have to do business. Me, I’m looking forward to the time when I’ll have a P&S man with me when I go to buy Aussies, Kiwis Claim No Fear Of U.S. Beef’s Japan Return By Richard Smith TOKYO — Beef exporters in Australia and New Zealand are not afraid of the return of grain-fed U.S. beef to the Japanese market, while the 20month anti-BSE age limit makes Canada a small player. Last year’s Australian exports of 405,000 tons here was a historic high, from a normal of 280,000 to 300,000 tons a year. Australia exported 159,280 tons of grain-fed and 191,444 tons of grass–fed beef to Japan through November, a total of 350,724 tons. Australia is continuing to pursue Japan’s grain-fed beef market, but the country’s drouth is hampering efforts to increase grain-fed production, acknowledged the Japan deputy regional manager for Meat and Livestock Australia. “The drouth is obviously having a strong effect,” Travers Nicholas said. Feedlot capacity has expanded considerably, but grain prices, which rose to AU $500 a ton (US $439) from a normal of AU $230-$240 (US $202-$211), forced producers to reduce the number of cattle on feed, Nicholas explained. As Australians are now seeing the arrival of a “La Niña,” which would bring better than average rainfall, they expect a better harvest next year. “Healthy crops, healthy grain prices, are going to equal better grain-fed product into the feedlots,” Nicholas said. Japan’s banning of beef from the U.S. in December 2003 because of BSE caused a shortage here of grain-fed, marbled beef, Japan’s retail consumer favorite. Stepping into the void, Australia significantly shifted production to grain-fed beef. In production year 2006/2007, Australia produced 2.67 million grain-fed cattle, 570,000 more than in 2002/2003. New, Used and Rare Books Specializing In Texas/Southwest Request Our Monthly Catalog. 6 East Concho San Angelo, Texas 76903 E-mail: cactusbooks@suddenlinkmail.com Tues-Sat 10 a.m. - 5:30 p.m 325/659-3788 Expecting 1000 Head 100 Brangus with a few Angus replacement heifers, weight 650 pounds, ready for your bulls. 1ST STOCKER/FEEDER SALE or sell a set of steers; he’ll tell me whether I’m being overcharged or underpaid. I won’t have to worry about pitting my feeble judgment against that of the professional shyster I’m trading with. Then, friends, we’ll have a good, healthy, honest, sound market. Let the good times roll! —(S.F. 01/10/63) “The increase is 27 percent, which was almost solely to provide additional product to Japan, and to a degree the (South) Korean market,” Nicholas said. “The 200-day and 300-day (feedlot time) product is certainly meant for Japan.” As a result, Australia monopolized at one point 91 percent of the import market. “We still do not have the final results for 2007, however, we estimate Australia to now supply approximately 84 percent of the total import market,” Nicholas said. The fact that New Zealand grass-fed beef export volumes here trebled in the past four years shows the meat has secured a greater marketplace presence, explained Meat and Wool New Zealand’s Japan representative. “I think a lot of people who traditionally did not look to New Zealand as a viable supply option, now at least have New Zealand on their radar screen, if not actually buying the product,” John Hundleby said. Hundleby said New Zealand exported 38,158 tons of beef and offal to Japan in production year 2006-2007, a 10 percent reduction from the previous year’s 42,280 tons. Is U.S. beef pushing the New Zealand meat out? No, Hundleby said, the decline occurred primarily because of strong demand in other markets. South Korea, at certain times in the past year, provided strong demand and was prepared to pay higher prices than the Japanese market. “At certain times of the year, product that could have conceivably come here was being sold to (South) Korea,” Hundleby said. High exchange rates haven’t helped. “In the Japanese market, there is a great reluctance on the part of end users to increase prices,” Hundleby said. Canada faces the same problem, as its strengthening loonie, which even rises over the U.S. buck, makes it difficult for Canadian beef to compete here. PRAIRIE DOG & GOPHER BAIT Tuesday, APRIL 1 Over 1000 Head Consigned 600 Angus sired calves, weight 350-600 pounds. 350 Brangus steers and heifers, weight 700 pounds POISON WHEAT PECOS, TEXAS PENS Four Miles North Of Interstate 10 Off Highway 17 North, ¼ Mile West On County Road 331 Contact: Dossie Cribbs — 432/664-2526 Open Mondays By Appointment. Pick Up Also Available AD 311 COUNTY RO BALMORHEA, TEXAS HIGHWAY 17 • NEW RECEIVING STATION • INTERSTATE 10 TRUCK STOP Non-Restricted Use FORT STOCKTON, TEXAS • RECEIVING STATIONS • OPEN MONDAY PRIOR TO SALE • FORT STOCKTON, TEXAS Sid Wilson — 432/553-2620 • Merrell Daggett — 432/290-2395 Mobile Check Us On The Website: www.wlauction.com Registered For Use In TX, KS, CO, NE, WY 9606 Highway 87 Lubbock, Texas 806/748-9000 866/748-9001 AVAILABLE AT: PRO CHEM SALES 900 S. Ross Street Amarillo, Texas 806/372-3424 866/886-1060 As Canadian cattle in the proper 20-month and younger age bracket is limited, only 3785 tons (1864 tons chilled and 1921 tons frozen) of Canadian beef came in last year through October. With such modest volumes, no way can Canada supply bigcity supermarket chains, so the Canadian Beef Export Federation is concentrating its efforts on regional, smallerscale chain stores. “Now, we are knocking at the door of supermarket people one by one,” CBEF Japan marketing manager Shoji Nomura said. Far from fearing the competition from U.S. beef, Australian and New Zealand exporters to Japan are welcoming the meat’s return. “The more confidence people in this market have in beef again, the more everybody will benefit from it, including the domestic product,” MLA’s Nicholas said. Edinburg Sells 582 Head Of Cattle EDINBURG — (TDA-Jan. 5) — No market trends were available due to holiday closings. Receipts totaled 582 head. Steers: medium and large No. 2 200-300 pounds $110-120, 300-400 pounds $100-109, 400500 pounds $90-100, 500-600 pounds $88-95, 600-700 pounds $82-87, 700-800 pounds $72-82. Heifers: medium and large No. 2 200-300 pounds $110117, 300-400 pounds $100110, 400-500 pounds $87-97, 500-600 pounds $83-88, 600700 pounds $75-85. Slaughter cows: breakers 1000-1200 pounds $51-54.50, boners 1000-1600 pounds $5155, high dressing $57-58.50, low dressing $41.50-46.50, lean 12001600 pounds $43.50-44, 10001200 pounds $44-48, high dressing $48, low dressing $39.50-43; bulls, yield grade 1-2 1790-2235 pounds $61-65.50, low dressing 1205-1285 pounds $55-55. Replacement cows: medium and large No. 1-2 young to middleaged cows 1005-1225 pounds 3-7 months bred $6472.50, aged cows 945-1160 pounds 2-5 months bred $51-54; cow-calf pairs, medium and large No. 1-2 young to middleaged cows 1265-1355 pounds with calves 100-200 pounds $800850 per pair, aged cows 9201100 pounds with calves 100150 pounds $490-790. BAXTER much deeper level. One man, one horse, one bovine. We know how it feels, how hard it is, and how good the contestants have to be to get there. They represent the best of what we stand for, for all the world COMMON SENSE to see. Sometimes it sends chills down my spine. they’ve got on the line. Man Víva Las Vegas! touches beast, leather touches hair, silver touches hide. The Three Rivers Sells noise and lights, the fireworks and carnival atmosphere fade 1387 Head Of Cattle into the rafters as we, in our THREE RIVERS — (TDAminds, nod our head, throw our Jan. 7) — No market trends rope, rock and fire, turn the were available due to holiday barrel, take our dallies and land closings. Receipts totaled 1387 on our feet right there beside head. them...to the applause of the Steers: medium and large adoring crowd. That’s...what No. 1 few 200-300 pounds $130145, 300-400 pounds $115brings us back. That and the remembrance 122.50, 400-500 pounds $107of our youthful attempts, of 119, 500-600 pounds $97-109, horses we’ve known, of friends 600-700 pounds $92-102, 700we’ve rode with. We see Billy 800 pounds $82-89, few 800-900 Etbauer, our Mickey Mantle, pounds $73-82; medium and large Walt Woodward, our Nolan No. 2 few 200-300 pounds $116Ryan, Trevor Brazile, our Ti- 119, 300-400 pounds $108-117, ger Woods, and Taos Muncy, 400-500 pounds $103-115, 500600 pounds $92-101, yearlings our LaBron James. We support rodeo because it $85-89, 600-700 pounds $94-101, is ours, no matter how it 700-800 pounds $73-77. Heifers: medium and large changes. If it takes Las Vegas to make it a major sport, we No. 1 300-400 pounds $103105, 400-500 pounds $92-99, welcome it, glitz and all. But we gray-haired fans 500-600 pounds $92-98, 600from America’s Outback, 700 pounds $89-92; medium where we still punch cows and and large No. 2 400-500 team rope on Thursday night, pounds $100-103, 500-600 appreciate the animals and pounds $91-96, yearlings $82contestants at the NFR on a 86, 600-700 pounds $82-86. BLACK ON THE EDGE OF Hunter S. Thompson, in his book “Fear And Loathing in Las Vegas,” said, “Circus, Circus (a big casino in Las Vegas) is what the world would be like if the Third Reich had won!” Las Vegas is the equivalent of endlessly switching the cable channel on your television anytime between midnight and 2 a.m.! Las Vegas has changed rodeo. It has been a great host to the National Rodeo Finals since 1985, literally launching rodeo into orbit somewhere between Haley’s Comet and Dancing with the Stars! It has also drug us middleaged and Social Security veterans, who have the most money to spend on Dodge pickups and fancy Justin boots and make up the vast majority of repeat NFR ticket buyers, into the whirlwind world of show business. Each performance at the NFR begins like the 4th of July and roars non-stop, leaving the audience spellbound, breathless and deaf. When it is over you feel like you’ve ridden or roped every wild domestic animal that ran, circled or crashed into the arena! It exhausts you. Watching rodeo is not like watching baseball or golf. There are no pensive, thoughtful moments as the steer wrestler ponders the angle of the horns. There are no no-hitters, no left fielders dozing off. Rodeo is more like hockey played with hambones and a whale bladder! Or tennis played with an orchestra and paint gun balls! But the umbilicus, the lifeline that holds baby boomers and seniors to the sport and gets them through the roller coaster hyperspace of the Thomas and Mack Arena, is the intimate moment we watch when each competitor puts all M M AUCTION M M Saturday, JANUARY 12 Llano, Texas Sale Time: 10 a.m. Location: Duncan Auctioneer’s Yard Highway 16 North — Llano, Texas Information Call: 325/247-5281 Website: www.auctionpeek.com Selling the following for Llano County, Llano National Bank, area contractors and others: Cat 955K crawler loader; Cat D6 dozer; International-Drott 150 crawler loader; JD 310D backhoe; Case 1845C skid loader; Cat DW20 pad foot roller; Bomag pad foot roller; Wacker double drum roller; scissor lift; I-R 250 air compressor; skid loader attachments; truck tractors; dump trucks; asphalt trucks; water tanks and flatbeds for trucks; storage van; assorted gooseneck equipment and stock trailers; horse trailers; lots of utility trailers; a large selection of late model pickups and cars including a classic 1956 Ford pickup; farm tractors and implements; squeeze chute; manure spreader; batwing shredder; portable panels; pipe; creep feeders; cube feeders; round bale haulers; antique horse drawn equipment; motorhome; travel trailers; boats; golf carts; four-wheelers; lots and lots of miscellaneous tools; mowers; pumps and generators; many more items too numerous to list! Auction conducted by: DUNCAN AUCTIONEERS Llano, Texas • Jimmy Decker, Lic. # 10410 January 10, 2008 Livestock Weekly Slaughter cows: breakers 75-80 percent lean 1000-1600 pounds $46-49, high dressing $52-54.50, low dressing $3842, boners 80-85 percent 1000-1600 pounds $46-53, lean 85-90 percent 1200-1600 pounds $48.50, high dressing $53.50, 85-90 percent 8001200 pounds $41-45.50, high dressing $48-48.50, low dressing $36.50-39, 85-90 percent under 800 pounds $36.50-38, high dressing $41.50, low dressing $33-34; bulls, yield grade 1-2 1415-1590 pounds $58-63.50, high dressing 1605-1620 pounds $64-65. Replacement cows: medium and large No. 1-2 young to middleaged cows 1170-1255 pounds 5-6 months bred $740870 per head, middle-aged to aged cows 910-970 pounds 58 months bred $450-580. Junction Sheep, Goat Price Trends Uneven JUNCTION — (Jan. 7) — Nannies sold weaker, other sheep and goat classes steady. Receipts totaled 1305 head. Sheep: No. 1 springer lambs ————— CLASSIFIED AD DEADLINE IS EVERY TUESDAY AT 10 A.M. 800/284-5268 325/949-4611 Page 5 50-70 pounds $102-115, 70-90 pounds $100-111; fat ewes $35-45, thin $12-28; bucks $28-40; babytooth ewes $6072, solidmouth $37-48. Angora goats: babytooth nannies $45-52; muttons $5070; shorn kids $105-114; slaughter nannies, shorn thin $17-27, fat $35-40. Meat goats: Spanish stocker nannies $60-80, fat nannies $38-46; fat muttons and billies $78-104, muttons $90-110; fat yearlings $105-115; fat Spanish kids $110-120, small kids $100-122, thin kids $92-105. Helping the Rancher Activate your siren from outside the truck. Up to 5 miles range. Call the cattle when you need to. $59.99 (Includes 1 free radio) 1-877-610-8671 cattlecallremote.com Great prices on walkietalkies and batteries. Page 6 Livestock Weekly January 10, 2008 case involves important issues of statutory construction (pertaining to Chapter 36 of the Texas Water Code), not the least of which is the meaning of historic use.” By Colleen Schreiber number of people who tried to The question before the AUSTIN – Oral arguments watch the oral arguments live court, Patterson told listeners, for what is touted to be the on the Internet was so great that is whether the district’s rules most important water case to it reportedly caused an over- with respect to transfer permits discriminate against Guitar and reach the Texas Supreme Court load of sorts in the system. since the 1999 Sipriano case The case merited enough at- other ranchers who do not have were heard recently. tention that oral arguments historic use. Guitar v. Hudspeth Co. were replayed in their entirety “Guitar argues that the UWCD No. 1 is the first case at the recent Texas Water Law district’s rules unlawfully proaddressing the powers of Institute Conference sponsored tect the existing and historic groundwater districts covered by the University of Texas use of groundwater for irrigation purposes, that it in fact by Chapter 36 of the Water School of Law. Code to rise through the courts, “This is a big case and a big grants the farmers a preference therefore much attention has fight over a minor aquifer that — to them an unlawful preferbeen paid to this case by essentially pits the farmers ence — to transfer and market groundwater districts through- against the ranchers,” re- water,” Patterson said. out the state and by state marked Third Court of Appeals The key issue before the policymakers as well. The judge Jan P. Patterson. “The Supreme Court appears to be whether when Chapter 36 authorizes protection of historical use, is referring to a volume of use or a particular purpose of use. The Hudspeth Co. UWCD P. O. Box 71 — Hamilton, Texas 76531 No. 1, referred to from here Office: 254/386-3185 • Fax: 254/386-3576 forward as “the water district” SHEEP/GOAT SALE MONDAY 10 A.M. • CATTLE SALES TUESDAY 12 NOON or “the district,” was created in 1955 primarily to protect the ALL SATURDAY SALES AT 11 A.M. Bone Spring-Victoria Peak Visit Our Website: www.hamcommco.com Aquifer. The Bone Spring Aquifer is one of two minor aquifers in Hudspeth County. Texas Supreme Court Hears Oral Arguments In Guitar Water Case HAMILTON COMMISSION CO. The battle centers around the small community of Dell Valley, a water-rich community in the middle of the desert in far West Texas. Prior to 1947 the Dell Valley area was primarily cattle ranching, but with development of irrigation in the 1950s it became a farming area. In 1990 the district adopted rules establishing a permit system whereby landowners had to acquire a permit before drilling, equipping or altering the size of a well. The rules also allowed landowners to apply for a certificate validating an existing well, regardless of when it was drilled, by providing information identifying the location of the well. Furthermore, the rules gave all landowners five acre-feet of water per acre per year regardless of the proposed use. However, the rules placed a strong limitation on the right to transfer groundwater out of the district. Beginning in 1997 the Texas legislature made sweeping changes to water regulation with the passage of Senate Bill 1 and later SB 2. Specifically, these bills made significant changes to Chapter 36 of the Water Code. The long and the short was that with the passage HILL FEED YARD M 20,000 Head Capacity M Corn Silage Based Ration M Competitive Ration Price M Professional Nutrition and Animal Health Care M Live and Grid Marketing Custom Cattle Feeders M Beef Safety and Quality Assurance ProgramSM M Resale Cattle Established 1962 M Feed Financing Dennis Hill — Manager HART, TEXAS M Cattle Financing P. O. Box 307 M Windbreak Fences and Mounds M In Area of Major Packers Phone: (806) 938-2156 FAX: (806) 938-2491 M Receive Cattle 24 Hours Visit Our Website At: www.hill-feedyard.com E-Mail: hillfeedyard@amaonline.com M Personal Attention Located Between Amarillo and Lubbock One Mile North of Hart on Highway M Retained Ownership Planning " A Job Worth Doing Is Worth Doing Right " of SB 2, some of the water district’s rules were no longer valid because they conflicted with the changes made to Chapter 36 with respect to transfer. In 2002 the district repealed those rules and established a new set. The new rules designated a historic use period from 1992 through 2002. Landowners who could prove use during that designated timeframe could apply for a validation permit. However, unlike the old rules, in which the amount potentially allocated depended on surface acreage, the new rules said that the amount the landowner was entitled to depended on whether or not and to what extent the land had been irrigated. The petitioner’s brief on the merits of the case explains this more clearly. “For every acre the landowner irrigated during that period (historic and existing use period) the rules allow him to withdraw as much as four acrefeet per year, and guarantee him an annual irrigation allotment of at least three acre-feet. By contrast, if a landowner did not irrigate this land, but instead used groundwater for any other non-exempt use, the amount of water he is entitled to produce is the maximum amount of water he beneficially used in any one year during the Existing and Historic Use Period.” Landowners who couldn’t show that they’d used groundwater during the historical period could apply for an operating permit. This permit is based on surface acreage, but as the petitioner’s brief points out, it is also dependent upon the level of the aquifer reaching a certain elevation. Furthermore, those who have validation permits not only have priority over operating permits, but they are also guaranteed at least three acre-feet regardless of the aquifer level. LIVESTOCK HANDLING EQUIPMENT Portable “OK Corral” Holds Between 80-100 Head Of Cows Sets Up In 10 Minutes Sort Cattle 3 Ways 5 Year Warranty On Animal Abuse Optional Panel Hangers and Horse Nose Gooseneck For Towing At Highway Speed Optional: Removable Towing Package For Pulling Squeeze Chute, Loading Chute, Etc. Portable Tub Tub, Twin Alley and Squeeze Chute In One Set-Up and Working In Minutes Tub Features “No Return” Latch For Safety 5-Year Warranty Against Animal Abuse Works Easily With “OK Corral” Alleys Are Adjustable In Width Full Size Squeeze Chute With All Standard Features Working Chutes Hydraulic Chutes Standard Features: — Double Squeeze Auction — Rumber Floor With Metal Cleats — Double Side Escape — Chest Rest — Options: Neck Extender and Palpation Cage WithFloor Loading Chutes Continuous Fencing — 12’, 14’ and 16’ Portable and Stationary — Rumber Floor Or Wood Floor W/Metal Cleats — Hinged Adjustable Legs and Moveable Hitch — Portable Units Can Carry 20 Portable Panels — 5-Year Warranty Against Animal Abuse For More Information Contact: ALEXANDER LIVESTOCK Lampasas, Texas 512/756-0593 • 512/966-0360 alexanderlivestock@earthlink.net Standard Features: — Waist Level Controls — Rumber Floor With Quieter Operation — Patented Neck Extender — 5-Year Warranty — Options: Gas Motor, Portable Attachment, Bull Package, Lay Over Option — Ideal For Holding Pens, Arenas, Fencing — 20’ Sections W/Slip Connectors For Easy Installation — Available In Round Or Square Tubing — Unpainted Or Painted (White, Red Or Brown) — Custom Color Also Available Come By And See Our Equipment Dealers For: At The Lampasas Cattle Auction TITAN WEST Come By And See Us At The Formerly San Antonio Livestock Show & Rodeo Linn Enterprises January 31 through February 17 The new rules also require anyone wishing to export water out of the district to obtain a transfer permit. To obtain a transfer permit, however, landowners must first have either a validation permit or an operating permit. In addition, the amount of water that can be exported is linked to the amount authorized in the operating permit or validation permit. Therefore the rules heavily favor the validation permit holder because, as the petition’s brief states, the validation permit holder “is entitled to a transfer permit to sell as much as 2.8 acre-feet of that groundwater per year (the maximum amount that may be transferred is 70 percent of the guaranteed four acre-feet). By contrast, land that was not irrigated receives no guaranteed allocation if the average water elevation of the Aquifer does not exceed the threshold value of 3580 feet.” Guitar owns more than 38,000 acres. The family traditionally has been involved in ranching, not farming. Therefore their historic use during the defined period was minimal. Several of the amicus briefs filed on their behalf contend that they were conserving the water, and because of that they are now being penalized by the district’s rules. Guitar applied for permits under the district’s old rules and was granted the right to transfer 162 acre-feet per year. However, three other applicants, Cimarron, CLM, RBB and Triple B, all farming operations owning far less acreage than Guitar, were collectively given the right to transfer 38,057.23 acre-feet of water per year, more than 60 percent of all the annual available groundwater as defined by the district. The district determined that only 63,000 acrefeet of water available from the aquifer could be used annually, either for consumptive use or for transfer outside the district. Guitar filed four lawsuits against the district which were consolidated. The first challenged the rules; the other three were appeals of permit decisions of the district under the new rules. The trial court upheld the validity of the district’s rules but denied the district’s request for attorney fees and litigation expenses; the court upheld the validation and transfer permits the district issued to Cimarron, CLM and RBB and upheld the district’s action on Guitar’s permit applications, but orWin the brush war with TREE TERMINATOR • 3 models cut 20”, 12” and 5” trees in one bite • Hitches to fit most tractors and skid steer loaders • Built to last with a 24 month warranty • Swivel hitch, sprayer and grapple options For a free color brochure call or visit our website: (417) 458-4350 www.treeterminator.com Grace Manufacturing • Plato, MO dered the district to refund certain administrative deposits to Guitar. Finally, the court upheld the validation and transfer permits the district issued to Triple B. Guitar appealed. Again the district prevailed. In a unanimous published opinion, the court of appeals upheld the validity of the district’s rules. Guitar filed a petition for review before the Texas Supreme Court. That review was granted. In oral arguments before the Texas Supreme Court, Guitar’s attorney, Russ Johnson, told the court repeatedly that the case is not about challenging the authority of the legislature or the provisions within Chapter 36. Nor is it about individual water districts’ right to protect and preserve historic use. “This case is not about undoing the groundwater regulatory framework that the legislature has provided in SB 1, 2 and 3. In fact, it is just the opposite,” Johnson told the court. “This case represents an opportunity for the court to advise groundwater districts of the extent of the authority and the limits on that authority, and in this case the specific limit on the authority to protect or preserve historic use.” Guitar also charges that the water district’s rules violate the equal protection clause with their specific provisions allow- ing the conversion of preserved historic use to a new use of transfer when every other new user is treated differently. “Chapter 36.122(q) says that a district can’t adopt a rule that says if you want to export you only get one acre-foot but if you want to use it in-district you get two or three acre-feet,” Johnson told the court. “They cannot make a distinction in terms of a new application based on where the water is going to go.” In his opening remarks, Renea Hicks, attorney for the water district, argued that Guitar is in fact challenging the structure set up in Chapter 36 by the legislature. “When you look behind what I consider the impenetrable statutory argument, this case really asks the court whether it meant what it said in 1999 in Sipriano.” In Sipriano the court upheld the rule of capture. Justice Enoch delivered the opinion for a unanimous court. Justice Hecht filed a concurring opinion, in which Justice O’Neill joined. Enoch wrote that “Sipriano presents compelling reasons for groundwater use to be regulated. But unlike in East, any modification of the common law would have to be guided and constrained by constitutional and statutory considerations. Given the Legislature’s recent efforts to regulate groundwater, we are not persuaded that it is appropriate today for this Court to insert itself into the regulatory mix by substituting the rule of reasonable use for the current rule of capture.” In saying that the Guitar case is really about Sipriano, Hicks was really pointing to the final paragraph of the opinion in which Enoch refers to the legislature’s recent efforts to regulate groundwater. Hicks argued that the district’s rules follow Chapter 36 precisely in terms of recognizing historic use. Giving preference to those with historic use, he said, is a way to recognize those who have “invested in the community. “This is in the desert. We have to have some basis for allocating this water. So we said if you produced water — pumped it up and used it, it doesn’t matter how — it just so happens here it’s mainly agriculture irrigation. If you used it in the defined period, you get a permit to produce it in the future essentially keyed to what you used before — four acre-feet per acre.” “There’s nothing wrong with protecting the farmer’s investment in farming,” John-son LAND CLEARING and RAKING Getting To The Root Of Your Problem BRUSH MANAGEMENT Johnny Trulock 325/737-1061 Home 325/338-2544 Cell 2861 N CR 412 Loraine, TX 79532 countered. “What is wrong is granting him the exclusive right to protect a resource that is shared by everybody.” During oral arguments the justices seemed to focus on a couple of key points, one being this definition of “use.” Before the Guitars’ attorney could even finish his opening line, Justice David Medina asked for an explanation of “use.” Johnson responded that “use” is used throughout Chapter 36 in the context of both the type — to what use does one put the water — and also the amount of use. Johnson commented that the Chapter 36.116(b) of the Water Code clearly gives groundwater districts the power to exempt existing or historic use. However, pointing to 36.113(e), Johnson insisted that in making changes to SB 2 the legislature clearly intended that when a permit holder changes its use or changes the character of the protected use, it is to be considered a new use. Hicks argued that “use” means an amount, not a purpose of use or kind of use. Justice Harriett O’Neill, however, pointed to another January 10, 2008 provision of Chapter 36 which basically says specific to transfer of water out of a district that all users must be treated the same. “We treat users the same,” Hicks assured. “We have said that if you were an in-district user that was an irrigator, which is nearly everyone out there, you essentially get to use up to 70 percent of the water that you pump when irrigating crops. “To treat exporters the same as in-district users we say you have to produce, that’s natural. Then if you want an export permit you can export 70 percent of what you can produce, which is equivalent to the consumption that you used if you engaged in and produced it inside the district,” he explained. To which Justice O’Neill responded: “I understand the rules, but this does sort of create a franchise for prior users to use water in a different way.” Justice Nathan Hecht offered a similar comment. “The troubling thing about it is that transfer was not a historic use,” Hecht said. Guaranteed Best Prices In The Metroplex! Water, Wind and Rodent Proof PICK UP & DELIVERY! Road Building and Grading Road Capping Earth Dams For Stock Tanks Recreation Erosion Control Flood Control C C C C TRIPLE C C CONCRETE B. B. 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The proceeds of the sale of these heifers is to boost the general operating and promotion account of the Texas Hereford Association. Bud Brainard Estate Swenson Land & Cattle Co. Since 1882 • Canadian Since 1882 • Stamford Ed Brainard Estate Scaling & Co. Since 1927 • Canadian Since 1891 • Henrietta Scharbauer Ranch LLC Gray Wynn Klein Ranch Since 1880 • Midland and Amarillo Henrietta McKnight Ranch Co. Kokernot 06 Ranch Ft. Davis Since 1895 • Ft. Davis W.T. Waggoner Ranches Bridwell Ranches Since 1850 • Vernon Est. 1929 • Wichita Falls Hicks was argumentative, countering again that “use” is not a “kind” of use. Then, as if to remind the attorneys whose courtroom it was, Justice O’Neill said, “Well, that’s what we’re here to decide.” “Well, it isn’t the only thing and it clearly is not a kind of use… if you look at the way the definitions are set up, it can’t possibly be a kind of use,” Hicks argued. “Historical means the amount used. If you look at 36.001(9) you can see that there is a clear distinction between use as an amount and the purpose of the use. It talks about use for a beneficial purpose and then it defines what the purposes are which are agricultural, municipal and so on, but it distinguishes use from purpose.” Hicks also pointed to a provision that deals with when a district is evaluating an application to move water out of a district. The old provision, he noted, said districts could look See Guitar Case Continued On Page 8 Permanent way to remove slack from your fenceline repairs in approx. ONE MINUTE on barb wire, electric fence, horse fence, or net wire. 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Rogers, Texas Polled Hereford Association 254/687-2898 • tphacattle@interlinkcc.com For a complete catalog visit www.texashereford.org Catalogs mailed by request only. Page 8 Livestock Weekly Guitar Case Continued From Page 7 at the amount and purpose of use. In SB 2, however, he reminded, the legislature changed that provision to say that a district can no longer look at purpose of use. “In 36.001(29), which was added in 2005, they specifically talk about use as an amount. It only makes sense if you talk about it as an amount, not the kind of use.” It was clear that O’Neill wasn’t the only justice who had expressed concerns about the impartiality of the district’s rules. “It appears to me that the way the scheme is set up now is that it doesn’t give all landowners equal access to the January 10, 2008 a farmer, if he had a transfer permit, he could decide today water,” Justice Medina reto stop all farming and transmarked. “It actually seems to fer out of the district at least discriminate against ranchers 70 percent whereas a rancher, or big property owners.” there’s no way he’d be able to “It does not burden them do that under the district’s (big landowners),” Hicks responded. “You have to under- regulatory scheme.” stand. We are mandated to per- “That is exactly correct,” mit exports and we are man- Johnson responded. dated to conserve the aquifer. The continuation of his reThose are our two mandates, marks, however, once again but we are permitted to recog- focused on use. nize historic use. That is the “I think it points out the fallegislative permission, and it is lacy of the approach. There is dictated that if we permit we no preservation of the historic then can’t turn around and say use in that scenario, in fact, for export we are doing it dif- quite the contrary. Use is converted to an entirely new use, ferently.” Chief Justice Wallace and obviously, in this circumJefferson focused on this issue stance in particular, there are a of fairness as well during limited number of landowners Johnson’s opening statement. that benefit from the preserva“What you’re saying is that tion of that historic use,” he reminded. “That in essence represents an adjudication of that right for these farmers to make whatever use perpetually of the limited amount of water that the district has found is No more flat tires, even in the most hazardous operavailable within this aquifer.” ating environments. Tom's The chief justice came back Marine Sales and Service, offers flatproofing. Your to this point later when Hicks pneumatic tires will roll over was before the court. spikes, scrap metal, nails, rocks . . . you name it. 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Hecht interrupted Hicks, saying that the district was putting the cart before the horse. “They can’t get the water out under your scheme, so they can’t produce,” Hecht pointed out. “So basically, what it comes down to is they can raise cattle or cantaloupes, and the rancher, he doesn’t need as much water, so in a sense he is conserving water by not utilizing it.” Medina then stepped into the fray. “So let’s say I’m not trying to transfer water, I’m trying to get an operating permit, and that depends on the level of the aquifer, which for the conceivable future is probably really not going to let me use that water. Isn’t there something wrong with that as well, whereas he (someone with a validation permit) gets a guaranteed amount?” “There is only something wrong with it if there’s something wrong with the very context of being able to protect historic use,” Hicks insisted. The discussion looped back around to this definition of “use” again when Justice O’Neill countered, “Unless we interpret historic use to be a type of use.” “But then you would be ignoring what the statute says,” Hicks stressed. “You don’t go there. If you interpret it that way you’re forcing this district and other districts to treat indistrict users differently from exporters. You’ll force us to. “If we had done that, if we (the district) had passed a rule that said what the Guitars said it should be, that all the irrigators — the people that had validation permits — then everyone that had historic use would be saying you can’t treat people differently for purposes of export than you treat for purposes of production and you’re treating us differently because we have a historic use …” Again O’Neill refocused on how “use” is defined. “If it’s a new use, all you’re asking them to do is apply for an operation permit,” she pointed out. “But it’s not a new use because the use is not talking about the kind of use,” Hicks reiterated. “You cannot find in the statute any basis for concluding that.” “If there have not been ex- Circle T Arena — Hamilton, Texas DECEMBER 8 • JANUARY 26 FEBRUARY 23 MARCH 15 — Finals Four Man Team — $500 Entry FMI: 254/592-1653 or www.cowgirlville.com 4C Livestock Inc. DBA C LIVESTOCK INC. 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The market and how it was to work also came up a couple of times. There seemed to be some concern about how requiring the irrigators to apply for a transfer permit to export water out of the district would in essence force them to continue to farm to keep from losing their historic rights, and how in the end that might impact the water market. The appellant’s attorney argued that the market would wire around that without any problems. “The market would still operate. It would just operate fairly because everyone could participate,” Johnson insisted. “El Paso would pay those farmers not to farm so that more water would then be available for the district to allocate among all the landowners. They would have to pay enough farmers enough money to free up a sufficient amount of water for export to El Paso.” Justices Nathan Hecht and O’Neill seemed to concur. “It might be that a farmer might have to decide which was more remunerative — 3120 Memorial Blvd. Kerrville, Texas Complete Shop For Quality Service And Installation CM TRUCK BEDS 67$1'$5'%2/783%8,/',1*6 $OOEXLOGLQJVFDQEHFXVWRPL]HGZLWK\RXUFKRLFHRI ZDONGRRUVGDPSHUULGJHYHQWVZLQGRZVZLWKILQVUROOXSGRRUV ORZ(LQVXODWLRQ ¶[¶[¶ ¶[¶[¶ ¶[¶[¶ ¶[¶[¶ ¶[¶[¶ ¶[¶[¶ $06&267((/,6$)8//6(59,&(67((/3529,'(5 +2752//(' &2/'52//(' 3,&./('$1'2,/(' *$/9$1,=(' (/(&752*$/9$1,=(' *$/9$11($/ )ODWEDU$QJOHV7XELQJ&XOYHUWSLSH([SDQGHGPHWDO73RVWV 3LSH6KHHW3ODWH5HEDU&KDQQHO%HDPDQGRWKHUVWUXFWXUDOV 76&5$PHPEHUVZLOOUHFHLYHDGLVFRXQW )257:257+ 0$5%/()$//6 6$1$1721,2 ZZZDPVFRVWHHOFRP ³4XDOLW\6LQFH´ Shown With Gooseneck Trough Monday-Friday 7:30 A.M. - 5:30 P.M. 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At the tail end there was some discussion about the emphasis the legislature has put on local control specific to the design and implementation of a groundwater district’s rules. “The legislature went to all that trouble to give this authority to a local government. Why shouldn’t one leave it to the discretion of the local parties involved?” Justice Medina asked. “Because this district has exceeded the authority that the legislature granted to Chapter 36 districts, and it’s done so in a way that is discriminatory to landowners who have conserved their water rights and who in essence have come up with a scheme where a limited number of landowners benefit from a shared resource,” Johnson responded. Medina also asked how the board members are chosen for these local groundwater districts. “They are elected,” Johnson responded, “but keep in mind that you’re talking about a very small population centered around the irrigation community in Dell City. All the board members are farmers.” “That sounds like they have a lock,” Medina added. “I would have said that it looks like they could change this by election of board members.” “It’s difficult to do,” Johnson confirmed. A ruling is not expected any time soon. In fact, it could be as long as a year before the court issues an opinion. Imported Meat Total 16.6% Below Year Ago WASHINGTON — (USDA) — Imported meat for the week ending November 24 totaled 18,939 metric tons. This compares to 22,709 metric tons for the same period last year and is a 16.6 percent decrease. The following figures represent metric tons. Totals included the following: Argentina 176, Australia 5816, Brazil 883, Canada 8073, Chile 57, Costa Rica 97, Denmark 527, France three, Ireland 70, Israel 23, Italy 49, Japan two, Mexico 615, Netherlands 28, New Zealand 1305, Nicaragua 597, Northern Ireland 46, Poland 260, Spain 12, Sweden 27, and Uruguay 275. Fresh beef imports totaled 9639 with Australia 4936, Canada 2490, Chile 25, Costa Rica 97, Japan two, Mexico 248, New Zealand 1009, Nicaragua 597, and Uruguay 235. Processed beef totaled 1376, including Argentina with 176, Australia 19, Brazil 883, Canada 223, Mexico five, New Zealand 30, and Uruguay 40. Fresh pork totaled 4024 with Australia 20, Canada 3310, Chile 32, Denmark 468, Ireland 70, Mexico 24, Netherlands 28, Northern Ireland 46, and Sweden 27. Processed pork totaled 1281 with Canada 775, Denmark 59, Italy 49, Mexico 126, Poland 260, and Spain 12. Lamb totaled 963 with Australia 790 and New Zealand 173. Veal totaled 321 with Australia 21, Canada 207 and New Zealand 92. Goat meat imports totaled 29, all from Australia. No mutton imports were reported. Miscellaneous meats totaled 134, with Canada 106 and Mexico 28. Poultry totaled 1171 with Canada 961, France three, Israel 23, and Mexico 184. Red Meat Production 4.2% Above Last Year ST. JOSEPH, Mo. — (USDA) — Total red meat production under federal inspection last week was estimated at 826.8 million pounds, 11 percent higher than the previous week and 4.2 percent above last year. Cattle slaughter was estimated at 528,000 head compared to 483,000 the previous week and 526,000 for the same period last year, liveweights 1305 pounds, 1308 and 1298, respectively. Cumulative beef production was 333 million pounds, down 19 percent compared to the same period last year. Cumulative cattle slaughter was 426,000 head, 19 per- ©••©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•• ©• HOLSTEIN STEERS ©• ENTERPRISES ©• ©• ©• ©• is now selling © ©• CATTLE CO. © FENCING SUPPLIES ©•• STEPHENVILLE Stephenville, Texas ©• ©•• At Competitive Prices For All Your Fencing Needs ©• ©• Structural Pipe • T-Posts • Precut Steel Posts • Wire © ©• ©•• ©• Delivery Available In Most Areas TROY & CHERYL MOORE © ©• Terry M. Warren Wink, Texas 800/343-0565 254/968-4882 • © © 432/557-8826 Mobile 432/527-3027 Home ©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©• T W 200-800 Pounds, Direct From Erath County, Home of 80,000 Dairy Cows Wednesday's Stocker Sales — 1 P.M. Monday's Dairy Sales — 1 P.M. Third Monday's Special Dairy Heifer Sales — 1 P.M. J____ January 10, 2008 Livestock Weekly cent below last year’s 526,000 million head. Calf and veal slaughter was 11,000 head, 9000 and 15,000, liveweights 293 pounds, 290 and 323. Cumulative veal production was 1.4 million pounds, down 50 percent from a year ago, slaughter down 45 percent at 8000 head. Hog slaughter was 2,009,000 head, 1,763,000 and 1,845,000, liveweights 273 pounds, 274 and 273. Cumulative pork production was 331.2 million pounds, just about 12.1 percent below last year’s total of 376.6 million, and slaughter was 1.624 million head, down 12 percent. Sheep slaughter was estimated at 39,000 head, 37,000 and 43,000, liveweights 137 pounds, 139 and 139. Lamb and mutton meat production was estimated at 2.6 million pounds, 2.6 million and three million. Cumulative meat production at two million pounds was down 33.3 percent from a year ago. Page 9 Billings Sold 1800 Head Of Sheep, Goats BILLINGS, Mont. — (Jan. 7) — No recent market trends are available due to holidays, but lambs under 80 pounds showed higher undertones, lambs over 90 pounds weaker undertones, and slaughter ewes higher undertones. Receipts totaled 1800 head. Replacement sheep: lambs, medium and large No. 1-2 54-59 pounds $113-116, 63-68 pounds $120-123.50, 70-79 pounds $105-116, 80-87 pounds $103108.50, 91-96 pounds $95-102, 101-108 pounds $91.50-97, 115116 pounds $93, 123 pounds $90. Slaughter sheep: slaughter lambs choice 2-3 143-146 pounds $80-82; ewes, good 2-3 141-179 pounds $26-31, utility 1-2 132158 pounds $18-28.25, cull 1 126 pounds $12, bucks 180-308 pounds $14-28. Goats: kids and yearlings, selection 1-2 47-55 pounds $3138; nannies and wethers, selection 1-2 85-105 pounds $58-69, selection 3 115 pounds $32.50; billies, selection 1 75-190 pounds $4567.50. FINGERLINGS Bass • Bluegill • Catfish • Crappie • Minnows MR. FISHfish Specializing In Pond and Lake Stocking Cat Large Bass & ble Availa Terry Cox 432/758-3640 432/553-4925 NATIONWIDE DELIVERY Email: doubletfish@yahoo.com • Lonoke, Arkansas • Seminole, Texas • Danbury, Texas • Phoenix, Arizona REPLACEMENT FEMALE SALE Friday, JANUARY 19 Sale Time — 11 a.m. PEARSALL LIVESTOCK AUCTION N<ËI<HL@<KCPJGI<8;@E>K?<NFI; 89FLKK?<È>I<8K;<8CJÉ8KPFLI M<ID<<I?8P<HL@GD<EK;<8C<I Pearsall, Texas (Easy Access On and Off IH-35 South of Pearsall) ' )%0 :Xj_ ! fi =`eXeZ`e^lgkf*-dfj% ! ! fi =`eXeZ`e^lgkf-'dfj% 8 C C : L I I < E K G I F ; L : K @ F E D F ; < C J % d`e`dldÔeXeZ\[Xdflekf])''' 9LK@=PFLN8EK8 >I<8K;<8C :8CCLJKF;8P *Prices may vary by dealer, are limited, and are effective only between November 1, 2007 and January 31, 2008. ©2007 Vermeer Manufacturing Company. All rights reserved. VERMEER and the VERMEER logo are registered trademarks of Vermeer Manufacturing Company in the U.S. and/or other countries. @eZ\ek`m\j -',D9Xc\i -'+D9Xc\i ,'+D&,',D:cXjj`Z9Xc\ij ,'+D9Xc\i ,+('I99Xc\i D:('*'Dfn\i:fe[`k`fe\i D:/+'Dfn\i:fe[`k`fe\i I)*''&I)/''Kn`eIXb\j KD-''&KD.''& KD/''KiX`c\[Dfn\ij D,'+'&D-'+'&D.'+'& D/'+'Dfn\ij 9G,'''9Xc\GifZ\jjfi (,'' (),' (''' .,' .,' (''' /,' ,'' +'' )'' )''' MOORE’S SERVICE CENTER Highway 84 West • Star, Texas www.mooresservicecenter.com 325/948-3595 Business 325/948-3667 Home These are some of the quality cattle already consigned: 8 Charolais bulls, sixteen to twenty months old, Trick and fertility tested. 3 Hereford bulls, two years old. 55 crossbred cows, three to six years old, calving now, some calves on ground. 35 Brangus pairs, big and good. 35 F-1 heifers, big and good, calving now. 30 crossbred pairs, three years old, good set of mixed cows, gentle. 30 crossbred cows, three to four years old, calving now. 25 crossbred pairs, three to five years old. 17 Angus pairs, two years old. 15 mixed crossbred pairs, three to six years old, good calves, gentle, local cows. 10 crossbred pairs, three to five years old, good and young. 25 mixed crossbred cows, heavy bred, four to six years old. 5 heavy bred Brahman heifers. 40 heavy bred, coming three year old Brangus cows, 1100-1150 pounds, bred to Angus bulls. 10 black baldy Brangus, heavy bred, 1100 pounds, bred to Angus bulls. THESE ARE SOME OF THE QUALITY CATTLE ALREADY CONSIGNED!!! Visit: www.pearsalllivestock.com To View More Consignments For More Information Contact: Frank Helvey, Manager or Kelley Thigpen 830/334-3653 Office 210/213-0753 or 830/334-7238 Mobile • 830/426-3777 Home Kelley Thigpen — 830/334-1047 Mobile www.pearsalllivestock.com Page 10 Livestock Weekly January 10, 2008 clude cattle, cotton, wheat, hay and hunting operations, management is the key, along with his supportive wife, Susan, and a detailed record-keeping system. were more valuable in prepar- “Susan will sit here and keep ing him for managing his op- the books,” Davidson says, eration than any agriculture walking along the working class could have been. He’s pens he built among the four been able to take advantage of paddocks of one of his intenopportunities that came his sive grazing programs. “I run way and think in broad busi- the chute. I started using a ness terms rather than think of young vet there at Clarendon. himself just as a cotton farmer Guy Ellis is his name. I really like him.” or cattle rancher. In fact, he describes himself Davidson will have two or three people on the chutes with as a grass farmer. him and a couple of people on At 65, he spends more of his horseback. time in the cab of his pickup All the cattle are tagged, and or big Dodge feed truck than Davidson knows exactly what on horseback, but with a boyhe wants to do with each aniish grin, he still talks fondly of mal and has it all written down. the horses he’s had. “As we work them,” he says, With different farms that in“we can shoot the bred ones that are staying here thataway and the others come back here.” Davidson has six farms and ranches spread out across the southeastern Texas Panhandle. Diversified Cattleman Took Long Way Back Home To Country Roots By David Bowser ESTELLINE, Texas — Mike Davidson runs a diversified farming and ranching operation east of Estelline in Hall County. He lives across the road about two miles from where he grew up, but he traveled a long way to get here. Unlike many of his peers who majored in agriculture, Davidson opted for a Bachelor’s in Business Administration and then got on-the-job management training in the Navy before taking over the family farming operation. Those experiences probably HUSKY “The Original” TROJAN Livestock Equipment Co. Inc. CUSTOM HYDRAULIC CATTLE CHUTES Now carrying . . . LOAD OUTS • HYDRAULIC ALLEY WAYS • PORTABLE CHUTES The manufacturer with over 20 years of building experience. With several designs and options to choose from, using the highest quality materials, we're sure to have a chute to fit your needs. BRANDING IRONS Electric Brands Shipped Within 24 Hours SPECIAL SALE: Electric Number Sets 3 or 4 Inch — $240 PERSONALIZED BRANDS: One Letter — $85 Two Letters — $95 Three Letters — $105 Catalogs Available At All Livestock Auctions www.huskybrandingirons.com Trojan Livestock Equipment Co. Inc. 1-800-222-9628 P. O. Box 453 — Weatherford, Oklahoma 73096 FAX: 800-267-4055 800/687-1543 • 580/772-1849 www.trojanlivestockequipment.com Bob Lanier Each has its own unique characteristics, but they are run in conjunction with each other. “We own four places and we have two more places leased,” Davidson says. He has a fall calving herd and a winter, or spring, calving herd. Davidson says he’s done that to more fully use his bulls. “Right now, we’re running 12 bulls,” Davidson says. “If you’re running 12 bulls and you’re using them three or four months out of the year, that’s not very efficient.” He’ll pick his replacement heifers and sell the others as bred heifers. He culls decisively. No heifer goes out on grass unless she’s carrying a baby. He’ll keep his steers and sell them as yearlings. Selling them at weaning, says the former marketing ma- Plus Shipping and Handling WE ARE NOW REBUILDING CHUTES Dealer Inquiries Welcome A BUSINESS DEGREE and a stint as a naval officer separated Mike Davidson from his farming roots in Hall County of the Texas Panhandle. Davidson came back home, however, and in time developed a diversified cotton and cattle operation based on intensive grazing. P. O. Box 460 Knoxville, AR 72845 BARBWIRE FENCE and Corral Construction Also Repair Old Fence. Crews Available Anywhere In The United States Burl Scroggs (800) 839-0397 H Ne w y Y p e p ar a FROM EVERYONE AT ! 3 P STEUP TO 3 jor, is selling them into the weakest market of the year. “We learned a long time ago that the cattle market is really predictable,” Davidson says. He tries to sell on the seasonal highs in March and July, or at least hedge his cattle, a strategy he has found to be successful. The 1200-acre place where he stands at the working pens and surveys the rolling sandy grass pastures falling away from them used to be a cotton farm with 300 acres of native grass that belonged to his wife’s family. This is typical of his operation. Davidson has seeded it with grass and instituted an intensive grazing operation. Four paddocks are sowed with his summer grass. The fifth is sowed with winter fescue. “The idea is to use as much native pasture for winter grazing as you have,” Davidson says. 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Smith Co. 471 South Hwy 16 — San Saba, Texas 76877 325/372-5786 mer pasture in the winter, but it goes dormant. “I can basically run one cow unit per six acres,” he says. Since changing from cotton to grass, Davidson has about doubled the income off the dryland farms he’s bought and turned into intensive grazing operations. A smaller place down the road is where he puts his heifers every year. Out of that group of calves, he’ll pick his replacement heifers. Looking out across the pasture in early December, he says it’s kind of like the wheat in the Panhandle at that time of year. There’s not much of it showing, but with the recent rains and snow, he expects it to take off as Christmas approaches. “That’s really a help,” Davidson says. Part of his heifer pasture used to be a lake. “It can be underwater,” he says. But the water usually is below ground level, giving him a sub-irrigated pasture. “I used to raise hay here every year,” Davidson says. “This year I went in there and sowed it in this fescue.” Some of it has come up, but Davidson hopes most of it will wait until spring. “This stuff, because it’s a winter grass, the ground temperature has to be 65 degrees or lower for it to germinate,” Davidson says. It won’t germinate in warm ground.” This year, September was hot. “I sowed this stuff the first of September,” he says, “and we got an inch and a half or two inches of rain, which is plenty to get it up, but it wouldn’t come up because the ground’s so hot.” By the time the ground temperature cooled, it turned dry. “It’s one of those things where you don’t know what to pray for,” Davidson says. “I’m afraid that if it does sprout now, that before it develops a good root system, we’ll have some severe cold and it’ll kill it.” He says he’ll come back to this pasture with his heifers in about two weeks. One end of the pasture, where it’s sub-irrigated, is fresh and green. As Davidson turns and drives uphill toward an old barn, the bright green turns to duller shades. “It’s the quality of ground,” Davidson says. “The better the ground here, the better it does.” Traditionally, farmers will plant a crop on their best ground and turn their worst ground over to grass. That can be a mistake, Davidson says. The old dry lakebed holds the moisture better, too, he notes. B-Dahl bluestem does well in this country, even in the sandy soils that alternate with the moisture-preserving sandy loams. Davidson’s cattle, like most intensive grazing operations, are used to being handled and come running to the feed truck. When he opens the gate to the next paddock or even if he takes them down the road, they are more than happy to follow him. “In the wintertime, when you’re caking,” Davidson says, “they’ll knock you down.” Most of the time, Davidson and his dog Burr handle the move themselves. The one problem with Burr, says Davidson’s wife, is that when Davidson drives off in the feed truck without Burr, the dog pouts. “He pouts worse than I do,” Susan laughs, “and I’m a good pouter.” Davidson also leases almost all his land to hunters. “The intensive grazing program complements the hunting program,” he says. Nowadays, grass is worth more than good cultivated ground, he says. While good ground put into grass is growing in value, land farmers used to ignore is also becoming more valuable. The rougher the land, the more valuable it is for hunting. Davidson points to a patch of rough country neighboring his pasture and says it leases for $600 or $700 an acre for hunting. “Farmland that will produce something won’t bring that,” he says. He cited one place he bought in the 1980s for $70 an acre. He recently sold it for $500. “It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out that’s the smart thing to do,” Davidson says. At the time, Davidson says he was still sowing wheat on that place, and he hadn’t done much grazing on it. To get the place he sold up to where he could run six acres per cow unit, he was going to have to spend $150 an acre putting in grass and fertilizing. “You always have to heavy fertilize it,” Davidson says. “This is really sandy.” It made a lot more sense to sell that place, he says, than to try to convert it to fit his other grazing systems. Over the years, he managed to buy a couple of other places. The places he’s been buying have been old dryland farms. Davidson’s been able to put his farming skills to work and plant grass and expand his intensive grazing operation. What makes his operation unique is that he doesn’t rely on a calendar to tell him when to move the cattle but rather the conditions. The weather here varies widely, and over a year’s period, temperatures can vary more than 100 degrees. Like most farmers and ranchers here, he values moisture highly. On what little cotton land he still has, Davidson says he started minimum tilling about eight years ago and inter-seeding wheat in the cotton. “I was doing the same thing our granddaddies did,” Davidson says. “We’d quit rotating, but it really pays off.” Davidson grew up on a stock farm with a dryland cotton operation about two miles across the road. “Dad had a few cattle,” Davidson says. “He raised registered Herefords during the 1950s.” After earning a bachelor’s in business administration degree with an emphasis in marketing from West Texas A&M University in 1966, Davidson went to Navy Officer Candidate School at Pensacola, Fla. He spent a year and a half on Guam before joining the Brown Water Navy on the Mekong River just below Cambodia at the height of the Vietnam War. “I was a Navy liaison officer,” Davidson says. He was part of a special operation that combined the Navy’s patrol boats, Air Force reconnaissance aircraft and Army Special Forces to block Viet Cong traffic coming down the river. “It stretched about 100 miles,” Davidson says. It was divided into two areas and there was a Navy liaison officer in charge of each area. He was sent to Bien Thuy down in the Mekong Delta and then up to a Special Forces B Camp at Moc Hoa, or as it was affectionately known, “Mortar Junction.” Davidson returned to civilian life on March 25, 1970, after earning a bronze star. “Susan and I married April 18, 1970,” Davidson says. “We were engaged the year I was in Vietnam.” Davidson laughs and says they dated eight years, but only went out seven times. “We knew each other that long,” he says. “We’d have one or two dates, then I’d be gone.” A Hall County girl, she was in high school when he was in college. Then she was in college when he was in Guam and Vietnam. “We knew each other better than most people getting married,” he says. Coming out of the Navy, See Davidson Continued On Page 12 $500,000 TERM LIFE INSURANCE MONTHLY PREMIUM Guaranteed For 10 Years $100,000 $250,000 Age 35 Age 45 Age 55 Age 65 $ 9 $ 14 $ 27 $ 65 $ 13 $ 24 $ 52 $139 $500,000 $1,000,000 Age 35 Age 45 Age 55 Age 65 $ 21 $ 44 $ 99 $273 $ 35 $ 83 $190 $532 Male, Preferred Risk, Non-Tobacco First Colony Life - Policy Form No. 1410-GP et al. Quotes For Estate Tax Insurance (2nd Survivorship Policy) Also Available Allow Us To Assist You With This Specialized Coverage For Amounts Or Ages Not Shown — Please Call For Telephone Quotes: GRAFA INSURANCE Jack Grafa, CLU Dennis Grafa (325) 655-5624 (800) 300-1386 San Angelo, Texas January 10, 2008 ORDAN J Cattle Auction Livestock Weekly Page 11 Weekly Sales Held At 11 A.M. Monday — Mason • Thursday — San Saba Special Bull Offering In Conjunction With Our Regular Sale Plan now to attend and purchase your bulls. Thursday, January 24 @ 11:00 A.M. — San Saba Featuring Pat Griswold Ranch 30 Angus — 15 Charolais Bulls will be fertility tested and ready to go to work. Plan to attend. Pat Griswold Ranch History: Mr. Griswold has been selling quality Charolais and Angus bulls with Jordan Cattle Auction for over 12 years with many satisfied customers year in and year out. Many of those customers are repeat buyers from year to year, due to the outstanding performance of these Griswold Charolais and Angus bulls. • 30 choice virgin Angus bulls, coming two years old, big and stout. EPD’s and performance records will be available on sale day. For more information please call: Pat Griswold at 817/946-8320. • 15 choice virgin Charolais bulls, coming two years old. EPD’s and performance records will be available on sale day. Don’t miss these good Charolais bulls. For more information, please call: Pat Griswold at 817/946-8320. Additional Consignments Include: • 9 choice, registered Brangus bulls, coming two years old. All of these bulls go back to very good genetics and will be big and stout, have registration papers. Consigned by Hagler Farms. • 6 Brangus virgin bulls, coming two years old, out of Mound Creek Brangus bloodlines. Consigned by Williamson Cattle Ranch. • 9 coming two year old virgin Angus bulls, AI sired out of top Angus bloodlines. Consigned by Williamson Cattle Ranch. • 2 ½Angus, ½ Maine bulls, sixteen months old. • 4 ½Angus, ½ Corriente bulls — ideal for heifers, horns have been tipped. • 1registered four year oldAngus bull, gentle, weight 1850 pounds. Special Replacement Female Sale Saturday, January 26 @ 10 A.M. — San Saba See Page 3 In This Week’s Publication For A List Of Consignments. Consignments Welcome! Saturday, February 23 @ 10 A.M. — San Saba Consignments Welcome! 6th Annual “Best Of The Best” Replacement Female Sale Saturday, March 15, 2008 @ 10:00 A.M. — San Saba Offering quality pairs, bred cows, bred heifers and open or exposed heifers. Don't miss your opportunity to buy some of the Best Females in the country. The seller and buyer of the top-selling females in each of the classes will receive trophies. All cattle will be five years or younger! Consignments Welcome! Special Stocker and Feeder Sales In Conjunction With Our Regular Sale Trophies Will Be Awarded To Our Champions! Thursday, February 7 — San Saba Thursday, March 6 — San Saba Premium Weaned Calf Sale In Conjunction With Our Regular Sale Trophies Will Be Awarded To Our Champions! Thursday, March 6 — San Saba Calves Need To Be Weaned By January 21 Special Bull Offerings In Conjunction With Our Regular Sale Plan now to attend and purchase your bulls. Thursday, February 21 @ 11:00 A.M. — San Saba Cow Creek Ranch: 35 Brangus — 15 two year olds AND 20 coming two’s this spring Thursday, March 13 @ 11:00 A.M. — San Saba Cattleman’s Kind: 45 Simmental and Simi/Angus Bulls Congratulations To Our Champions At The Special Stocker Feeder Sale Monday, January 7 @ Mason ENGLISH Champion: Elgin Durst — Fredericksburg, Texas Reserve Champion: McAllister Partnership — Menard, Texas EXOTIC Champion: Ricky Frantzen — Comfort, Texas Reserve Champion: Gwen Dean — Cherokee, Texas CROSSBRED Champion: Perry Bushong — Mountain Home, Texas Reserve Champion: Abbey Keyser — Mason, Texas Ken Jordan • Willard Jordan — Owners & Operators Jeffrey Osbourn — Jody Osbourn — Al Johnson P.O. Box 158 • San Saba, Tx. 76877 San Saba: 325/372-5159 M Mason: 325/347-6361 www.jordancattle.com M info@jordancattle.com Page 12 Livestock Weekly January 10, 2008 tion. The place he and Susan Davidson him, but Davidson wasn’t the bought and began to farm soon Continued From Page 11 same person he was when he’d after they were married is now Davidson had talked with left the farm four years before. all cattle. Cessna about working in the In 1972, Davidson’s father In the mid-1990s, Davidson aircraft business and had inter- announced that he was retiring, says he began to change his viewed with the FBI in Wash- and Davidson took over the operation and switched the ington, D.C., but he went back operation. emphasis to cattle. While some to farming with his father. “He realized that I was probmight say the mid-90s was not “It was a little difficult for ably going to leave if he didn’t a good time to get into the the first couple of years,” he retire,” Davidson says. “Anycattle business, Davidson says says. “You’ve been in a posi- way, we decided to stay here.” it was better than farming in the tion of being your own boss Susan was teaching at the 1980s. and having this authority.” time. She’s since retired from “The decade of the 1980s Davidson says he loved his the classroom and helps run the was a real lesson,” Davidson father and had great respect for farming and ranching operasays. “It was a lesson to banks, and it was a lesson to farmers.” They faced inflation and high interest rates. Equipment and fertilizer prices soared. He was raising sheep and had a cattle operation. He built a greenhouse and raised tomatoes, but still farmed a lot of acres. He still maintains that no CATTLE FEEDERS matter how many tomatoes he P. O. Box 49 — Pecos, Texas 79772 raised, he could have sold more. The problem was time. After being on a tractor all day, Take Advantage Of Our Warm, Dry Winter Weather he’d end up in the greenhouse picking tomatoes all night. Owner: Burl Little III Office: 432/447-9630 “We kept our head above the Fax: 432/447-5445 Cell: 830/305-4444 water in the decade of the Stockers And Feeders For Sale — Mexican Cattle 1980s,” Davidson says, “but I PECOS BEEF STARTING • PRECONDITIONING • GROWING Sales Every LAMPASAS WEDNESDAY CATTLE AUCTION 512/556-3611 12 Noon P. O. Box 547 Lampasas. Texas realized there had to be an easier way.” His momma cows are basically a commercial herd with a strong Angus influence. Because of the rugged territory and the heat in the summer, there is some Brahman blood in the mix. “In our heifer program we’ve used half-Jersey bulls,” Davidson says. “Right now, we’re using Braunvieh and Gelbvieh bulls.” The Brown Swiss breed was bred from the Braunvieh, he says. “It’s a German milking breed,” Davidson says, “and it also has an extremely deep ribeye. The feedlots like them.” In 2000 they really began to expand their cattle operation. “We had already developed a summer program of grass with the B-Dahl,” Davidson says. “In the winter pasture, we were using wheat.” It’s always been desirable, he says, to have something that would be dependable in the wintertime to replace row cropping. Originally, Davidson says he was going to do some interseeding of wheat and summer grass, figuring the volunteer wheat would seed itself Good Used Furniture And Quality Rebuilt Mattresses For The Bunk House, Camp House Or Your House NIS AUCTION N E T AND MATTRESS FACTORY 2207 North Chadbourne San Angelo, Texas 76903 325/653-3494 BRUTON TRAILERS Wants You To Keep SCORE!!! BRUTON “Easy Pull” TRAILER SALES, INC. back. “I had three or four different ideas for the wintertime,” he says. “Then I contacted the Experiment Station at Woodward, Okla.” He went up there to see what they were doing with winter grasses. The varieties he saw were dependable on good ground, but they weren’t dependable on average ground. “On good ground or sub-irrigated ground,” Davidson says, “they will hold their stand.” He tried several different grasses, but they weren’t drouth tolerant. Davidson says he ended up being directed to Dr. Dariusz Malinowski at the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station at Vernon. “He gave me the number of the Pennington Seed representative in Henderson, Texas,” Davidson says. Davidson tried a tall fescue named Flecha. “I tried 11 acres at first,” Davidson says. The fall of 2004 turned out to be the perfect year to put it in. There was good moisture. The next year was dry, but 2006 was wet. “2005 was dry from the fall all the way nearly to the next fall, July 2006,” Davidson says. “Then it started raining.” It rained until the fall of 2007, when it turned off dry, but now it appears that there will be some winter rain and snow bringing good moisture back to the area. The fescue worked really well with the moisture. It wasn’t great in drouth condi- tions, but it did survive and came back with some rain. “What it didn’t do was that the new crops that I sowed that dry year, I didn’t get a stand on any of it,” Davidson says, “but the existing stand held.” He seeded some more in those areas and improved the stand. Davidson says that with an intensive grazing operation the key is using a good perennial grass. With fuel costs, seeding an annual is just too expensive. “The reason you use this stuff is so you don’t have to sow it every year,” Davidson says, “like you do with wheat. There wouldn’t be a great advantage to it if it wasn’t a perennial.” Davidson, it turned out, was the only rancher who tried the fescue. Others had an acre or two and were experimenting with it. “What my statement has always been,” Davidson says, “is that it’s got to compete with wheat. If it won’t produce the tonnage that wheat will, it won’t work.” Davidson says it matches wheat because the growing curve of the fescue in an average year will produce grazing in September. That won’t work in a drouth, he concedes, but it will in an average year for moisture. “It comes out of dormancy the first of September,” Davidson says, “and you’ve got this grass four or five inches tall.” It peaks in November. During the really cold part of the year, December, January and February, it drops off a little. “It still grows,” Davidson QUA LITY CATTLE HANDLING EQUIPMENT Brand X 1 Over 50 Years of Customer Satisfaction single available 0 SUPER TE U 000 CH DUTY 4 UT LOADO DOUBLE YSTEM ALLEY S CIRCLE BOWMAN ENTERPRISES 1 Unequaled Service and Parts Department 0 1 Unsurpassed Quality Construction 0 Garden City, Ks. (888) 338-9208 • Fremont, Ne. (800) 426-9626 www.bowmanenterprisesnet.com “Quality Is Remembered Long After The Price Is Forgotten” Brian K. Marschall Todd e. huckabee Blake Behrens Ranch and Rural Real Estate Financing Financing land throughout Texas, New Mexico and Oklahoma One day approval on most loans. Variable rates and fixed rates - up to 30 years Call Us: 325-655-5733 www.brutontrailers.com Toll Free BRUTON “Easy Pull” TRAILER SALES, INC. 1-800-588-6714 1801 N. Main Street — San Angelo, TX 76903 www.crockettnationalbank.com Visit us online at: Member Box 591 San Angelo TX, 76902 We proudly support the Texas Wildlife Association and the Texas Brigades. says, “but it’s not growing a great amount.” Davidson says it will go on into the summer where wheat will mature and go dormant. “In May and June, this stuff will stay green,” Davidson says. He warns that one year he had a hot May and the fescue went dormant. “If you have three weeks with no moisture and temperatures in the 100-degree range,” he says, “it’ll go into dormancy.” Davidson says that last year on his better ground, it never went dormant because he had plenty of moisture and a cool summer. “It does like fertilizer,” he says. “It’s not something you can’t fertilize.” The B-Dahl, he says, doesn’t need the fertilizer the fescue requires. “It does like good strong ground,” Davidson says. It’ll grow in sand, he says, but takes a lot of fertilizer and a lot of water. The water at Davidson’s home is underground stream water that comes off the Caprock. “These wells here are 200 to 300-gallon wells,” Davidson says. “They are not big wells at all.” Davidson was so impressed with the fescue that he has gone into the grass seed business. He revamped his greenhouse for a drying and packing barn for his grass seed and sells it to nearby ranches. Davidson says that with intensive grazing programs and improved grasses, he weans a lighter calf, but he makes up for it with a six acre per cow unit. Ordinarily in this country, native pasture would require 30 acres per cow unit. 500-600 pounds $93.75-100.50, 600-700 pounds $92-97, calves $85-91, 700-725 pounds $9097.10; medium and large No. 1-2 300-400 pounds $103-106, 400500 pounds $93-97.50, 500-600 pounds $88-97.50, 600-700 pounds $91-96. Slaughter cows: breakers 75-80 percent lean 1200-1600 pounds $45-47.75, high dressing $49.50-50, boners 80-85 percent 1100-1300 pounds $47.50-51.25, high dressing $52-54.50, low dressing $4547, lean 85-90 percent 10001200 pounds $44-47.25, high dressing $47.50-54, low dressing $39.50-44, 85-90 percent 800-1000 pounds $40-42, high dressing $43-44, low dressing $35-40, 85-90 percent under 800 pounds $31-34, high dressing $35-38, low dressing $29; bulls, yield grade 1-2 1540-1900 pounds $54.50-58, low dressing 1300-1800 pounds $48-53.50. Replacement cows: medium and large No. 1-2 mid-dleaged to aged cows 900-1400 pounds 4-7 months bred $600-810 per head. Cattle On Feed Up One Percent Nationwide In 1000-Head Lots WASHINGTON — (USDA) — Cattle and calves on feed for slaughter December 1 in feedlots with a capacity of 1000 or more head totaled 12.1 million head, one percent above the same period in 2006 and three percent above December 1, 2005. November placements totaled 2.12 million, 12 percent above November 2006 and three percent above 2005. Net placements were 2.06 million. Placements of cattle and calves weighing less than 600 pounds came to 685,000 head, 600- Livestock Weekly California 555,000, up three percent; Colorado 1,070,000, down four percent; Iowa 570,000, up 14 percent; Kansas 2,500,000, down two percent; Nebraska 2,520,000, unchanged; and Texas 3,010,000, up four percent. Placements:Arizona 37,000, up 23 percent; California 73,000, up six percent; Colorado 190,000, up 31 percent; Iowa 96,000, up 17 percent; Kansas 450,000, MOTLEY MILL AND CUBE Roaring Springs, Texas 915 W. Paul Bond Drive, Nogales, AZ 85621 For free catalogue: Email: office@paulbondboots.com Telephone: (520) 281-0512 Fax: (520) 281-2577 Web: www.paulbondboots.com OLD STYLE COTTONSEED CAKE and now COTTONSEED and GRAIN BLENDS Call: 806/348-7316 After 5 p.m. Call: 806/469-5272 Some stock boots also available. JAMES GWINN, OWNER Genetics to help create more value! All bulls GENESTAR® DNA tested for Tenderness and Feed Efficiency! Selling 225 Registered Black Angus Bulls! 125 Coming 2s and 100 Yearlings Noon (CT) - Thursday, March 13, 2008 - Abilene Auction - Abilene, TX BRINGING YOU THE VERY BEST IN ANGUS GENETICS! Backed by the industry’s best service, delivery, guarantee and discount policies! 1. Complete data on each bull including Pedigree, EPDs, $Values, plus Performance and Ultrasound! 2. Our bulls are DELIVERED FREE within the USA! Freight discount if you pick up! 3. Discounts - up to 10% off of the bid price! 4. Breeding Soundness Guarantee! 5. Sight unseen guarantee for absentee buyers, plus “on site” animal evaluation/buying assistance! 6. Broadcast live over RFD-TV by Superior Productions! (e-mail or call us for a DVD of this offering) 7. Price discovery/marketing assistance for calves/bred heifers sired by our bulls! 8. Free AnguSource® ID Tags for calves sired by Wehrmann/Donnell Bulls. 9. Calves sired by Wehrmann/Donnell consistently “top the market.” 10. We understand your business and can relate to your needs, concerns and expectations! Bulls d ere Deliv e Fre GAR Precision 2536 Reg No. 12716656 The influence of “2536” is expressed in the pedigrees of many of the sale bulls. DCC Rito Direct 3C3 Reg. No. 14570071 High-marbling sons of “3C3” will be featured. A.I. sires of sale bulls include: GAR Predestined, GAR Retail Product, Rito 1I2 of 2536 Rito 6I6, DCC Rito Direct 3C3, DCC Rito Platinum 3J4, DCC Rito Prime 1I5, CA Future Direction 5321, Rito 2 878 of 2536 BVND 878, GAR Integrity, Rito 4L60 of 2536 BVND 208, OCC Emblazon 754E, SS Objective T510 OT26 E-mail: info@donnellcattlecompany.com Web site: www.donnellcattlecompany.com Wehrmann Angus New Market, VA Richard McClung Jr. (540) 896-6545 Page 13 up 11 percent; Nebraska 485,000, up five percent; and Texas 510,000, up 17 percent. Marketings:Arizona 27,000, up 11 percent; California 61,000, up 11 percent; Colorado 145,000, unchanged; Iowa 75,000, up seven percent; Kansas 355,000, down eight percent; Nebraska 355,000, down seven percent; and Texas 490,000, down two percent. The 17th Wehrmann-Donnell Bull Sale Tulia Feeder Steers, Heifers $2-5 Lower TULIA — (TDA-Jan. 7) — Feeder steers and heifers were $2-5 lower, calves instances $7-10 lower. Receipts totaled 3444 head. Steers: medium and large No. 1 200-300 pounds $138-145, 300-400 pounds $122-127, 400450 pounds $119-125, 450-500 pounds $105-121, 500-600 pounds $104-111, calves 600-700 pounds $96-103, yearlings and long weaned calves 600-700 pounds $102-107.35, 700-800 pounds $102.25-104, calves 700-775 pounds $94.50-100, 800-900 pounds $101-101.50; medium and large No. 1-2 350400 pounds $118-119, 400500 pounds $108.50-119, 500600 pounds $101-109.50, 600700 pounds $103-104.50, calves 600-700 pounds $100102, 700-800 pounds $100103.50, 900-975 pounds $92; medium and large No. 2 600700 pounds $92.50-103. Heifers: medium and large No. 1 300-400 pounds $110116, 400-500 pounds $94-107, ————— DISPLAY ADVERTISING DEADLINE IS EVERY MONDAY AT 5 P.M. 800/284-5268 325/949-4611 699 pounds 650,000, 700-799 pounds 420,000, and 800 pounds and heavier 361,000. November marketings totaled 1.74 million, three percent below 2006 but two percent above 2005. Other disappearance came to 57,000 head during November, 31 percent below 2006 and 37 percent below 2005. Statistics from the seven leading states, compared to a year earlier: Cattle on feed: Arizona 367,000 head, up eight percent; January 10, 2008 Call or E-mail to request a DVD or VHS tape! More sale information available on our Web site. Buyer pre-registration available on our Web site. Donnell Cattle Co. Graham, TX Tommy Donnell (940) 362-4555 Page 14 Livestock Weekly January 10, 2008 He has people knock on his door at all hours of the night, and he says that you never know who it will be or what they’ll want. “I have people come up all the time and knock on the door By John Bradshaw come back. They were reat midnight and ask where FALFURRIAS, Texas — spected. You could trust them,” Houston is or where is this. It’s Things have changed in South says Durham. Texas between the ranchers With this new crowd, no- too damn dangerous.” and the illegal aliens. Not too body knows for sure who they Just a few weeks ago long ago most of the immi- are because they can’t catch Durham and his wife were in bed when they heard a helicopgrants traveling through were enough of them to know. The ter close to the house. They respectful of property and had ranchers are nervous now, looked out and saw the helia good relationship with the Durham says, because they can copter only 100 yards away. landowners, but that isn’t al- feel the change taking place. “I didn’t want to go out there People are scared to leave at midnight and disturb whatways the case today. There is an increasingly brazen crimi- their wives at home alone, even ever in the hell they were donal sort that is keeping South during the day. ing. The next day I went out Texans on edge. “This is dangerous, nowa- there and saw all the tracks, and Lavoyger Durham runs the days, out at the ranch. You’ve I figured they got 50.” El Tule Ranch here, and he has got to keep in contact with your Durham called the Border seen this change take place. wife and family all the time. Patrol the next day and asked “I’m not against Mexicans. You can’t just leave them out if they had been working at El My mother was Mexican, and there like you used to. You Tule. They said they had, and I work with those guys. My used to go out and fix wind- that they caught 43 people. grandparents on my mother’s mills or check cattle or what- “Like I said, that was a hunside came from Mexico,” ex- ever and come back and see dred yards from my house.” plains Durham. them at night.” “That happens all the time. “It’s a different breed of “You can’t do that now. You Everybody’s got horror stories. people, now. Before, these can’t trust that scenario any- Everybody’s got them,” oldtimers would come and more. All these ranchers will Durham reiterates. He knows work for a year or two, go back tell you the same thing, espe- of ranchers being fired upon, and see their families and then cially overnight,” says Dur- ranch security guards being beaten or held at gunpoint, and ham. Most ranchers carry a gun women threatened near their — FOR SALE — with them anyway in case they homes. TROPHY RAMS and need to shoot a snake or coy- Durham says he could talk BORDER COLLIES ote, but Durham says he also for hours about horror stories. 512/630-1074 keeps a couple of shotguns There is always trash, fences milesallenbordercollies.com loaded and ready to go at night. are cut or driven through, floats are torn up on water troughs, gates left open and much more. “All that is not as bad as not knowing exactly what kind of Non-Fiction With An Old West people are coming across, and Shoot-Out In The 1960’s some of them, we know they’re By Retired Texas Police Chief Change In Nature Of Illegals Concerns South Texas Ranchers The Gun That Wasn't There Russell S. Smith www.amazon.com or www.russellssmith.com fiftysixsouth@yahoo.com for store locations/autographed copies SAGINAW FLAKES, INC. 800/875-8162 Located Near Fort Worth, Texas Please Call For Prices On The Following Feed Ingredients. Flaked Corn Flaked Milo Flaked Barley Whole Barley Ground Corn Soybean Meal Soy Hull Pellets Corn Gluten Feed Pellets TULIA LIVESTOCK AUCTION RECEIPTS FROM MONDAY, JANUARY 7 — RECEIPTS 3444 Stocker and feeder cattle $2-5 lower than last sale two weeks ago, cows and bulls $1-4 higher. 13 blk 5 mxd 16 mxd 15 mxd 33 blk 56 mxd 38 blk 102 mxd 70 blk 44 blk 21 mxd 25 blk 30 mxd 106 mxd 96 mxd STEERS 450 lbs. 346 lbs. 551 lbs. 570 lbs. 536 lbs. 601 lbs. 608 lbs. 758 lbs. 664 lbs. 759 lbs. 674 lbs. 740 lbs. 625 lbs. 736 lbs. 756 lbs. $121.00 129.00 107.50 107.50 111.00 104.00 105.00 103.50 107.35 103.50 105.50 102.25 104.00 103.85 102.50 61 blk 45 mxd 10 mxd 88 mxd 79 mxd 30 mxd 34 mxd 32 mxd 39 mxd 22 mxd 16 mxd 29 blk 20 mxd 89 mxd 75 mxd 730 lbs. 861 lbs. 960 lbs. 811 lbs. 954 lbs. HEIFERS 371 lbs. 593 lbs. 488 lbs. 549 lbs. 542 lbs. 583 lbs. 474 lbs. 683 lbs. 637 lbs. 723 lbs. 104.00 101.50 92.00 101.00 92.00 $109.00 96.75 100.00 97.50 96.25 97.50 102.00 96.00 97.00 97.10 dangerous. The Border Patrol will tell you that they used to just apprehend Mexicans, but now they’re from all over. “I could sit here all day and tell stories about pregnant women coming across, guys getting beat up by coyotes and they crawl for a mile. I’ve found about 10 or 15 dead in the 18 years that I’ve been here. You’ve got to get to them quick or else the buzzards eat them up. That’s true.” It is common for the illegals to become dehydrated, and the coyotes, or human smugglers, won’t wait on them. The Border Patrol told Durham that within a five-mile radius of his ranch, 200 to 300 aliens pass through each night. The criminals have become much more organized, and Durham says the show and the rodeo are being played on this side of the border now. The drug business isn’t just in Mexico now. Gangs like the Mara Salvatruchas, or MS13s, are here now. Human smuggling has become big business, and those involved aren’t shy about breaking a few U.S. laws. Drug lords are involved with human smuggling, Durham says, and it’s all extremely organized and synchronized. In some areas aliens must pay a toll just to cross the river. Last year Durham testified before the Senate Judiciary Subcommittees in a joint hearing between the Subcommittee on Terrorism, Technology and Homeland Security, and the Subcommittee on Immigra- CASH FOR USED tion, Border Security and Citizenship. “I was scared, because after you gave your speech you were fresh meat for questions,” jokes Durham. Durham was asked to testify because he has lived on a ranch his entire life. He testified to the hardships and dangers brought upon the ranches by the current situation in South Texas. The human smugglers are risk addicts as well as being on dope, he says, and they’ve got to be crazy or high to have the courage to do all the things they do and drive the way they do. “Those sumbitches will drive like crazy; they don’t care.” When the Border Patrol finds a load of aliens and gives chase, if the smuggler can’t outrun them he will drive through the fence along the road and everyone will bail out, Durham explains. The human smuggler will toss his phone and any identification and intermingle with the illegal aliens. The smuggler cannot be identified unless the Border Patrol is right there and can pull him off the wheel, which rarely happens. The Border Patrol, in Durham’s opinion, just does not have enough manpower. Each time he reports aliens to the Border Patrol, they immediately ask him if that is visual, or is it tracks. “If it was tracks they might be in Houston having a Tecate beer by the time they get out there. If it’s visual, and they’re not busy, then sometimes CATERPILLAR EQUIPMENT — Any Condition — 325/949-8188 or 325/450-5002 Summers Spraying Service Miller Custom All Metal Buildings Phone (210) 289-0321 Neal Summers — Owner Fast, Efficient Aerial Control Of Mesquite • Pear • Weeds St. Lawrence, Texas 800/687-3477 432/397-2564 Office 432/264-8588 Mobile 432/687-1885 Home CUSTOM BUILDINGS ERECTED ON YOUR SITE. Call for year-end specials. We beat anybody's prices. Horse Barns - Hay Barns - Work Shops - Storage Buildings CARING FOR CATTLE IS AN TRADITION Whether you're retaining ownership, buying cattle for placement, Wade Lewis, Manager Hereford Feed Yard 50,000-Head Capacity P.O. Box 151 Hereford, TX 79045 1-800-999-5066 Rodney Wren, Manager Farwell Feed Yard 30,000-Head Capacity P.O. Box 215 Farwell, TX 79325 1-800-771-9017 Slaughter Cows: $42.00 To $54.00 AzTx procure cattle for you, we'll do our part to make sure things match OUR SERVICES INCLUDE: • Cattle and Feed Financing CHECK OUT WEBSITE FOR TRAILER SALES and SCHOLARSHIP INFO MATADOR, TEXAS • East Highway 70 and CR 417 Tommy Gleghorn: 806/347-2405 home or 806/269-5154 mobile — RECEIVING PENS — — OWNERS — MARK & KAREN HARGRAVE 806/236-3021 Mobile partnering with neighbors, or letting your needs and expectations. Worship Service Every Monday @ 9:30 A.M. TYLER HARGRAVE 806/236-9405 they’ll come out and catch them.” Though the traffic has supposedly slowed down, Durham doesn’t believe it. The tracks, personnel and people he has seen, as well as what his neighbors have told him, prove otherwise. “Can you imagine two Border Patrols chasing 20 guys in the middle of the dog days of August out on the sand pit trail and they go up there and catch them, then the next day they’ll be out there on the damn street hitching a ride going somewhere? “It’s very demoralizing for the Border Patrol.” When Lavoyger Durham began the South Texans’ Property Rights Association they had a meeting that the Border Patrol was invited to attend. The woman in charge agreed to come if he guaranteed not speak ill of them, and Durham assured her that he knows the Border Patrol is doing the best they can with what they have. “They were all there, and it was very successful. We kind of found out what the heck was going on. They’re just overpowered.” Durham explains that the current rate is $3000 to $4000 for an illegal to get from Mexico to Houston. It takes five coyotes. There are two in Mexico; one is the recruiter. “’You want to go to the United States or Houston? Do this and this. You can only carry this and this.’ “That’s the recruiter. Then you’ve got the guy that brings them across.” After they cross the river, there are two more coyotes, a Bob Tabb, Manager Dimmitt Feed Yard, LLC 47,000 Head Capacity P.O. Box 638 Dimmitt, TX 79027 877-924-2333 Larry Bilberry, Manager Garden City Feed Yard 90,000-Head Capacity P. O. Box 1722 Garden City, KS 67846 1-800-272-4191 • Retained Ownership Counseling • Professional Nutrition and Health Care • Sophisticated Marketing • Price Protection Assistance CORY MCCARLEY 806/433-6476 SALE EVERY MONDAY P. O. BOX 22 • TULIA, TEXAS 79088 • OFFICE: 806/995-4184 www.tulialivestockauction.com AzTx Cattle Co. • P. O. Box 390 • Hereford, Texas 79045 • 800-999-5065 www.aztx.com e-mail: aztx@aztx.com cattle co. driver and the leader. Everyone gets in a vehicle and drives up near whichever Border Patrol checkpoint is in their path. Then the leader and the illegals get out, jump the fence and take off cross-country to go around the checkpoint. The driver goes back for another load. “The leader walks around to the north, where there’s another guy. One honk, ‘I’m around.’ Two honks, ‘come on.’ Three honks, ‘I’m gone.’ Five coyotes and they all get a piece of the action.” Durham says there are three zones in South Texas for illegal aliens. The first zone, which he calls the nilly-willy zone, is in the Valley. Aliens can mingle with the residents and the Border Patrol doesn’t know who has green cards and who doesn’t. “They don’t catch many people there in the Valley. They’ve got to catch them coming across the river.” From there the coyotes take them north and they enter what he calls the catch-me-if-youcan zone, and it is here that the aliens walk around the Border Patrol checkpoints and cause trouble for area residents. “Once they walk around the Border Patrol station, they get to a highway with too many fingers on it, and the Border Patrol can’t check all that stuff. They go up there to Houston and it’s kind of like a sanctuary city. That’s the can’t-touchme zone. They’re more or less free.” Durham doesn’t know what the government can do to help. The government can get all the technology they want, he says, but there will still have to be someone out there to pick up the aliens. “Maybe they ought to bring the National Guard back down or triple the numbers on all the law enforcement that we have now,” Durham advises. “In my opinion, the politicians and everybody else have to make up their minds whether they want the border secure or not. It looks like they’ve got a pretty good start putting up a fence.” Durham believes the border fence will help, and that the border must be secure before anything can be done with the aliens already here. It’s a big cycle, he says. After the bor- der is secure is when talk of things such as the guest worker programs should begin. “It’s a different game now, and the border is wide open. That’s what’s scary.” ProRodeo Tour Adds Five More Events For 2008 PRCA Season COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — The Wrangler ProRodeo Tour is expanding from 21 to 26 elite events for the 2008 season, including three of the top four prize money rodeos sanctioned by the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association — Cheyenne (Wyo.) Frontier Days, San Antonio Stock Show & Rodeo and the Reno (Nev.) Rodeo. The 26 rodeos in this year’s lineup combined to offer prize money of nearly $8.3 million in 2007 and will project at something closer to $9 million in 2008, without taking into account the highly-successful Ariat Playoffs series at season’s end, which this year paid out $1.62 million to the contestants who qualified. For the third consecutive year, the Tour begins at the SandHills Stock Show & Rodeo in Odessa, Texas, Jan. 412. It will be followed by the National Western Stock Show in Denver, Jan. 12-27; the Black Hills Stock Show Rodeo, in Rapid City, S.D., Jan. 31-Feb. 3; and the San Antonio Stock Show & Rodeo, Feb. 1-16. The Tour again concludes with the Dodge City (Kan.) Round-Up, in early August. Contestants choose which 15 of the 26 rodeos they want to have counted toward their Tour standings, and the top 35 finishers in each event qualify for the first round of the fourtiered Playoffs, along with the winners of the Dodge National Circuit Finals Rodeo in Pocatello, Idaho, in March. Participating rodeo committees have until 120 days before the beginning of their event to finalize dates. Standings by event: Bareback riding: 1. Billy Wall, Morgan, Utah, $8219; 2. Wes Stevenson, Kaufman, Texas, $6644; 3. Josh Cole, Quitman, Texas, $4617; 4. Brian Bain, Culver, Ore., $4347; 5. Clint Cannon, Waller, Texas, $3630. Steer wrestling: 1. Joey Bell Jr., Athens, Texas, $6526; 2. TRoy Orr, Lebanon, Tenn., $6136; 3. Ted Gollaher, Cascade, Mont., $5988; 4. Bill Pace, Stephenville, Texas, $5478; 5. Glen Clark, Granbury, Texas, $5429. Team roping (headers): 1. David Key, Caldwell, Texas, $6810; 2. Luke Brown, Rock Hill, S.C., $5685; 3. Reese Kerr, Comfort, Texas, $4751; 4. Robert Pixley, Livingston, Texas, $4207; 5. Travis Tryan, Billings, Mont., $4125. Team roping (heelers): 1. Richard Durham, Morgan Mill, Texas, $5685; 2. Kory Koontz, Sudan, Texas, $5567; 3. Jesse Echtler, Huntsville, Texas, $4751; 4. Michael Jones, Stephenville, Texas, $4541; 5. Trey Cruz III, Montgomery, Texas, $4207. Saddle bronc riding: 1. Cody DeMoss, Heflin, La., $7422; 2. Jeff Willert, Belvi-dere, S.D., $5132; 3. Morgan Forbes, Kaycee, Wyo., $3620; 4. Isaac Diaz, Davie, Fla., $2954; 5. Justin Arnold, Santa Margarita, Calif., $2824. Tie-down roping: 1. Blair Burk, Durant, Okla., $6463; 2. Cole Bailey, Okmulgee, Okla., $6337; 3. Ryan Watkins, Stephenville, Texas, $5944; 4. Jerrad Hofstetter, Portales, N.M., $5243; 5. Shay Good, Midland, Texas, $4691. Steer roping: 1. Chet Her- J January 10, 2008 Livestock Weekly ren, Pawhuska, Okla. $2936; 2. Lawson Plemons, Chilton, Texas, $2816; 3. Cody Lee, Gatesville, Texas, $2708; 4. Scott Snedecor, Uvalde, Texas, $2204; 5. JB Whatley, Gardendale, Texas, $1647. Barrel racing: 1. Libby Swenson, Denison, Texas, $8420; 2. Cassie Moseley, Farwell, Texas, $7000; 3. Susan Smith, Hodgen, Okla., $5660; 4. June Holeman, Arcadia, Neb., $5274; 5. Lisa Lockhart, Oelrichs, S.D., $4996. Bull riding: 1. Kanin Asay, Powell, Wyo., $6048; 2. Brandon Sartin, Zachary, La., $5616; 3. Seth Glause, Rock Springs, Wyo., $4891; 4. J.W. Harris, May, Texas, $4828; 5. Jeremy Kolich, Norco, Calif., $4806. Wool, Mohair LDPs Unchanged WASHINGTON — As of Wednesday the LDP for mohair remained at 57 cents. The LDP for ungraded wool also remained unchanged at 15 cents. Isa Cattle Company, Inc. REPUTATION BEEFMASTER HERD (L Bar • Vista • Lasater Genetics) Calving February 10 To April 10 4 Older Cows — 28 Five To Ten Year Old Cows 20 Bred Heifers — 18 Yearling Heifers 16 Yearling Bulls • Take Any Or All • ALSO, TEMPORARY PASTURAGE AVAILABLE J Laurie Lasater 325/234-9906 P. O. Box 60327 San Angelo, TX 76906 Lorenzo Lasater 325/656-9126 There’s SOMETHING ABOUT USING A BANKER WHO GOES HOME TO A PET POODLE that JUST ISN’T RIGHT. Located In America's Greatest Cattle Feeding, Marketing and Milo Growing Area Family Owned and Operated Stratford, Texas * Tender Lovin’ Care WALTER LASLEY - Off. (806) 753-4411 Res. (806) 753-4421 Fax. (806) 753-4435 www.walterlasleyandsons.com Celebrating 50 Years Of Cattle Feeding CATTLEMAN’S STOCK WHIP Handmade In Voca, Texas USA M Mesquite Stock M Quality USA Tanned Cowhide M NO Windup Needed M Cracks Out In Front — Loud & Easy M Horseback Or On Foot M Choose From 3’, 4’ or 5’ Whip To Suit Your Needs. Terry Peavy • 325/456-3788 Cell • 325/239-5551 Home P. O. Box 102 — Voca, TX 76887 If the trucks in the parking lot don’t give it away, the first firm handshake will. We’re not your average bankers. We’re farmers and ranchers, and we get your business because it’s our business too. Come to us for the best rates on loans that meet your needs, because only those that know what you do can really help you do it. MILLS COUNTY COMMISSION COMPANY Highway 16 South — Goldthwaite, Texas Sheep and Goat Sales Every Friday • 11 a.m. CALL 1-800-451-5997 OR VISIT W W W. F A R M C R E D I T N M . C O M Visit Our Website To See Future Special Sale Dates: www.millscountycommission.com We Welcome Your Consignments.Your Business And Patronage Are Greatly Appreciated! Heath Hohertz 325/938-6482 Cell 325/648-2249 Harlan Hohertz 325/998-0492 Cell A L B U Q U E R Q U E J — FOR SALE — & SONS WALTER LASLEY INC. CUSTOM * TLC CATTLE FEEDING CAPACITY 20,000 HEAD Page 15 R O S W E L L L A S C R U C E S T U C U M C A R I C L O V I S J Page 16 Livestock Weekly January 10, 2008 YOUR CENTRAL TEXAS TRUCK HEADQUARTERS JUST ANNOUNCED — al Addition $1000 GM OWNER LOYALTY* On Purchase Of New 2007 And Most 2008 GM Vehicles Through January 31, 2008 *Must Own 1999 Model GM Vehicle Or Newer To Qualify STOCK NUMBER 27190 28150 28148 28069 28453 28162 28482 28213 28209 28202 28198 28391 28467 28445 27809 28452 28263 28196 28287 28464 28265 28140 28008 28249 28303 28158 27573 26970 27218 27037 26821 27523 27214 26362 27845 28091 27169 27197 28157 28028 27983 27459 28245 28289 28183 28188 28266 28300 28229 28145 28369 27590 27551 27874 26983 27590 27853 YEAR MAKE 2007 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2007 2008 2008 2008 2007 2007 2007 2007 2007 2007 2007 2007 2008 2008 2007 2007 2008 2008 2008 2007 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2007 2007 2008 2007 2007 2008 GMC CHEVY CHEVY CHEVY CHEVY GMC GMC CHEVY CHEVY CHEVY CHEVY CHEVY CHEVY CHEVY CHEVY CHEVY GMC GMC GMC GMC CHEVY CHEVY CHEVY CHEVY CHEVY GMC CHEVY CHEVY CHEVY CHEVY GMC GMC CHEVY TOPKICK CHEVY CHEVY GMC CHEVY GMC CHEVY CHEVY GMC GMC CHEVY CHEVY CHEVY GMC CHEVY CHEVY CHEVY CHEVY GMC GMC CHEVY GMC GMC GMC MODEL TYPE TRIM ENGINE PACKAGE 1500 CREWCAB SLE2 5300V8 1500 EXTENDED LT1 5300V8 1500 LONGBED WT 4800V8 1500 LONGBED WT 4300V6 1500 REG/SHORT BED WT/LS 4300V6 2500 CREW CAB SLT HO DURAMAX 2500 CREW CAB SLE2 HO DURAMAX 2500 CREWCAB WT HO DURAMAX 2500 CREWCAB WT 6000V8 2500 CREWCAB LT1 HO DURAMAX 2500 CREWCAB WT HO DURAMAX 2500 EX/LONGBED WT 6000V8 2500 EX/LONGBED WT 6000V8 2500 EXTENDED LT1 6000V8 3500 CREW/DUALLY LTZ HO DURAMAX 3500 CREW/DUALLY LT1 HO DURAMAX 3500 CREW/DUALLY LTZ HO DURAMAX 3500 CREW/DUALLY LTZ HO DURAMAX 3500 CREW/DUALLY SLT HO DURAMAX 3500 CREW/DUALLY SLE1 HO DURAMAX 3500 CREWCAB LT1 HO DURAMAX 3500 CREWCAB LTZ HO DURAMAX 3500 EX/CHASSIS WT HO DURAMAX 3500 EXTENDED LT1 6000V8 3500 REG CAB CHASSIS WT HO DURAMAX 3500 REG CAB CHASSIS WT HO DURAMAX 3500 REG CAB CHASSIS WT HO DURAMAX 3500 REG CAB CHASSIS LT1 6000V8 3500 REG CAB CHASSIS LT1 HO DURAMAX 3500 REG/BOXDELETE WT 6000V8 3500 REG-CHASSIS SLE1 6000V8 3500 REG-CHASSIS WT 6000V8 3500 REGULAR LT1 6000V8 4500 CREW/CHASSIS 6.6 DURAMAX 4500 REGULAR/CHASSIS 6.6LDURAMAX 2500HD CREW/LONGBED LTZ HO DURAMAX 2500HD CREWCAB SLE2 HO DURAMAX 2500HD CREWCAB LTZ 6000V8 2500HD CREWCAB SLT HO DURAMAX 2500HD CREWCAB LTZ 6000V8 2500HD CREWCAB LT1 6000V8 2500HD CREWCAB SLE1 6000V8 2500HD CREWCAB SLE1 HO DURAMAX 2500HD CREWCAB WT 6000V8 2500HD CREWCAB LT1 HO DURAMAX 2500HD EX/LONGBED LT1 HO DURAMAX 2500HD EX/LONGBED SLE1 HO DURAMAX 2500HD EXTENDED WT 6000V8 2500HD EXTENDED LT1 HO DURAMAX 2500HD EXTENDED WT 6000V8 2500HD EXTENDED LT1 6000V8 2500HD REGULAR WT 6000V8 2500HD REGULAR WT 6000V8 2500HD REGULAR WT 6000V8 2500HD REGULAR SLE1 6000V8 2500HD REGULAR WT/PW/PL 6000V8 2500HD REGULAR WT 6000V8 TRANS AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO AUTO 2WD 4WD 4x4 4x4 4x4 4x2 4x4 4x4 4x2 4x4 4x4 4x4 4x4 4x4 4x2 4x4 4x4 4x2 4x4 4x4 4x4 4x2 4x4 4x4 4x4 4x2 4x4 4x4 4x2 4x2 4x4 4x4 4x4 4x2 4x4 4x2 4x4 4x4 4x4 4x4 4x4 4x4 4x4 4x4 4x2 4x4 4x4 4x4 4x2 4x4 4x2 4x4 4x4 4x4 4x2 4x4 4x4 4x4 4x2 MSRP $39,680 $31,835 $24,130 $19,590 $24,790 $53,750 $36,740 $42,234 $33,839 $46,999 $42,529 $33,581 $28,467 $35,720 $50,472 $44,297 $52,827 $50,185 $51,197 $45,207 $48,395 $54,617 $41,383 $33,892 $39,737 $39,116 $35,957 $30,059 $41,849 $29,515 $33,794 $27,762 $33,187 $45,060 $49,515 $50,165 $47,315 $41,289 $50,790 $43,755 $37,619 $37,924 $43,694 $34,845 $45,944 $43,514 $41,874 $32,070 $40,080 $32,341 $36,819 $30,045 $26,850 $29,999 $33,178 $31,113 $26,705 REBATE** $3,000 $2,000 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $3,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $3,500 $2,500 $3,500 $2,500 $2,500 $2,500 $2,500 $2,500 $1,500 $1,500 $3,500 $2,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $2,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $2,500 $2,500 $1,500 $2,500 $2,500 $1,500 BONUS CASH* $1,750 $1,750 $1,750 $750 $1,750 $1,750 $750 $750 $750 $1,750 $1,750 $1,750 $1,750 $1,750 $1,750 $1,750 $1,750 $1,750 $1,750 $1,750 $1,750 $1,750 $750 $750 $1,750 $750 $1,750 $750 $1,750 $750 $1,750 $750 $750 $750 $750 SALE PRICE $33,779 $27,797 $22,414 $17,499 $22,199 $45,519 $31,228 $35,547 $29,494 $39,841 $35,821 $29,509 $24,999 $31,499 $43,228 $37,099 $44,849 $42,647 $43,529 $37,939 $40,939 $46,369 $34,551 $29,219 $32,779 $32,326 $28,994 $25,466 $34,592 $24,999 $28,873 $23,298 $28,376 $38,810 $43,831 $42,989 $40,549 $36,595 $43,299 $38,517 $33,842 $33,145 $36,883 $30,240 $38,515 $37,389 $35,198 $27,748 $33,649 $28,217 $32,149 $25,539 $22,599 $25,686 $28,536 $26,391 $22,672 +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL +TTL TOTAL SAVINGS $5,901 $4,038 $1,716 $2,091 $2,591 $8,231 $5,512 $6,687 $4,345 $7,158 $6,708 $4,072 $3,468 $4,221 $7,244 $7,198 $7,978 $7,538 $7,668 $7,268 $7,456 $8,248 $6,832 $4,673 $6,958 $6,790 $6,963 $4,593 $7,257 $4,516 $4,921 $4,464 $4,811 $6,250 $5,684 $7,176 $6,766 $4,694 $7,491 $5,238 $3,777 $4,779 $6,811 $4,605 $7,429 $6,125 $6,676 $4,322 $6,431 $4,124 $4,670 $4,506 $4,251 $4,313 $4,642 $4,722 $4,033 Ü 2007 VEHICLES or 1.9% — 72 MOS (In Lieu Of Factory Rebate) 0% — 60 MOS *Includes applicable incentives. Tax, title, license, dealer fees and [other] optional equipment extra. BAYER MOTOR CO. INC. H 800/843-5230 • 325/356-2541 218 East Grand COMANCHE WE ARE PROFESSIONAL GRADE. bayerl@itexas.net www.bayermotor.com BAYER FORDBAYER - MERCURY, INC. January 10, 2008 USED TRUCKS S A L E S A L E P R I C E P R I C E 20076.0L, CHEVY 2500 REGULAR CAB Auto, 40K Miles. Stk # 27991 $17,900 + TTL S A L E S A L E P R I C E P R I C E 2006 CHEVY 3500 REG-CAB Duramax, 6-speed Manual, 52K Miles. $26,900 + TTL S A L E S A L E P R I C E P R I C E 2007 DODGE 2500 QUAD CAB Diesel, Six Speed, Loaded, 4K Miles. Stk. # $29,500 + TTL S A L E P R I C E P R I C E 2007 CHEVY 3500HD EX-CAB 4x4 Duramax, Leather, 14K Miles. Stk # F10360 $38,500 + TTL 2006 CHEVY 2500HD REG CAB 4x2, 6.0, Auto, 20K Miles. Stk. # 26915 $19,500 + TTL 20058100CHEVROLET 3500 FLATBED 4x4 V-8, Auto, 300 Miles. Stk. # 26699 $28,500 + TTL S A L E S A L E P R I C E P R I Auto, Diesel, Lariat, 112K Miles. Stk # F10250 C E 2005 CHEVY 2500 HD REGULAR CAB 4x4 6.0L, Five Speed, 46K Miles. Stk. # 28364 $16,900 + TTL P R I C E 2004 FORD F-350 CREWCAB 4x4 $25,500 + TTL S A L E S A L E 2004 DODGE 3500 QUADCAB 4x4 Diesel, Auto, 84K $25,900 + TTL P R I C E S A L E S A L E P R I C E P R I C E 2003 DODGE 2500 REG-CAB 4x4 SLT, Diesel, Auto, 96K Miles. Stk. # 28332 $19,900 + TTL P R I 4x4, LS, 7.4 V-8, Auto, 85K Miles. Stk. # 19770 C E 2000 CHEVY 2500 EXT-CAB 4x4 $11,500 + TTL 2008 FORD F-350 2008 FORD F-250 2008 FORD F-350 2008 FORD F-250 CAB/CHASSIS 4x4 CREWCAB 4x4 CAB/CHASSIS 4x4 CREWCAB 4x4 MSRP REBATES BFM DISCOUNT $38,800 $4,000 $2,646 2003 DODGE 2500 QUAD CAB Diesel, Auto, Only 29K $22,500 + TTL MSRP REBATES BFM DISCOUNT $42,420 $2,000 $3,417 P R I XLT, 6.8L V-10, Auto, 88K Miles. Stk. # 27073 C E 1999 FORD F-250 REG-CAB FLATBED $10,900 + TTL Additional Rebates For Farmers, Ranchers and Other Commercial Customers May Apply. Additional $500 Available To TSCRA Members Or PHCC Members. If We Don’t Have What You Want, We Can Locate It For You!! All Used Vehicles Come With A 90-Day Limited Warranty. MSRP REBATES BFM DISCOUNT $39,805 $2,000 $2,651 DRW • DIESEL XL • AUTOMATIC STK # F10381 MSRP REBATES BFM DISCOUNT $40,995 $4,000 $2,857 DIESEL • AUTOMATIC XL • POWER W&L STK # F10373 MSRP REBATES BFM DISCOUNT $41,760 $2,000 $3,334 DIESEL • AUTOMATIC XL • POWER W&L STK # F10376 MSRP REBATES BFM DISCOUNT $42,675 $2,000 $3,490 DIESEL • AUTOMATIC DRW • XL • POWER W&L STK # F10351 MSRP REBATES BFM DISCOUNT $42,940 $3,000 $3,138 DRW • DIESEL XL • AUTOMATIC STK # F10374 MSRP REBATES BFM DISCOUNT $43,120 $4,000 $3,076 $37,003+TTL $37,185+TTL $36,802+TTL $36,044+TTL 2008 FORD F-350 2008 FORD F-250 2008 FORD F-250 2008 FORD F-250 REG-CAB 4x4 SUPERCAB 4x4 CREWCAB 4x2 CREWCAB 4x4 DRW • XLT DIESEL AUTOMATIC STK # F10379 DIESEL AUTOMATIC XLT STK # F10350 DIESEL AUTOMATIC XLT STK # F10313 DIESEL AUTOMATIC XLT STK # F10091 MSRP REBATES BFM DISCOUNT MSRP REBATES BFM DISCOUNT MSRP REBATES BFM DISCOUNT MSRP REBATES BFM DISCOUNT $43,365 $3,000 $3,442 $45,255 $3,000 $3,748 $45,710 $2,000 $3,825 $45,895 $2,000 $3,699 $36,923+TTL $38,507+TTL $39,885+TTL $40,196+TTL 2008 FORD F-250 2008 FORD F-250 2008 FORD F-250 2008 FORD F-350 CREWCAB 4x4 CREWCAB 4x4 CREWCAB 4x4 CREWCAB 4x4 DIESEL AUTOMATIC LARIAT STK # F10096 DIESEL AUTOMATIC FX4 STK # F10243 DIESEL AUTOMATIC LARIAT STK # F10270 DRW • LARIAT DIESEL AUTOMATIC STK # F10264 MSRP REBATES BFM DISCOUNT MSRP REBATES BFM DISCOUNT MSRP REBATES BFM DISCOUNT MSRP REBATES BFM DISCOUNT $50,255 $2,000 $4,225 $50,370 $2,000 $4,342 $50,945 $2,000 $4,314 $52,310 $2,000 $4,429 $44,030+TTL $44,028+TTL $44,631+TTL $45,881+TTL 2008 FORD F-550 2008 FORD F-250 2008 FORD F-550 2008 FORD F-350 CC/CHASSIS 4x2 CREWCAB 4x4 CC/CHASSIS 4x4 CREWCAB 4x4 DRW • LARIAT DIESEL AUTOMATIC STK # F10383 KING RANCH DIESEL AUTOMATIC STK # F10378 DRW • LARIAT DIESEL AUTOMATIC STK # F10382 MSRP REBATES BFM DISCOUNT MSRP REBATES BFM DISCOUNT MSRP REBATES BFM DISCOUNT $52,430 $3,000 $4,065 $53,475 $2,000 $4,773 $56,665 $3,000 $4,525 XL • AUTOMATIC GASOLINE STK # Fj0031 MSRP REBATES BFM DISCOUNT $32,445 $2,000 $1,719 $45,365+TTL $46,702+TTL $49,140+TTL $28,726+TTL 2008 FORD F-350 2008 FORD F-350 2008 FORD F-350 2008 FORD F-350 CREWCAB 4x4 CREWCAB 4x4 CREWCAB 4x4 CREWCAB 4x4 MSRP REBATES BFM DISCOUNT $37,900 $2,000 $2,264 XLT • DIESEL SIX SPEED MANUAL STK # Fj0074 XL • GASOLINE SIX SPEED MANUAL STK # Fj0097 DIESEL AUTOMATIC XL STK # Fj0099 MSRP REBATES BFM DISCOUNT MSRP REBATES BFM DISCOUNT MSRP REBATES BFM DISCOUNT $36,410 $2,000 $2,011 $30,955 $2,000 $1,466 $39,340 $2,000 $2,868 $33,636+TTL $32,399+TTL $27,489+TTL $34,472+TTL 2008 FORD F-350 2008 FORD F-350 2008 FORD F-350 2008 FORD F-250 CREWCAB 4x4 CREWCAB 4x4 CREWCAB 4x4 REG-CAB 4x4 XL • DIESEL SIX SPEED MANUAL STK # Fj0107 2003 FORD F-650 REGULAR CAB Cummins Diesel, Six Speed, 218K. Stk. # $19,900 + TTL XLT • AUTOMATIC GASOLINE STK # F10384 $32,154+TTL $35,154+TTL $34,138+TTL $36,426+TTL 2008 FORD F-250 2008 FORD F-250 2008 FORD F-350 2008 FORD F-450 CREWCAB 4x4 CREWCAB 4x4 CC/CHASSIS 4x4 CAB/CHASSIS 4x4 XL • AUTOMATIC GASOLINE STK # Fj0052 S A L E S A L E 1-877-356-2707 DIESEL • AUTOMATIC XL • POWER W&L STK # F10375 S A L E 2006KingFORD F-250 CREWCAB 4x4 Ranch, Leather. Stk. # F10074 $38,500 + TTL CALL TOLL FREE DRW • DIESEL XL • AUTOMATIC STK # F10032 2006 DODGE 3500 QUADCAB Diesel, Dually, 6-speed Manual, 43K Miles. $29,500 + TTL Page 17 COMANCHE, TEXAS 714 E. CENTRAL — COMANCHE, TEXAS 1-800-968-1877 Livestock Weekly MSRP REBATES BFM DISCOUNT $37,850 $2,000 $2,615 XLT • DIESEL FIVE SPEED STK # Fj0109 MSRP REBATES BFM DISCOUNT $44,795 $2,000 $3,413 XLT • DIESEL SIX SPEED MANUAL STK # Fj0112 MSRP REBATES BFM DISCOUNT $43,305 $2,000 $3,160 XL • DIESEL AUTOMATIC STK # Fj0117 MSRP REBATES BFM DISCOUNT $34,935 $3,000 $2,410 $33,235+TTL $39,382+TTL $38,145+TTL $29,525+TTL 2008 FORD F-250 2008 FORD F-250 2008 FORD F-250 2008 FORD F-250 REG-CAB 4x4 CREWCAB 4x4 CREWCAB 4x4 CREWCAB 4x4 XLT • DIESEL AUTOMATIC STK # Fj0119 MSRP REBATES BFM DISCOUNT $38,675 $3,000 $2,785 $32,890+TTL XLT • DIESEL AUTOMATIC STK # Fj0120 MSRP REBATES BFM DISCOUNT $43,765 $2,000 $3,311 $38,454+TTL XL • DIESEL SIX SPEED MANUAL STK # Fj0123 XLT • AUTOMATIC GASOLINE STK # Fj0127 MSRP REBATES BFM DISCOUNT MSRP REBATES BFM DISCOUNT $36,930 $2,000 $2,524 $32,406+TTL Photos For Illustration Purposes Only $36,870 $2,000 $2,162 $33,708+TTL Additional Discount Available For Current Super Duty Owners.