Free: Contests & Raffles.
O.K. I checked out all the deterents the Friends of the Wolves have to offer. I'm a rancher and I'll do what it takes but every single solution they presented is very ridiculous. 1. put flagery around property. I have 11 miles of fence and am considered a small cattle rancher. That consists of 38,133 flags at 18" apart, taking 39 days to put up if I get 2 per minute. Then there's the areas I have no fence since it is natural rocky and steep cows can't manipulate but wolves can. This area will have to have small rope hung which will take more time and money. QUESTION? So who buys the flags? Who puts in the time to hang the flags? Who maintains the flagery?2. Put range riders out. I'm a one man operation. I start at 5 a.m. changing sprinklers, milking a cow, fixing fence, cutting hay, baleing hay, fixing machinery and come in the house when it's dark. When do I have time to ride range? When I do check the cows I have to hop in the pickup and make a quick trip and back to work as fast as possible. QUESTION? Who pays for the range riders? Will this actually work since wolves are nocturnal mostly? My cows don't all stay together so do we get several guys to chase each bunch around? Are there actually people that will do this type of thing for practically no money for long periods of time? Do these ranger rides wear head lamps so they can ride at night?3. Get guard dogs Wolves eat dogs. Dogs will stay with sheep perty good but you have to check in with them several times a day to feed and water them. Would need several dogs (really big mean dogs) to protect cattle from wolves. When my cows split up how will my dogs know which bunch to go with? Will dogs stay with cattle day and night? Who buys and trains the dogs? This idea works great in Ireland where its all open country and with sheep that are brought in every night. Would never work with cattle, besides, "wolves eat dogs". Won't work.4. Use moveable fencing. How much time do I have to move moveable fencing consisting of several miles of fence every day. A wolf proof fence might work on a corral but out on these rugged wooded mountains is out of the question. Who buys this multmillion dollar fencing for me and who moves it every day? Who actually is going to move this fencing regularly and who pays this Paul Bunyan to move it?5. Bring animals in at night. It only takes about a day to round up my cattle on my small place sometimes 2. How can I bring them in every night if it takes all day to bring them in just once? So if I'm bringing in my cows every day for the nights stay in my corral, who changes my sprinklers, milks the cow, fixes my fences, cuts and bales the hay, fixes my junk equpment? Who pays for all this?Finally, folks seem to think us cattlemen are rich. Just a quick math quiz. Last summer alfalfa was worth 200 per ton. My cows eat 3 tons ea. per winter. That's 600 just for the hay costs to support a cow for one winter. When I took my steers to market last fall I averaged 512.00 per steer. Figure that one out folks. I lost 88 dollars per cow just on the hay expense. I haven't told you about the fencing costs, irrigation costs, taxes, fuel bill, break down expenses, salt, baleing string, tractor payments plus some cows don't raise a calf because it dies from scours or she aborts from eating pine needles or it gets eaten by wolves. So us rich ranchers are suppose to take on another big expense with money we don't have. Most of us have our wives working to help support the place. These solutions the folks come up with are so far in left field I can't believe anybody ever put it in print. Can't figure out why us cattlemen are not included in the loop when solutions are SERIOUSLY looked at. gotta git back to work.