IV Branding 2015

Every year on the ranch, calves are gathered up and “branded”. Because we do not catch and tag each calf when it is born like many cattle producers do, the first time we get a hand on our calves is in late July to early August. Each herd is individually brought into one of two yards, and sorted into cows, dry cows (cows that have no calves), and calves. The calves are then put through our farm-built sorting tub and chute. Each calf is caught in the small calf squeeze and headgate. They are each vaccinated, tagged, branded and castrated (if they are males). 

  
Branding is a family affair every year. The kids love working the calves, as they are just the right size. It’s a great chance to improve their livestock handling skills for when they are older, and working fully grown animals. 

 
 

Although branding days are hard work, they are everyone’s favourite days of the summer. They not only give us the chance to get a really good look at how well we have nurtured our cattle, branding days also give us a great look at how we have nurtured the inner farmer in each of our children. 

   
Needless to say, I was bursting with pride!!

 
And the calves looked great too…

  

When Life and Weather Collide to Create Hell Week on the Farm

Sometimes all the planning and forethought in the world can’t save you from fate. This coming week on the farm is going to be nothing short of Hell Week. The amount of work that must be jammed into the next 5 days is daunting to say the least. 

I think that any non-farmer would be astounded at the amount of planning it takes to run and manage a large(ish) farm. Pretty much every waking moment is spent planning the year, that month, the week and the very next moment. Whatever you are doing at any given moment, farmers always need to be thinking about what comes next. Unfortunately, sometimes all the planning in the world can’t keep all the pieces from colliding. 

We (and when I say we, I mean Aaron!) create a grazing plan every winter for the coming spring, summer and fall.  It is fully planned what path each herd will follow to maximize grass and forage productivity. It changes drastically each year, so that pastures that you graze in the fall one year will get a break the next fall, and so on. One major consideration is making sure that each herd will pass by one of two yards in late July so that they can be brought in and the calves can be processed (vaccinated, tagged and branded). 

Late July is not the traditional time period for brandings. Many are done in May, or June. Because we calve into June, those times would not work for us. We need to make sure all the calves have hit the ground before we start branding. We also like late July because it usually falls in-between the two cuts of hay, and before silage season. Usually. This week we have 1200 pairs that need to be brought in, sorted (cows, calves and dry cows), and processed. 

This year has been an odd one. The lack of rain for the first three months of the growing season meant our hay crop is about 20% of what it usually is, so we had to get creative with finding feed for the coming winter. We were lucky to have 1000 acres of oats that were meant to be combined (I say lucky, but again that is where the planning comes in), that could be baled for greenfeed. It has all been cut, but we finally caught a rain last week, so now all 1000 acres need to be baled this week. 

Every year we silage the land that has been freshly seeded down to forages. We silage those acres because they are seeded with a bit of oats, which makes good feed, and because it helps the little forage seedlings grow better if those oats are removed early on. We don’t own our own silage equipment, so we get a custom silaging crew in from Manitoba to help us out. This usually happens in early August, but this year’s drought ment that the crop matured much earlier than usual. The crew will be here this week, so they need need to be organized, and fed and helped. 

Although we have been planning for this work for the past 9 months, it was supposed to happen over a month long period. Not a week! 

1200 pairs to bring in, sort, process and move back out. 1000 acres to bale. 800 acres to silage. A dozen men to feed each day. And the brain power to keep it all organized. 

Thank the lord we have awesome people the work with us, or none of it would be possible! 

I better get out there – I hear the chorus of bellows that mean #branding15 is starting!

Random Thoughts on the Long Drive Home

After a few days up in Northern Saskatchewan at Jan Lake, we headed home today. I knew I had considerable windshield time in the passenger seat (a rare occurance for me), so I asked my Facebook Friends for some suggestions on a blog post to write along the seven hour ride. I had some great suggestions, from what it’s like to vacation as a farmer, to some good lake recipes. I was pretty gung ho, and had some reasonably well formed thoughts rolling through my head. Then, lake head set in. That’s right. I got lazy. 

  
So instead, I will share a few random thoughts and even more random pictures that caught my eye on the long drive home. 

1. Sometimes it takes stepping out of your normal routine to bring you full circle. 

Noelle and I skipped a great horse show to go up to the lake. While it was a great family decision, I couldn’t help but feel like we were missing out on not only a good show, but catching up with some really good horse show friends. Turns out I not only got to spend quality family time, but also got to catch up with some REALLY great horse show friends from years ago. 

Back in my prime high school horse showing days, Vince and Sharon Walker were not just family friends. They were family. I was best friends with their oldest daughter, Alisha, and my sister was best buds with Lindsay, their middlest child. While I dare not get into details about the adventures we got ourselves into, it is safe to say that Vince and Sharon were secondary parents to me for those years. 

It was great to catch up with both of them up at Jan this weekend. It was very nice to see that Vince is as easy going as always, and Sharon still has multiple dogs by her side. The chat with them brought back a lot of great memories, and it was great to hear about what all of their three kids (and multiple grandchildren) are up to these days. 

2. Crops north of the 16 highway look great. 

  
From Elfros to Choiceland, even the frost damaged or re-seeded canola looks MUCH better than around home. Cereal crops look fantastic. And there are far more hemp fields than I have ever seen in the past.  I would have taken more (and better quality) pics, but it was not worth the “I’m in a hurry to get home” conversation (aka argument).

3. I have no idea what the heck this thing is, or what it is possibly used for. Whatever it is, what did they think people might do to it?? It had me stumped. And giggling. 

  
4. I love the Rose Valley elevator. I don’t know who’s idea it was to paint a smiley face on the side, but it works. It makes me smile every single time I drive past. 

  
Once again, excuse the 120km/hr fly-by shot. As well as the bug gut smears. 

5. As great as it was to get away for a few days, honestly, there is no place like home! 

6. I need to stop thinking about my blog now. What I really should be doing is typing a list (or 10 lists) of what I need to pack/do to get ready for the horse show we are leaving for TOMORROW! My head is starting to hurt, just thinking about it. 

Happy Hump Day!!

Why Most Farmers Don’t Want to Jump into Niche Markets

If I have heard it once, I’ve heard it a thousand times. 

“Why wouldn’t farmers want to grow (organic/natural/hormone free/random other stuff), people want it, and the farmers can make more money growing it.”

Here are a few reasons (right or wrong) why Farmers hesitate to jump into these niche markets. 

1. Farmers are a practical bunch. We often don’t think in terms of “why not, if we would make more money”, but more like “Why would anyone pay more ‘A’, when ‘B’ is just as healthy, safe, and delicious.” 

We have a very close relationship with the food we produce, no matter what kind of food it is. Whether it is grains, oilseeds, vegetables or meat that we grow, we spend the better part of a year nurturing it, worrying about it, and praying over it. Our profession isn’t one where you go home after 8 hours and turn off your brain. Every waking minute is spent planning on how to get the best possible growth, the healthiest crop and herd, while leaving the land in the best shape it can be in to do it all next year. After all of that, we proudly serve what we have grown to our family and friends at our kitchen tables. I promise you that I can better tell you how safe or healthy the meat we produce is, infinitely better than any fancy marketing team. 

In a farmer’s practical mind, why would he/she work harder and spend more money growing something that someone somewhere thinks might be better, when you know that what you already grow is completely awesome!

In other words, just because someone will pay more money for it, doesn’t make it right. 

2. Farmers have heard before that they will make more money. Sometimes it actually happens, sometimes it doesn’t. As long as there have been markets, there have been niche markets. One of the main reasons there are small, directed markets for any specific product is that there are significantly larger costs for producing that product. If it was really that easy, everyone would be doing it, and it would no longer be a small market. 

For example: We have raised and finished both conventional beef, and hormone-free “natural beef”. Cost of gain (the cost of producing each pound of beef) depends largely on feed prices at any given time, but if conventional cost of gain is $0.80/lb then hormone-free could be around $1.00/lb and organic beef could be as high as $1.50/lb. Natural beef premiums we have experienced in the past have been anywhere from $0.05 to $0.25. Raising natural beef involves quite a heavy load of paper-work, not to mention the extra work of feeding cattle different rations, and for longer. A twenty five cent premium may sound attractive, but not so much after you’ve taken time to consider your true costs. Top that with a fairly unstable market, and you may do all that work for one year, only to have your premium shrink or disappear altogether the next year. 

3. Fads come and go. Dairy used to make you fat, then it was carbohydrates. A great friend of mine owns the SaskMade Marketplace. She says that 4 years ago everyone came in looking for organic. Now the ask is always for gluten free. Going into a new production system always takes significant time and money. How sure can farmers be that this new one is going to last? 

4. Niche markets lack standards. Many of these small markets lack a standard set of rules that must be followed around the world. A prime example of this is the organic markets. While Canada has fantastic rules and standards that must be followed, the same cannot be said for organic food everywhere. There isn’t much more disheartening than seeing the organic flax that you poured your heart and soul, time and money into, only to have the market tank because China shipped literally boat loads of organic flax into North America. Especially when you know their fields were probably never inspected, and if they were, well, who knows what palms were greased along the way. 

A&W calls their beef “sustainable”, but what does that mean? There is no set standards around calling any beef from anywhere “sustainable”. In Canada, they ship much of their beef in from Australia. How “sustainable” is that? Compare that to McDonalds, who have been working together with environmental, government and beef producer groups for YEARS, to gather information and come to a consensus about what sustainable beef actually looks like. 

These huge gaps in standards make it very difficult to put your farmer stamp of approval on any given niche market. 

5. Farmers hate having all their eggs in one basket. By definition, niche markets are small. This means there are much fewer companies to sell your product to. This means the farmer carries a much greater risk. 

There have been instances of hauling grain to small companies, only to have them fold into bankruptcy before you get paid. Also, If there is only one company that buys product X and you want to sell your Product X in September, you better hope they are buying then. Farmers like options. Lots of options. 

6. Change sucks. Although present day farmers are more progressive than ever, there will always be a lingering fear of change. We are only human after all. When things are going well on your farm, there are few farmers that would be willing to completely change their production system. What farmers are doing on their farms today is a result of many years, sometimes even generations, of small steady changes and adjustments. To take your entire system, and turn 90 degrees in an entirely new direction is a difficult step for anyone. 

But….

All this being said, farmers do take leaps into new directions all the time. They try new crops and new systems. Sometimes it works well for them, sometimes it doesn’t. This post isn’t meant to convince any farmer not to try a new market, but rather to help an average person understand why farmers don’t always produce what you think you want at any given time. 

Saskatchewan Cattlewomen’s Golf Tournament 2015

On Thursday June 11th I gathered with a fantastic group of ladies to spend the day golfing, networking, and raising funds for a great charity. 

  
The Saskatchewan Cattlewomen’s Golf Tournament was started in 2010 by Sheri Pedersen and Cheri Wildeman. The previous year they had attended the Canadian Cattlewomen For The Cure Golf Tournament in Alberta. Although it was a fantastic event, Sheri and Cheri realized that it was difficult to spend two days travelling for one day of golfing, and they also saw an opportunity to raise funds within Saskatchewan. So with a lot of work and organizing from those two ladies, the Saskatchewan Cattlewomen’s Golf Tournement was born. 

Each year, the golf tournement and supper raise funds for the Children’s Hospital in Saskatoon. What started as a small amount, quickly grew into a substantial annual number. 

Previous Funds Raised:

          2010 $2500
          2011 $7150
          2012 $9000
          2013 $13500
          2014 $16000

This year was no exception. With 64 golfers, and 90 for supper, 2015 was a roaring success. There were ladies in attendance from Saskatoon, Moose Jaw, Regina, Ituna, Kelliher, Duval, LeRoy, Jansen, Eastend, Tessier, St Benedict, Lockwood and Lanigan. With the help of numerous sponsors, $14,250 was raised. Over the past six years, a grand total of $62,400 has been raised for the Children’s Hospital. 

Beyond the great cause of raising funds, the Saskatchewan Cattlewomen’s Golf Tournement is a great day of networking, socializing and fun.  There is room for every level of golfer (even the very *ahem* challenged golfers such as myself), and a delicious steak supper for the non-golfers. There are prizes for the golfer’s and door prizes that everyone has a chance at. 

 

Brad Wildeman grilling steaks like a boss!! 

I had a wonderful time catching up with some great old cattle business friends, and creating some new contacts as well. I may have lost the odd ball in the process, but it was well worth it. 

  

My Golf Team:
Kim McLean (Sk Ag)
Bree Kelln (Pioneer Hybrid)
Candace Ippolito (Saskmade Marketplace)
Adrienne Ivey (me!!)

 
Thank You Sponsors!!! 

What’s Up With My Instagram

I love social media. I love FaceBook for personal social interactions with old and new friends. It is also my go-to for good horse related articles, and I have been known to buy tack and show clothes through FaceBook too. Twitter is my “agriculture” place. I read technical and feel-good Ag articles. I see the news (like the fact that Tim Hortons is in hot water right now – and it’s not for their tea), talk about our farm, and fight with the odd activist. This blog is also falls under the social media category. I use it as a tool to connect with both friends and strangers. I try to engage with consumers to help give them a glimpse into the world of farmers, which seems so normal to me. I spout my opinions, and love every second of it!!

Intagram is the one social media platform that has always intrigued me, but I have never quite jumped on the bandwagon. Still to this day, I am mostly guessing on how to use it’s most basic functions, let alone how to use it to it’s max in engaging people (and it shows!). 

On Twitter, I have around 900 followers. On any given week, I will have around 500 people read my blog. On Instagram? 55 followers. Don’t get me wrong, social media is not a race to get followers. There are so many ways of using social media. To be honest, the number one reason I use FaceBook is that my 80 yr old Grandma goes there every week to see pics of her grandkids. Talking about Ag is a secondary use there. I don’t seek out new “friends”. But in my mind, Instagram could be an awesome way to bridge the gap between regular every day folk, and farmer peeps like me. If only I knew how to use it. 

So what’s up with my Instagram account these days? A great friend of mine, Jordan, has helped gently (kind of) push me into many of my current social media skills. She heckled me into getting a Facebook profile picture before I knew how to do much more than log on. I may have beat her to the Twitter punch, but she has been blogging for years. If I hadn’t experienced her amazing way of sharing her experiences on her blog, I am very sure mine wouldn’t exist today. I only wish I knew how to sit a link to her blog here. It is great! And now she is guiding my way into the world of Instagram. 

A friend of Jordan’s has started a monthly picture challenge on Instagram. She has come up with a list of words, one for each day. You need to post a picture representing the word of the day. You don’t need to post everyday, only when it works for you. I took this challenge as the perfect way to get myself more familiar with Instagram. It gives me a specific reason to post everyday. Only 4 days in, and I feel more comfortable there already. 

Here is the list of June’s words:

  
Today is June 5th, so in the back of my head I know I am looking for a photo opportunity that relates to the word “diamond”. Any suggestions? 

Here are a couple of my first Instaalbum posts:

 

   

 

So if you are one of my few followers on Instagram, now you know what is up with my slightly criptic posts. If you are not one of my followers, feel free to follow me! Or even better, play along!  

Update: Jordan has once again heckled (ok, gently nudged) me into learning something new. You will find a link to her blog here. Once again, she is awesome (and right)!!

12 Signs: You Might Be A Farm Wife If…..

1. Your first date night post-baby is to a cattle auction.

2. When telemarketers/sales people/ government workers call and ask for the man of the house, then doubt you when you offer to answer questions, you wish for the superhuman ability to reach through the phone to strangle said person.

3. You automatically know what your friend is talking about when she complains she had to pull out the “I WILL walk to the house” line last week. You automatically respond with “I know, they’re such jerks” before you’ve even heard the story.

4. You have managed to cart supper for 8 to a field 8 miles away with 3 kids in tow, one of which is still in a bucket car seat, and another that is the devil itself in the form of a two year old. And  you kept it hot. And managed to remember (and cook accordingly) that 2 guys don’t eat cucumbers, one won’t eat onions and they all want 3 helpings of dessert. And did I mention you got it there hot?  And you celebrated with wine. Lots of wine.

5. You have been pulled over for speeding and got off (legitimately) for the excuse of “The combine is sitting, waiting for these parts.”

6. Your vet’s cell number is programmed into your phone.

7. With every summer wedding invitation you receive, you send back the RSVP with a special note: “attendance is weather dependant”.

8. The local grocery store has a mop handy for when you make a quick milk run on the way past town when hauling yearlings. They know the spring run means your boots are dropping more than mud.

9. In the spring you can identify all the other cow-farmer wives by the lingering stench of milk-replacer on their hands/clothing/hair.

10. You understand the true meaning of the phrase “I’ll be in in a few minutes” also known as “I’ll be there right away”, also known as “This will only take a few minutes”, also known as “Be right there”. True meaning of said phrases: “I have no idea how long I will be. Eat without me.”

11. You understand that your tightly managed schedule can be blown apart at any moment by weather, loose animals, emergency parts runs, or “I just need you for a couple minutes to move trucks”.

12. You love your life, and wouldn’t change it for all the money in the world!

Update: 

Seconds after publishing this post, I head out to drive to an arena I ride at, and find that out of 5 trucks on our farm, this one was the only truck left for me. Figures!!

 
 

The View From My Ranch Porch This Morning (Literally)

Lately I have been reminding myself to take the time to enjoy the view around me more often. When you are surrounded by nature’s beauty on a daily basis, it doesn’t take long to start taking it for granted. A simple drive to town is a showcase of new leaves, green fields, wetlands full of waterfowl, and the glory of wide open spaces. 

This morning brought another reminder, even closer to home. As I stood out on my front porch, enjoying the view of the newly leafed trees, I had a visitor. 

  
This beautiful Momma White Tailed Deer was only steps away. She took her time gracefully grazing and nibbling at the ditches. She seemed to particularly enjoy the dandelions. She is welcome to them, I have more than enough!

 
Beyond the reminder to take the time to enjoy my view, it was a more immediate reminder that I need to cut the grass in my ditches! 

Happy Day everyone. How is your view this morning?

Keeping my Cool with Vegans on Twitter

It is not new news that Vegan Activists are busy on social media these days. Months ago they made a huge group effort to take over the farmer driven #farm365 movement on Twitter. #farm365 was started by Andrew Campbell, an Ontario dairy farmer as a way for farmers to show (with pictures) what their daily life is like on the farm. What started as a great way to show consumers how their food is really produced in a completely open and transparent way, quickly spiralled down into offensive attacks from vegan groups trolling twitter. See more here: https://www.realagriculture.com/2015/01/farmers-speak-perspectives-farm365-activist-backlash/

Since the moment I started taking part in #farm365, I have had countless tweets attacking me, my family and my profession.

 So why do I continue to take part? It is really quite simple – I believe in the purpose of #farm365. I believe that people have forgotten what everyday farmers look like. They have forgotten that we are kind, caring, compassionate people that feed what we grow to our families with pride. We care about the land we are in charge of. We are not swayed by mega-corporations trying to sell us one seed/chemical or another. We make our own decisions, and stand by them. 

When the vegans come a-trolling, sometimes it is hard to keep my cool. I have no interest in trying to change their minds. I know they are set on their choices, just as I am set on mine. I know that the vast majority of people won’t be swayed by them either – especially when they are at their most hateful. I know it is best to walk away and probably hit the BLOCK button. That being said, some days it is really hard not to engage them. It is hard not to stand up for myself, my values and my morals. I want to shout from the rooftops that we care deeply for our animals, and ensure their eventual death is pain-free and respectful. But they don’t care. They only see death, and to them the death of an animal is possibly more important than the death of a human. It is certainly more important to them than the respect of a fellow human. 

So sometimes I crumble. Sometimes I engage. It never works. I have tried being respectful. I have tried being witty. It. Does. Not. Work. 

Today I crumbled. I engaged. Luckily they have learned to not threaten violence, or Twitter will suspend their accounts. This was a calm and respectful interaction with them. Believe me, they get much, much worse. Here is a little snapshot of today’s crumble:

   

       

So again, I have learned my lesson. Do not engage. But knowing that still doesn’t lessen the knife-like feeling in my gut everytime one of their brethren favorites or re-tweets one of these. 

So for all you eat meat-eaters out there – those of you that are watching on Twitter or Facebook or reading blogs like this one: thank you for every Like, Favorite, Share, or Re-Tweet. Thank you for every honest question you have asked of farmers like me. Thank you for wanting to know more. My engagement with you far out weighs days like today. Your support balances the hate. Some days we need it.