For several years, my phone conversations with George have been
depressing. Sometimes when we discuss rain, he’s never had enough on
Spud Mountain. He seems to live in endless drought conditions — until it
rains and washes out his water gaps, tanks and roads. It’s tough on his
cows. Thank goodness he has a job at the bank.
Last summer, in anticipation of summer rain, he sent me a rain gauge
that his bank has been using as a customer gift since, oh, probably
statehood. It was shiny and had the bank’s name on it. When our monsoon
hit in July, we were ready.
Our late summer rains are pretty reliable; it’s the spring rains that can make a big difference.
Even 2 or 3 inches will get the grass growing before it gets so hot.
It affects the delicate balance that haunts dairymen: milk vs.
reproduction. When a cow is generating enough milk to keep the calf’s
condition positive, there may not be enough energy left in her body to
cycle. There’s nothing prettier than a sleek cow in good condition with a
big bag and a good-sized calf at her side. Well, it would be even
prettier if the bull were trying to mount her!
My neighbors and I have a morning-after rainfall report. The one that
tells his amount first usually gets one-tenth less. I’m sure most of
you have heard the joke about the farmer who left his double barrel
shotgun leaned up against the property line fence. After the big rain he
retrieved his shotgun. One barrel was full of rain and the one on his
side was plum dry.
It’s not unusual for us to get that kind of spotty precipitation in
the county, though by the end of our rainy season we’re within 2 inches
of each other. If we get more than five minutes into a conversation I’m
sure to be reminded when it rained every year on the same day. “Yessir,
sonny! Jes like clarkwork. You could set yer watch by the afternoon
showers.” Sometimes Noah comes up in the discussion. Then the subject
will switch to the times when it was so dry fish were wearing sunblock.
Issues of concern to people who live in the west: property rights, water rights, endangered species, livestock grazing, energy production, wilderness and western agriculture. Plus a few items on western history, western literature and the sport of rodeo... Frank DuBois served as the NM Secretary of Agriculture from 1988 to 2003. DuBois is a former legislative assistant to a U.S. Senator, a Deputy Assistant Secretary of Interior, and is the founder of the DuBois Rodeo Scholarship.
Sunday, November 17, 2013
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