We are One
Joe
We are Few
Thursday
was Joe Delk’s final day as Chairman of the Dona Ana Soil and Water
Conservation District board.
The scheduled
monthly meeting was the event and it brought to a close a nine year personal
commitment to maintain a voice for rural citizenry. His orchestrated ouster at
the hands of the progressive machine in the recent election was completed and
the stage was set to allow the environmental left to claim rights to
the direction of “natural resources” that are the key to
maintaining an agricultural presence in southern New Mexico.
The event
bypassed any celebratory antics. It was as subdued as it was remorseful. Joe
will be missed and his dedication to this industry and its culture will be hard
to replace.
We are One
I watched
with fascination the clip of Judith Durham and her mates from years ago. There
she was, her tiny frame, amidst her Seeker men singing to a jam packed arena. I
had forgotten how big her voice was. My goodness how powerful it was as she
rose to the tips of her toes and raising her arms to reach the high notes only
to hold captive a crashing crescendo. With that constant hint of a smile, she
not only swept her group to stardom she captured the imagination of the world.
Many of their
songs were ours when we knew them best in ‘60s. We were young then, too, and a
clip of us from that time would leave us gasping at the changes. Yes, we were
one from that time. Our eyes were bright. Our hair was not yet streaked with
gray but carried the luster of youth.
Of all the Seeker songs, it was We are Australian that captures the best
of Judith’s talents. She told us not only about herself, but about her
heritage. From the lyrics, she described the parallels of her nation to ours.
Some came in irons to find a home on those dusty red plains. Another was a
farmer’s wife. Some were convicts while others were freemen. Together, they
created a culture that today they know as home.
Isn’t that
our story as well?
My own surname is purported to be from indentured servants who remained bound somewhere
in Georgia
before they escaped to arrive in Texas.
In Bell County they settled only to find life as
difficult as what they had escaped. It was so difficult they eventually
migrated westward to enter New Mexico
before statehood. Among their numbers, too, was a farmer’s wife. Like the
Australians, they found
ways to become freemen.
Joe’s
family came from Switzerland.
They had come to American and cross country with the intent to find a new world
counterpart to that European backdrop. Sometime in 1879, they arrived in what
we know today as the Mesilla
Valley in a covered
wagon. They had stayed long enough to restock some necessaries and left Picacho headed to Ft. Mason.
At Ft. Mason, they spent a night in security
behind locked gates. Sunup found them headed west on the Butterfield Trail
toward the community of San Vicente which is now Silver City
in Grant County. Nearing Magdalena Gap, a frantic
rider literally galloped by them calling to them to turn and run to Ft. Mason.
“Apaches
are on the warpath,” he shouted. “Run to the fort to save yourselves!”
Soon, the
family could see the dust from the approaching Indians. Their world quickly
changed from one of a challenge of the immense desert crossing to the challenge
for their lives. Before it was all over a horse had been shot down in the
traces, Mr. Flurry had cut the horse loose, and he and the other horse pulled
the wagon, their earthly possessions and the family through the open gates at Fort Mason.
The gates
were slammed shut and safety was at hand. The rest is history. The family
created a culture that would result as home under the Kneeling Nun on the Delk
Ranch.
Indeed, we
are one.
We are Few
We are one, but we are many … we are
Australian the lyrics continued.
The
difference in their song and ours is not just 12,000 miles of earth’s surface.
We are no longer many. From known demographics, less than two percent of our
nation’s population is engaged directly in agriculture. We are few. We find
ourselves in a more precarious position than the small states at the time of
our founding. There are no safeguards. There are no vested firewalls to protect
our existence. The democracy of the progressive mobs is nearly complete. We are
being consumed in increasing swaths by masses that crush our voices and our
votes. There are no remedies and even the only ostensible protections for small
states, two senators, are no longer aligned with what is best for our rights.
The 17th Amendment freed them from any state obligation and allowed
loyalties to be redirected to the highest bidder. Currently, that is the
environmental movement.
The problem
is even greater within the rural communities within our states. The dominion by
urban centers is leaving rural communities in ruins. We don’t have the votes
and we don’t have the strength and security of private property and rights to
fend from the tide. It is a fundamental problem that has fewer and fewer
solutions.
I’ll miss
Joe’s leadership. The whole state will miss Joe Delk’s leadership. It was he
who envisioned the most recent lawful coordination process to be implemented to
make government agencies engage with local government in land management decisions.
That was blasphemous to the progressives and their agenda. Joe was as much a
threat to them as he was a modern day visionary for the agricultural and rural community.
We are one,
but … we are few.
Stephen L. Wilmeth is a rancher from southern New Mexico. “Thank you,
Joe.”
And even among the few, there are fewer still who will step forward and spend the time and effort it takes to provide leadership.
My former boss, Secretary of Interior Jim Watt, was fond of the following quote from a Theodore Roosevelt speech, often dubbed his Man In The Arena quote:
"It is not the critic who counts: not the man who points out how the
strong man stumbles or where the doer of deeds could have done better.
The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face
is marred by dust and sweat and blood, who strives valiantly, who errs
and comes up short again and again, because there is no effort without
error or shortcoming, but who knows the great enthusiasms, the great
devotions, who spends himself for a worthy cause; who, at the best,
knows, in the end, the triumph of high achievement, and who, at the
worst, if he fails, at least he fails while daring greatly, so that his
place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who knew neither
victory nor defeat."
Joe will certainly not join those "cold and timid souls", as he has been a leader in various livestock and ag organizations. He made some tough choices as a member of the NM Livestock Board, and most recently as Chairman of the Dona Ana Soil & Water Conservation District. In each instance he has represented the ranching industry accurately and completely, and sometimes at great personal sacrifice. But at the end of the day, he should be celebrating "the triumph of high achievement."
Our rural and ranching traditions are passed down through several avenues and one of the most important is music. Of course, Joe's activities in that arena have spanned six decades. First with his father, Forrest Delk's band (which you can explore here) and most recently with his sons in The Delk Band (which you can explore here).
And it doesn't stop there. Check out these grand kids.
Joe will certainly not join those "cold and timid souls", as he has been a leader in various livestock and ag organizations. He made some tough choices as a member of the NM Livestock Board, and most recently as Chairman of the Dona Ana Soil & Water Conservation District. In each instance he has represented the ranching industry accurately and completely, and sometimes at great personal sacrifice. But at the end of the day, he should be celebrating "the triumph of high achievement."
Our rural and ranching traditions are passed down through several avenues and one of the most important is music. Of course, Joe's activities in that arena have spanned six decades. First with his father, Forrest Delk's band (which you can explore here) and most recently with his sons in The Delk Band (which you can explore here).
And it doesn't stop there. Check out these grand kids.
If that's not leaving a legacy I don't know what is.
And on a more personal level, I'll always remember Joe's helping hand in kicking off the DuBois Rodeo Scholarship and the NMSU Rodeo Hall of Fame.
I'll close by letting you in on a secret. You haven't heard the last from Jose Delk. We all await his next
exploits!
THANK YOU, JOE DELK
---Frank DuBois
1 comment:
Great article Frank - and "We are few" hits the nail on the head - sounded like you were describing California.
And when the "masses that crush our voices and our votes" - finally crush our last voice, the next sound the 'masses' will hear is their stomachs growling.
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