Biosecurity
Trich and
Treat
Fences
By Stephen L. Wilmeth
I talked
to Joe Bill.
I told
him his recognition as New Mexico’s ‘Cattleman of the Year’ was an honor not
just for him but for his family and the industry. Sure, he has always been
active in the New Mexico Cattle Growers Association, but his award reflects the
nomination of a cattleman that doesn’t live in the more predominately private
lands sanctity of eastern New Mexico nor has he been a presiding president.
He’s a federal lands rancher from a family that has prevailed through an
uninterrupted presence now reaching into its third century. That alone is
worthy of his award.
Following
the congratulatory words, ranching ensued. Fencing was the issue. Joe Bill is
our neighbor. As he has done on much of his country in recent years, he has
made a pass across our common boundary and made major repairs. Our contribution
to what he completed has been meager and we owe him. I told him I appreciate
him greatly, and I do. He makes us both better.
Yes, that
tedious cliché is in order. Fences do make good neighbors, but good neighbors
and fences together make even … better neighbors.
Biosecurity
This
morning The Westerner reported the
shooting death of the former Gulf Cartel leader in Reynosa, Tamaulipas, ‘Toro’
Loiza Salinas, has led to a power vacuum as the next jeffe takes control.
Nearly 400 Mexicans have been butchered. Anywhere else that would be considered
war, but, in the control of the drug corridors of our southern border, that is
simply continuing drama.
Indeed,
a border wall is necessary, and, to those who disagree, the welcome is out to
come and live in the shade of any fence they can find along its course.
Yes sir, reach and out spread
goodwill to any and all comers. Welcome signs to those wayward straggles
trudging northward could be made, but, be beware. After bienvenidos hermanos y hermanas, Tervetuloa veljet ja siaret, or huān ying xiōng di jiĕ mèi the conversions
just get plain unspellable much less pronounceable.
‘Toro’ Salinas’ nickname highlights
yet another issue that worries every border rancher and that is the matter of feral
bulls or cows or any livestock. Heaven help us if some terrorist organization
decides to disrupt our food supply. A pair of pliers can do irreparable harm to
our biosecurity at any spot along the 85 miles of New Mexico/Mexican border
where only barbed wire fencing still exists. Nip the fence, drive a wad or
individual animal with hoof and mouth disease through it, plug the hole so they
don’t return, and go to the nearest cantina and drink to the success of the
deed would be all it takes to start a firestorm of domestic injury.
The bottom line is biosecurity
alone is justification for the border wall, or fence, or whatever livestock,
terrorist, and cartel proof barrier that must be installed for our nation’s
protection and economic wellbeing.
Trich and Treat
Hoof and mouth disease isn’t the
only threat.
There are more than 40 herds of
New Mexico cattle that are quarantined for the sexually transmitted Trichomonas
fetus (the reality is there are many times that many impacted but untested for
this cowering nightmare). This microscopic protozoon is a silent killer of
unborn cattle fetuses. As such, it is a wrecker of ranching profitability. When
our operation faced this debacle earlier in this decade, the protocol overseen
by our state veterinarian called for multiple bull testings and full sexual
rest for the cow herd, but the real defense was thought to be the removal of
bulls before the age of six. Our program was copied from a northern New Mexico
rancher who adopted the practice of starting fresh with a new bull battery
after every fourth breeding season.
The problem now is there is
evidence that bulls younger than six retain the protozoa and can become
carriers. Further, the belief that cows will clean themselves up with full
sexual rests through a minimum of three cycles has also been discounted. In
fact, there are most likely chronic carriers that are disguised by carrying
calves to full term. Apparently, their uterine inflammation resulting from the
protozoan is not severe enough to result in fetal abortion.
This has become a true epidemic.
It is spread by carrier animals, normally bulls, that are passed back and forth
between and among ranches.
It is the same absence of
biosecurity that an ineffective international boundary livestock barrier
presents. Ranches, like countries, must have effective, closed boundaries so
herd health can be protected, guarded, and maintained. Unlike the Mexican border, however, there is
no constitutional mandate to control ranch boundaries, but there is a huge
federal implication. Every border ranch in New Mexico (within direct primary
cartel reach) except one is dominated by federal ownership. With their dominion
of ownership responsibilities, policing power over ongoing operations, and the
shortfall of any management plan consideration to head the problem off, there
should be immediate and joint efforts to control the spread of Trich and every
other disease of national consequence that a comprehensive biosecurity barrier
should address. Currently, there is no dedicated
partnership program to install any perimeter fencing. It is the requirement of
the rancher to address it. With 80 year old perimeter fencing infrastructure, suffocating
NEPA regulatory demands, and hundreds of miles of fencing involved, few ranches
can consider such large scale undertaking.
To make it worse, those 40 ranches
that are now impacted by national monument status and have no guarantee to even
stay on the land have an even bigger problem. They simply cannot enter into the
financing liabilities that such an undertaking would require.
This is a huge problem and it
needs to be included in the scope and the intent of biosecurity along the
southern border.
Stephen
L. Wilmeth is a rancher from southern New Mexico. “Joe Bill Nunn should be recognized
for one most important thing … he accepts no government payment.”
I too want to add my congratulations to Joe Bill and Lauren, friends for almost 50 years now. We played baseball together in College, and since then its been Cattlegrower meetings, team ropings and various federal land management issues. Good friends, good times and a well deserved honor.
I too want to add my congratulations to Joe Bill and Lauren, friends for almost 50 years now. We played baseball together in College, and since then its been Cattlegrower meetings, team ropings and various federal land management issues. Good friends, good times and a well deserved honor.
---Frank DuBois
2 comments:
there is a vaccine to control foot and mouth and there was atopical to kill the trich parasite but the feds have won't allow either one
Great read, as always, Steve.
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