Virtual
fences
Don’t
fence me in
Everywhere you turn we have virtual this and virtual
that, and now we have virtual fences.
The BLM is working with ranchers to do just that,
install virtual fences.
Funded
in part by a grant from the Natural Resource Conservation Service, plus money
from the BLM and Colorado Parks and Wildlife, this first-ever virtual fencing
program has grown from one rancher with about 135 cows to now more than 2,000
cows. They have installed 10 towers in two counties that are pinging livestock
on over 500,000 acres.
Hilary
Boyd, assistant field manager in the BLM’s Colorado River Valley Field Office says,
“How can we manage livestock without structure? Now there are endless
possibilities. You can sit on your screen, figure out where you want to send
your animals, how long you want them there and how you are going to move your
animals across the landscape.”
So
why do you need a rancher? It turns out the cattle need to be trained on the
new system. Each cow has a collar that makes a noise as they approach a virtual
fence, and if need be, a shock is applied to their ears. The younger cows,
being turned out for the first time, quickly adapt to the system. The older
cows who are accustomed to roaming the range, take a little longer to adapt.
One article says a rancher can take up to two weeks to get the cattle to
respond appropriately. Personally, I’m not sure who is being the most trained,
the cow or the rancher.
The University of Idaho has received
a grant for a ‘four-year field project for researchers at U of I and Washington
State University to test the safety and efficacy of a prototype virtual fence
system that uses novel features to manage cows, sheep and other grazing
livestock with minimal ecological footprint.” The rationale here seems to be a
little different. Karen Launchbaugh, director of the U of I Rangeland Center,
says, “As wildlife habitat becomes increasingly fragmented and recreational
activities on rangelands continue to grow, maintaining unobstructed corridors
for movement of wildlife and humans is critical.”
More hikers and more wildlife means
more control over the rancher and his livestock,
All we need now is some virtual post
hole diggers, and maybe even a virtual BLM range con.
Until next time, be a nuisance to
the devil and don’t forget to check that cinch.
Frank DuBois was
the NM Secretary of Agriculture from 1988 to 2003, is the author of a blog: The
Westerner (www.thewesterner.blogspot.com) and is the founder of The DuBois Rodeo
Scholarship and The DuBois Western Heritage Foundation
CORRECTION:
In last month’s column, while discussing the Bison Preserve, I wrote the BLM
had issued a grazing permit for sheep on 60.000 acres of federal land. That
should have been for bison, not sheep.
4 comments:
Nailed it,Frank! Another way to concede control to government.
Soon they will control people by that implant that they must carry as a personal identification and permissions device. The same one that allows you to get paid or to spend the money that you may have earned based on your personal profile score.
Old Farmer It’s called a cell phone and we all have one in our hip pocket.
Typical comment by staffer: now we can sit on our asses and pretend to manage the resource without even going out there! And, folks we are paying for that! Wake up America and throw the bums out!!
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