Texas ranchers scramble to keep animals alive in unusual cold
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[February 18, 2021]
By Tom Polansek
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Texas ranchers worked
overtime to haul water and hay to cattle to keep them alive during a
freak winter storm, but some cows have already succumbed to unusual icy
temperatures that also killed chickens, idled meat plants and threatened
crops.
The deaths of baby cows in the top U.S. cattle state and struggles to
care for surviving livestock are the latest challenges for ranchers who
over the past year have dealt with COVID-19 cutting demand for meat at
restaurants and shuttering slaughterhouses.
In Texas, home to more than 13 million cattle, ranchers said they are
spending long, cold hours breaking up ice in water tanks and on frozen
ponds so animals have something to drink. Icy conditions have turned
diesel fuel into a useless gel in tractors. Ranchers said they are using
gasoline-powered pickup trucks to transport hay that cattle can eat and
use for warm bedding.
Kaylin Isbell, a rancher in Florence, Texas, said a few cows and sheep
had died after birth. Babies are particularly vulnerable to the shock of
the cold when they leave their mothers' warm wombs covered in fluid.
Isbell said her mother-in-law took newly born sheep into a spare bedroom
in her home to keep them warm.
The cold will also kill oats Isbell planted for young cattle to graze
on, she said. As a result, Isbell said she will need to sell the animals
earlier than expected, reducing her profit margins.
Ranchers nationwide were already facing higher feed costs as corn and
soybean prices soared to multi-year highs.
"We just keep going," Isbell said. "That's all you can do."
Texas Agriculture Commissioner Sid Miller told Reuters that baby chicks
are freezing to death because there is not enough natural gas to heat
hatcheries. He said dairy operations are dumping $8 million worth of
milk down the drains daily because milk processing plants are without
power. Grain mills across the state cannot manufacture animal feed
without power either, Miller said.
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A baby calf, born in the last few days, stands with its mother
during a period of cold weather when it's more vulnerable, on Austin
Miles' ranch in Whitesboro, Texas, U.S. February 17, 2021. Austin
Miles/Handout via REUTERS
"We've got an animal welfare issue going on," he said.
Major meat processors like Cargill Inc and Tyson Foods Inc said they
suspended operations at some plants.
In Whitesboro, Texas, fifth-generation rancher Austin Miles said he
is filling a red 300-gallon tank with water from a hose at his
parents' home two to three times a day and shuttling it to cattle to
drink. The pond they would normally drink from froze, he said.
"This is extreme for us," Miles said. "Our infrastructure was just
not quite set up for these prolonged cold periods."
The storm has killed at least 21 people across four states, and
temperatures are forecast to remain 20 to 35 degrees below average
across parts of the central and southern United States for days.
Cattle could suffer from respiratory problems once the deep freeze
gives way to warmer temperatures, said Missy Bonds, assistant
general manager of her family's ranch in Saginaw, Texas.
"Mother Nature needs a Xanax," she said.
(Reporting by Tom Polansek; Editing by David Gregorio)
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