Selecting Sound Salers
The Salyers family, of Billings, Mo., is like any other family living in the 21st Century, busy. What is the most important trait that a cow/calf operation needs to have to be profitable and productive when management must be time-efficient? Easy calving provided from stable structured mommas and low birth weight sires. “The female Salers have the largest pelvic area of any cow breed, this quality along with choosing calving ease sires makes the possibility of calving problems very low,” said Gary Salyers.
Balancing Beef, Milk and Equine
Father and son, Mac and Wade Hampton, of Westville, Okla., have been working together since Wade's early childhood. Wade remembers driving a '47 blue Chevy truck when he was 4 years old and barely able to see through the steering wheel while his dad was cutting and unloading square bales for cattle. Wade said, "My dad always told me that if it looked like I was going to hit a tree or something, just turn off the key. The problem was one day I was distracted by some nuts and bolts in the glove box and my dad had to hit on the cab of the truck to get my attention. I turned off the key and luckily stopped just in time."
Bringing Back the Milkman
Zack Brown, of Lowell, Ark., decided to bring back the convenience of the milkman when thinking about how to serve the global food movement of people wanting traceable food. He decided he needed to look for an unadulterated product that wasn’t warehoused or transported to reduce cost and get a better product to the customer. He had to go to the farmer. “Farm Box Delivers is trying to get back to our roots and the way we used to buy food,” Zack said. “Consumers need to start taking responsibility for how they buy food and farmers need to take responsibility for how they sell food. There has to be a communal responsibility about how we source food, buy food and sell food.”
Meticulous Milk Plans
As every producer in agriculture knows, starting a new farm is an expensive and complex process. Pauline Thiessen seems up to the challenge. She has worked at Ozark Natural Foods in Fayetteville, Ark., for 16 years, the last four as produce manager. During that time she put herself through college. Being in charge of $2 million worth of produce annually has taught her the value of careful and meticulous planning as well as general management skills.
Focused on Forages
In 2000 the potential of Ron Locke’s farm, in Long Lane, Mo., grew exponentially after he attended the Annual Southwest Missouri Spring Forage conference in Springfield, Mo., where Ron first learned about intensive grazing.
Computers, Goats and Cheese
Brenda Snider isn’t what a person might typically think of when they think of a dairy producer. With a master’s in computer information systems, Brenda has taught at the college level. Brenda owns her own company, Equitech Information Systems, LLC, and works with various state, county and other government agencies aiding them by developing and implementing various computer software programs.
Building from the Bottom Up
Sharon Medina Benigar moved to Osceola, Mo., from Coosbay, Ore., in 1980. She was a young, single mother with three children. Sharon moved here to find the life she had always dreamed of, but she found more than expected.
Ranching Out the Risk
Mike and Malinda Taylor own, and along with their three sons operate, Horsehead Ranch in Talala, Okla. They are Brangus seedstock producers raising and selling purebred Brangus bulls and fancy replacement heifers. Ranching is Mike’s passion; he is a fourth generation farmer and rancher. His great grandfather’s brand was the horsehead dating back to the beginning of Oklahoma's statehood. Mike not only continues to use the horsehead brand but also named his ranch after it.
Making a Plan
Nothing is more heartwarming than seeing a young person with a goal. Elysia Bushey, a 21-year-old entering her senior year at Missouri State University, is a young lady with a plan. Her major is ag education with a minor in animal science. Elysia said, “My goal is to ultimately be an ag teacher and to raise show cattle and registered cattle on the side. I probably want to get into raising some registered goats for my students so they can have access to some pretty good quality animals at a decent price.” Now that’s making a plan.
Breaking New Ground
What happens when you have two girls of college-age? For Jerry and Dyanna Moyer of Lincoln Ark., the answer is build four new chicken houses. Jerry and Dyanna have two girls, 20-year-old Cheyenne pursuing a degree in animal science and 18-year-old Caleigh looking forward to a degree in agribusiness. Jerry is a fieldman for George's and Dyanna is a special education teacher's aide in Prairie Grove, Ark.