(Left) Placer County rancher Joe Fischer says rain and mild temperatures have improved grazing conditions on California rangelands and that he’s optimistic for a “phenomenal feed year” if rains continue. Photo/Ching Lee
"As far as grass growth, this is as good of a feed year as we've ever had this early in the season," said Placer County cattle rancher Joe Fischer. "This early grass growth and early root establishment will really set us up to have a phenomenal feed year come spring if these rains continue."
But he said he also prepared for additional drought by reducing the herd he manages by 20 percent last winter and leaving more residual feed on the ground in order to promote better grass growth this season.
Mild temperatures have also aided grass growth, Fischer said, but they don't bode well for a healthy snowpack—sensors measure the Sierra Nevada snowpack at about half of average—and that will affect water supply for this summer where he has irrigated pasture. In addition, many springs are not yet flowing the way they should be, he added, noting that a lack of drinking water on one ranch prevented him from placing any cattle there in early fall, even though it had plenty of residual dry feed.
"I'm still fearful that we aren't out of the woods yet when it comes to drought in California," he said.
Despite his fears, Fischer said he's "hopeful and optimistic that this is going to turn around for us" and that California ranchers will move toward reestablishing their herds, though their cattle numbers will remain conservative at first.
With last month's deluge, Mariposa County rancher Clarence Borba said it appears he can start retaining some of his cattle, after being forced to cut his herd in half and to buy feed when there was nothing left to graze. Because he leases his ground, which receives no irrigation, Borba said his costs soared when he had to buy feed and pay rent on the land even when no grasses were growing.
"There were times when I didn't know if we were going to make it through," he said.
Borba said while he's trying to build back his herd, he's doing it slowly.
"Things are looking a lot brighter now than they were a few months ago, but our profit margin is pretty narrow, so you can't make too many mistakes and spend too much money," he said.
San Joaquin County rancher Diana Connolly said she sold about a quarter of her herd early last year and didn't keep any replacement heifers, due to a lack of feed. Like many cattle ranchers around the state, she has had to buy plenty of hay during the last three years. Whether she will keep any replacements this year will depend on how the rest of the rainy season goes, she said, as she doesn't have to make that decision until May, when she weans her calves.
Though she has filled her barns with hay, Connolly said if more rain does not come this season to improve pastures, "it won't make any difference how much feed you have right now." She recalled how the lack of precipitation last winter left ranchers scrambling, even though the fall began with some good moisture.
"The rains are good, but I think the whole cattle industry is still feeling the effects of the three-year drought," she said.
One lesson that Sacramento County rancher Jim Vietheer said he has learned from the drought is to start buying crop insurance, with this year being the first time he's signed up for it. He noted that federal disaster aid has allowed him to buy extra hay. Strong cattle prices have also allowed him to cull his herd more heavily than he normally would, so that he could reduce impact on his pastures.
He said even though recent rains "have helped our situation amazingly," he fears it will be short-lived if the state does not continue to get more, periodic rainfall. For this reason, Vietheer said he's going to remain conservative on his stocking rate on some of this leased properties, "in case it becomes another bad year."
"I'm a lot happier, but you don't want to count your chickens before they hatch," he said.
For San Diego County rancher Jim Davis, his region has not gotten "significant amounts of rain" and it has "come very gently, with little runoff," he said, but he also noted that "conditions are very much improved over what they were a month ago."
He said his cattle will be on supplemental feed for another month and a half, but that is typical for this time of year. Being three hours away from the Imperial Valley, Davis said buying feed has not been a problem, and while the price of hay "is never low enough," at least there's an adequate supply.
But for now, he said he will try to maintain his herd at the current level.
"I'd like to see another year of good moisture before we start rebuilding," he added.
Riverside County rancher Bud Wellman said his herd size has not bounced back because a fire two years ago destroyed much of his summer range, which is on forestland, and the U.S. Forest Service so far has not allowed grazing to resume.
"Right now is when the cattle would do the most good," Wellman said, adding that cattle grazing would restore the forest ground so that water could penetrate it rather than causing floods.
What has helped him, he said, is that the Girl Scouts of Orange County has allowed his herd to graze its campgrounds for weed abatement and fire prevention.
While his summer range in the mountains has improved with the recent storms, Wellman said where he's hurting is on his winter range, south of Palm Springs. He has not been able to place his cattle there because many of the springs and creeks cattle use for drinking water are still dry, and what rainfall the region received has not been enough to get them flowing.
"The water situation on the desert side is still very critical," he said. "If we could get those streams and springs back, we'd be in good shape."
(Ching Lee is an assistant editor of Ag Alert. She may be contacted at clee@cfbf.com.)
Reprinted with permission: California Farm Bureau Federation