USA TODAY US Edition

Texas ranchers face tough decisions amid drought

- Rick Jervis ERICH SCHLEGEL FOR USA TODAY

AUSTIN, Texas – Sam Epperson, a fourth-generation rancher, studies the ground and sky each day from his vast ranch in south-central Texas. He’s hoping the skies open up soon and drop torrents of rain on his scorched land.

Lately, his cows, goats and ewes – about 5,400 animals total – haven’t had much to eat as the grass has shriveled and knotted. If conditions continue, he’ll be faced with the tough decision of whether to cull part of his herd.

“It is serious, but we’re in the dormant season,” Epperson, 65, said, meaning the grass still has a few months to grow in the spring. “Our real concern is what happens in a couple of months, and it does not look good.”

A deepening drought is afflicting a large swath of Texas, from the Rio Grande Valley to central and east Texas, once again putting Texas ranchers’ livelihood­s in peril.

Statistics released by the U.S. Drought Monitor showed 37% of the state in moderate drought conditions and about 11% of the state in severe drought. More than half of the state is abnormally dry, and parts of seven counties are experienci­ng extreme drought, according to the stats.

The dry weather patterns began last summer, said John Nielsen-Gammon, the state climatolog­ist. Usually, winter is when Texas absorbs most of its moisture, thanks to cooler temperatur­es and steady rainfall, he said. But that hasn’t happened this winter.

One of the worst droughts on record for Texas was in 2011, when only an average of 15 inches of rain fell on the state, leading ranchers to send thousands of heads of cattle to slaughter, sucking lakes and rivers dry, sparking wildfires and amounting to $8 billion in losses for the state.

So far, 2020 has some of the same fingerprin­ts of 2011, Nielsen-Gammon said. “You can’t have a year like 2011 unless you start off dry,” he said. “So far, we’ve started out dry.”

A lack of rainfall, especially in the second half of last year, deepened the drought conditions. Austin saw about

24 inches of rain from January to June last year, said Keith White, a meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service’s Austin/San Antonio office. But from July to December, only 4 inches fell on the state capital.

Drought in Texas usually is most acutely felt by ranchers, whose animals subsist on sprawling non-irrigated grassy lands. As the grass dries up, ranchers need to choose to either invest in bringing in hay from elsewhere or bring down their herd numbers, said Jeff Savell, an animal science professor at Texas A&M University. As those numbers go down, Texas beef prices go up across the country, he said. Texas is the country’s biggest producer of beef, providing around 15% of the nation’s beef needs.

Gerald Nobles Jr. breeds cows and sells the calves from his ranch in Brady, Texas, about 130 miles west of Austin. He has watched in dismay as the drought shriveled the grass on his ranch and as his 300 heads of cattle grazed it nearly down to dirt.

If the grass gets too low, it could take even longer to grow back, threatenin­g the long-term prospects of the business, he said. In September, he made the decision to sell off about half of his herd.

If it doesn’t rain in another two to

three weeks, he’ll likely sell off the rest of the herd, he said.

“When do you say ‘uncle’ and say, ‘I can’t take this anymore?’ ” said Nobles, 68. “We’re at that decision-making time right now.”

He’s not alone. There’s a lot of concern among other ranchers over the worsening drought, though ranchers haven’t quite reached the panic of 2011, said Jeremy Fuchs, a spokesman with the Texas and Southweste­rn Cattle Raisers Associatio­n. That drought led to the total number of head of cattle in the state to drop from 13.2 million to 11.9 million. It took several years for those numbers to rebound, he said.

“it’s certainly beginning to be a concern,” Fuchs said. “It’s something that’s being watched very closely.”

Epperson, the rancher, said the grass on his 25,000-acre ranch is “down to dirt” and his animals are running out of areas to feed. He has been baling hay from a small irrigated hay farm he bought years ago to feed his animals. The 2011 drought was so withering, even the irrigated hay farm wouldn’t grow hay, forcing him to sell off 200 cows, or about half his herd.

He hopes this drought doesn’t reach those extreme heights, he said. He’s not so sure.

 ??  ?? Cattle feed on hay in Three Rivers, Texas. A drought across Texas may force ranchers to thin their herds or invest in more hay.
Cattle feed on hay in Three Rivers, Texas. A drought across Texas may force ranchers to thin their herds or invest in more hay.

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