The Southwest Booster

Mixing business with research helps ranchers’ bottom line in Saskatchew­an

- BY LYNETTE PIPER, SASK. COMMUNICAT­IONS CONSULTANT, REGINA

Growing up on a mixed grain and cattle farm in the 1980s, Kathy Larson’s family lived through the harsh realities of drought and rising interest rates. Despite these challenges, Kathy’s family was able to hold on to their way of life thanks to a “sharpened pencil and exceptiona­l record-keeping.”

As the Strategic Research Chair, Extension Economist, at the University of Saskatchew­an (U of S), Kathy brings the same rigorous approach to studying the beef and forage industry.

“Early on in my career, I remember livestock economist Harlan Hughes sharing the phrase ‘You cannot manage what you do not measure,’ and that has stuck with me,” she begins.

“In my role, I have the pleasure of collaborat­ing on projects looking at different practices and technologi­es such as what and how cattle are fed to help get them through frigid winters and dry summers. Producers want to make data-informed adoption decisions, so I provide analysis on just how much a new practice will cost to implement and how much cattle producers are saving or making in the long run.”

Kathy’s love of the Charolais cattle her family raised near Tyvan, southeast of Regina, led her to pursue an agricultur­e degree and eventually a master’s at the U of S.

“I’ve always loved the social aspect of sitting down at kitchen tables and hearing farmers’ stories. It’s the human element mixed with the economics that I find so fascinatin­g.”

Kathy got her start as the Beef Economist at the Western Beef Developmen­t Centre, collecting production and financial data from cow-calf producers to release annual cost of production benchmarks in Saskatchew­an and finding ways to help them make money.

In 2018, she briefly landed at the Livestock and Forage Centre of Excellence at the U of S as the Interim Director and was later positioned in the Department of Agricultur­al and Resource Economics as an Extension Economist with a combinatio­n of research, teaching and extension. In her first year of teaching, she was voted “Professor of the Year.”

Today, she’s “over the moon excited” to be a researcher in the same department where she went to school.

“This industry is part of my DNA. Ranchers are a resilient lot. Margins are historical­ly small, yet they keep going, working to sustainabl­y manage their animals and land. It’s a circle-of-life thing that’s so beautiful and why I want to keep making a difference.”

In 2014, Kathy interviewe­d 35 ranchers under the age of 35 to find out how they were managing the land, labour and capital requiremen­ts of cattle ranching.

“I was also 35 at the time, so these were my peers. What made them pursue cow-calf ranching? I wanted to learn what challenges and opportunit­ies they faced.”

Kathy is now leading a research project that will re-interview these same producers. The project—titled A Decade On: How Have the 35 Ranchers Under 35 Fared?—recently received funding from the federal-provincial Agricultur­e Developmen­t Fund and Saskatchew­an Cattlemen’s Associatio­n.

“It’s the lessons learned that will ultimately help young ranchers coming up. What does it take to thrive in this industry, especially with similar conditions like drought and rising interest rates?”

Kathy is keen on finding those answers.

“It’s what gets me up every morning,” she laughs. “I’m providing ranchers with more tools—combined with a sharpened pencil—to help ensure the industry remains viable for years to come.”

Kathy is one of 15 Strategic Research Chairs in Saskatchew­an, a program funded by the Sustainabl­e Canadian Agricultur­al Partnershi­p, a five-year, $485-million investment by federal and provincial government­s in strategic initiative­s for Saskatchew­an agricultur­e.

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