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    Drought, high demand makes hay hard to find

    OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A scorching drought in the southern Plains has caused hay prices to soar, benefiting farmers to the north but forcing many ranchers to make a difficult choice between paying high prices or selling their cattle.

    Ranchers in much of Texas, Oklahoma and even Kansas are having to pay inflated prices for hay and then shell out even more to have it trucked hundreds of miles from Iowa, Missouri, Nebraska or South Dakota. Their only other options are to reduce the size of their herds or move cattle to rented pastures in another state.

    "It's pretty ugly," said Don Davis, who raises grass-fed beef on his ranch about 75 miles northwest of San Antonio.

    Davis said he used to think last year's dry weather couldn't get worse, but this year's record-setting drought has put even more pressure on ranchers.

    Parts of Texas haven't received any rain since last fall, and forecasters predict the drought will last at least through November. The situation isn't much better in western Oklahoma, southern New Mexico and parts of southern Kansas.

    Officials say only a handful of Texas' 254 counties received enough rain to grow hay this year, so significantly less is available at the same time demand has skyrocketed because pastures are parched.

    That's why the average price of hay climbed to $170 per ton this summer from $112 per ton last July, according to U.S. Department of Agriculture statistics. But many ranchers are paying much more because the price doesn't include shipping costs.

    "Hay has gone up tremendously in price, and it's hard to get," said Jay O'Brien, who runs a ranch near Amarillo, Texas.

    Some farmers have turned to social networking to find hay. The Hay Connection, a Facebook site started by two Oklahoma brothers, matches buyers and sellers and had more than 7,500 fans by midday Sunday.

    Farmers in Iowa and Wisconsin banded together last week to donate several truckloads of hay to ranchers in Texas and Oklahoma, but those donations are likely to offer only a temporary reprieve.

    Nebraska hay farmer Cory Banzhaf said he's shipped about 80 percent of his crop — roughly 2,000 tons — south to Kansas and Oklahoma this year because of the drought.

    Banzhaf said trucking the hay grown near Pleasanton, Neb., adds $50 to $70 to the cost of each ton, leaving ranchers with bills of between $225 and $270 a ton.

    "It's great if you're selling it, but horrible if you're buying it," said Banzhaf, who can sympathize because he also raises about 1,000 cattle.

    Continuing to buy hay at those prices could be a recipe for bankruptcy, so ranchers have been selling off calves and cows of calf-bearing age even though they know it will be costly to rebuild their herds later.

    Davis said he had to truck in hay from Nebraska this year at a total cost of about $240 a ton to supplement the emergency supply he had in his barn. Normally, he relies almost entirely on pastures to feed his cattle.

    The cost led to his decision to sell off more of his cattle this year, even though he estimates his herd is about 40 head smaller today than it was in 2008.

    "I don't know that anyone could significantly plan for a drought like we've had," Davis said.

    Texas AgriLife Extension Service drought specialist Travis Miller said many livestock auctions in the state are so busy right now that they've been turning cattle away. Ranchers have been selling off cattle at double or triple the normal rate.

    "We've been culling and culling heavily," Miller said.

    Scott Dewald, executive vice president of the Oklahoma Cattlemen, said the southwest and northwest corners his state are in especially bad shape, forcing ranchers to bring in hay from as far away as South Dakota.

    Many ranchers also have lost access to water because ponds have dried up, adding to the need to reduce the size of herds or even sell all their cattle, he said. Fortunately, prices paid have largely remained strong because of high demand from foreign markets and other factors, enabling ranchers to make some money on the sales.

    "At least we didn't have the added insult of selling into a down market," Dewald said.

    ___

    Online:

    U.S. Drought Monitor: http://droughtmonitor.unl.edu

    The Hay Connection: http://on.fb.me/okjuuc

    ___

    Follow Josh Funk on Twitter at www.twitter.com/funkwrite

     

    19 comments

    • HTNM  •  9 mths ago
      We CHOOSE to airdrop/supply to charities abroad TONS of food to starving countries, expecting nothing in return (where the MAJORITY of the food winds up on the black market and/or the hands of the elite to continue to fill their couffers on the backs of their own people)...

      ...YET...we CHOOSE to not help those in our OWN country who NEED our help NOW...

      ...abhorant, inexcusable, disgust doesn't even start to cover how I feel...
    • missouri farmboy  •  9 mths ago
      feel sorry for the guys having to buy hay its like pushing a rope. one yr ain't so bad but 2 yrs will kill you , whats bad is that some people on here aren't smart enough to realize that in 2 yrs a hamburger will cost what a steak does today. if texas and okla. and the rest of the south don't get some rain this fall and next spring , the price of a pair $12.00 rustler work jeans will cost as much as a pair of levis does today. we can survive 1-2 yrs with out a crop but 3 yrs of no farm exports will tank whats left of this weak economy. i have bought high dollar corn in the 80's and fed it to 12-14.00 hogs and that don't work either.the wealth of any nation comes from the earth farm crops , oil , lumber, and etc. i would rather our government help the guys buy hay and grain to fed their stock than give it to some dam banker here or over seas, because it is helping our own people not just the farmers but everybody who likes to eat.
    • RL  •  9 mths ago
      Man made Climate change guru's? Can't even explain the world going from hot to cold to hot before men walked the earth. Every human on this planet whether they are poor or rich wants clean water air and land, period. By the very exisistence of a species shall we say men for this example, impacts the rest of the world in one way or another..Viruses are a life form, some of which are terminal to humans..Will u go to bat to destroy another life form to save yourself????
    • x  •  9 mths ago
      Hey GOP- still think climate change is not happening?
    • RUSH  •  9 mths ago
      The corn alcohol subsidies are wrecking my cattle business. It has caused the price of fertilize to rise so much that I have to cut back on my hay fields. Corn is too expensive to feed and the leftover brewers grain is about the same as feeding newspaper. What burns me about all of this is our tax money is paying for it.
    • Daniel Azawitz  •  9 mths ago
      Texas can blame Gov. Perry and Oklahoma can blame Sen. Inhofe. This drought is exactly what is predicted as a symptom of global warming, and Perry and Inhofe are two key obstructionists who are blocking action to control global warming. Predictions are that both Texas and Oklahoma will be permanent dustbowls by the end of this decade.
    • Al  •  9 mths ago
      I made a little 400 mile round trip southeast of Amarillo last week, through ranch country. I've never seen it so bad. Usualy after wildfires it rains and brings back the grass lusher. Not this time. Even the weeds are burning up. The usually attractive Pitchfork Ranch is just barren wasteland.
    • Kuick  •  9 mths ago
      Being from Montana I haven't seen hay prices below $150 a ton for at least 5 or 6 years. Welcome to reality Texas farmers - inputs have gone up and so has the price to produce this feed. I feel bad there has been such a bad drought but $150-$200 a ton hay is average here, without trucking.
    • Harry  •  9 mths ago
      Do I hear Texans, Okies and the rest wondering why the Feds have not stepped in to help? What happened to the John Wayne independence? Oh I am sorry that only applies to old grannies and their ilk on welfare. Giving money to ranchers and such is not welfare right? I got an idea, have Gov. Perry of Texas have one of his prayer meetings. He can call it "national Prayer meeting day to get rid of the drought". That ought to fix things real fast and rain will be on its way.
    • Sunmusing  •  9 mths ago
      My heart goes out to you ranchers in the drought area. I have alot of friends who are ranchers, and they are seeing the hay for our area being shipped out, and they are worried about their own heards being decimated by the same drought. Kobe beef in Japan being inedible due to radiation, Chinese are figuring they like beef, as the fish supply "dries up". It is really a global calamity.
    • HTNM  •  9 mths ago
      We CHOOSE to airdrop/supply to charities abroad TONS of food to starving countries, expecting nothing in return (where the MAJORITY of the food winds up on the black market and/or the hands of the elite to continue to fill their couffers on the backs of their own people)...

      ...YET...we CHOOSE to not help those in our OWN country who NEED our help NOW...

      ...abhorant, inexcusable disgust doesn't even start to cover how I feel...
    • Amy  •  9 mths ago
      I agree with Kerrdog, I think we're going to be seeing some major food shortages because of this drought. And it doesn't help that all the prime farmland in north Texas has been sold off for housing developments over the last decade...

      I know a lot of ranchers, and this is really hitting them hard. A friend of mine sold off his entire herd (over 100 head) except for his prize Angus bull, 2 heifers, and 1 steer (for his own freezer). I have a small farm on 10+ acres that I've been trying to rent out (can't sell it because the market sucks) and I can't rent it out use of the drought! No one wants to rent a farm when it's too dry for the pasture to grow, which makes it worthless!
    • kerrdog  •  9 mths ago
      As a Central Texas cattle grower I cant' help but wonder if Fema considers the food shortages that are coming up to be a "disaster". They've already earmarked over 7 Bil to rebuild all those beach houses along the east coast. What are the money drains that live out that way going to BBQ when the beef market drys up.
    • Kelly  •  9 mths ago
      Tip of the iceberg here.The next few years coming are going to bring much pain a sorrow to everyone.The largest aquifer that feeds us,that would be the Ogallala Aquifer is not recharging as fast as the water is being drawn out, simple math tells us we are in deep trouble.Same thing going on in the San Joaquin Valley in California.Another bread basket of the US.So you think feeding horses and cows is bad.Wait until these shortages start coming to your super market.We are truly doomed and I think somewhere in a old book they speak of these trying times,but then again I could be wrong.................................................not really.
    • steve  •  9 mths ago
      The price of horse hay here in AZ has gone through the roof. Even last years moldy cow hay is double what it was last year. And with no rain here it has made it almost impossible for the local ranchers.
      • Randy 9 mths ago
        if it's so dry there, why is your hay moldy?
    • twohorsecrazy  •  9 mths ago
      I hate the great hay chase. There are a lot Brokers who have bought up last years hay and the first cut of this year and have made a killing on selling it. what they bought for 50 to 75 they are now selling for 150 and higher. I have horses and they need hay just like the cows. This will be tough going into winter. I don't know how people are going to make it....
    • Grammy  •  9 mths ago
      Farming is such a rough business! Always some #$%$ thing to make a loss and not always much good to make a profit. Glad I am out of it now.
    • BearCat  •  9 mths ago
      I feel for the Texas cattle ranchers, I really do.
      And the root cause for this problem may not be easy to see and even less easy to accept.
      Texas has always been susceptible to droughts. However they had also been blessed with an incredible aquifer that was able to sustain the farms and grass lands along with a limited population. Unfortunately the population of Texas has grown and out paced it's infrastructure, including it's water supply. Due to a growing philosophy of lower and lower taxes there is insufficient revenues to repair, replace, or construct new facilities for the growing population. What could be done you may ask. Well, you could start by building new reservoirs for the storage of the rains that are yet to come. You could invest in "Desalinization Plants" along the Gulf Coast. However more permanently, a pipeline and pumping system could be constructed beginning in areas where there is an abundant water supply, such as areas that suffer flooding on an annual basis. Even areas within other states. With the final destination the new reservoirs and strategic points along the vast Texas aquifer where it could be pumped back into the ground, deep within the aquifer itself, keeping it replenished.
      This would take however a substantial investment over a long period of time. Take a look at the "Salt River Project" in Arizona for instance. Would it be worth the investment in time and money? Ask Arizona.
      Your choice, you decide.
    • Tobor  •  9 mths ago
      How many cows will one ton feed? For how long?
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