I kind of have bit my tongue about April 4, 97 the last few weeks.
That deal was 100,000 dead in a couple days.
That one came at the end of a real slobberknocker of a Winter. When we went home from college in Bozeman after finals week, moving home to the ranch, I was driving my 71 3/4 ton Ford. I couldn't see over the snow pile strung out along Main Street while driving, and the Winter went downhill from there.
This one is nothing like that one.
I wonder if it just seems so much worse since all of us on the internet now weren't then?????????????
Of course, my heart goes out to the ranchers in that area now, but many folks had calves on the ground during the April blizzard.
When I went out that morning, my sheep were trying to paw their way through a metal gate when they heard me coming. I'm no rocket scientist, but the rest of the day was spent bedding cows and sheep, and feeding. Some neighbors decided since their pairs wouldn't go to Summer pasture that day, they would get more neighbors to help push them.
We had a heifer hump up and calve, and lost that calf. We lost 7 out of about 200 sheep. What sucked was my brother lost 2 out of 160 and I lost 5 out of 40, ouch!!! 12 1/2% interest on that Blizzard in just stock loss. Our neighbors lost around 220 calves and some cows out of about 260 pair that they insisted must go to Summer pasture.
Badlands