>
>
> CATTLE RANCHERS DESCRIBE 'WORST NIGHTMARE'
>
> Ranchers saw the end of their world Monday.Dead cattle mottled the
> landscape a day after winds whipped fire into a murderous frenzy across
> six Texas Panhandle counties."It's like Armageddon out here," McLean-area
> rancher Bill Bryant said."We hauled - I don't remember - 15 to 18 calves
> that were dead. They just get into a corner and the fire consumes
> them."Worse than the dead were the dying.Cattle without ears.Tails
> amputated by fire.Eyelids melted shut.Ranchers had no choice but to put
> the burned cattle down."Imagine your worst nightmare, and it can't even
> come close to this," said Brad Overstreet, a hand on the Taylor Ranch.Fire
> killed four horses in a pasture on the ranch six miles north of
> Alanreed."All the horses were dead when we found them," Overstreet said.
> "They didn't have a hair on them."It's the worst thing you've ever seen in
> your life."Wind swept across ranges that looked eerily barren - worse than
> land sucked dry by months of drought, said Mike Darsey, who ranc!
> hes the Les Darsey family operation six miles north of Alanreed on state
> Highway 291."It almost looks like a desert around here," he said. "In a
> lot of places it looks like sand dunes. It's not charred and black like
> you normally would think of after a fire."Ranchers toiled Monday not just
> to deal with the dead and injured, but to feed those that remain.Hay
> already hard to come by due to months without rain went up in a puff of
> smoke.Ranchers who had learned to deal with the shortage found themselves
> scrambling to provide sustenance to the living."We have no moisture, we
> have no grass, the hay is burnt up. What do you do?" Bryant said. "I'm
> numb."He described a highway north of McLean strewn with cattle
> carcasses.The fences designed to keep them safely penned had been consumed
> by fire."There's miles and miles of fences burnt up," Darsey said.At
> $10,000 per mile, replacing the fences segmenting more than 650,000 acres
> of Panhandle ranchland will be highly costly, said Dr. Bo!
> b Robinson, agriculture regional program director at the Texas A&M Uni
> versity Extension Service in Amarillo.The now-porous fencing in the
> fire-stricken area once held in about 25,000 cows, some of them pregnant,
> since it is calving season, Robinson said. It was unknown Monday how many
> perished.Every one loaded up and hauled away represents an investment of
> $1,200 to $1,800, he said.And a rancher's time, sweat and tears.They'll
> have to closely observe the surviving members of their herds for weeks,
> Robinson said.Cattle that seemed fine after a Stephenville fire became
> crippled by hoof problems that didn't show themselves for two
> weeks.Firefighters have performed heroics in saving much of anything from
> Sunday's inferno, the ranchers said as they tried to look forward."Last
> night we were driving about 2 (a.m.). There was fire to the north, fire to
> the west and fire to the east," Bryant said. "It's just devastating."
>
> :
> http://www.amarillo.com/stories/031406/new_4214034.shtml
>
> **********************************************
>
> http://amarillo.com
>
>
>
> CATTLE RANCHERS DESCRIBE 'WORST NIGHTMARE'
>
> Ranchers saw the end of their world Monday.Dead cattle mottled the
> landscape a day after winds whipped fire into a murderous frenzy across
> six Texas Panhandle counties."It's like Armageddon out here," McLean-area
> rancher Bill Bryant said."We hauled - I don't remember - 15 to 18 calves
> that were dead. They just get into a corner and the fire consumes
> them."Worse than the dead were the dying.Cattle without ears.Tails
> amputated by fire.Eyelids melted shut.Ranchers had no choice but to put
> the burned cattle down."Imagine your worst nightmare, and it can't even
> come close to this," said Brad Overstreet, a hand on the Taylor Ranch.Fire
> killed four horses in a pasture on the ranch six miles north of
> Alanreed."All the horses were dead when we found them," Overstreet said.
> "They didn't have a hair on them."It's the worst thing you've ever seen in
> your life."Wind swept across ranges that looked eerily barren - worse than
> land sucked dry by months of drought, said Mike Darsey, who ranc!
> hes the Les Darsey family operation six miles north of Alanreed on state
> Highway 291."It almost looks like a desert around here," he said. "In a
> lot of places it looks like sand dunes. It's not charred and black like
> you normally would think of after a fire."Ranchers toiled Monday not just
> to deal with the dead and injured, but to feed those that remain.Hay
> already hard to come by due to months without rain went up in a puff of
> smoke.Ranchers who had learned to deal with the shortage found themselves
> scrambling to provide sustenance to the living."We have no moisture, we
> have no grass, the hay is burnt up. What do you do?" Bryant said. "I'm
> numb."He described a highway north of McLean strewn with cattle
> carcasses.The fences designed to keep them safely penned had been consumed
> by fire."There's miles and miles of fences burnt up," Darsey said.At
> $10,000 per mile, replacing the fences segmenting more than 650,000 acres
> of Panhandle ranchland will be highly costly, said Dr. Bo!
> b Robinson, agriculture regional program director at the Texas A&M Uni
> versity Extension Service in Amarillo.The now-porous fencing in the
> fire-stricken area once held in about 25,000 cows, some of them pregnant,
> since it is calving season, Robinson said. It was unknown Monday how many
> perished.Every one loaded up and hauled away represents an investment of
> $1,200 to $1,800, he said.And a rancher's time, sweat and tears.They'll
> have to closely observe the surviving members of their herds for weeks,
> Robinson said.Cattle that seemed fine after a Stephenville fire became
> crippled by hoof problems that didn't show themselves for two
> weeks.Firefighters have performed heroics in saving much of anything from
> Sunday's inferno, the ranchers said as they tried to look forward."Last
> night we were driving about 2 (a.m.). There was fire to the north, fire to
> the west and fire to the east," Bryant said. "It's just devastating."
>
> :
> http://www.amarillo.com/stories/031406/new_4214034.shtml
>
> **********************************************
>
> http://amarillo.com
>
>