SUNDAY, AUG. 30, 2015
Ranchers face loss of livestock, livelihoods in Washington fires

DANVILLE, Wash. – The burned carcasses blend into the scorched landscape, just more black and ash among the haunting outline of trees. “There she is,” rancher Doug Grumbach says, pointing up the steep slope near his ranch. “It looks like she was trying to run and froze in that mode.”
The cow is now obvious: A perfectly shaped head, a body covered in skin that’s become cured leather – taut and solid like a drumhead. She’s upright, wedged between two burned trees, ribs exposed, a flurry of maggots working furiously. Her calf lies in a heap nearby.
Grumbach is silent. He rubs his jaw and points to another carcass farther up the hill on the grazing land in the Colville National Forest, just south of the Canadian border. The land recently burned in the Stickpin fire.
Grumbach, like cattle ranchers across fire-ravaged north-central Washington, isn’t sure of his total losses. The devastation includes not only body counts but hundreds of miles of fence, grazing land and water sources on his family’s fourth-generation ranch. So far, he knows of eight dead cows and four calves, a loss of about $35,000. Thirty more of his Angus herd is missing. In his corrals at home are a cow and several calves with burned hooves.
Livestock toll still ‘a wild guess’
For some ranchers, this is the second year of hardship – first stemming from drought and now another round of deadly fire.
Chris Bieker, of the federal Farm Service Agency in Spokane, doesn’t know how many cattle died in the fires. There are places livestock owners haven’t been able to get into because of fire and road closures.
“At this point, anything is just a wild guess,” he said.
That’s especially true about the numerous ranches located in the Okanogan Complex of fires in north-central Washington. Together, the Okanogan Complex has burned about 475 square miles and is considered the largest wildfire in state history.
Cattle production is Washington’s fifth-largest commodity with about 1.1 million cows and calves valued at $706 million in 2013, according to the Washington state Department of Agriculture. Behind wheat, hay is the state’s second-most-productive field crop.
Bieker said the Farm Service Agency still is trying to process payments for lost livestock from last year’s brutal Carlton Complex fires in the Methow Valley, which was until this year the largest wildfire recorded in Washington. More than 1,000 cattle burned along with 500 miles of fencing. Some fear this year’s losses are worse.
Bieker added that it’s important for ranchers to report their losses within 30 days, under the federal Livestock Indemnity Program – an often difficult task when they still are digging fire lines and trying to rescue cows. That program, part of the 2014 Farm Bill, allows cattle owners and others to recoup 75 percent of the market value of livestock that died because of “adverse weather.”
I feel very sorry for the animals. I have no sympathy for the ranchers.
That’s why I hate those damn fires. The animals die like that and people are busy trying to figure out “market value.:” Sad and mad beyond words here . . .
Yep, you almost never hear about the 1,000 cows killed in last years’ catastrophic fire.
So tragic for the exploited animals. Either way they suffer horribly, at the hands of selfish and greedy humans. Rest in peace, dear ones.
Either way it’s at the hands of self-centered humans–whether sent to the slaughterhouse or left out on open range to die horribly in these catastrophic fires humans are responsible for making worse than ever…
I know, it’s very sad – but we consider protecting property more important than human or animal life. Can’t these even people make an attempt at rounding up their livestock? I’ve read about abandoned horses and burros too, or leaving so-called loved family pets behind in fires too.
I truly am sick to death of the messes we make, and it is hard for me to have any sympathy for anyone but our victims.
Same here. I read about a terrible fire on a transport truck that killed 30 horses. There was some speculation that no one attempted to get them out because they were insured anyway. I hate to believe that, but denial would be stupid, knowing the greed and callousness that people are capable of.
Sick of hearing on the news about these fires that “no structures were damaged” or that “a number of houses were destroyed.” No mention of the nonhuman lives lost. I also hate to see backfires started. The wild animals trying to escape get caught between both. It just sucks big time!
It’s one of the worst effects of global warming.