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  • 25
    Oct
    2012
    2:56pm, EDT

    Ranchers return to old-fashioned cattle drives to help environment

    By Meredith Birkett

    People sometimes talk about armchair travel. In my case, it was desk chair travel as I opened up a link photojournalist Ami Vitale sent me to her latest project -- documenting the ranching community near her new home in Montana. Suddenly I was in a world where nature takes priority over smart phones, where a person's identity is not formed predominantly by their tweets. Sure, it was some romanticism on my part, but the scenes of neighbors coming together to herd cattle in the beautiful valleys of Montana seem timeless and a world away.

    Ami Vitale

    Barb Pearson's horse takes her hat off as they relax during the annual spring cattle drive in the Centennial Valley. Pearson was helping out the Ruby Dell Ranch, where she's good friends with owners Jim and John Anderson.

    As Vitale got to know the ranchers, she found that some were returning to traditional cattle drives, forgoing trucking their cows in favor of moving them from horseback, and frequently changing their grazing location to try to minimize the cattle's impact on the land. One of the ranch managers, Bryan Uhrling of J Bar L, says it helps to think of cattle as "...mobile composting machines. Their hooves plant seeds, their urine moves moisture from watering sites to arid grounds, and their manure is a natural fertilizer. They are the perfect all-in-one farming machinery."

    I've long been an admirer of Vitale's work, from her early days in Kashmir, to more recent work on maternal health in Sierra Leone and on biologists trying to save rhinos from the brink of extinction. As Vitale shares below, today she is finding inspiration closer to home.

    Aspiring photographers often ask me where they might go to find the best stories. My answer is always the same - get to know your own backyard, what's close at hand, rather than traveling around the world just to capture images of something foreign or exotic.  My rationale is that if you can tell these stories of every day life and focus on what we have in common rather than the obvious differences, then you will succeed as a storyteller. 

    Ironically, I have rarely listened to my own advice and the past dozen years has seen me crisscross the globe playing witness to civil unrest, turmoil, and violence in over 80 countries.  I broke my pattern in 2010 when I moved to Montana and have tried to base myself in this beautiful but austere landscape. 

    The images I am now able to create tell the story about our deep connection to land, the importance we place in stewardship, and a vanishing way of life in the American West. The folks whom I have got to know are remarkable in their fortitude, work ethics, and the neighborliness they exhibit everyday.  It is not an easy story but one that requires patience and persistence to birth - and yet I believe it is as rewarding in the telling as the more sensational events I have had the opportunity to cover.

    Slideshow: These cowboys ride ‘in tune with nature’

    Some Montana cattle ranchers are returning to traditional grazing methods by mimicking how bison used to roam.

    Launch slideshow

    Other stories by Vitale:

    • Rhinos: Flight for survival
    • Sierra Leone: Where every pregnancy is a gamble
    • Frontline: Kashmir

     

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    8 comments

    This is a way of life worth preserving if only I could get away with it!!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: cowboys, ranch, us-news, beef, montana
  • 17
    Apr
    2011
    10:23pm, EDT

    Charlie Riedel / AP

    Jim Hoy, of Cassoday, Kan, left, and his son Johs Hoy watch prairie grasses burn on the younger Hoy's Flying W Ranch near Clements, Kan., Saturday, April 16. Ranchers in the Kansas Flint Hills burn the prairie grasses every spring to help renew the pastures for cattle grazing.

    Ranchers renew pastures in Kansas with the help of a little fire

    By Katie Cannon, Senior Multimedia Editor

    Proof to all of you out there who claim Kansas is totally flat. :)

    1 comment

    what about the other animals that rely on praire graases..like ground nesting birds...guess they just got wiped out on those lands.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: fire, kansas, ranch, cattle, prairie, clements, pasture
  • 27
    Jan
    2011
    6:15pm, EST

    Hay airlifted to hungry horses abandoned at a ranch in Montana

    Here's a link to more about this story.

    Larry Mayer / AP

    Hay flies through the air as Al and A.J. Blain, of Billings Flying Service, use a helicopter to haul hay to horses on the former Leachman Cattle Company ranch east of Billings on Thursday, Jan. 27, 2011. The Billings Gazette reports that the Northern International Livestock Exposition had collected $10,000 in cash donations and about 250 tons of hay by Thursday. Five dead horses have been found on the ranch. A Montana veterinarian had warned that others would start dying off in droves if they did not receive food soon. The horses belong to James H. Leachman, who has filed for bankruptcy. Leachman is scheduled to appear Friday on multiple charges of animal cruelty.

    Larry Mayer / The Billings Gazette via AP

    Horses gather around hay dropped from a helicopter hauling hay to horses on the former Leachman Cattle Company ranch east of Billings on Thursday, Jan. 27, 2011.

    4 comments

    They show somed young horses with the yellow leg bands that died from the circulation being cut off and there are more that will soon have the same fate if they do not get the leg bands off. It will cut the circulation off on them too. There is a blk/gray behind a Buckskin mare in the picture above  …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: ranch, united-states, horses, montana, animal-cruelty

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Meredith Birkett

Meredith Birkett is a senior multimedia editor for special projects at MSNBC.com. In this role, Meredith works with freelancers, picture agencies, and staff multimedia journalists to produce multimedia projects across all sections of MSNBC.com.

Katie Cannon

is a Senior Multimedia Editor and has worked at msnbc.com since 1996.

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