News Desk

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
Texas
ranch
wins
top
environmental
award
FORT WORTH, Texas, July 21, 2005 –
Richards Ranch of Jacksboro, Texas, has been selected as one of seven
regional winners nationwide of the 2005 Environmental Stewardship Award
Program (ESAP).
The annual award program recognizes cattle producers whose
stewardship practices are innovative, cost-effective and contribute to
environmental conservation. Now in its 15th year, the program is
sponsored by Dow AgroSciences L.L.C. and the Natural Resources
Conservation Service and is administered by the National Cattlemen’s
Beef Association.
Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association nominated
Richards Ranch for the program after the ranch won the first
Environmental Stewardship Award presented jointly by TSCRA and the Texas
Section Society for Range Management last March.
Richards Ranch is the sole representative of NCBA’s Region IV,
which includes Texas, Oklahoma and Arkansas. One of the seven regional
winners will be selected as the national winner and announced in
February 2006 at NCBA’s annual convention in Denver.
“This program acknowledges cattle producers who have gone above
and beyond in their efforts to preserve natural resources,” explains
Stacey Katseanes, coordinator of the ESAP. “People who devote their
lives to working the land embody the true meaning of environmentalists.
“Conservation is a lifetime commitment that has greatly
rewarded this Texas family,” he continued. “Richards Ranch
demonstrates how today’s cattlemen utilize creative technologies and
innovations to operate a profitable and environmentally-friendly
business.”
The 139-year-old north Texas ranch encompasses 15,000 privately
owned acres and runs approximately 950 head of cattle. It is primarily a
cow-calf operation with additional income from stocker cattle and
retained ownership of feeder calves. Other ranch activities include
hunting, fishing, a lodge/retreat facility and nature tourism
activities.
“Conservation efforts are vital to the success of Richards
Ranch,” explains Katseanes. “These management practices include
intensive rotational grazing, brush control, proper stocking rate,
management during drought and prescribed pasture burning.”
After more than two decades of the planned rotational grazing,
grasses are much denser and the land is able to use rainfall much more
effectively. Stock numbers have been increased, and the ranch is
planning to increase herd size to 1,200 head. Wildlife populations such
as deer and turkey have also increased, and quail remain on the ranch
while populations are declining in other parts of the state.
“John Hackley and Henry Richards just
don’t believe you can have good livestock habitat if it isn’t also
good wildlife habitat,” says Katseanes. The success of their efforts
was recognized recently by the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department,
which presented Richards Ranch with the 2005 statewide Lone Star Land
Steward Award.
John Hackley has been general manager of
the ranch for the past 25 years. He is a direct descendant of James and
Elizabeth Hensley who founded the ranch in 1865.
“We want to be able to enjoy our
heritage of ranching, its way of life and to live off the land,”
Hackley says. “We want to be able to sustain this heritage for future
generations of our family and to be able to leave the land better than
we received it.”
He proudly shares the Richards Ranch
mission statement: “To preserve our land base by improving the
ecosystem so that we can contribute to the welfare, happiness and
economic levels of the family, employees and industries identified with
ranching, the local community and the world at large.”
The Richards family has spent extensive
hours researching environmental stewardship and attending seminars,
workshops and field days. They have utilized information from the NRCS,
Alan Savory and Holistic Resource Management, Stan Parsons Ranching for
Profit and the Texas A&M University System. The ranch has also
hosted countless range and pasture judging contests.
“John Hackley has a strong
conservation ethic,” says Wayne Hanselka, professor and Extension
program leader for rangeland ecology and management with Texas
Cooperative Extension. ”He has a genuine love of the land and is very
proactive. He believes the ranch business needs optimum management with
a strong resource base to be successful. The Richards Ranch is a
testimony to his stewardship.”
– TSCRA-27-2005 –
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