American Prairie loses grazing rights

I know that ~ 3% of the total production is public land based, that’s a widely shown number by a lot of groups.

A lot of the west is relatively low production per acre, some areas over 100 acres per AUM.

I don’t know how blm in holdings play into those numbers either
Also, what percent of that percent is the number in question with the APR? It’s a back and forth debatable topic having cattle on public land period. But is it really debatable that the APR’s tiny percent of that tiny percent is relevant from any broader food security standpoint? Also, if we are really that worried about food security here anyone can dm me, I have some places to start that might be a bit more beneficial than cattle ranching if one is so passionate.

Sure, someone can go slippery slope with it but Clark Griswald’s saucer didn’t have enough lubrication to make a slope slippery enough where a meaningful percent of that 3% of cows would become Bison. After all, those things are unruly and vicious right?
 
My only major problem with ranchers centers around the public discourse and overly romanticized portrayal of them. Whenever in a debate regarding cattle and rangeland health with ranchers or proselytizing pro rancher people they go the “Clayton Mortenson” or other “good actor” rancher route with their argument.

However, whenever I agree with the practices of the good rancher and ask how I can help them make those practices the law and the norm they wane. They tend to use the positive exceptions only to excuse the damaging norm and not as a motivation and catalyst for real change. I always ask, “Is there a bill or policy I can call and make comments on? Is there any action I can do to make the good actor ranchers practice the minimum? Because it sounds great! You’re right. I love it! Let’s do it!” They always balk at that.

I’m not inherently anti-ranching but I have a hard time seeing the industry as a whole as good allies when they claim to have found a better way but refuse to make it the rule and not the exception.

Addition: Also, one’s views of ranchers is hugely dependent on the ecotype they run around and hunt in. I’ve been in areas where the grass is thick, the soil hardy, and cattle roam. If that’s where one lives and hunts they might see the cattle as just benefitting the land and in those areas they may be right. I’ve run around mostly in the arid high desert Great Basin. Where soils are loose, grass sparse, invasives primed, and water holes vulnerable to sedimentation and erosion. There is no plus side to the species there. I have seen completely nuked landscapes and completely destroyed creeks devoid of any fish life. Just from livestock damage. They can be the cure or the poison. I just see the latter more and the rangeland health studies in my area show that as the norm.
It’s Clarence Mortenson and having the pleasure of getting to meet him and ride around he would probably agree with what you say more than not.

I believe the land should be multi use and there are regulations on it already it seems they are not enforced as they should be so I don’t know what any more regulations would do.
 
It’s Clarence Mortenson and having the pleasure of getting to meet him and ride around he would probably agree with what you say more than not.

I believe the land should be multi use and there are regulations on it already it seems they are not enforced as they should be so I don’t know what any more regulations would do.
Whoops should have looked it up.

True and it reminds me of my most recent discussion with a pro ranching friend. We had a lively debate and he sent a video like many do about a good acting rancher who was forced to stop their unique practices. In the end I agreed to call my representative (D) and say that I think that ranchers should be allowed more leeway for adaptive management practices, provided its for research or a scientifically supported practice. His end of the deal was to call his rep (R) and demand that funding and resources be provided to enforce the existing grazing laws and standards that are on the books.

I felt this was a very good win-win actionable conclusion. He refused to make the call.
 
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