Customer Success Story - JT Land and Cattle
Jim and Carol Thorpe call themselves “novice
ranchers,” but they have certainly taken advantage
of resources available to producers in their area to
utilize best management practices in their
operation.
“We have benefited significantly in climbing that initially steep
learning curve with assistance from the NRCS
(Natural Resources Conservation Service), county
extension agents, publications, good neighbors, and
membership in the New Mexico Cattle Growers, the
Society for Range Management and the Quivira
Coalition,” Thorpe said.
Located in eastern New Mexico, JT Land and Cattle sits on 12,000 acres
of open range that Jim and Carol have stocked with
230 Angus and Angus-Brangus type cows with Hereford
influence. Their ranch, best described as “midway in
the middle of nowhere between Albuquerque and
Amarillo,” receives 14 inches of annual rainfall,
and has a stocking rate of 40 acres/AUY.
Through NRCS suggestions and the assistance of EQIP cost-share
programs, he said they have been able to steadily
increase grazing capacity through installing
fencing, water improvements and brush control
practices.
Thorpe said they have become involved in certified natural beef
programs, as well as age and source verification,
and other producers using a record keeping tool such
as CattleMax should explore these programs.
“You can leverage the ability of having calf birth records to sell
into source and age verified programs,” he said.
Their ranch duties are split into two categories. Jim said he is
charge of “facilities,” including the water system,
fences, corrals and vehicles, while Carol manages
the “ranch personnel,” or the many cows, horses,
dogs, chickens and “assorted other critters” that
call JT Land and Cattle home.
Jim said they acquired the land and entered the cattle business in
1999.
“We took the opportunity to become novice ranchers after the sale of a
family business and have learned the truth in the
old adage that you can really make a small fortune
in ranching—provided you start off with a bigger
one!”
Soon after, Jim and Carol began using CattleMax to manage their cattle
records.
After seeing an ad for CattleMax in Livestock Weekly, Jim said they
requested a CattleMax trial CD and liked the
program.
“Before CattleMax,” he said, “We built an Excel spreadsheet which
worked well at first until it got overwhelmed with
successive years’ input.”
They have learned that CattleMax makes it easy to change your record
keeping as your operation changes.
“We started off with the Commercial Edition, and last year took
advantage of the upgrade offer to the Registered
Edition,” he said, “Even as we are not a registered
operation, we like the enhanced features, such as
cow pedigrees. This helps in selecting replacements
and planning breeding groups.”
Thorpe said they use the cow-calf pasture report most often, but their
favorite features in CattleMax include the ability
to get the decision information they need quickly
and easily. He said they appreciated being able to
quickly access cow progeny records, see past calving
records and easily change the status of a group of
cattle all at once.
“Using CattleMax to track [the cattle] and their progeny has been a
key to our making progress,” he said, “For example,
in selecting replacement heifers, a beautiful heifer
might be selected during a traditional gate cut, but
the CattleMax records might show that her dam has an
undesirable udder. Having this information helps to
keep from making the same mistake twice.”
Jim Thorpe said that the power of CattleMax as a management tool is
what really aids his cattle operation and helps save
time.
“As the celebrated business guru Deming once said, ‘You can’t manage
what you don’t measure,’” he said, “CattleMax gives
today’s cattlemen a one-stop tool for tracking all
of the measurements necessary for successful herd
management in a competitive marketplace.”
To learn more about JT Land and Cattle, visit them online at
http://jtlandandcattle.com.



