Houston, TX – Thousands Of Texas Cattle May Have Died In Wake Of Harvey

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    A small herd of cows walk along high ground in the Hamshire area on Monday. Several Chinook helicopters flown by the Michigan Army National Guard dropped bales of hay in the area to feed stranded livestock. As of Monday, an estimated 2,000 head of livestock were stranded in the area due to Hurricane Harvey flood waters.   Photo taken Monday, September 04, 2017  Guiseppe Barranco/The EnterpriseHouston – Texas agricultural officials fear thousands of cattle may have died in the aftermath of Harvey, resulting in losses to ranchers of tens of millions of dollars.

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    The counties that sustained damage when Harvey first came ashore Aug. 25 were home to 1.2 million head of cattle, representing 1-in-4 of all beef cows in Texas, the nation’s largest producer.

    The Houston Chronicle reports that most ranchers don’t insure their herds because of the cost, so a rancher could be out hundreds of thousands of dollars if an entire herd drowned.

    But agricultural economists don’t expect the losses to affect meat prices.

    The beef cows in the coastal regions are mostly raised for breeding. Their calves are sent to Texas Panhandle feedlots where they grow to full size before going to slaughterhouses.


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    6 years ago

    Nebech on these poor creatures. If they don’t end up in hamburger they end up drowning in a storm.

    Butterfly
    Butterfly
    6 years ago

    Meat may start getting expensive for Yom Tov.. Maybe they will get it from Canada or Argentina??

    PaulinSaudi
    PaulinSaudi
    6 years ago

    It seems a shame and a sin to let them die like that.