LandCAN

Turning the Texas Drought into Plenty

By: Amos S. Eno
Posted on:01/11/2012 Updated:07/12/2017

How One Texas Rancher Helped to Feed People While Saving his Ranch from the Drought.

A rancher can do everything right: develop a conservation plan that includes rotational grazing, install cross-fencing, conduct nutrient and pest management, and build a pond to water his pastures.  But what happens when a drought - with no end in sight - threatens to wipe out all past achievements?  What happens when a rancher who is doing everything right has to downsize his herd in the midst of a massive cattle sell off that has overcrowded auction barns around the state?

If that rancher is David Brooks of DDV Ranch in Fayette County, Texas, he donates his cattle to feed the hungry.  “The love of the land and my love of helping others made it the perfect solution,” said Brooks, who made the decision with his wife, Darlene and daughter, ‘Tori.’  “I have been active in helping people most of my life, from mission work in Cuba to serving on the mission board at church that helps in disaster response.”  Brooks donated 23 head of cattle, or more than 7000 pounds of beef, to feed needy families while fostering conservation efforts on his ranch.

A Recognized Community Leader

Brooks was recently recognized for his volunteer work in Houston and across Texas as the Central South District Coordinator for Disaster Response & Relief.  Brooks has provided training opportunities in disaster response, led relief efforts, and has participated as a member of the Texas Annual Conference Committee on Relief, a leadership group for United Methodist disaster response efforts encompassing all of East Texas.  

“My family and I have been blessed.  Through this effort, I knew that I was not only going to help feed people who needed food, but I would also help my land and the environment by not continuing to overgraze, ” said Brooks.

Conserving Ranches, Avoiding Waste

Brooks worked with the NRCS to develop the conservation plan for his ranch and to donate his beef cattle.  Through its annual federal food drive called “Feds Feeding Families,” the NRCS applied Brooks’s 7,000 pounds of beef toward the USDA’s food contribution goal in 2011.  “Working with NRCS is like working with a good neighbor who is watching out for your best interests.”

“At the beginning of the summer, USDA set a department-wide goal of contributing 500,000 pounds of food to the overall federal government goal of two million pounds,” said Salvador Salinas, NRCS State Conservationist for Texas. “In the end, the generous donations of USDA employees and our customers such as Mr. Brooks and others throughout Texas and the US, helped USDA exceed their goal and the overall federal goal by raising a total of 5.97 million pounds of food!”