Counting sheep at the Meeker Classic | Rio Blanco Herald Times | Serving Meeker, Rangely, Dinosaur & Northwest Colorado

2022-09-16 20:36:32 By : Mr. Gary Lee

September 15, 2022 Niki Turner Features, Meeker 0

The border collies tend to get top billing at the Meeker Classic Sheepdog Championship Trials, but it could be said that behind (or in front of) every good dog, are sheep that will test their mettle and bring out the best in dog and handler. These are the sheep Julie Hansmire, owner and manager of Campbell Hansmire Sheep, brings to the Classic every year.

Hansmire has about 3,400 sheep in her operation. The Merino sheep spend winters in Utah, trail to high mountain pasture above Eagle, Colorado, in the spring, and trail back west in the late fall. They spend a few months in the Fruita/Loma area before heading back to Utah.

Hansmire has continued the work she started with her late husband Randy Campbell, who passed away in 2010, and their children. Hansmire sheep are “range sheep,” meaning they are raised without fences, guarded by shepherds and dogs.

Raised on a farm in Nebraska — albeit one without sheep — Hansmire received ag degrees from the University of Nebraska and Texas Tech. After meeting her husband, the couple bought their “base property” in Utah so they could apply for grazing permits, and raised sheep and some cattle. She was serving on the board of directors for Colorado Wool Growers when the board received a handwritten letter from Gus Halandras about the idea for the Meeker Classic. Hansmire was interested, and so began a decades long partnership.

For the Classic, Hansmire pulls about 700 yearling ewes out of the mountains and brings them to Meeker. The ewes are as close to identical as possible. “I try to make it even for everyone,” she said, setting aside sheep that are smaller or with a longer tail, characteristics that might set them apart from the others.

Hansmire selects fresh groups for the first three days of the trials so that each dog and handler team faces the same challenge — untested and untried sheep. For the semifinals and finals, the groups are blended together. For the finals, dogs have to “lift” two groups of sheep, bring them to the shedding ring, and separate out five that have been outfitted with orange collars.

Sheep, like most humans, prefer familiar settings and safety in numbers. Being cut from their flock into small groups, facing dogs they’ve never encountered and being put through the trial course makes them edgy.

“They don’t like being separated from their sisters,” Hansmire said. “And they’ve never been worked by a dog.”

If they were worked daily for about two weeks, she explained, they’d learn the system and become more compliant. As it is, when they set foot — hoof — on the trials field, they’re unsure what the dogs are doing, what the handlers are doing, and why they’ve been separated from the larger herd, and they can act up.

Case in point, during Friday’s competition this year, one of the sheep refused to cooperate with the dogs and riders who herd the trial group off the field between runs. She jumped a fence and escaped into the parking lot. Once captured, the ewe was safely returned to the corral via ATV.

For spectators, watching the sheep can provide almost as much entertainment as watching the dogs. Over the years Hansmire’s sheep have jumped over, kicked, and even tried to bite the dogs that attempt to manuever them through the trials course. Sometimes the sheep are so feisty the dog gets frustrated, a situation that inspired a new term: “Meekered.”

The sheep industry in the West has faced and overcome multiple challenges, from the range wars in the previous century when cattle ranchers attempted to prevent sheepherders from taking up residence on prime grazing land, to market competition from New Zealand and Australia over the price of wool and lamb, to battles over grazing permits, to depredation from mountain lions, bears — and now in Colorado, the impending threat of wolves and the inherent risks reintroduction of a new predator will bring.

But like the sheep they raise, sheep ranchers are adaptable, and they’re finding ways to innovate for the future and redefine their industry for new market trends. One example of that innovation is happening in Oregon, and Theos Swallow Fork Ranch in Meeker and the Campbell Hansmire Ranch are participating.

In 2017, the 32,000 acre Imperial Stock Ranch in Oregon was the first in the U.S. to adopt the Textile Exchange’s Responsible Wool Standard (RWS), which provides guidelines for humane animal husbandry and standard for land management and worker welfare, according to a 2022 article in Inside Outdoor Magazine.

Upon realizing the demand for wool that could be verified as sustainable and traceable was growing exponentially, Jeanne Carver and her late husband Dan created the Shaniko Wool Company to provide a way for other sheep ranchers to obtain RWS certification with less expense, through collaboration. The availability of certified, ethically-sourced wool has opened doors to major brands like Ralph Lauren, which used RWS verified wool in the sweaters and hats worn by U.S. Olympic teams in the 2022 Winter Olympics.

The use of sheep for other environmental benefits include programs in California, where sheep are grazed under power lines and in rural/urban areas for fire mitigation and chemical-free vegetation control, similar to the use of goats in recent years in Northwest Colorado to manage leafy spurge, a noxious, invasive weed. The California Wool Growers Association’s website states, “Employing livestock to manipulate vegetation is as old as grazing itself. Promoting grazing to manage vegetation as a paid service–typically called prescribed or targeted grazing–is a more recent phenomenon.”

Sheep provide another benefit to the environment besides grazing and fertilizing… wool is environmentally friendly in more ways than one. Each wool fiber is almost 50% carbon, more than cotton or wood-based textiles. Sheep turn carbon into wool, sequestering environmental carbon in a completely natural way.

And for those who feel itchy when they think about putting on a wool sweater, the wool from certain breeds, including the Merino breed raised by Hansmire, is so fine it reduces or eliminates skin irritation.“It’s the finest wool in the world,” Hansmire said. This has opened new markets and increased demand for new wool products.

Hansmire and her industry continue to innovate, and we hope to be counting sheep–and the successful ag operations who care for them–well into the future.

By NIKI TURNER – editor@ht1885.com

MEEKER | The public can join the excitement of the Meeker Classic Sheepdog Trials, one of Northwest Colorado’s premier fall events, from Sept. 4-8 and save some money and a lot of hassle.

MEEKER | Join us for the premiere screening of “Colorado Experience: Meeker Classic Sheepdog Trials” followed by a panel discussion at Meeker High School on Wednesday, Feb. 27. Doors open at 5:30 p.m. Witness dog […]

MEEKER I Three evenings of fun and entertainment are slated to compliment the Meeker Classic Sheepdog Championship Trials, which began on Wednesday. Visitors and locals will have the opportunity to enjoy art, music, film and […]

Your email address will not be published.

Currently you have JavaScript disabled. In order to post comments, please make sure JavaScript and Cookies are enabled, and reload the page. Click here for instructions on how to enable JavaScript in your browser.

Copyright © 2022 | MH Magazine WordPress Theme by MH Themes

We are using cookies to give you the best experience on our website.

You can find out more about which cookies we are using or switch them off in settings .

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognizing you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.

You can adjust all of your cookie settings by navigating the tabs on the left hand side.

Strictly Necessary Cookie should be enabled at all times so that we can save your preferences for cookie settings.

If you disable this cookie, we will not be able to save your preferences. This means that every time you visit this website you will need to enable or disable cookies again.

This website uses Google Analytics to collect anonymous information such as the number of visitors to the site, and the most popular pages.

Keeping this cookie enabled helps us to improve our website.

Please enable Strictly Necessary Cookies first so that we can save your preferences!

This website uses the following additional cookies:

Please enable Strictly Necessary Cookies first so that we can save your preferences!