Do you know where your livestock are?

Do you know where your livestock are?

U.S. Forest Service analyzing the declining numbers
The U.S. Forest Service is taking a hard look at the declining numbers of livestock grazing in the San Juan National Forest, such as these two lonely cows in the high country near Stony Pass in the San Juan Mountains.
A lonely cow grazing in the high country near Stony Pass in the San Juan Mountains is becoming an all-too familiar sight, so the U.S. Forest Service is analyzing the declining numbers. “Numbers fluctuate,” said Mark Tucker, the rangeland management program leader for the Forest Service. “There have been few consistent years in the last 15.”

Do you know where your livestock are?

The U.S. Forest Service is taking a hard look at the declining numbers of livestock grazing in the San Juan National Forest, such as these two lonely cows in the high country near Stony Pass in the San Juan Mountains.
A lonely cow grazing in the high country near Stony Pass in the San Juan Mountains is becoming an all-too familiar sight, so the U.S. Forest Service is analyzing the declining numbers. “Numbers fluctuate,” said Mark Tucker, the rangeland management program leader for the Forest Service. “There have been few consistent years in the last 15.”