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Ranch

A ranch (from Spanish: rancho/Mexican Spanish) is an area of land, including various structures, given primarily to ranching, the practice of raising grazing livestock such as cattle and sheep. It is a subtype of a farm. These terms are most often applied to livestock-raising operations in Mexico, the Western United States and Western Canada, though there are ranches in other areas.[1][note 1] People who own or operate a ranch are called ranchers, cattlemen, or stockgrowers. Ranching is also a method used to raise less common livestock such as horses, elk, American bison, ostrich, emu, and alpaca.[2]

Ranches generally consist of large areas, but may be of nearly any size. In the western United States, many ranches are a combination of privately owned land supplemented by grazing leases on land under the control of the federal Bureau of Land Management or the United States Forest Service. If the ranch includes arable or irrigated land, the ranch may also engage in a limited amount of farming, raising crops for feeding the animals, such as hay and feed grains.[2]

Ranches that cater exclusively to tourists are called guest ranches or, colloquially, "dude ranches". Most working ranches do not cater to guests, though they may allow private hunters or outfitters onto their property to hunt native wildlife. However, in recent years,[when?] a few struggling smaller operations have added some dude ranch features such as horseback rides, cattle drives, and guided hunting to bring in additional income. Ranching is part of the iconography of the "Wild West" as seen in Western movies and rodeos.

Ranch occupations

 
Aike Ranch, El Calafate

The person who owns and manages the operation of a ranch is usually called a rancher, but the terms cattleman, stockgrower, or stockman are also sometimes used. If this individual in charge of overall management is an employee of the actual owner, the term foreman or ranch foreman is used. A rancher who primarily raises young stock sometimes is called a cow-calf operator or a cow-calf man. This person is usually the owner, though in some cases, particularly where there is absentee ownership, it is the ranch manager or ranch foreman.

The people who are employees of the rancher and involved in handling livestock are called a number of terms, including cowhand, ranch hand, and cowboy. People exclusively involved with handling horses are sometimes called wranglers.

Origins of ranching

Ranching and the cowboy tradition originated in Spain, out of the necessity to handle large herds of grazing animals on dry land from horseback. During the Reconquista, members of the Spanish nobility and various military orders received large land grants that the Kingdom of Castile had conquered from the Moors. These landowners were to defend the lands put into their control and could use them for earning revenue. In the process it was found that open-range breeding of sheep and cattle (under the Mesta system) was the most suitable use for vast tracts, particularly in the parts of Spain now known as Castilla-La Mancha, Extremadura and Andalusia.

History in North America

 
Frijole Ranch (c. 1876) is part of Guadalupe Mountains National Park in west Texas, United States

When the Conquistadors came to the Americas in the 16th century, followed by settlers, they brought their cattle and cattle-raising techniques with them. Huge land grants by the Spanish (and later Mexican) government, part of the hacienda system, allowed large numbers of animals to roam freely over vast areas. A number of different traditions developed, often related to the original location in Spain from which a settlement originated. For example, many of the traditions of the Jalisco charros in central Mexico come from the Salamanca charros of Castile.[citation needed] The vaquero tradition of Northern Mexico was more organic, developed to adapt to the characteristics of the region from Spanish sources by cultural interaction between the Spanish elites and the native and mestizo peoples.[3]

Cattle ranching flourished in Spanish Florida during the 17th century.[4]

 
A rancho in Jalisco.

The word "Rancho" in Mexico developed different definitions from what it originally meant in Spain. In the book "Descripción de la Diócesis de Guadalajara de Indias" (1770), Mateo José de Arteaga defined "Ranchos" as "extensions of land where few people live with few assets and sheltering in huts."[5] In 1778, José Alejandro Patiño, in his text "Topografía del Curato de Tlaxomulco," defined Ranchos as "some country houses of little pomp and value, in which poor and middle-class men live, cultivating the small lands that they have or lease in which to sow according to the size of each of their possibilities and raising their domestic rural animals according to their strength."[6][7]

By the nineteenth century, the words Rancho and Estancia as used in Mexico had been consolidated to define a unit of land that made up a Hacienda or any rural area or the countryside in general. Domingo Revilla in 1844, in his text "Los Rancheros", defined a Rancho or Estancia as "a unit of land which comprises a Hacienda, where cattle and horses are raised, and which is in the care of a Caporal who is the captain of the other cowboys."[8] Niceto de Zamacois, in his book "Historia de Méjico" (1879), defined terms as follows: "...the men of the countryside who carry out their jobs on horseback are given the name of "Rancheros," derived from the word Rancho that is applied to a small hacienda, or to a part of a large one that is divided into racherias or ranchos. Those who carry out the same tasks in the haciedas of Veracruz are given the name of "Jarochos."[9]

Thus the term Rancho in Mexican Spanish became a unit of land that makes up a hacienda where cattle is raised and where people live in farmhouses. The people that live and work in those Ranchos managing cattle and horses are called Rancheros.[10]

United States

 
The historic 101 Ranch in Oklahoma showing the ranchhouse, corrals, and out-buildings.

As settlers from the United States moved west, they brought cattle breeds developed on the east coast and in Europe along with them, and adapted their management to the drier lands of the west by borrowing key elements of the Spanish vaquero culture.

 
An 1898 photochrom of a round-up in or near the town of Cimarron, Colorado.

However, there were cattle on the eastern seaboard. Deep Hollow Ranch, 110 miles (180 km) east of New York City in Montauk, New York, claims to be the first ranch in the United States, having continuously operated since 1658.[11] The ranch makes the somewhat debatable claim of having the oldest cattle operation in what today is the United States, though cattle had been run in the area since European settlers purchased land from the Indian people of the area in 1643.[12] Although there were substantial numbers of cattle on Long Island, as well as the need to herd them to and from common grazing lands on a seasonal basis, the cattle handlers actually lived in houses built on the pasture grounds, and cattle were ear-marked for identification, rather than being branded.[12] The only actual "cattle drives" held on Long Island consisted of one drive in 1776, when the island's cattle were moved in a failed attempt to prevent them from being captured during the Revolutionary War, and three or four drives in the late 1930s, when area cattle were herded down Montauk Highway to pasture ground near Deep Hollow Ranch.[12]

The Open Range

The prairie and desert lands of what today is Mexico and the western United States were well-suited to "open range" grazing. For example, American bison had been a mainstay of the diet for the Native Americans in the Great Plains for centuries. Likewise, cattle and other livestock were simply turned loose in the spring after their young were born and allowed to roam with little supervision and no fences, then rounded up in the fall, with the mature animals driven to market and the breeding stock brought close to the ranch headquarters for greater protection in the winter. The use of livestock branding allowed the cattle owned by different ranchers to be identified and sorted. Beginning with the settlement of Texas in the 1840s, and expansion both north and west from that time, through the Civil War and into the 1880s, ranching dominated western economic activity.

Along with ranchers came the need for agricultural crops to feed both humans and livestock, and hence many farmers also came west along with ranchers. Many operations were "diversified", with both ranching and farming activities taking place. With the Homestead Act of 1862, more settlers came west to set up farms. This created some conflict, as increasing numbers of farmers needed to fence off fields to prevent cattle and sheep from eating their crops. Barbed wire, invented in 1874, gradually made inroads in fencing off privately owned land, especially for homesteads. There was some reduction of land on the Great Plains open to grazing.

End of the Open Range

 
The severe winter of 1886–87 brought an end to the open range. Waiting for a Chinook, by C.M. Russell.

The end of the open range was not brought about by a reduction in land due to crop farming, but by overgrazing. Cattle stocked on the open range created a tragedy of the commons as each rancher sought increased economic benefit by grazing too many animals on public lands that "nobody" owned. However, being a non-native species, the grazing patterns of ever-increasing numbers of cattle slowly reduced the quality of the rangeland, in spite of the simultaneous massive slaughter of American bison that occurred. The winter of 1886–87 was one of the most severe on record, and livestock that were already stressed by reduced grazing died by the thousands. Many large cattle operations went bankrupt, and others suffered severe financial losses. Thus, after this time, ranchers also began to fence off their land and negotiated individual grazing leases with the American government so that they could keep better control of the pasture land available to their own animals.

Ranching in Hawaii

Ranching in Hawaii developed independently of that in the continental United States. In colonial times, Capt. George Vancouver gave several head of cattle to the Hawaiian king, Pai`ea Kamehameha, monarch of the Hawaiian Kingdom, and by the early 19th century, they had multiplied considerably, to the point that they were wreaking havoc throughout the countryside. About 1812, John Parker, a sailor who had jumped ship and settled in the islands, received permission from Kamehameha to capture the wild cattle and develop a beef industry.

The Hawaiian style of ranching originally included capturing wild cattle by driving them into pits dug in the forest floor. Once tamed somewhat by hunger and thirst, they were hauled out up a steep ramp, and tied by their horns to the horns of a tame, older steer (or ox) and taken to fenced-in areas. The industry grew slowly under the reign of Kamehameha's son Liholiho (Kamehameha II). When Liholiho's brother, Kauikeaouli (Kamehameha III), visited California, then still a part of Mexico, he was impressed with the skill of the Mexican vaqueros. In 1832, he invited several to Hawaii to teach the Hawaiian people how to work cattle.

The Hawaiian cowboy came to be called the paniolo, a Hawaiianized pronunciation of español. Even today, the traditional Hawaiian saddle and many other tools of the ranching trade have a distinctly Mexican look, and many Hawaiian ranching families still carry the surnames of vaqueros who made Hawaii their home.

Ranching in South America

In Argentina and Uruguay, ranches are known as estancias and in Brazil, they are called fazendas. In much of South America, including Ecuador and Colombia, the term hacienda or finca may be used. Ranchero or Rancho are also generic terms used throughout tropical Latin America.

In the colonial period, from the pampas regions of South America all the way to the Minas Gerais state in Brazil, including the semi-arid pampas of Argentina and the south of Brazil, were often well-suited to ranching, and a tradition developed that largely paralleled that of Mexico and the United States. The gaucho culture of Argentina, Brazil and Uruguay are among the cattle ranching traditions born during the period. However, in the 20th century, cattle raising expanded into less-suitable areas of the Pantanal. Particularly in Brazil, the 20th century marked the rapid growth of deforestation, as rain forest lands were cleared by slash and burn methods that allowed grass to grow for livestock, but also led to the depletion of the land within only a few years. Many of indigenous peoples of the rain forest opposed this form of cattle ranching and protested the forest being burnt down to set up grazing operations and farms. This conflict is still a concern in the region today.

Ranches outside the Americas

 
Cattle in a dehesa in Bollullos Par del Condado, Spain.

In Spain, where the origins of ranching can be traced, there are ganaderías operating on dehesa-type land, where fighting bulls are raised. However, ranch-type properties are not seen to any significant degree in the rest of western Europe, where there is far less land area and sufficient rainfall allows the raising of cattle on much smaller farms.

In Australia, a rangeland property is a station (originally in the sense of a place where stock were temporarily stationed). In almost all cases, these are either cattle stations or sheep stations. The largest cattle stations in the world are located in Australia's dry outback rangelands. Owners of these stations are usually known as graziers or pastoralists, especially if they reside on the property. Employees are usually known as stockmen/stockwomen, jackaroos/jillaroos and/or ringers (rather than cowboys). A number of Australian cattle stations are larger than 10,000 km2, with the greatest being Anna Creek Station which measures 23,677 km2 in area (approximately eight times the largest US Ranch). Anna Creek is owned by S Kidman & Co.

The equivalent terms in New Zealand are run and station.

In South Africa, similar large holdings are usually known as a farm (occasionally also ranch) in South African English and plaas in Afrikaans.

See also

References

  1. ^ Spiegal, S., Huntsinger, L., Starrs, P.F., Hruska, T., Schellenberg, M.P., McIntosh, M.M., 2019. Rangeland livestock production in North America, in: Squires, V.R., Bryden, W.L. (Eds.), Livestock: Production, Management Strategies, and Challenges. NOVA Science Publishers, New York, New York, USA.
  2. ^ a b Holechek, J.L., Geli, H.M., Cibils, A.F. and Sawalhah, M.N., 2020. Climate Change, Rangelands, and Sustainability of Ranching in the Western United States. Sustainability, 12(12), p.4942.
  3. ^ Haeber, Jonathan. "Vaqueros: The First Cowboys of the Open Range". National Geographic News, August 15, 2003. Accessed online October 15, 2007.
  4. ^ Arnade, Charles W. (1961). "Cattle Raising in Spanish Florida, 1513-1763". Agricultural History. 35 (3): 116–124. ISSN 0002-1482. JSTOR 3740622.
  5. ^ Serrera Contreras, Ramon María (1977). Guadalajara ganadera estudio regional novohispano, 1760-1805 (in Spanish). Sevilla, Spain: Escuela de Estudios Hispano-Americanos. p. 33. ISBN 9788400036959.
  6. ^ Gomez Serrano, Jesús (2000). Haciendas y ranchos de Aguascalientes estudio regional sobre la tenencia de la tierra y el desarrollo agrícola en el siglo XIX (in Spanish). Mexico: Universidad Autónoma de Aguascalientes. p. 61. ISBN 9789685073059. Retrieved 23 February 2022.
  7. ^ Serrera Contreras, Ramon María (1977). Guadalajara ganadera estudio regional novohispano, 1760-1805 (in Spanish). Sevilla, Spain: Escuela de Estudios Hispano-Americanos. p. 33. ISBN 9788400036959.
  8. ^ Revilla, Domingo (1844). El museo mexicano o miscelánea de amenidades curiosas e instructivas Volume 3 (Volume 3 ed.). Mexico City: Ignacio Cumplido. p. 557. Retrieved 23 February 2022.
  9. ^ de Zamacois, Niceto (1879). Historia de Méjico desde sus tiempos mas remotos hasta nuestros dias Volume 10 (Volume 10 ed.). Barcelona and Mexico: J.F. Párres y compañia. p. 61. Retrieved 23 February 2022.
  10. ^ Domínguez, Ramon Joaquin (1856). Diccionario nacional ó gran diccionario clásico de la lengua Española. Vol. 2. Madrid, Paris: Mellado. p. 268. Retrieved 23 February 2022.
  11. ^ Deep Hollow Ranch History 2007-11-22 at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ a b c Ochs, Ridgeley. "Ride 'em, Island Cowboy," Newsday,. Accessed May 5, 2008

Notes

  1. ^ For terminologies in Australia and New Zealand, see Station (Australian agriculture) and Station (New Zealand agriculture).

Further reading

  • Blunt, Judy (2002). Breaking Clean. Knopf. ISBN 0-375-40131-8.
  • Campbell, Ida Foster; Hill, Alice Foster (2002). Triumph and Tragedy: A History of Thomas Lyons and the LCs. Silver City, New Mexico: High-Lonesome Books. ISBN 0-944383-61-0.
  • Ellis, George F. (1973). The Bell Ranch as I Knew It. Lowell Press. ISBN 0-913504-15-7.
  • Greenwood, Kathy L. (1989). Heart-Diamond. University of North Texas Press. ISBN 0-929398-08-4.
  • Paul, Virginia (1973). This Was Cattle Ranching: Yesterday and Today. Seattle, Washington: Superior.
  • Ward, Delbert R. (1993). Great Ranches of the United States. San Antonio, Texas: Ganada Press. ISBN 1-88051-025-1.

External links

  • The Canadian Museum of Civilization - Native Ranching and Rodeo Life on the Plains and Plateau
  • The Handbook of Texas Online: Ranching
  • Cattle Ranges of the Southwest, published 1898, hosted by the Portal to Texas History
  • Guide to ranch archives in Southwest Collection/Special Collections Library at Texas Tech
  • Cowboys to Cattlemen Virtual Museum Exhibit and Lesson Plans at Grant-Kohrs Ranch NHS from National Park Service

ranch, this, article, about, type, land, method, raising, livestock, information, people, handle, cattle, ranches, cowboy, other, uses, disambiguation, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, ple. This article is about a type of land use and method of raising livestock For information on people who handle cattle on ranches see Cowboy For other uses see Ranch disambiguation Rancher redirects here For other uses see Rancher disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Ranch news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message A ranch from Spanish rancho Mexican Spanish is an area of land including various structures given primarily to ranching the practice of raising grazing livestock such as cattle and sheep It is a subtype of a farm These terms are most often applied to livestock raising operations in Mexico the Western United States and Western Canada though there are ranches in other areas 1 note 1 People who own or operate a ranch are called ranchers cattlemen or stockgrowers Ranching is also a method used to raise less common livestock such as horses elk American bison ostrich emu and alpaca 2 View of the Grant Kohrs Ranch near Deer Lodge Montana Ranches generally consist of large areas but may be of nearly any size In the western United States many ranches are a combination of privately owned land supplemented by grazing leases on land under the control of the federal Bureau of Land Management or the United States Forest Service If the ranch includes arable or irrigated land the ranch may also engage in a limited amount of farming raising crops for feeding the animals such as hay and feed grains 2 Ranches that cater exclusively to tourists are called guest ranches or colloquially dude ranches Most working ranches do not cater to guests though they may allow private hunters or outfitters onto their property to hunt native wildlife However in recent years when a few struggling smaller operations have added some dude ranch features such as horseback rides cattle drives and guided hunting to bring in additional income Ranching is part of the iconography of the Wild West as seen in Western movies and rodeos Contents 1 Ranch occupations 2 Origins of ranching 3 History in North America 3 1 United States 3 2 The Open Range 3 3 End of the Open Range 3 4 Ranching in Hawaii 4 Ranching in South America 5 Ranches outside the Americas 6 See also 7 References 8 Notes 9 Further reading 10 External linksRanch occupations EditSee also Cowboy Aike Ranch El Calafate The person who owns and manages the operation of a ranch is usually called a rancher but the terms cattleman stockgrower or stockman are also sometimes used If this individual in charge of overall management is an employee of the actual owner the term foreman or ranch foreman is used A rancher who primarily raises young stock sometimes is called a cow calf operator or a cow calf man This person is usually the owner though in some cases particularly where there is absentee ownership it is the ranch manager or ranch foreman The people who are employees of the rancher and involved in handling livestock are called a number of terms including cowhand ranch hand and cowboy People exclusively involved with handling horses are sometimes called wranglers Origins of ranching EditRanching and the cowboy tradition originated in Spain out of the necessity to handle large herds of grazing animals on dry land from horseback During the Reconquista members of the Spanish nobility and various military orders received large land grants that the Kingdom of Castile had conquered from the Moors These landowners were to defend the lands put into their control and could use them for earning revenue In the process it was found that open range breeding of sheep and cattle under the Mesta system was the most suitable use for vast tracts particularly in the parts of Spain now known as Castilla La Mancha Extremadura and Andalusia History in North America Edit Frijole Ranch c 1876 is part of Guadalupe Mountains National Park in west Texas United States When the Conquistadors came to the Americas in the 16th century followed by settlers they brought their cattle and cattle raising techniques with them Huge land grants by the Spanish and later Mexican government part of the hacienda system allowed large numbers of animals to roam freely over vast areas A number of different traditions developed often related to the original location in Spain from which a settlement originated For example many of the traditions of the Jalisco charros in central Mexico come from the Salamanca charros of Castile citation needed The vaquero tradition of Northern Mexico was more organic developed to adapt to the characteristics of the region from Spanish sources by cultural interaction between the Spanish elites and the native and mestizo peoples 3 Cattle ranching flourished in Spanish Florida during the 17th century 4 A rancho in Jalisco The word Rancho in Mexico developed different definitions from what it originally meant in Spain In the book Descripcion de la Diocesis de Guadalajara de Indias 1770 Mateo Jose de Arteaga defined Ranchos as extensions of land where few people live with few assets and sheltering in huts 5 In 1778 Jose Alejandro Patino in his text Topografia del Curato de Tlaxomulco defined Ranchos as some country houses of little pomp and value in which poor and middle class men live cultivating the small lands that they have or lease in which to sow according to the size of each of their possibilities and raising their domestic rural animals according to their strength 6 7 By the nineteenth century the words Rancho and Estancia as used in Mexico had been consolidated to define a unit of land that made up a Hacienda or any rural area or the countryside in general Domingo Revilla in 1844 in his text Los Rancheros defined a Rancho or Estancia as a unit of land which comprises a Hacienda where cattle and horses are raised and which is in the care of a Caporal who is the captain of the other cowboys 8 Niceto de Zamacois in his book Historia de Mejico 1879 defined terms as follows the men of the countryside who carry out their jobs on horseback are given the name of Rancheros derived from the word Rancho that is applied to a small hacienda or to a part of a large one that is divided into racherias or ranchos Those who carry out the same tasks in the haciedas of Veracruz are given the name of Jarochos 9 Thus the term Rancho in Mexican Spanish became a unit of land that makes up a hacienda where cattle is raised and where people live in farmhouses The people that live and work in those Ranchos managing cattle and horses are called Rancheros 10 United States Edit The historic 101 Ranch in Oklahoma showing the ranchhouse corrals and out buildings As settlers from the United States moved west they brought cattle breeds developed on the east coast and in Europe along with them and adapted their management to the drier lands of the west by borrowing key elements of the Spanish vaquero culture An 1898 photochrom of a round up in or near the town of Cimarron Colorado However there were cattle on the eastern seaboard Deep Hollow Ranch 110 miles 180 km east of New York City in Montauk New York claims to be the first ranch in the United States having continuously operated since 1658 11 The ranch makes the somewhat debatable claim of having the oldest cattle operation in what today is the United States though cattle had been run in the area since European settlers purchased land from the Indian people of the area in 1643 12 Although there were substantial numbers of cattle on Long Island as well as the need to herd them to and from common grazing lands on a seasonal basis the cattle handlers actually lived in houses built on the pasture grounds and cattle were ear marked for identification rather than being branded 12 The only actual cattle drives held on Long Island consisted of one drive in 1776 when the island s cattle were moved in a failed attempt to prevent them from being captured during the Revolutionary War and three or four drives in the late 1930s when area cattle were herded down Montauk Highway to pasture ground near Deep Hollow Ranch 12 The Open Range Edit Cattle near the Bruneau River in Elko County Nevada The prairie and desert lands of what today is Mexico and the western United States were well suited to open range grazing For example American bison had been a mainstay of the diet for the Native Americans in the Great Plains for centuries Likewise cattle and other livestock were simply turned loose in the spring after their young were born and allowed to roam with little supervision and no fences then rounded up in the fall with the mature animals driven to market and the breeding stock brought close to the ranch headquarters for greater protection in the winter The use of livestock branding allowed the cattle owned by different ranchers to be identified and sorted Beginning with the settlement of Texas in the 1840s and expansion both north and west from that time through the Civil War and into the 1880s ranching dominated western economic activity Along with ranchers came the need for agricultural crops to feed both humans and livestock and hence many farmers also came west along with ranchers Many operations were diversified with both ranching and farming activities taking place With the Homestead Act of 1862 more settlers came west to set up farms This created some conflict as increasing numbers of farmers needed to fence off fields to prevent cattle and sheep from eating their crops Barbed wire invented in 1874 gradually made inroads in fencing off privately owned land especially for homesteads There was some reduction of land on the Great Plains open to grazing End of the Open Range Edit The severe winter of 1886 87 brought an end to the open range Waiting for a Chinook by C M Russell The end of the open range was not brought about by a reduction in land due to crop farming but by overgrazing Cattle stocked on the open range created a tragedy of the commons as each rancher sought increased economic benefit by grazing too many animals on public lands that nobody owned However being a non native species the grazing patterns of ever increasing numbers of cattle slowly reduced the quality of the rangeland in spite of the simultaneous massive slaughter of American bison that occurred The winter of 1886 87 was one of the most severe on record and livestock that were already stressed by reduced grazing died by the thousands Many large cattle operations went bankrupt and others suffered severe financial losses Thus after this time ranchers also began to fence off their land and negotiated individual grazing leases with the American government so that they could keep better control of the pasture land available to their own animals Ranching in Hawaii Edit Ranching in Hawaii developed independently of that in the continental United States In colonial times Capt George Vancouver gave several head of cattle to the Hawaiian king Pai ea Kamehameha monarch of the Hawaiian Kingdom and by the early 19th century they had multiplied considerably to the point that they were wreaking havoc throughout the countryside About 1812 John Parker a sailor who had jumped ship and settled in the islands received permission from Kamehameha to capture the wild cattle and develop a beef industry The Hawaiian style of ranching originally included capturing wild cattle by driving them into pits dug in the forest floor Once tamed somewhat by hunger and thirst they were hauled out up a steep ramp and tied by their horns to the horns of a tame older steer or ox and taken to fenced in areas The industry grew slowly under the reign of Kamehameha s son Liholiho Kamehameha II When Liholiho s brother Kauikeaouli Kamehameha III visited California then still a part of Mexico he was impressed with the skill of the Mexican vaqueros In 1832 he invited several to Hawaii to teach the Hawaiian people how to work cattle The Hawaiian cowboy came to be called the paniolo a Hawaiianized pronunciation of espanol Even today the traditional Hawaiian saddle and many other tools of the ranching trade have a distinctly Mexican look and many Hawaiian ranching families still carry the surnames of vaqueros who made Hawaii their home Ranching in South America EditIn Argentina and Uruguay ranches are known as estancias and in Brazil they are called fazendas In much of South America including Ecuador and Colombia the term hacienda or finca may be used Ranchero or Rancho are also generic terms used throughout tropical Latin America In the colonial period from the pampas regions of South America all the way to the Minas Gerais state in Brazil including the semi arid pampas of Argentina and the south of Brazil were often well suited to ranching and a tradition developed that largely paralleled that of Mexico and the United States The gaucho culture of Argentina Brazil and Uruguay are among the cattle ranching traditions born during the period However in the 20th century cattle raising expanded into less suitable areas of the Pantanal Particularly in Brazil the 20th century marked the rapid growth of deforestation as rain forest lands were cleared by slash and burn methods that allowed grass to grow for livestock but also led to the depletion of the land within only a few years Many of indigenous peoples of the rain forest opposed this form of cattle ranching and protested the forest being burnt down to set up grazing operations and farms This conflict is still a concern in the region today Ranches outside the Americas Edit Cattle in a dehesa in Bollullos Par del Condado Spain In Spain where the origins of ranching can be traced there are ganaderias operating on dehesa type land where fighting bulls are raised However ranch type properties are not seen to any significant degree in the rest of western Europe where there is far less land area and sufficient rainfall allows the raising of cattle on much smaller farms In Australia a rangeland property is a station originally in the sense of a place where stock were temporarily stationed In almost all cases these are either cattle stations or sheep stations The largest cattle stations in the world are located in Australia s dry outback rangelands Owners of these stations are usually known as graziers or pastoralists especially if they reside on the property Employees are usually known as stockmen stockwomen jackaroos jillaroos and or ringers rather than cowboys A number of Australian cattle stations are larger than 10 000 km2 with the greatest being Anna Creek Station which measures 23 677 km2 in area approximately eight times the largest US Ranch Anna Creek is owned by S Kidman amp Co The equivalent terms in New Zealand are run and station In South Africa similar large holdings are usually known as a farm occasionally also ranch in South African English and plaas in Afrikaans See also EditAnimal husbandry Cattle station Garden tools Estancia Holistic management Homestead buildings Intensive animal farming Cattle List of Ranches and Stations Movie ranch Pastoralism Ranch school Ranch style house Sheep stationReferences Edit Spiegal S Huntsinger L Starrs P F Hruska T Schellenberg M P McIntosh M M 2019 Rangeland livestock production in North America in Squires V R Bryden W L Eds Livestock Production Management Strategies and Challenges NOVA Science Publishers New York New York USA a b Holechek J L Geli H M Cibils A F and Sawalhah M N 2020 Climate Change Rangelands and Sustainability of Ranching in the Western United States Sustainability 12 12 p 4942 Haeber Jonathan Vaqueros The First Cowboys of the Open Range National Geographic News August 15 2003 Accessed online October 15 2007 Arnade Charles W 1961 Cattle Raising in Spanish Florida 1513 1763 Agricultural History 35 3 116 124 ISSN 0002 1482 JSTOR 3740622 Serrera Contreras Ramon Maria 1977 Guadalajara ganadera estudio regional novohispano 1760 1805 in Spanish Sevilla Spain Escuela de Estudios Hispano Americanos p 33 ISBN 9788400036959 Gomez Serrano Jesus 2000 Haciendas y ranchos de Aguascalientes estudio regional sobre la tenencia de la tierra y el desarrollo agricola en el siglo XIX in Spanish Mexico Universidad Autonoma de Aguascalientes p 61 ISBN 9789685073059 Retrieved 23 February 2022 Serrera Contreras Ramon Maria 1977 Guadalajara ganadera estudio regional novohispano 1760 1805 in Spanish Sevilla Spain Escuela de Estudios Hispano Americanos p 33 ISBN 9788400036959 Revilla Domingo 1844 El museo mexicano o miscelanea de amenidades curiosas e instructivas Volume 3 Volume 3 ed Mexico City Ignacio Cumplido p 557 Retrieved 23 February 2022 de Zamacois Niceto 1879 Historia de Mejico desde sus tiempos mas remotos hasta nuestros dias Volume 10 Volume 10 ed Barcelona and Mexico J F Parres y compania p 61 Retrieved 23 February 2022 Dominguez Ramon Joaquin 1856 Diccionario nacional o gran diccionario clasico de la lengua Espanola Vol 2 Madrid Paris Mellado p 268 Retrieved 23 February 2022 Deep Hollow Ranch History Archived 2007 11 22 at the Wayback Machine a b c Ochs Ridgeley Ride em Island Cowboy Newsday Accessed May 5 2008Notes Edit For terminologies in Australia and New Zealand see Station Australian agriculture and Station New Zealand agriculture Further reading EditBlunt Judy 2002 Breaking Clean Knopf ISBN 0 375 40131 8 Campbell Ida Foster Hill Alice Foster 2002 Triumph and Tragedy A History of Thomas Lyons and the LCs Silver City New Mexico High Lonesome Books ISBN 0 944383 61 0 Ellis George F 1973 The Bell Ranch as I Knew It Lowell Press ISBN 0 913504 15 7 Greenwood Kathy L 1989 Heart Diamond University of North Texas Press ISBN 0 929398 08 4 Paul Virginia 1973 This Was Cattle Ranching Yesterday and Today Seattle Washington Superior Ward Delbert R 1993 Great Ranches of the United States San Antonio Texas Ganada Press ISBN 1 88051 025 1 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to wbr Ranches and wbr Ranching The Canadian Museum of Civilization Native Ranching and Rodeo Life on the Plains and Plateau The Handbook of Texas Online Ranching Cattle Ranges of the Southwest published 1898 hosted by the Portal to Texas History Guide to ranch archives in Southwest Collection Special Collections Library at Texas Tech Cowboys to Cattlemen Virtual Museum Exhibit and Lesson Plans at Grant Kohrs Ranch NHS from National Park Service Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ranch amp oldid 1131856130, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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