REGION THURSDAY, MARCH 17, 2022 THE OBSERVER — A3 Bidding on beef Harrell Hereford Ranch has its 43rd annual spring sale By SAMANTHA O’CONNER soconner@bakercityherald.com BAKER COUNTY — With sunshine bringing a bit of late winter warmth to Baker Valley the morning of Monday, March 7, it was a perfect day for the 43rd annual Harrell Hereford Ranch sale. The lowing of cattle and the whinnying of horses was joined by the eager chatter of ranchers from all over the country as they mingled together, exam- ining the bulls, heifers and horses that would go on the auction block. The sale includes bulls, heifers and, for the 24th straight year, Harrell- Mackenzie quarter horses. The aromas of fresh hay and wood chips mingled with the smoky scent of barbecued tri-tip greeted the Harrells’ visitors. Laughter and comments of “such a nice day” drifted among the gates and barns as a couple hundred people enjoyed a lunch prior to the sale. Mingling among the distinctively colored red- and-white Herefords, Dan Forsea, a rancher from Richland, was looking for a bull or two. “They’ve got good quality cattle. Keep get- ting better all the time,” Forsea said of the Harrells’ off erings. He has attended the Harrells’ annual spring auction since they started, saying he and his dad, Walt, used to come together. Dan said his father, who died on Jan. 16, 2020, always enjoyed going to the auction. “This is a good family, too,” Dan said of the Har- rells. “We’ve known them for years and they’re just a really good family. It’s always great to come out here.” Edna and Bob Harrell started the Harrell Here- ford Ranch along Salmon Creek, northwest of Baker City, in 1970. The fami- ly’s 80-acre home ranch has expanded to include several ranches and a herd of 400 registered Her- eford cows, 400 black baldy commercial cows, a 1,000-head feedlot and 25 quarter horse broodmares. The Harrells’ cattle run on 8,000 acres of native range. Edna Har- rell continues to help at the ranch along with her son, Bob Harrell Jr., his wife, Becky, and their daughter, Lexie. Bob Harrell Jr. was inducted into the Hereford Hall of Fame in Kansas City, Missouri, in October 2021. He said he was “very pleased” with this year’s sale. “The bulls were steady, the heifers were SALE BY THE NUMBERS The Harrell Hereford Ranch sale featured 197 lots sold, and buyers from 19 states. Yearling bulls made up the bulk of the sales, with 107 lots sold and an average of $5,764 per bull. A total of 25 2-year-old bulls were sold, at an average price of $5,298. The top bull sold for $23,000. Eight others sold for $14,000 or more. Buyers claimed 28 regis- tered heifers, at an average price of $4,279, and 15 commer- cial replacement heifers were sold at an average of $7,262. On the Harrell-Mackenzie quarter horse sale, 12 geld- ings were sold at an average of $13,313, and 10 mares were sold at an average of $10,300. really good, up from last year, and the horses were outstanding.” A nationwide attraction John Rusher from Westcliffe, Colorado, was one of the many ranchers who traveled a long dis- tance to partake in the auction of what he called “good, high-quality Her- eford bulls” and quarter horses. Landen Doyle traveled from Dallas, Texas, where his family owns the Doyle Hereford Ranch. This was his fi rst year visiting the Harrell Hereford Ranch. “Always wanted to come up here and look at this ranch. Finally got Samantha O’Conner/Baker City Herald Ranchers gather in the sale barn at Harrell Hereford Ranch near Baker City for the annual spring auction on Monday, March 7, 2022. the opportunity, came up here with my dad on his birthday,” Doyle said. Dan Cook, who trav- eled from Idaho, attended last year’s auction as well, which included both in-person and online bidders. Jerry and Inesse Parks of Aiden, California, have been traveling to the Har- rell auction for a dozen years to buy horses and bulls. After mingling with the cattle and fellow ranchers, exchanging stories and laughing, everyone made their way into the auction barn. Food and beverages were available as country music fi lled the air. Then the fun began with Bob Harrell Jr.’s words of thanks to those joining and those who helped with the auction. The auctioneer went off , words fl ying, and the fi rst bulls were bought by ranchers from Nebraska, then Virginia and North Dakota. Assessing the beef industry The beef business has had its ups and downs over the years, and recently, prices haven’t helped much, according to some ranchers attending the Harrell sale. “It’s pretty expensive right now because of the hay. It’s pretty tough to make a buck,” said Cook, from Idaho. Jerry Parks, from Cal- ifornia, said the cattle market has gone up a bit, but it’s unpredictable. “It’s up and down all the time,” he said. “It seems like we never get hardly enough out of our product compared to what it gets after it leaves us. We just keep plugging along.” Forsea said infl ation, which has signifi cantly increased production costs for ranchers who depend on diesel and other petroleum products, is making it tough for producers. And like many ranchers, Forsea is bothered by the dominance in the meat- packing industry by four large corporations. Building more smaller, regional packing plants would give ranchers more options for selling their cattle and potentially boost prices. The Biden administra- tion this winter announced a campaign to encourage the construction of regional packing facilities. “It’s aff ecting every- body,” Forsea said of infl a- tion. “As far as the prices in the supermarkets, the cattle/ calf man is seeing that dif- ference and its packers and retailers and getting it from one place to another, fuel, and everything. But anyway, that’s why we’re in it for the long haul because eventually we might see a good year. So it’s get- ting better. It’s a good way of life.” Baker City Police detective remains on paid leave By JAYSON JACOBY Baker City Herald BAKER CITY — Baker City Police Det. Shannon Regan remains on paid administrative leave more than seven months after Police Chief Ty Duby removed her from active duty. Duby made that deci- sion in July 2021 after Jim A. Schaeff er, the La Grande attorney representing Shawn Quentin Green- wood, who was accused of fi rst-degree murder in the January 2020 shooting death of Angela Parrish in Baker City, claimed that Regan had violated Green- wood’s constitutional rights by listening to fi ve phone calls that Greenwood, who was in the Baker County Jail, made to Schaeff er’s cellphone in 2020. On June 25, 2021, Schaeff er fi led a motion seeking to dismiss all charges against Greenwood. After hearings in Baker County Circuit Court on Aug. 13 and Aug. 24, Judge Matt Shirtcliff ruled that Regan, the lead detective in investigating the fatal shooting of Parrish, would not be allowed to testify during Greenwood’s trial due to the phone call issue. Although Shirtcliff denied Schaeff er’s motion to dismiss all charges against Greenwood, the judge did prohibit Baker County Dis- trict Attorney Greg Baxter from using at trial any evi- dence that Regan collected after Sept. 14, 2020, the day that her computer was used to access and listen to the fi ve phone calls, according to a forensic investigation by the Oregon Department of Justice. Baxter did not contest the claim that Regan lis- tened to the fi ve calls. Greenwood, then 50, ended up pleading no con- test to three lesser charges “It’s a tough situation,” on Sept. 3, 2021, fi ve days Duby said. “At some point before the trial was the city is going to scheduled to start. have to move.” The no contest plea He said Regan, a had the same eff ect 17-year Baker City as a conviction. Police offi cer, is at Shirtcliff sen- the top of the salary tenced Greenwood schedule for detectives, to a total of 90 Duby which has a monthly months in prison on salary of $6,066. the three convictions: crim- Duby said he has not inally negligent homicide, a heard anything from the Class B felony, fi rst-degree Oregon Department of Jus- burglary, a Class A felony, tice about its investigation and attempting to elude of Regan resulting from the law enforcement, a Class C phone call issue. felony. Baker City Manager None of the three Jon Cannon said the city is charges for which Green- working with its attorney wood was convicted carries on how best to handle the a mandatory minimum sen- situation with Regan. tence, so he will be eligible “It’s a personnel matter for a reduction in sentence so I’m limited on what I based on good behavior and can say about it,” Cannon other factors. said on Thursday, March Duby said the city can’t 10. “We don’t want it to be keep Regan on paid leave an indefi nite time period “indefi nitely.” to have an employee in Open Fri-Sun Take-out Menu 5pm-8pm Updated Weekly www.tendepotstreet.com 541-963-8766 tendepotstreet@gmail.com resenting Regan. Thenell had not returned a phone message by press time for this story. In Regan’s absence, Zach Thatcher is working as the department’s major crimes detective, Duby said. 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