2 CapitalPress.com December 1, 2017 California ranch family living history For the Capital Press Tom Orvis and his fami- ly’s story goes back five gen- erations. “The Snow Ranch was formed in 1873, after William Snow completed approxi- mately 15 years of putting the properties together,” Orvis said. The land is a 5,000-acre block in both Stanislaus and Calaveras counties. Snow’s daughter, Mary Ada, met C.B. Orvis, a veterinarian from Wisconsin, in the 1890s when he came from Stockton in a surrey to doctor a horse, he said. “They married soon af- ter.” Their son, William Snow Orvis, was born in 1896. At that time, they raised sheep and cattle. The registered Her- eford herd was established in 1918. Today the Snow Ranch is headquartered near Farming- ton, Calif. The ranch Tom Orvis raises regis- tered Horned and Polled Herefords and commercial Black Baldie crossbreds. The herd includes 200 mother cows and 140 re- placement heifers, he said. The operation calves in fall and spring and takes cat- tle to Bloods Meadow in Bear Valley in the summer. They also operate Orvis Ranch Beef — a grass-fed beef purveyor. They use herd bulls and artificial insemination to man- age their genetic base. They also lease part of the ranch to Diestel Turkey Ranch for tur- key production. The operation sells wean- ling bulls to customers for breeding and maintains the registered herd through the female line and home-grown herd bulls. They also sell tur- key manure to growers. The days are long, Tom Orvis said. The work — re- pairing fences, working cat- tle, calving — starts at day- light and often goes into dark. In spite of the hours, he would encourage anyone to go into ranching with one warning: “If you don’t love it, don’t do it.” “The constant threat of drought tops the list of chal- lenges that face California livestock industry,” he said. “Rules and regulations com- plete the list. They seem use- less and time-consuming and have fees attached that never, in my opinion, seem to ac- complish anything.” Courtesy of Tom Orvis Tom Orvis and his family raise registered Horned and Polled Herefords in Stanislaus and Calaveras counties, Calif. “If you don’t love ranching, don’t do it,” he says. LIVESTOCK AUCTION EVERY THURSDAY, 1 PM 541-259-1251 Terry 541-409-7490 LebanonAuctionYard.com 37063 KGAL DRIVE • LEBANON, OR • 97355 YOUR COMPLETE LIVESTOCK RESOURCE! L17-3/106 L17-3/100 By JULIA HOLLISTER