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Ranchers Wary of City Growth

LAS CRUCES – There are a couple of simple rules to follow on New Mexico ranches: Don’t go back on your word, don’t shirk your turn at bailing hay, and don’t ever – ever – feed Skittles to a man’s cattle.

“Sure, they taste good and they’ll eat them, but they aren’t good for them,” said Mark Santiago, the director of the New Mexico Farm & Ranch Heritage Museum on Dripping Springs Road on the outskirts of Las Cruces.

With neighborhood developments catching up to outlying museum properties, farm life is having to adapt to curious city folk poking about ranch property. So Skittles – which some visitors recently offered his cattle – discarded candy wrappings, and the wide array of risks to urbanites who try interacting with cattle were on Santiago’s mind as he walked through the 47-acre property that is devoted to showcasing the 3,000-year history of farming and ranching in New Mexico.

When the museum was opened in 1998, it was surrounded by open space.

“Now we are being surrounded by development,” said Santiago as he stood on a sandy desert trail and pointed at the surrounding neighborhoods slowly closing in on the once-isolated expanse of property.

The only solution, he said, is to build a fence around the ranch to limit interaction between ranch animals and people, especially students, walking through the ranch area who might be tempted to hop the current wooden corral fences and get close to animals.

“Our concern is that as more and more residential and business things develop around the museum, we will become a rural island in an urban sea,” he said.

With the August opening of Centennial High School – and the thousands of students, staff and visitors who will soon be swarming the campus less than a half mile away – ranch hands say a fence may prevent a tragedy befalling students walking by the ranch and venturing into the stable area.

“I’ve got a bull over there that weighs close to 3,000 pounds. You can love all over him, and as soon as he moves wrong and smashes you, the fun is over,” he said.
— This article appeared on page C1 of the Albuquerque Journal



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