| A Lifetime Achievement Award was
presented to Registered Hereford rancher, Dean Neer at the annual
Modoc County Cattlemen’s Dinner on October 30, 2004.
During the dinner meeting at the Brass Rail, Neer’s
achievements in the cattle industry and his commitment to excellence in the
improvement of Horned Hereford genetic stock were noted.
Neer was reared in Modoc County and graduated from
local schools. He attended Stanford University, earning a BA in economics
and an MBA in business administration.
During his youth, he helped his father, John Neer,
on the family ranch and journeyed with him to the Midwest selecting, buying,
and importing high quality bulls into Modoc county. As a result, local
cattlemen had access to some of the nation’s best breeding stock.
In the 1960s Neer launched his own registered
Horned Hereford business, which is in its present form today as Neer
Hereford Ranch. In early days of the business Neer partnered with Ken and
Duane McGarva, and then John McGarva. For a short time, Neer also raised
registered Shorthorns along with G. Martin Young.
After Neer’s marriage to Marie, the two embarked
upon their own trips to Texas, Montana, and Colorado, where they found herd
sires to improve their stock. With criteria of superior confirmation,
production achievement, and disposition, they continued to select herd sires
from championship stock.
When trips became more difficult, they entered into
an A. I. program. Marie received her training and became the ranch’s
technician. One of the first bulls they used was WSHR Duke 8430 from Wiese
and Sons in Iowa. This bull added frame and thickness and put, as Wiese
said, "puppy gentle disposition" into the herd.
Neer states that good disposition is essential, and
many repeat customers comment not only on production improvement, but also
on the gentleness of Neer bulls and their offspring. Neer spends months
researching before purchasing semen, poring into pedigree and performance
history and interviewing owners.
Neer insists that confirmation, disposition,
efficiency and high production are as important as frame. He selects for
maternal and milking qualities, fertility, and thickness. His cows have
frequently been on the American Hereford Association’s Dams of Distinction
list, based on their production records. At the University of Nevada
Efficiency of Gain trial, his bull calves had the top feed efficiency of
bulls from eight different breeds entered: they gained the most weight on
the least amount of feed. One of these bulls was henceforth used in the Neer
herd as their own herd sire.
Although they have seldom ventured into the show
ring, their showings have been successful. In the 1970s, with the help of
Tom Alford, they showed several heifers and bulls throughout county fairs in
central and northern California. The calves ribboned in a number of fairs,
including the Fresno, Madera and Lassen County Fairs, and the Tulelake fair;
one heifer Grace Builder 123 was awarded a blue ribbon in every fair entered
and won two Best of Show ribbons. In November 2003, Neer’s first entry into
the Shasta Bull Sale earned a Reserve Champion rating.
Neer Hereford Ranch’s returning customers range
from Petaluma and Sacramento areas to southern Oregon and western Nevada. A
local rancher, Pinky Anklin, has bought 76 bulls from Neer Hereford Ranch
over recent years. Since 1936, the Neer family has sold over 3,000 head of
bulls.
Neer said that he was "grateful for the award,
because of where it comes from: from people who have put food on the table
for over 70 years--our friends and neighbors in the cow business."
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