People rally across state and nation to feed animals affected by Hurricane Harvey.

Krissa Welshans 1, Feedstuffs Editor

September 18, 2017

14 Slides

Mike Doguet, owner of Doguet’s Diamond D Ranch Turf Farm in Nome, Texas, said the outpouring of support from neighboring states in the aftermath of Hurricane Harvey has been overwhelming. “We have had truckloads of hay coming from all over,” Doguet said. “It’s just been amazing.”

Doguet and his son-in-law Matt Willey opened their warehouse facility at Nome following Hurricane Harvey to serve as an animal supply point, with assistance from the Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service.

They had just weathered one of the worst hurricanes in the history of Texas and made every attempt to save nearly 500 head of Brangus cattle on their ranch in southeastern Texas. With flood waters rising every hour, Doguet and Willey, along with ranch hands, found themselves rounding up cattle on horseback, in the dark or by boat, to get the herd to the highest point on the ranch.

Still, Willey said, “even the places you thought were the highest points, it turned out they weren’t. We were down to our last 80-100 acres or so of high land.”

Doguet said a mere 7 in. separated flood waters from the entrance of their ranch home, although family members had to be taken out by boat.

Doguet said they did lose more than 300 round bales of hay that sat in a pole barn engulfed by rising flood waters. However, the bales were stacked, and those on the second and third rows survived.

However, Doguet noted that “a lot of folks around here don’t have barns, and winter is coming up."

The animal supply point has been providing hay, bedding materials and other supplies for ranchers and livestock owners in Jefferson County, Texas, and the surrounding area. The need was so intense immediately after the hurricane that the supply point distributed as many as 500 round bales in one afternoon.

“There were trucks lined up all along the road,” Willey said. “We had an assembly line here inside the warehouse getting dog and cat food unloaded. You’ve just never seen anything like it, but you know what? Nobody got impatient. Everybody just understood the situation.”

Willey said there are people in the area who have so much pride that they don’t want any help with hay or supplies. “We’ve had to force the issue. They need the hay; they need to keep their cattle fed and alive. This is what this is here for, and this why so many people have chipped in,” he said.

Doguet pulled out a legal pad with a list of ranchers needing hay; some needed as many as 600 round bales. “Every one of these individuals need double what they are asking for, but they don’t want to take something that might help another person,” he explained.

The next major concern is cattle coming down with pneumonia.

Willey said some of his cattle were showing symptoms, so he made a quick trip to see veterinarian Eric Metteauer with SETX Equine & Veterinary Hospital in Sour Lake. Metteauer has been working around the clock rescuing cattle or tending to sick livestock. At his practice Thursday, he was treating everything from horses to dogs.

Willey said Friday would be an early start. “We are going to start at 6:30 a.m. tomorrow and work about 250-300 head,” he said. “We’ve got to act fast.”

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