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The
story began in 1882...
Our family’s love affair with land and livestock
began in 1882, when Albert Hezekiah Lasater and his son Ed purchased a cattle ranch
in south Texas. Ed's son Tom began a crossbreeding program that led to the development
of one of two new breeds of cattle started in the United States. More than developing
a breed, Tom Lasater's life work embodied a new ranching philosophy, one that embraced
Nature as a partner rather than a force to be overcome. In 1948 the family moved
the cattle herd to the shortgrass prairie of eastern Colorado.
Today, Lasater Ranch Enterprises are managed by Tom's son Dale, a fourth-generation
rancher. For more than half a century the Lasater Ranch has been a wildlife sanctuary.
There is no poisoning, hunting, or trapping on the ranch. Like the bison, our cattle
coexist with coyotes, deer, prairie dogs, pronghorn antelope, rattlesnakes, and other
wildlife. Believing that working with nature is the best policy, many years
ago we implemented practices that helped restore the natural balance between animal
species, domestic livestock, land and man.

Grazing animals are vital to the environmental health of the Great Plains, and rightly-raised
cattle can help sustain that health. Our cattle–like the roaming herds of bison once
did–harvest grasses, till the soil with their hooves, fertilize the ground (via that
most natural of processes) and then are moved to fresh pastures, leaving the grazed
plants to fully recover. When the pastures are rested (typically 70 to 80 days),
the grasses develop to their full potential– growing extensive root systems that
help them survive drought.
For many years, our family has monitored the pastures which make up the Lasater Ranch.
Our goal is to see a continuous carpet of grass and forbs when we look down; bare
hard-packed earth, which does not let in rainfall, is a sign of poor pasture health.
Ground that is covered by grasses is able to hold water, enabling the land to receive
the beneficial use of whatever precipitation falls. None of this is possible without
the impact of grazing animals.
The spread of noxious weeds into grasslands provides
a relatively new challenge for U.S. cattle raisers / grass "farmers". Rather
than employ herbicide, we have chosen to introduce bugs which are natural predators
for certain weeds and to bring in goats, which readily graze weeds. Most importantly,
we try to manage the grazing to encourage the proliferation of healthy and diverse
native plants that are able to compete with the foreign species.

Call us smart or call us crazy–we always look for a way to do the job naturally with
the resources that nature gave us.
We have been ranching for more than a century, looking at our surroundings holistically
instead of in parts. One of the most valuable lessons we’ve learned is that everything
in Nature has a purpose... the ant, prairie dog, the coyote, the porcupine... This
lesson governs every aspect of our business. We refuse to compromise when it comes
to Nature–in a very real sense, she is our most valued business partner and the source
of our business philosophy. Everything has its purpose, and it takes time to get
results when you are on our mother's schedule. Forty years ago it was common practice
to dry-age beef for 21 days. Due to the pressures to get beef quickly to the meat
counter, dry-aging was eliminated. At the Lasater Ranch, we are not in a hurry, as
we are still dry-aging our beef.

Lasater
Grasslands Beef LLC
Within
Colorado 1-719-541-2855
Outside
Colorado 1-866-4LG-BEEF
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