DB Adams Farm & Ranch

DB Adams Farm & Ranch Family owned and operated farm in Tucumcari. We raise alfalfa, melons, and honeybees.

Please help if you can, share if you can’t. Thank you for all the love and support.
11/01/2024

Please help if you can, share if you can’t. Thank you for all the love and support.

After a sudden and brief illness, Bob passed away on 10/24/24. A complex and… Vanessa Adams needs your support for Celebrate Bob's Life with a Loving Send-Off

08/26/2024
08/08/2024

The fire season is here, and it's devastating in multiple states

10 Rules to Live by in Evacuations with Horses
By: Colorado Horse Rescue Network

1. TEACH YOUR HORSE TO LOAD (and tie)! And I mean immediately step into a trailer. Their life depends on it. Emergency crews will only spend a few minutes trying to help your horse before they will have to move on and leave your animal.
2. Take at least one bale of hay and a BUCKET, you never know where your horse is going to end up. Have these things ready to go in your trailer during fire season.
3. No matter what, if you take your horses or not, MAKE SURE you take your proof of ownership/BRAND INSPECTIONS! This will help you prove the horses are yours later on! (Photos and or coggins work in non brand inspection areas!) This may be the only way you can claim them if they're found.
4. If you CANNOT TAKE your horse, TURN THEM LOOSE! They have great survival instincts, it's better than dying in a locked barn.
5. IF YOU TURN THEM LOOSE, write your phone number on them in some way! Spray paint/shoe polish, whatever you can find. We have seen a lot of horses with illegible numbers on hooves, THESE DON'T LAST when a horse is wandering through debris. We personally use tags tied into manes, even masking tape around a braid will work!
6. If you turn them loose TAKE THEIR HALTERS OFF! Imagine all the debris your horse is going to encounter! You don't want them caught up! Also no blankets, no sheets, no boots, nothing that might melt, catch fire or get snagged!
7. If you turn them loose, LOCK THEM OUT OF THEIR BARN/PEN/STALL/YARD. They WILL go back!
8. If you take your horse to an evacuation center, it is still a good idea to have your horse marked in some way. Sometimes evacuation centers have to evacuate or move horses as they fill up!
9. If you take your horse in a trailer, PLEASE tie them if you safely can! I cannot count how many times we were evacuating and found a loose horse we needed to load with ours, if the horses are loose in the trailer that is a disaster waiting to happen.
10. If your horse is in a large pasture area and you need to leave them cut the fence in corners and leave gates open! When horses can't find their way in smoke/debris they will follow fence lines.

07/27/2024
They ran to the groceries, they filled up their carts,They emptied the Tops and Price Chopper and Walmart,They panicked ...
07/21/2024

They ran to the groceries, they filled up their carts,
They emptied the Tops and Price Chopper and Walmart,
They panicked and fought and then panicked some more,
Then they rushed to their homes and they locked all the doors.
The food will be gone! The milk eggs and cheese!
The yogurt! The apples! The green beans and peas!
The stores have run out, now what will we do?
They’ll be starving and looting and nothing to do!
Then they paused, and they listened a moment or two.
And they did hear a sound, rising over the fear,
It started out far, then began to grow near.
But this sound wasn’t sad, nor was it new,
The farms were still doing what farms always do.
The food was still coming, though they’d emptied the shelves,
The farms kept it coming, though they struggled themselves,
Though the cities had forgotten from where their food came,
The farms made them food every day, just the same.
Through weather and critics and markets that fall,
The farms kept on farming in spite of it all.
They farmed without thank yous.
They farmed without praise.
They farmed on the hottest and coldest of days.
They’d bought all the food, yet the next day came more,
And the people thought of something they hadn’t before.
Maybe food, they thought, doesn’t come from a store.
Maybe farmers, perhaps, mean a little bit more. ❤️
✍️ Anna Richards

Address

Tucumcari, NM

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