When
I was about 16 years old, I had two Charolais-Herford cross steers
for 4-H. I called one "Wild" and the other "Woolly"! Their names
were appropriate. "Wild" was the better steer, and my father thought
he was good enough to be shown at the NILE show in Billings, MT.
Since my parents thought it was too far to go on my own, my grandfather,
"Carver Stevick" went along to help drive. I didn't realize how
nervous an animal by itself in a 16 foot bumper trailer could
get; and needless to say, after several hundred miles the steer
lived up to his name: "Wild". I managed to get him shown-barely-
and stood last in class. There was a girl just ahead of me with
a Shorthorn steer that I thought was quite good. Even then it
didn't bother me to disagree with a judge's placings! I asked
where she had purchased her steer. She said from a lady near Lewistown,
MT. This conversation was to remain in the back of my mind for
a long time. My grandfather and I got my steer sold, took the
money and the experience and headed home to Des Lacs, N.D.
People
who have met my father, Vern Stevick, have been regaled with the
story of how he sold "Traveler's" mother to me for $10.00 US..
This is true. But as Paul Harvey would say, "This is the rest
of the story".
My first two years in 4-H I would have two steers:
one to show, and one for a companion. By my third year, my parents
thought that I was capable of handling a heifer project; so they
agreed to let me take one of their replacement heifers, feed,
fit, and show her; and then she would be returned to the breeding
herd. At that time, the 4-H program only allowed showing yearling
heifers- not as pairs later on. This program went on for several
years.
My parents were very poor when they married,
as were their parents before them, and all the ancestors before
them. But my parents, Vern & Donna Stevick, had a dream--- and
that dream was to have their own farm. To achieve that dream,
my father worked full time off the farm, virtually the whole time
that I was growing up. My mother stayed home and ran the place
and looked after my sister and I. We were all expected to pitch
in, and farm work came first, then school, then school activities.
The actual price paid for "Zelda", was $10.00
+ a year's labor on the farm. "Zelda" was the nickname for "QAS
Blackbird Eve 601-1", dam of "QAS Traveler 23-4". Very few people
know her by "Zelda", but this 4-H heifer was named after a famous
author's wife, Mrs. F. Scott Fitzgerald, in a book that my mother
was reading at the time. (The Great Gatsby)
In 1971, my father thought we should try Artificial
Insemination on our cows. The idea stemmed from a friend of the
family, Jake Niessen of Pearson, Man. Jake had been in the Angus
business for years, and was now involved with importing a new
breed of cattle from Europe: Simmental from Switzerland. My dad
purchased six doses of semen from Jake's new bull, "Renz", and
then we had to figure out a way to A.I. the cows. Ward County
had a brand new assistant county agent, fresh from university,
and he agreed to A.I. for us. From the six doses of semen we got
three heifer calves and one steer. I showed the steer the next
year in 4-H and Jake helped us sell the heifers for $1000 each
as yearlings, This was the most money we had ever seen from a
cattle sale! That fall of 1972, Dad said I should go to A.I. school,
so I skipped three days of high school and paid my fees to go
to A.I. school. This was a typical A.I. crash course: a few hours
of semen handling, half a day of passing pipettes through rotting
reproductive tracts from the slaughter plant, two partial days
of breeding sloppy old canner milk cows, and a few hours on nutrition,
and quite a bit of time listening to how good the semen was from
the sponsor of the course! Those were the good old days of A.I.ing:
thawing ampules of semen in ice water, drawing the semen up the
pipette, and then trying to pass that large pipette through a
small cervix.
Our A.I. facilities consisted of herding the
cow into my grandparents' old hip roof dairy barn, and catching
her head in a milk cow stanchion from an open alley. The cows
had to be gentle and/or patient. The year that "Traveler" was
conceived (1977); Dad was good friends with Glenn Hetzel from
South Dakota, and he had just purchased "Band 105" from Jorgenson's
Angus at Ideal, S.D. Dad bought some semen on this bull, but it
was slow coming on the bus. "Zelda" was ready to be bred, so I
drove into Minot and waited for the bus. I got home about midnight,
managed to get the cow into the stanchion and bred her in the
middle of the night. On February 1, 1978 "Traveler" was born.
That same year, 1978, I was clipping cattle
with my partner, Eric Aasmundstad from Devil's Lake, N.D. We were
doing sale cattle in Montana, so while we were in Lewistown, I
tracked down the place that had raised the good Shorthorn steer
that I had seen in Billings, MT, in 1970, eight years previously.
The original lady had died, but her daughter, Pawnee Muscleman,
was running the ranch. Eric and I drove out there and made a deal
to purchase three steers for my sister Coreen to show in 4-H.
Eric and I continued to work cattle shows and sales, and that
July we went to Calgary, Alberta, during Calgary Stampede to fit
cattle for Shawest Simmentals at the 2nd World Simmental Congress.
We were working illegally in Canada (no work permits). We entered
Canada at Coutts, Alberta, in July 1978; the first time that I
had ever set foot in Alberta. I started dating this cowgirl, Anne
Alm, at the Stampede; although we had met the previous November
at Agribition Show in Regina, Sask. We were introduced by a mutual
friend, Don Jensen, of Simmental Breeders Ltd., Cardston, AB.
By the summer of 1978, I felt that "Traveler"
had quite a bit of potential, and I needed to get him somewhere
to be seen. Many years before a long-time family friend had had
a bad experience at a bull test center in Southern Montana; but
I felt that "Traveler" needed to be on test. Both Dad and Clyde
Barks had spoken highly of the people who ran Treasure State Test
Center at Simms, MT. Russ and Barb Pepper had just purchased the
test center. I planned to take "Traveler" there, but had no way
to get him there.
Enter the rodeo girlfriend with the horse trailer!
But she wouldn't bring her horse trailer all the way from Claresholm,
Alberta to Lewistown, MT. She did bring her truck, though, and
we drove out to the Mrs. Muscleman's, picked out the three steers,
borrowed her trailer, rewired the trailer to fit Anne's truck,
drove to North Dakota, unloaded the steers, picked up "Traveler",
drove to Treasure State Test, unloaded "Traveler" from this pink,
two-horse trailer, took the trailer back to Mrs. Muscleman, and
proceeded back to Alberta to work more cattle shows. Russ Pepper
still laughs about "those two kids with a borrowed pink horse
trailer, dropping off the very first bull for the current test
season". "Traveler's" test station number was # 101. At this point
the bull still didn't have a name; only his number S68!
My mother and father named the bull for me.
Dad says he suggested "Traveler" because I was traveling up and
down the road clipping cattle. Mother says she suggested "Traveler"
because that was the name of Robert E. Lee's gray horse he rode
during the Civil War.
The next time I saw "Traveler" was during Christmas
of 1978. I had stayed for Christmas with Anne's family, we had
gotten engaged in August, and I was taking a bus from Claresholm,
AB to Billings, MT, to get cattle ready for the Denver Show for
Jim Leachman. I contacted Russ Pepper and he met me at the bus
depot and drove me out to see "Traveler". That was the only time
I doubted "Traveler". After seeing him then, I said to Russ; "Well,
I guess he won't be a $50,000 syndicate bull."
While Anne & I were in Denver with Leachman
Cattle Co., we had two job offers for full time employment. I
figured that with our wedding set for August 11, 1979, I needed
a full time job. I decided on the job with Highfield Stock Farms,
at Okotoks, AB, because it was going to allow me to do what I
wanted-- work full time with show and sale cattle and to show
cattle all over Canada and the U.S.
It took until the end of February, 1979, to
get my Canadian work permit, and then it was only good for 90
days. At the end of the 90 days, Anne & I went to the Canadian
consulate in Calgary to renew my work visa; and the gentleman
who interviewed me wrote right on my landed immigrant application
that I "HAD" to get married within 90 days (Aug 11)!! The Canadian
government forced me to get married!
During all this time; my parents were fielding
calls from people who had seen or heard about "Traveler". Mother
had written to ABS (American Breeders Service) about him. I still
have the letter of rejection from ABS on why they were not interested
in him. Years later ABS leased "Traveler" from the syndicate that
purchased him (Sitz, Stevenson, Davis, & DeNowh); and he quickly
became ABS' first million dollar beef bull in semen sales.
I knew that the bull was doing good on test
but was not aware of how good, and how much interest there was
in him. Dad suggested that we come to Great Falls for the sale.
I asked for a couple of days off work and we flew down on a Saturday.
After several inquiries about how he would be sold, I dropped
my 1/3 retained ownership clause on the recommendation that it
would complicate the sale. I did retain the rights to 50 doses
of semen per year, and the fact that his name could not be changed.
I wanted people to know who raised the bull. 
"Traveler" was the first bull in the ring.
He started at $5000, that was more than I had expected in total.
At about $30,000, Anne grabbed my knee. In my mind I can still
see the sale and the whole time that Pat Goggins was selling "Traveler";
it seemed to be in slow motion. The gavel fell at $60,000 U.S.
to the syndicate of Rollin' Rock, Gardner & Denowh, Basin Angus,
and Sitz Angus. We took the buyers, contending bidders, auctioneer,
and ring staff out for a big steak dinner; then Anne & I got on
the plane, flew to Calgary, and I was back working at my job by
7:00 a.m. the next morning.
The money I got from "Traveler", less taxes,
was used the following year to make the down payment on our first
ranch. My ultimate dream was to have our own place. "Traveler"
made that possible! We have hanging on our kitchen wall a commissioned
painting of our first place, with "Zelda" standing in the forefront.
The 4-H heifer that made it happen!