Adrian Cattle Co.

At Adrian Cattle Co. it's a lot like school for cattle. They come to a new place, meet lots of new animals and learn new things. Most important for the McMillians as they manage 1,000 or so cattle at a time is making sure they're eating, drinking and relaxing. That's the sign of a healthy herd of cattle.

When Cattle Are LIke Family:

"Actually we treat the cattle a lot like my 11 kids – we vaccinate them when they are young and if they get sick we take care of them. It is as simple as that." -Mark McMillan

Tell Us About Adrian Cattle Co. 

I'm Mark, my wife Lynnette and I have 11 kids. We have five biological kids and we’ve adopted six. We just had our 11th child last week (2018). It’s a pretty good family. Everybody does work here – it is really good place to raise a family. A small operation like ours means everybody works to help out and it's hard work, it is long work but it is what we like. At this spot right here we have about 1,000 to 1,500 head of cattle on feed which we call starter calves. We feed them a mix of local and native forages and grains until they weigh about 900 pounds and then we sell them to a larger finishing feedyard where their diet is designed to really help them put on weight and gain that muscle that becomes delicious beef.

What do you feed the cattle at Adrian Cattle Co? 

Our feed ration is really simple: timothy hay, alfalfa hay, apples and corn. That could be corn silage or distillers’ corn. Most of it comes from right around here. It is a great benefit, we don’t have to truck in stuff from a long away. Its right here. Its easy and handy. 

We have and a partnership with Stevens Hay Farms. We use a lot of their hay by-products, things like hay kick-outs and maybe hay that isn’t top quality hay that isn’t ready for the export market. With Stevens Hay Farm, we also graze a lot on triticale (a hybrid of wheat and rye), corn stalks and regrowth wheat. We put a lot of stuff back into the ground that benefits Stevens Hay Farm. 

The native grass here around Soap Lake is a lot of sage brush with June grass, cheat grass. It’s green gold – it makes the cattle put on weight and is real healthy for them. We also graze on irrigated crop circles, maybe when a crop is going out of rotation, we will plant a cycle of triticale and turn yearling cattle out on it. The weight gains for the cattle are good on this forage when they also have the higher energy foods like grains available. It doesn't have to be expensive or complicated to deliver good nutrition to your cattle. And I think what we do here shows there's more than one way to feed cattle.

How Do you keep over a Thousand cattle happy?

Actually we treat the cattle a lot like my 11 kids – we vaccinate them when they are young and if they get sick we take care of them. It is as simple as that. We do most of our work with the cattle from horseback. It works best for our land here and our operation, we think it’s gentler and the cattle handle better on horses, we believe. And we feed them what they like to eat, both in pasture and here in the feedyard. They're safe, they're healthy, they're fed and they're happy.

What's Your Secret?

Well there is really no secret. This is the simple way. We have a lot of natural resources to feed our cattle: native grasses, triticale, wheat pastures, hay, corn, apples. We have a great family that loves to do this work together, even when it's hard work. We use technology to make our lives easier where we can. We take care of our cattle with medicine and the help of our vet. That's a formula for the good life right there.

Adrian Cattle Co.

Soap Lake, WA

Backgrounding

Between 6-12 months of age, cattle spend time at stocker and backgrounder farms and ranches where they graze on a variety of pastures. Here they gain weight and convert forage and grass into lean protein.

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