By LeRae Haynes –

Animals are raised with great care at Big Bear Ranch, where a high standard of animal welfare has been in place for decades. What the animals eat, how they live, and how they’re treated recently resulted in another successful inspection by Animal Welfare Approved (AWA), and a growing list of customers who love the food and the way it was raised.

Little future rancher Finnegan Krumsiek caught herding cows by his mom, Stefanie Krumsiek at Big Bear Ranch. Photo: Rainer Krumsiek

Big Bear Ranch, raising sheep, pigs, and cattle, is owned and run by Rainer Krumsiek, his son Florian, and his daughter-in-law, Stefanie. Since March 2016 the 1,100-acre ranch with its mixture of pasture and forest has been animal welfare approved and grass fed certified by AWA All the food that goes into Big Bear animals is 100% organic.

Animal Welfare Approved by A Greener World is a food label for meat and dairy products that come from farm animals raised to the highest animal welfare and environmental standards. The program was founded as a market-based solution to the growing consumer demand for meat, eggs, and dairy products from animals treated with high welfare and managed with the environment in mind.

Krumsiek said Big Bear used to be certified organic but explained he wasn’t happy with what happened to that whole movement. “The certification process was taken over by big corporations and they make the rules, which are watered down,” he said. “For example, you can buy hydroponic veggies as certified organic, and I didn’t agree with that.”

He didn’t grow up around animals, but always had an interest in the natural world. “The only animals I had as a child in Germany were tadpoles in a jar in springtime,” he noted.

Ewes with two-week-old lambs out on fresh dandelion pasture in May. Photo: Stefanie Krumsiek

The journey from his younger years in Germany to a becoming a rancher in Horsefly was a long and interesting one. “When I was in school, I wanted to become a forester. In Germany, someone questions you and recommends a profession, and I remember the guy who talked to me,” Krumsiek added. “He asked me a couple of funny questions, including how many teeth a sheep has, and told me I should get into trades.”

So, he took an apprenticeship and learned welding, metal work, and mechanics.

After a detour into microeconomics with the idea of working with his father, Krumsiek looked again at becoming a forester, only to be told there was a three-year wait for the schooling.

“The guy said, given what I told him about my interests, I should study landscape ecology—learning about plants, climate, soil, design, and more,” he continued.

“When I got my degree, I worked with a famous landscape engineer. I got to specialize in high-end, private gardens and built my own company.”

Krumsiek was finally able to have animals: dogs and Icelandic horses, which he really liked. He said he learned to train dogs and horses the natural way: training them, not breaking them.

“When we immigrated from Germany to [Kelowna] BC in 1993, we bought the horses and boarded them until we found a ranch of our own. When we did, the place where we boarded them gave us five old geldings, and we started our herd here at Big Bear Ranch with 10 animals,” he said.

“Icelandic horses are very sturdy, strong horses that are great to ride, can pull a carriage, and be used for logging. They were my wife’s hobby before she passed away, and we still enjoy them today.”

Cattle came next, representing an enormous learning curve at Big Bear. “We boarded cattle here first, and then bought our own herd of 106 animals, and built it to 250 cow-calf pairs. In the first years we fertilized the fields according to soil tests and still needed 3.5 tonnes of hay to get a dry cow through the winter,” he said.

“In spring, the cows looked awful and next winter we started to feed grain to get them through.

Tamworth piglets exploring their pasture. Photo submitted by Rainer Krumsiek

“After learning that commercial fertilizers create funny proteins, which are more a burden than nourishment for living organisms, we stopped with the fertilizers and applied management intensive grazing. Our cows are contained in part of a field using electric fencing, where they graze what they are supposed to eat for one day. The next day they are moved to another section, and then another.”

This way the grass has only one day of disturbance, said Krumsiek, and then needs two to four months of recovery time. It takes that long for the roots to recover.

He said in one day grass can show one to two inches of growth, and because cows love that fresh new grass the best, they will always go back to it. He explained that all your good grasses will be eliminated in two to five years.

“Knowledge of the growth of grass is the basis and electric fencing the tool,” he said. “For years my recovery period for the forage was way too short.”

They also changed the calving season from February to May. “Calving in February and March should be forbidden by the SPCA because it is cruelty to animals. A calf born in February or March has the same coat as a calf born in May and is much more vulnerable to the cold,” he continued.

“The summer calves are a bit smaller, so the birth is easier. The last five years I’ve never had to pull a calf, and we have never had one case of Scours.”

At Big Bear they take a humane approach to weaning, too, letting the calves stay with their mothers up to 11 months.

“The most humane way to separate them is with electric fence,” Rainer said. “When a calf wants to get to its mother, it will wiggle through barbed wire. It won’t go through an electric fence: there are far fewer injuries.”

He added that when they are weaned more naturally, there is very little bawling from the calves.

Big Bear’s commitment to animal welfare is the same for sheep and pigs, too. From birth to butcher, it’s done right. Even the inspected butcher facility is approved by AWA.

How animals are treated means everything to Krumsiek, who added that more and more people are aware of the correlation between a healthy animal and healthy meat.

“They care about the quality of the food,” he said, “but when I ask a new customer why they choose to buy from us, the number one answer is because we treat the animals right.”

For more information about Big Bear Ranch, visit www.bigbearranch.com, email info@bigbearranch.com, or phone (250) 620-3353.

LeRae Haynes is a freelance writer, song writer, community co-ordinator for Success by 6, member of Perfect Match dance band, and instigator of music with kids.

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3 Comments

  1. What an interesting and reassuring article on the wonderful owners of Big Bear Ranch. A number of years ago, my daughters did some research to find a healthy and ethical source for beef and found Big Bear. I received an order of organic, grass-fed beef that year as a Christmas present – an order of good health basically – how wonderful. I’ve been buying from Rainer and his family ever since. We’re very fortunate to have these compassionate and conscientious stewards of the land.

  2. Marion Pettinger on

    Thank you all for all the care you are taking. The only vote I have in my food choices is with my dollars and I’m happy to be able to cast my vote with you. May all your efforts in animal care continue to be recognized.

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