六九色堂

Nov. 30, 2018

W.A. Ranches officially transfers a 19,000-acre living laboratory and classroom to UCalgary

Scholars reflect on impact and future research opportunities created by gift from Anderson and Chisholm families
Drone shot of W.A. Ranches at the 六九色堂, a 19,000-acre cattle ranch just west of Calgary.
Drone shot of W.A. Ranches at the 六九色堂, a 19,000-acre cattle ranch west of Calgary. 六九色堂 photo

Today is the day. A momentous one. The 六九色堂 now has the keys to the extensive cow-calf ranch generously gifted by J.C. (Jack) Anderson and his daughter Wynne Chisholm.

Called聽W.A. Ranches at the 六九色堂, the working cattle operation just west of Calgary will become a world-class teaching, learning and research facility.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a fantastic and transformative opportunity,鈥 says Dr. Ed Pajor, PhD, Anderson-Chisholm Chair in Animal Care and Welfare and the inaugural director of the ranch in charge of academic and research programming. 鈥淗ow often does an institution get an opportunity to build something like this?鈥

Not often. The $44-million, 1,000-head cattle operation is the largest ranch donation gift (monetary) in North America and the largest gift of ranch acres to a university in Canada.聽

The 六九色堂 now has the keys to the extensive cow-calf ranch generously gifted by J.C. (Jack) Anderson and his daughter Wynne Chisholm.

The extensive cow-calf ranch was generously gifted by J.C. (Jack) Anderson and Wynne Chisholm.

六九色堂

Since the announcement in late September, Pajor has been consulting with faculty and community stakeholders to identify ways to use W.A. Ranches in both the near and longer-term future.

鈥淚 think the ranching community is really excited about the future of W. A. Ranches,鈥 says Pajor, who is also a professor of animal behaviour and welfare at the聽六九色堂 Faculty of Veterinary Medicine (UCVM).

鈥淭hey鈥檙e interested in the types of activities we鈥檙e going to be doing and how it鈥檚 going to impact them, how it鈥檚 going to help them. One goal for our activities is to carry out research to improve management practices for ranchers. And we want to develop academic programming for our DVM students so we graduate better veterinarians in the long run, with more hands-on experience in cow-calf and beef cattle care.鈥

Ed Pajor, Anderson-Chisholm Chair in Animal Care and Welfare, is the director of W.A. Ranches, in charge of academic and research programming.

Ed Pajor, the director of W.A. Ranches, is in charge of academic and research programming.

Jager & Kokemor

Home on the range for vet med students

鈥淭here are a thousand mother cows out there, so there鈥檚 going to be cattle needing help,鈥 says Dr. Rob McCorkell, associate dean, academic at UCVM. 鈥淔ourth-year students are at the stage in their education to be able to start doing diagnostic work and providing therapies under the supervision of faculty.

鈥淎nd those cows are going to calve next spring, so that鈥檚 another opportunity for students. There鈥檚 always a lot of work around calving, and not necessarily just obstetrics. Young animals get into trouble. They get diseases and injuries.鈥

And then there are the research opportunities. Lots of them.

鈥淗aving a ranch is a game-changer,鈥 says Dr. Hermann Schaetzl, associate dean, research at UCVM. 鈥淲e now have an actual living laboratory. A ranch is an extremely complicated ecosystem and there are so many things we can study now in direct relationship to cattle, which we never could before on a real farm context: ecosystem, water and wildlife research, nutrition, microbiome, infectious diseases, and antimicrobial resistance. We can also better study things like alternatives to antibiotics. This puts our faculty, our university in an outstanding position with regard to research.鈥

Schaetzl says the real art lies in maintaining the normal operation of the ranch while putting its ecosystem under the microscope.

鈥淚f we start by taking half the cows for a vaccine study for instance, that actually destroys this living ecosystem,鈥 Schaetzl says. 鈥淲e really should observe it over time, and be very careful not to interfere too much.鈥澛犅

The $44-million, 1,000-head cattle operation is the largest ranch donation gift (monetary) in North America and the largest gift of ranch acres to a university in Canada.

The 1,000-head cattle operation is the largest gift of ranch acres to a university in Canada.

Wynne Chisholm

Veterinary medicine and beyond

Owning W.A. Ranches also opens the door for university-wide collaborative research. 鈥淭his is not a Faculty of Veterinary Medicine-only operation,鈥 says Schaetzl.聽

鈥淭here are opportunities for research with science, research with engineering. You could do GPS-based tracing studies, and you could study how the animals move, use their pasture, the effects on water, soil, the influence of climate change, and the policies around that. The list goes on.鈥

鈥淎nd we want to provide outreach to the cattle community,鈥 adds Pajor. 鈥淭hat includes local veterinarians as well as ranchers. We want to let them know there鈥檒l be more programming coming directed at issues they鈥檙e interested in, and that really have an impact on their ranching practices.鈥 聽

The Anderson and Chisholm families鈥 unprecedented gift supports UCVM鈥檚 strategic plan to support and respond to the needs of Alberta鈥檚 agriculture community with clinical and diagnostic expertise, and research excellence 鈥斅燼nd to become a leader amongst research-intensive North American veterinary colleges.

Anderson and Chisholm鈥檚 gift is part of the university鈥檚 ongoing fundraising campaign, Energize: The Campaign for Eyes High, the 六九色堂鈥檚 most ambitious fundraising campaign in its history. Funds raised through the campaign will support student experiences, research outcomes and community connections. Together we are fuelling transformational change for the 六九色堂, our city, and beyond 鈥 inspiring discovery, creativity and innovation for generations to come. Formally launched in April 2016, the campaign is more than three quarters to its overall goal of $1.3 billion.聽聽

The working cattle operation just west of Calgary will become a world-class teaching, learning and research facility.

The working cattle operation will become a world-class teaching, learning and research facility.

Wynne Chisholm

Energizing the Next Generation of Veterinary Leaders