Our mission is
to
supply multiple trait-improving seedstock to the cattle industry that
add value at all levels of the production chain.
Gateway
Simmental is a family owned and operated ranch managed by Ember and
Darlene Butcher and their sons Jim and Tom.
Jim’s family consists of his wife Lynn and 4 children, Logan,
Austin, Brockton and Gracie. Tom’s
family includes his wife Denise and 5 children, Tyler, Colton, Jordan,
and twins Emily and Avery. The home place consists of farm and working
facilities headquartered 2 miles northwest of Lewistown MT.
The cattle are summered on mountain pasture 25 miles southwest of
Lewistown in the Snowy Mountains. Gateway
Simmental calves between 650-700 cows and breeds about 1000 head total
per year. The operation also
includes 3000 acres of farmland and 600 acres of irrigated hay.
Emmet Butcher
was a pioneer in the Simmental breed when he AI’ed Hereford cows to
Parisien, the first Simmental sire available, in the spring of 1968.
He AI’ed his first cow back in 1961 making him one of the first
in this area to AI. Today,
approximately 700 head are either bred AI or are carrying an embryo
transplant calf.
Gateway Simmental became an entity in 1975 at the conclusion of
the Emmons and Butcher joint production sales.
Through 2001, Gateway has been involved in 49 production sales.
Today Gateway has two production sales annually; a bull sale
in late January or early February and a Female sale in September.
Until 1989, Gateway Simmental produced traditionally marked
Simmental with a fair amount of success.
However, at that time it was obvious that for us to continue to
be successful supplying bulls to ranchers in this area, we needed to
change the color of our Simmental and address the Angus revolution.
So we geared up and began producing non-diluter gene red and
black Simmentals that would not produce gray calves on black cows.
We have always been advocates of crossbreeding and we needed to
adapt our program to complement the Angus influenced commercial cow.
It was exciting for us to produce cattle with solid pigment from
top to bottom so we could focus on the maternal traits that Simmental
had always been noted for. Sunburned
udders and cancer eyes could become a thing of the past.
Providing a moderate framed, easy calving, maternally functional
animal would become the centerpiece of the program.
Today, carcass excellence has been added to the equation.
We have been
very fortunate to have found or bred some of the most influential
Simmental genetics in recent years. The
combination calving ease, “spread”, and carcass leaders among the
“GW” sires is well documented. |