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RITZVILLE – A local rancher found a silver lining around clouds of COVID-19 restrictions, and is spinning it into gold.
Peyton Curtis, 20, was studying animal science on a pre-veterinary track at Cal Poly in San Louis Obispo when the campus sent everyone home in mid-March.
"I remember sitting in biology class with my roommate, and we were saying, 'There's no way they're going to send us home. This isn't going to get bad,'" recalled Curtis Wednesday, Aug. 5. "And then, within 24 hours, they said, 'Everyone pack up and go home.' I left at three in the morning, did the 17-hour drive, and made it home for dinner."
Two months later, her father, Miles Curtis, purchased a meat-packing plant in Odessa, and Peyton launched a website featuring their locally-raised beef for direct sales to customers.
Curtis said her father had his eye on the meat-processing plant for awhile.
"And then COVID hit, and meat shelves were empty and my dad and I kind of looked at each other and were like, 'I think now is our time.' So he went over and bought that, and I started the meat business," Curtis said.
She named the retail business 'The Herd.'
"We based it off a community aspect because we want to bring people together," Curtis said. "Everyone wants to enjoy good meat, and it's a company built on education - teaching people 'this is where your meat is coming from.' And I think that is our hope, to support family operations like us, like the Harder Ranches, like Union Cattle Company out of Colfax. This is what we do; this is our life."
As a fourth generation rancher, Curtis has been working with cattle all her life. Her great-grandfather, Ed Curtis, originally from Colfax, and her grandfather Bill Curtis started the ranch; and her father began working it when he returned from college.
"He's been growing it ever since," Curtis said, adding the family has ranches in Odessa, Ewan and Tokio.
Purchasing the meat processing plant enables the 5C Curtis Cattle Company to grow in a whole new dimension.
"We are totally vertically integrated, which means we control every aspect of the supply chain for our cattle," Curtis said. "We are essentially taking out the large, industrial corporations like Tyson and Washington Beef, and taking out the grocery stores, and we are delivering a product to consumers where they know where it's coming from. And we are able to do that at virtually the grocery store prices."
Curtis said The Herd delivers beef through direct sales to consumers and temporary, "pop-up shops."
"We'll ship it straight to your front door. We ship on Mondays, just to make sure the boxes arrive fresh and frozen during the week. The boxes are packed with dry-ice in reusable ice packs in an eco-friendly liner, so there's nothing bad for the environment there," Curtis said. "We are also doing pop-up shops." Curtis said locations for the temporary pop up shops include the Moses Lake Farmers Market and in the Spokane Valley next to Costco and Home Depot. "We'll pop up for about five hours at a time and get a large rush of people. They buy their beef boxes and then we move to the next place."
Not only are they able to maintain ownership of their cattle from calving to the consumer, they are able to offer meat-processing to other producers. Curtis said with COVID-19 shutting down avenues for sales, ranchers began to think how they might be able to sell their meat elsewhere, and "all the packing plants filled up."
"Now we are giving ranchers the opportunity at another place - a USDA-inspected plant, and it's just in their own backyard," Curtis said.
The plant, called Limit Bid Packing, charges producers a $100 harvest fee, along with cut and wrap fees.
"We're actually booked throughout the end of the year with producers," Curtis said, adding only Curtis Cattle Company beef is sold through The Herd. "We maintain ownership throughout the whole thing, until it's on your dinner plate. It's something we've always wanted to do."
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