in County, ID
Job Description
Worksite: Glendo Wyoming Dates of Need: 4/01/2025 - 11/30/2025.
The basic duties of a ranch hand on a working ranch are tending livestock and repairing and cleaning fences, ranch
buildings, and equipment. Tending livestock usually includes feeding, watering, birthing, branding, shearing, roping,
sorting, pasturing, herding, grooming, or trimming, cleaning stalls and basic doctoring skills for the ranch's horses,
cattle, poultry, pigs, and/or sheep. Having raised healthy animals through this attentive care, ranch hands must also
haul the livestock to market or to a shipping terminal for the purposes of selling or butchering. Ranchers specialize in
nurturing and caring for these young animals. Cow-calf raisers must keep track of breeding and calving season, and
they must have enough rudimentary veterinary skills to aid heifers in the birthing of calves and even in the treatment of
animals that are wounded or hurt during the birthing process. Moving or herding cattle to and from different pastures,
transporting animals to new locations or to market, protecting the herd from wild animals or even poachers and
providing basic veterinary care to sick or injured animals as the need arises. As with any piece of property, a ranch
requires a great degree of general maintenance and oversight. Because of the vastness of many ranches, this work
includes tasks such as repairing fences to separate pastures and building and maintaining all buildings on the
property, maintaining machinery, trucks, tractors, and other equipment used in ranching. Other maintenance tasks for
entry level ranch jobs include groundskeeping, operating machinery such as mowing and baling hay fields, removing
dead or fallen trees and ensuring there are no poisonous or dangerous plants or animals on the property that could
harm the livestock, daily irrigation of fields using modern sprinkler systems, setting up irrigation tubes to direct water to
specific areas and digging new ditches to move water to new locations.