LONG CREEK, Ore. — It rained last night, and Sharon Livingston couldn’t be happier about it.
Recently named Agriculturalist of the Year, the welfare of her ranch is never far from her mind.
Born and raised in Long Creek, Livingston, now 77, still works the ranch she grew up on. She leases her Angus and Angus-cross cattle to a local rancher, Jim Jacobs, and helps when she can.
Livingston works seven days a week and doesn’t take vacations outside of work. She’s deeply involved in Oregon agriculture and is the former president of the Oregon Cattlemen’s Association and a member on both the Oregon Board of Agriculture and the Oregon Beef Council.
In recognition, Livingston has been named the 2016 Agriculturalist of the Year by Oregon Aglink. She will receive the award at the annual Denim & Diamonds Dinner and Auction in Portland, Nov. 18.
Livingston is one of only two women who have been president of the cattlemen’s association.
“I taught school for years with men, and if we went through the lunch line and they let me go in front, I would say, ‘Thank you.’ I’m appreciative,” she said. “However, if you choose not to, it’s OK. We’re all working here together.”
Grant County Commissioner Boyd Britton has known Livingston for roughly two decades and speaks highly of her.
“Sharon Livingston is one of the reasons Grant County will always be strong,” Britton said. “She loves the land, and she stands up for the rights of the agricultural community.”
The award is presented by Oregon Aglink, a marketing and public relations association for the agricultural industry founded in 1966. The organization’s goal is to educate urban Oregonians on where their food comes from and how farmers produce it, Aglink Executive Director Geoff Horning said.
Agriculturalist of the Year is “the most prestigious award” in the agriculture industry, he said.
“It’s something that has to really be a career achievement,” Horning said. “It’s really more of an award to present someone who has gone above and beyond over a long period of time.”
It’s for this dedication that Livingston is being honored.
“Sharon has been an extraordinary advocate for Oregon agriculture on so many fronts for her entire life,” Horning said. “She represents everything that is good about our industry and about her community. She’s very selfless, very outgoing and very willing to do whatever it takes to help her industry do better.”
Livingston is appreciative of the recognition, but gets her satisfaction from being a steward of the land, a provider for her community.
“I just try to pay my bills, be a good citizen, honor the Constitution and flag and vote,” she said.
Livingston, like many in the area, is conservative. She said many in the agricultural industry are excited about President-elect Donald Trump and the chance to have a Republican in the White House.
However, she is worried about Trump’s stance against the Trans-Pacific Partnership, which would help the industry export products.
She is committed to helping give agriculturalists a voice in state government in a time where she says they deal more and more with government regulations and oversight. Livingston cites the Agricultural Water Quality Management Act, also known as Senate Bill 1010, as a prime example.
The bill requires the Oregon Department of Agriculture to help reduce water pollution from agricultural sources to improve the health of watersheds throughout the state. Livingston has stayed involved with the board of agriculture to make sure they are able to use water to produce crops and sustain their industry.
“Land ain’t no good without water,” she said, quoting a line from her favorite book, “Half Broke Horses.”
Livingston said she will always be an advocate for taking care of water and using it in a sustainable way.
Livingston has watched the community she grew up in slowly dry out. She said the evidence is all around her: Smaller classes in schools, fewer open businesses and a lack of jobs are all proof Long Creek is hurting.
“It’s a whole different society, a different area, a different community,” she said.
However, Livingston believes the town has a future, which is something that drives her to advocate for the needs of local agriculturalists.
Livingston said she will continue to work in agriculture as long as she can but is uncertain to whom she will pass on the tradition. She lost her husband, Fred, in 1992 to cancer and her oldest son, Clayton, to a heart attack in 2013. Both had been involved in the ranch. She has two other children who have moved away but is hopeful a grandchild will show interest in the tradition.
Livingston said she never intended to get rich and plans to hang on to the ranch as long as she can.
“It’s my life, and it’s what I do,” she said. “I’ll do it as long as I can.”