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- AMERICAN SCENE, Page 17Dillon, MontanaThe Rising Sun Meets the Big Sky
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- After buying a U.S. cattle ranch, a Japanese meat company sends
- its managers to train in the saddle alongside American cowpokes
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- By TODD BREWSTER
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- At the Lazy 8 ranch outside Dillon, Mont., a handful of
- tired cowboys shuffle into the calving barn for lunch. Troy
- Seilbach hangs up his spurs. Charlie Carpenter opens a thermos
- of coffee, and Blue, a dirty mixed-breed dog with a heavy pant,
- positions himself for a fallen crumb from one of the cowboys'
- Baggies-wrapped sandwiches. Emblazoned on the lunchroom's white
- wall is a hastily drawn map of Japan.
-
- The map is the remnant of the previous week's spontaneous
- noontime discussion, during which the two newest cowboys -- who
- hail not from Bozeman or Butte but from Tokyo and Ehime
- prefecture -- attempted to explain the geography of their native
- country. "Damn! 120 million people in a place the size of
- Montana," says Dillon native Jim Cherney, 28, as he looks at the
- map. "That's a lot of people."
-
- "Lot of people," repeats Hidehisa Mori, 29. Mori, who says
- he grew up watching dubbed Clint Eastwood and John Wayne
- movies, proudly tugs at his black Stetson and sticks his thumbs
- over his rattlesnake-buckle belt. Only the Japanese-English
- dictionary sticking out of his shirt pocket spoils a perfect
- Marlboro-man look.
-
- When the news came two years ago that the Lazy 8, a
- 77,000-acre property that stretches 40 miles south of Dillon to
- within roping distance of the Idaho border, had been bought for
- $12.3 million by a Japanese meat company called Zenchiku, there
- was much the same outcry that has accompanied more visible
- Japanese acquisitions like CBS Records, Columbia Pictures and
- Rockefeller Center. What made things worse was that the purchase
- was Zenchiku's way of capitalizing on a relaxation of trade
- barriers that was meant to help American cattle companies. For
- a while, as word of the sale passed through town, dark clouds
- of xenophobia hung over Dillon. But now that East has met West,
- cowboy to cowboy, tensions have eased. "Anyone want a rice
- cookie?" asks Mori as he and his co-workers begin to eat. "I'll
- trade some Hershey's Kisses," says Seilbach.
-
- Mori and his compatriot, Kazuhiru Soma, are here as part
- of an apprenticeship program established by Zenchiku. In order
- to better understand how American ranches work, and for their
- American ranchers to better understand the kind of beef that
- Japanese consumers will buy, the company has begun sending over
- young sales managers to work for two years each as American
- cowboys. Beef is a delicacy in Japan -- selling for as much as
- $180 a pound. Since it is used in small amounts, the consumer
- prefers a high-quality, marbled meat filled with the
- intermuscular fat that America's health-conscious buyers avoid.
- Teaching breeders at the Lazy 8 about Japanese preferences is
- Mori's and Soma's job. Teaching "Harry" and "Kaz," as they are
- called here, about roping calves and herding bulls is the job
- of cowpunchers like Cherney, Carpenter, Seilbach and Dick
- Chaffin.
-
- "The first thing that struck me about Montana was the
- sky," says Kaz, between spoonfuls of rice and seaweed. "There's
- so much of it, much more than Japan. For days after I arrived, I
- would wander out onto the ranch late at night and look up at the
- stars. So many stars!" The next thing that struck Kaz hit a
- little harder. Assigned to wrestle his first calf, the newcomer
- resorted to the only technique he knew -- judo -- and landed in
- the dirt. "I tried leg sweeps," he says, "only I had forgotten
- that they have four legs -- two too many."
-
- Never having traveled out of Japan before, both men were
- taken aback by American casualness. "I was puzzled by the name
- Lazy 8," says Harry. "To us `lazy' means only `lazy,' as in
- sleeping off the saki. Now I know that `lazy' can also mean
- `laid-back.' " Kaz, for his part, found the relationship between
- boss and worker hard to fathom. Used to bowing when meeting a
- superior, he now greets John Morse, the third-generation
- Montanan hired to run the Lazy 8, by shouting "Hi, John!" "Yeah,
- Kaz, you guys gotta get rid of that junk," says Chaffin,
- offering a lesson in American egalitarianism between bites of
- a roast beef sandwich. "People who run things aren't any better
- than us. They just make more money."
-
- Harry has become enamored of the American way of life,
- sporting a bumper sticker on his Ford Bronco II that reads HAVE
- A NICE DAY in Japanese, and dreaming of staying on in Montana
- beyond his two-year stint. While they have become proficient at
- roping calves, building fences, pitching hay and loading oats,
- both men say the best part of their experience has been the
- horseback riding. "Out on the plains, galloping along, I feel
- like a real cowboy," says Kaz. "But you sure as hell don't look
- like one!" jokes Chaffin as the room resounds with laughter.
-
- "We've had our problems," says Carpenter, loading a plate
- of spaghetti and meatballs into the microwave. "But they mostly
- relate to language. These guys know some English, but they
- don't know American slang, and cowboys use a lot of slang, much
- of it unprintable." There was, for instance, some
- misunderstanding involving the word bull. Kaz and Harry arrived
- thinking it meant the male bovine, but when Carpenter and others
- say "that's a lot of bull," they may not be referring to cattle.
- "I don't always want to look everything up," admits Harry, who
- attends English classes at nearby Western Montana College. "So
- sometimes I pretend to understand when I don't."
-
- While some people still express resentment at the ranch's
- sale, most have accepted Zenchiku as a friendly presence. Morse
- feels that any remaining suspicion toward the company is similar
- to the feelings townspeople would have had about any outsider.
- "They're as worried about Californians," he says, noting that
- the previous owner, the Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., is
- based in New York City -- a place hardly more familiar to
- Montanans than Tokyo.
-
- One factor in the change of mood was Zenchiku's
- willingness to invest locally. The company gave $10,000 to the
- hospital, and buys much of its farm machinery from the local
- John Deere outlet. Jackets and hats sporting the Zenchiku logo
- were given to each of the employees, who sometimes wear them out
- to the local saloons. Zenchiku has even sponsored their own
- bowling team, though neither of the Japanese ranchers
- participates. "I prefer martial arts," says Kaz, who teaches
- judo to a handful of Montanans in town.
-
- Still, not all of Zenchiku's decisions have been greeted
- warmly. Attempts by Morse to introduce Japanese
- consensus-management principles to the Lazy 8 were met with a
- less than enthusiastic response from the American cowboys. A
- "cowboy forum," in which the group met weekly to air their
- grievances and offer opinions on how the ranch might be better
- managed, quickly dissolved. "We move cattle," shrugs Seilbach.
- "How much is there to talk about?" Attempts to computerize the
- operation -- tagging each animal with a different number to
- follow their progress from birth through slaughter -- did catch
- on, despite the cowboys' grumbling. "An experienced cowboy knows
- much more than any computer," says Seilbach, "but that's the
- future. It's not just the Japanese either -- everybody's taking
- the cowboy skills away from the cowboy."
-
- The crisp cold of a Montana winter afternoon creeps
- through the doorway as the cowboys prepare to go out and sort
- some more cattle. "Yeah, I hope to get to Japan someday," says
- Chaffin, donning his spurs. "Not me," says Seilbach. "I don't
- think I could take all those crowds." The group listens silently
- as Harry and Kaz tell horror stories about sardine-packed
- subway cars and hotel rooms the size of cots. "Lot of people,"
- concludes Harry, to heads nodding in agreement. "Here? A lot of
- sky."
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