WATCH LIVE – Premiere of RanchHER Season 2

Tue, 4/30/24 – 9 PM ET | 8 PM CT | 7 PM MT | 6 PM PT

_RanchHer_Season02-Ep01-CharityStaeffler-SarahKropf_1920x1080.jpg

Tuesday, April 30, 2024

9 PM ET | 8 PM CT | 7 PM MT | 6 PM PT

CLICK HERE TO WATCH FREE ON RFD-TV NOW

CLICK HERE TO WATCH ON FACEBOOK

The stream will start at the time listed above.

No live events streaming at present.

RanchHER TV Host Janie Johnson joins lifelong neighbors Charity Staeffler & Sarah Kropf for a cold and icy adventure herding cattle through remote Oregon high country in the Blue Mountains.

Charity Staeffler & Sarah Kropf are lifelong neighbors and best of friends, continuing a legacy in the Oregon high country that spans five generations.

After settling in America from Germany in the 1800s, their families grazed cattle across thousands of acres in the Blue Mountains with a federal land permit.

Each fall, just like their ancestors, these hard-working ladies spend weeks camping in isolation on the timbered slopes and grass ridges of Oregon’s wild country, gathering scattered herds to move home for winter.

Watch RanchHER Season 2, Episode 1 featuring Charity Staeffler & Sarah Kropf when it premieres on Tuesday, April 30 at 9 pm ET only on RFD-TV and RFD-TV Now!

You can also catch encore airings of the episode on Fridays at 9:30 pm ET and Saturdays at 11:30 am ET, or stream any episode of RanchHER and FarmHER any time with your RFD-TV Now subscription.

Related Stories
On this week’s episode of FarmHER + RanchHER, host Kirbe Schnoor travels to Wilson’s ranch to see how she blends tradition and technology to raise elite Red Angus cattle.
Mother-daughter RanchHER duo, Lyn and Sherrie Ray, joined us on Wednesday’s Market Day Report for a sneak peek at tonight’s brand new episode of FarmHER + RanchHER.
The Wild Ride of Raising Ranch Kids, Writing Books, and Traveling the Rodeo Trail with Paige Murray

LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

While the agriculture industry hoped details on proposed “bridge” payments for farmers would be released this week, Ag Secretary Brook Rollins said the USDA is still working with the White House on the finer points.
Federal lawyers submitted a brief this week backing Bayer’s argument that federal laws governing herbicides like Roundup should prevent lawsuits over the popular chemical.
China’s renewed purchases signal improving sorghum demand at a time when export markets are otherwise uneven. Meanwhile, agriculture groups across the U.S, Canada, and Mexico want to protect close trade relations.
The Cotton-4 are pushing hard for new value chain investments. Still, many U.S. cotton producers face unsustainable losses, and weakened regional textile capacity threatens the survival of the Carolina “dirt-to-shirt” supply chain.
Tryston Beyrer, Crop Nutrition Lead at The Mosaic Company, examines planning trends as producers weigh corn and soybean plantings for 2026.
Brooks York with AgriSompo joins us to offer an update on what agents are prioritizing as the calendar year winds down.