Photo: Aaron DeNu/Flickr

Saving a Family Ranch in Wyoming

 

Luke Lynch, Wyoming State Director, writes about working with Freddie Botur to save his family's ranch.

Freddie Botur pictured with his horse on Cottonwood RanchThe first time I met Freddie, he had just convinced his aging father to pull their family’s cattle ranch off the market. Listening to real estate developers talk about massive subdivisions on his pristine ranch as they passed miles of trout-filled Cottonwood Creek had become too much for him to bear. After much negotiating, he convinced his father that he could turn around the struggling ranch, and he was faced with the daunting task of managing the vast 75,000-acre spread.

Photo: Freddie Botur on Cottonwood Ranches

 

Freddie’s historic ranchland has some of the most important wildlife habitat in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem. It is land that supports his cattle herd, but it is also home to large populations of moose, elk, mule deer, and pronghorn antelope. It’s a place with healthy populations of sage grouse, raptors, burrowing owls and approximately 65 species of concern in Wyoming.

 

 

I’ve been blessed to work with Freddie’s family over the past several years since he saved the ranch from subdivision. The Conservation Fund’s approach—building partnerships to conserve lands in an economically sustainable way— has made a truly symbiotic relationship possible. Working in concert with federal and state agencies, along with the Wyoming Stock Growers Agricultural Land Trust, our partnership has provided needed help to the ranch. Funds were used to install pipelines, replace antiquated headgates, build wildlife-friendly fence and encourage progressive grazing management that has benefited all species, including the cattle. In exchange, the public is now assured that the ranch will stay intact and be available for wildlife and agriculture forever.

The Conservation Fund’s work has freed Freddie to do what he loves—run the ranch. Freddie’s leadership has prompted neighboring ranchers to work with us to conserve their lands. What once looked like a bleak future is now bright for Cottonwood Creek and its wildlife and ranching heritage.

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Greater Sage Grouse Video

The number of sage grouse, a ground-dwelling bird found across the western United States, has declined significantly. In Wyoming alone, the sage grouse has decreased an estimated 70 percent in the past 50 years. Watch this video of the sage grouse "strutting"—it's quite the sight!

 

Video courtesy of Gail Patricelli, UC Davis

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Photo Gallery: Wyoming

Browse through photos to learn more about our work in the Upper Green River Valley and Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem.