We've decided to add an adjacent ranch to our holdings, some 10,000
acres. The owners wanted $1,000 an acre for it but there have been no
takers for years because there's not a lot that can be done with it
-- limited livestock grazing potential is about it, plus, with care, one annual crop of alfalfa hay, probably mostly Grade 2, some Grade 1 -- so they
were happy to have us take it off their hands for a comparatively modest
sum.
But it does have water, and water in the west is more valuable than gold
and silver. But we'll put this acreage in a conservation reserve
program (lower taxes!) and leave the water where nature wants it. We'll
also do a lot of restoration work planting native vegetation to help
re-establish a flourishing ecosystem.
As
we completed the sale, the owners of a 6,000-acre ranch adjacent to our
new holdings came to us offering a very reasonable price for their
ranch. It was inherited land they did not know what do do with and
wanted to be rid of. We were happy to acquire it and for
now, at least, also put it in a conservation reserve program.
So in
total we've added some 25 square miles to our fiefdom. There's lots of
game on the new land. Aside from some roads and a few other
improvements, most of it looks just as it did before the white man
came. That is, unless you are a botanist and can recognize all the
invasive species. And spot the changes caused by a lowered water table
and hard-panning in a few places.
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