THE FRED COLUMN -- fred martin
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You may think it presumptuous of me to declare the official location of
God’s country, but somebody has to do it.
You see, I am there right now: the Last Dollar Ranch, a 400-acre spread
just across the Dallas Divide, about 12 miles west of Ridgway, Colo.
That’s about 375 miles southwest of Denver and just over a gaggle of
soaring peaks from Telluride.
I am writing this in front of a fine, old, nickel-and-iron, wood-burning
stove in the small main room of the Last Dollar’s snug guest cabin. It
used to be the woodshed, but you’d never know it.
It is one of a dozen meticulously restored log buildings on a ranch that
have been here at the base of sky-scraping mountains since before we last
had a century turn on us.
It has been what passes for unseasonably warm here at 10,000 feet, but that seems to be coming to a halt right soon. I can tell because the Last
Dollar’s three cats are hunkered down just outside on a window ledge.
They speak to me: “Help, tenderfoot, we are meant to be inside with you
and that treasure of a stove.”
They and Sadie, ranch manager Duane Beamer’s sheep dog, are about all the
critters left here now (except Amy Beamer and their two great kids). The
Last Dollar’s horses and purebred Herefords were taken to winter pasture
a month ago.
I am here on this remarkable patch of paradise to soak up history and
atmosphere and see if I can help Newport Beach resident Vince Kontny in
his quest to preserve America’s cattle ranches. In Colorado, those are
disappearing at a clip of about three a day.
I wrote about Vince a couple of years ago. He’s a Colorado ranch boy who
has done well in the world. After graduating from the University of
Colorado at Boulder in engineering, Vince served with the Navy’s CB units
in Vietnam.
He took his discharge overseas and wound up in Australia, swinging a pick
on a railroad construction job of Irvine-based Fluor Daniel.
To drastically shorten this success story, Vince met and married Joan,
returned to the states and, eventually, became president and chief
operating officer of Fluor. He and Joan live near the Lido Isle bridge.
When Vince retired a few years back, he sought his roots. The more he
sought them, the more appalled he became at the state of ranching in the
United States.
With the gumption that took him from grunt to president of a worldwide
engineering and construction firm, Vince is on a mission to prevent vast
acreage of ranchland from becoming anonymous, nonproductive housing
tracts or 35-acre “ranchettes.”
“If the current trend continues,” Vince told a Denver Rotary Club
audience, “we’ll (lose) precious open space, wildlife habitat,
agricultural production and a ranching heritage that will affect all
future generations.”
For his part, Vince has taken ranches that had been in the same two
families for 100-120 years and restored them -- both physically and as
businesses. However, the profit side still needs some help.
Ranch manager Duane Beamer told me he’s hoping to get a market price of
80 cents per pound for Last Dollar calves next year. In 1993, the market price was $1.02 per pound.
Land prices are making America’s ranchers disappear. After all, why put
calluses on top of your calluses when you can sell out to a developer for
literally thousands of times the agricultural value.
As an example, Vince cites “a 200-acre parcel near Telluride with few
trees and no improvements sold for more than $4.2 million cash. Its
agricultural value would be less than $100 an acre.”
But, hey, ranches are outdated. Feedlots are the modern, efficient way to
go. So what’s the big deal?
Basically, says Vince, it is this: “We are losing our rich cultural
heritage -- our link to the true spirit of the Old West. And in an age
when people are struggling to define (their) values, the rancher has for
generations demonstrated the values we all admire: family, faith, work
and community.”
And that, says Vince Kontny, is something worth saving.
* FRED MARTIN is a longtime Newport Beach resident and Daily Pilot
columnist who now lives in Fort Collins, Colo. His column appears
monthly.
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