The Denver Post

RANCH HAS $100 MILLION ASKING PRICE

- By Jason Blevins

With the recent sale of the 83,000-acre, fourteener-hosting Cielo Vista Ranch in the San Luis Valley, longtime landowners across Colorado are testing the market by listing their so-called legacy ranches for jaw-dropping prices.

With the recent sale of the 83,000-acre, fourteener-hosting Cielo Vista Ranch in the San Luis Valley, longtime landowners across Colorado are testing the market by listing their so-called legacy ranches for jaw-dropping prices.

A Vail Valley homesteadi­ng family’s 20,000-acre spread near Burns is for sale for $100 million. Cielo Vista listed for $105 million. Utah’s 13,000-acre Wasatch Peaks Ranch, which listed for $46 million, is under contract. And now the latest entry: The 224,050-acre Cross Mountain Ranch in northwest Colorado is hitting the market at $100 million.

“I don’t know what it is with this sudden interest. I can sit on these things for four years or more without any activity,” said Ken Mirr, whose Mirr Ranch Group sold Cielo Vista, is selling Wasatch Peaks and just listed Cross Mountain. “It seems like it’s all about having something that is compelling. Having a story that resonates with people is important.”

Spanning four counties with 56,050 deeded acres and 168,000 leased acres adjoining Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management and National Park Service land, Cross Mountain Ranch is one of the largest ranches in the country. The rural family compound of the late Ronald Boeddeker, the Southern California real estate tycoon renowned for luxury developmen­ts like Lake Las Vegas and Waikoloa Beach Resort in Hawaii, Cross Mountain remains a working cattle and sheep ranch. With more than 20 miles of riverfront along the Yampa, Little Snake and Williams Fork rivers, the ranch’s water rights and hay production can support 2,000 cows and 10,000 sheep.

The Boeddeker clan locked about 16,000 acres in a conservati­on easement in 2014.

The deal, led by the Colorado Cattlemen’s Agricultur­al Land Trust, connected easements on neighborin­g ranches to permanentl­y protect 250,000 acres of sage grouse habitat. Cross Mountain Ranch, near Dinosaur National Monument and the Yampa Valley Regional Airport, is part of an area that contains the largest concentrat­ion of sage grouse in Colorado. The ranch also hosts one of North America’s largest elk herds.

The ranch includes several homes, including an 11,000-square-foot, ninebedroo­m log lodge and a hunting lodge. Mirr said the ranch’s senior water rights, recreation­al offerings and livestock operations make it “a strong investment opportunit­y.” But Mirr, a former public lands attorney who has worked toward land con- servation all his career, is hoping the ranch draws a conservati­onist.

The unnamed buyer of Cielo Vista, which includes the 14,047-foot Culebra Peak and 18 13,000-foot peaks in the Sangre de Cristo range, plans to keep the ranch intact without new developmen­t, Mirr said. He’s looking for a similar buyer for Cross Mountain.

“Hopefully, we can continue to find these good buyers for these properties,” Mirr said. “As long as we can keep these ranches intact and we have good people managing these properties, it’s good for the whole region.”

Tony Caligiuri, the head of Colorado Open Lands, is eager to deal with new owners who might want to mirror the conservati­on efforts of Louis Bacon, the billionair­e conservati­onist who has donated more than 160,000 acres of his two ranches in the San Luis Valley to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service for perpetual protection from developmen­t.

Caligiuri recently hired a person to work with real estate brokers, potential buyers and new owners to outline the role of conservati­on easements on properties that are on the market or recently sold. With landowners who pioneered conservati­on easements aging and ready to sell, Caligiuri expects 20 percent of the 450 properties with Colorado Open Lands easements to change hands every year. On top of that, large landowners across the state are increasing­ly pursuing conservati­on easements.

“We’ve seen a huge bump in interest,” said Caligiuri, noting that his team is working on six conservati­on projects over 10,000 acres in Moffat County alone right now. “It’s hard to say why it’s happening now, but there has definitely been a bump. You’d be amazed at some of the developmen­t pressure in remote parts of this state.”

 ?? Courtesy of Ken Mirr, Mirr Ranch Group ?? Cross Mountain Ranch, the family homestead of developmen­t tycoon Ronald Boeddeker, has been listed for sale for $100 million. The ranch, which is near Steamboat Springs, spans four counties in northwest Colorado.
Courtesy of Ken Mirr, Mirr Ranch Group Cross Mountain Ranch, the family homestead of developmen­t tycoon Ronald Boeddeker, has been listed for sale for $100 million. The ranch, which is near Steamboat Springs, spans four counties in northwest Colorado.

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