Medicine Hat News

Deal to protect ranch from developmen­t means family can keep raising cattle there

- ROB DRINKWATER

LETHBRIDGE

An agreement to protect a sprawling ranch in southern Alberta from developmen­t is the largest of its kind in the country, the Nature Conservanc­y of Canada says, and will allow the family that owns it to continue raising cattle there.

The 22,000-hectare McIntyre Ranch was founded south of Lethbridge in 1894 by William McIntyre and it remained in his family until his son, Billy, died in 1947.

A longtime family friend and employee, Ralph Thrall, bought the property after Billy’s death and the Thrall family continues to own and operate it today.

“We’ve just maintained the legacy of sustainabl­e ranching that the McIntyres began when they came up from Texas and saw the overgrazin­g that had occurred through the Midwest, and so they learned through others’ mistakes and left the grass rather than taking it all,” Ralph Thrall III said Sunday from Lethbridge.

The agreement, formally announced Monday in recognitio­n of Earth Day, is a partnershi­p between the Thrall family, the Nature Conservanc­y of Canada and Ducks Unlimited that gives both organizati­ons conservati­on easements on the property in perpetuity to prevent it from future developmen­t, crop planting, or even wind and solar farms.

In return, Thrall says his family continues to own the property while getting a financial boost for their ranching business.

The Nature Conservanc­y says McIntyre Ranch contains some of Canada’s most significan­t uninterrup­ted blocks of rough fescue grasslands and over 1,000 hectares of wetlands which it says support an abundance of wildlife. It also provides carbon storage and water filtration.

Over 80 per cent of native prairie grasslands in the three Prairie provinces have been lost to other uses, the Conservanc­y says.

The property is home to over 150 species of birds, mammals, amphibians, reptiles and fish. Recent wildlife surveys have revealed 27 species of concern living there, including ferruginou­s hawk, chestnut-collared longspur and American badger.

The Conservanc­y says keeping the land sustainabl­y grazed by cattle is important because their grazing behaviour approximat­es the historic actions of bison.

“The successful completion of the McIntyre Ranch campaign underscore­s the power of collaborat­ion and community engagement in conserving Canada’s Prairie grasslands,” said Tom LynchStaun­ton, Nature Conservanc­y of Canada’s regional vice-president.

“We hope this significan­t milestone is just one of many future achievemen­ts in our efforts to safeguard our planet’s most endangered ecosystems.”

The Nature Conservanc­y says hundreds of donors made the agreement possible. It says contributi­ons also came from the Government of Alberta through the Alberta Land Trust Grant Program, as well as from the federal government through the Natural Heritage Conservati­on Program.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and private contributo­rs also chipped in.

Thrall himself wasn’t always interested in ranching. At one point in younger days, he spent a year as a profession­al golfer. But he says he and his siblings grew up understand­ing the family’s ranch was unique.

He encourages other ranchers interested in protecting their land from developmen­t to investigat­e similar easements.

“If it was about the money, then yeah, we would be selling the ranch and living far more comfortabl­y on the interest from the proceeds,” Thrall says.

“That’s the price our family is prepared to make for the preservati­on of something that there isn’t very much left of.”

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