
Find Out How To Own 916,000 Acres Of Wyoming Land
If you have an extra $80 million lying around, you should look into buying the Pathfinder Ranch—916,076 acres of prime Wyoming land. When you break it down, you could own 1.45% of Wyoming's total land area.
Swan Land Company's Scott Williams says about the ranch:
You look from one mountain range to the next, and the realization hits you: everything in between is Pathfinder. A vast expanse of grasslands, sagebrush, river corridors, wildlife, and wind. Simply put, it’s freedom.
Not only will you have over 900,000 at your fingertips, but you'll be a part of conservation, and you will be supporting wildlife restoration. The ranches own and maintain the nation's first sage-grouse habitat conservation bank and the largest ever approved bank by the U.S. Department of the Interior Fish and Wildlife Service.
Can you imagine being the owner of nearly every piece of land between Alcova and Rawlins? That would be wild, right?
The properties under the Pathfinder Ranches have flocks of Sage-grouse, antelope, elk, mule & whitetail deer, bald and golden eagles, bighorn sheep, black bears, mountain lions, and other species of wildlife can be found on the land.
The mountain peaks around the ranches are in the Ferris, Pedro, and Rattlesnake Ranges, and many of the legendary trails (Oregon Trail, Pony Express, California Trail, and Mormon Trail) cross through the land. History runs deep in this area, and you could be the new owner of ranches with more land than the entire state of Rhode Island, and about the same size as Denali National Park in Alaska.
Four units make up the Pathfinder Ranches.
- Two Crosses Unit - 180,061 total acres
- Beulah Belle Unit - 98,357 total acres
- Stewart Unit - 569,053 total acres (largest of the bunch)
- Wooden Rifle Unit - 68,606 total acres
If you're fortunate enough to be able to take over ownership of this fantastic chunk of Wyoming history, remember me if you need to make a new friend. Thanks.
Wyoming Ranch Motion-Triggered Wildlife Cam
Gallery Credit: Working Lands & Wildlife Project via Vimeo
