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Vermejo Park Ranch

Vermejo Park Ranch,[1] Vermejo Ranch, or Vermejo, is a 550,000-acre (220,000 ha) nature reserve and guest ranch in northeastern New Mexico and southern Colorado. Ted Turner Reserves, the luxury hospitality company founded by Ted Turner, includes conservation research and ecosystem restoration along with guest operations.[1] The reserve, which stretches from the Great Plains at an elevation of 5,867 ft (1,788 m) to the summit of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains, reaches an elevation of 12,931 ft (3,941 m). The ranch produces significant quantities of coalbed methane, a type of natural gas.

Vermejo Park Ranch
Looking west towards Valle Vidal the Great Plains in the foreground, February 2011.
LocationColfax / Taos counties, New Mexico and Las Animas / Costilla counties, Colorado, United States
Nearest cityRaton, New Mexico
Coordinates36°53′21″N 104°58′45″W / 36.88917°N 104.97917°W / 36.88917; -104.97917
OperatorTed Turner Reserves
Websitehttps://tedturnerreserves.com/vermejo/

History edit

Vermejo Park was originally part of the Maxwell Land Grant. After Vermejo Park went through several owners in the late-19th century, William H. Bartlett (1850–1918) of Chicago, Illinois bought 205,000 acres (83,000 ha) from the Maxwell Land Grant Company in 1902. Bartlett evicted a number of Hispanics living at Vermejo Park.[2] He hired close friend and Chicago architect, Joseph Lyman Silsbee to help him make improvements, including three large residences (including the main Casa Grande) and a power plant. He re-introduced elk to the park and built and stocked several lakes with trout. He expanded the property to 300,000 acres (120,000 ha).

Bartlett died at the ranch in 1918 and his sons, who had managed the ranch, died within two years.

A syndicate of New York, St. Louis, and Chicago businessmen took an option to buy the ranch and organized the Vermejo Park Club, selling memberships to Tex Austin, Billy Mitchell, Amon Carter, and the Frederick Guest family. A member of the Guest family shot an elk which at the time was the ninth largest in the world; it is now on display at the Museum of Natural History in New York. The syndicate, however, was unable to raise the US$1.8 million asking price and the original club was disbanded.[3]

In 1926, Los Angeles Times baron Harry Chandler bought the property from Bartlett.[4] In 1927 Chandler and his investors opened a new Vermejo Park Club attracting Will Rogers, Cecil B. DeMille, Douglas Fairbanks, Mary Pickford, Harvey Firestone and Herbert Hoover. The club was disbanded during the Great Depression, although ranching operations continued.[5]

W. J. Gourley, a Fort Worth businessman, began buying property in the Vermejo Park area in 1945 and increased its area to 480,000 acres (1,900 km2). He used the ranch for recreation as well as cattle ranching. On December 23, 1955, the large middle guest house burned and the stables were renovated to become the ranch's main social and dining area now called "The Stables".[3][6]

Gourley died in 1970 and Pennzoil bought the property from his estate in 1973 for US$26.5 million and increased its area to 588,000 acres (2,380 km2). Pennzoil continued cattle ranching and expanded the facilities for guests.[6] In 1996 Ted Turner purchased the property from Pennzoil, put emphasis on managing wildlife. He used much of the former cattle pasturage for bison,[7] traditionally called buffalo in North America. Ralphie V, the mascot of the Colorado Buffaloes, was born there.[8] After living there for awhile, he decided to open it to paying guests.[9]

Coal, natural gas, and oil edit

Vermejo has large hydrocarbon resources estimated to consist of a 300-year reserve of bituminous coal, trillions of cubic feet of natural gas and unknown quantities of oil.[3]

Coal mining on land later belonging to Vermejo began by 1880. Seven coal mining settlements and mines were established on the ranch: Blossburg, Brilliant, Tin Pan Canyon, and Swastiks in Dillon Canyon and Gardiner, Koehler, and Waldron canyon nearby. All were located at the lower elevations on the ranch between 6,460 feet (1,970 m) and 7,220 feet (2,200 m) elevation. The coal mines employed 3,563 miners in 1911. These miners consisted primarily of local Hispanic workers and many recent immigrants to the United States, especially from Italy and Greece.[10] Other coal mines were located just outside the boundaries of Vermejo, notably at Dawson, New Mexico where in 1913, 263 miners were killed in the worst mining disaster ever to happen in the United States.[11] Coal production slowly declined to insignificant levels and ceased altogether in 2002 due to the high cost of coal extraction.[12] Land polluted or disturbed by the coal mining is still being reclaimed.

When Pennzoil sold the property to Turner in 1996, it retained mineral rights. Turner, however, was able to impose upon the company strict environmental controls for natural gas extraction. In 1999 Pennzoil sold its mineral rights to El Paso Natural Gas. By 2011, there were 970 natural gas wells on the property, 840 of them in New Mexico and 130 in Colorado.[13] Although touting the coalbed methane production at Vermejo, as environmentally friendly, El Paso Natural Gas ran into public opposition when it attempted to exploit natural gas resources in the neighboring publicly owned area of Valle Vidal. In 2007, Congress withdrew the 101,794 acres of Valle Vidal from energy development and mining.[13]

Description and geography edit

 
Big Costilla Peak is one of the two highest mountains on the ranch. This photo was taken from the publicly owned Valle Vidal.

Vermejo, just west of the city of Raton, is the biggest component of Turner's ranch empire of 2,000,000 acres (810,000 ha) that consistently keeps him in the top ten of private landowners in the United States.[14] It lies mostly in western Colfax County, New Mexico, but smaller portions extend into northeastern Taos County, New Mexico as well as southwestern Las Animas County and southeastern Costilla County in Colorado.

Elevations of Vermejo range from 5,850 feet (1,780 m) on the Canadian River near Maxwell, New Mexico to Big Costilla Peak which rises to 12,931 feet (3,941 m) on the western boundary of the reserve and the border between New Mexico and Colorado. Most of the reserve consists of the Park Plateau, part of the Raton Basin, a much dissected tableland with elevations from 6,500 feet (2,000 m) to about 9,000 feet (2,700 m). The westernmost extension of Vermejo is in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains with elevations from 9,000 feet (2,700 m) to above timberline. An eight-mile long, north-south ridge with four summits above 12,750 feet (3,890 m) including Big Costilla Peak form the western boundary.[15]

Most of Vermejo is drained by the Canadian River and its tributary, Vermejo Creek. The Canadian is part of the Mississippi River drainage basin. A small portion in the western part of the ranch, the East Fork of Costilla Creek, drains into the Rio Grande. Costilla Reservoir is on the East Fork of Costilla Creek. About 20 lakes, both natural and artificial, are scattered around the higher elevations.[16]

Vegetation and climate edit

Vermejo, has the typical life zones of the southern Rocky Mountains. Below 6,500 feet (2,000 m) Great Plains grassland and steppe vegetation is dominant. From 6,400 feet (2,000 m) to 7,800 feet (2,400 m) Piñon pine-juniper woodland is common, especially on south facing slopes. Ponderosa pine forests are found between 7,100 feet (2,200 m) and 8,400 feet (2,600 m) elevations. A mixed conifer forest, consisting mostly of Douglas fir, white fir, and ponderosa pine, is found between the elevations of 7,000 feet (2,100 m) and 9,800 feet (3,000 m). Between elevations of 9,800 feet (3,000 m) and 12,000 feet (3,700 m) is a subalpine conifer forest consisting mostly of Engelmann spruce, subalpine fir, and limber pine. Quaking aspen is scattered in both the mixed conifer and subalpine forests at elevations from 8,000 feet (2,400 m) to 10,300 feet (3,100 m). Above the treeline at approximately 12,000 feet (3,700 m) is alpine tundra. Grassland and meadows are interspersed with forest at all elevations.

The climate of Vermejo is mostly semi-arid. The lower elevations receive an average of 15 or 16 (400 mm) inches of precipitation annually, mostly in summer. Middle and higher elevations receive about 22 inches (550 mm) of precipitation annually. Temperatures vary depending upon elevation and slope exposure with a wide range between the lower and higher elevations. Snow accumulation is significant during winter at higher elevations.[10]

Wildlife edit

Game animals include 6,000 to 8,000 elk, 3,000 to 4,000 mule deer, pronghorn, 1,400 bison, black bear, cougars, Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep and Merriam's turkey (a subspecies of the wild turkey).[17][18] Game fish include several species of trout including the Rio Grande cutthroat which survives only in a few small streams in its former range.

Conservation edit

The black-footed ferret was declared extinct in 1979, but a remnant population was found in Wyoming.[19] In cooperation with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Vermejo introduced ferrets to the reserve in 2008, with the goal of establishing a population of 120 ferrets. More than 8,000 acres (3,200 ha) of shortgrass prairie on the reserve are occupied by prairie dogs, the chief prey of ferrets.[20]

Vermejo also has an agreement with the Fish and Wildlife Service to help conserve the Rio Grande cutthroat trout in the small headwater streams in which it lives. The Rio Grande cutthroat is declining in numbers and is only found in about 10 percent of its former range.[21] Vermejo is also cooperating with Philmont Scout Ranch in restoring Ponil and Bonito Creeks to conditions in which they can support trout populations[22]

Vermejo is improving the quality of its ponderosa pine forest by selective cutting and controlled burning and encouraging the expansion of declining quaking aspen forests.[23] Research on various factors influencing the wildlife on the property and reclamation of land impacted by abandoned coal mines are on-going projects.

Infrastructure edit

The Cimarron Solar Facility on 364 acres (147 ha) produces 30 megawatts of electric power, sufficient for 9,000 homes.[24]

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Vermejo Park Ranch". Turner Enterprises. Retrieved February 9, 2021.
  2. ^ Laurie 1976.
  3. ^ a b c Pappas, Mike J. (2003). Raton History Mystery and More. Coda Publications. pp. 83–86. ISBN 0-910390-69-X.
  4. ^ McDougal, Dennis (2002). Privileged Son: Otis Chandler and the Rise and Fall of the L.A. Times Dynasty. Da Capo. ISBN 0-306-81161-8.
  5. ^ Stanley, F (2008). The Grant that Maxwell Bought. Sunstone Press. pp. 221–222.
  6. ^ a b Laurie, Karen Pillmore (1976). "History of Vermejo Park" (PDF). Guidebook of Vermejo Park. New Mexico Geological Society.
  7. ^ "Vermejo Park Ranch". Turner Bison Exchange. Retrieved February 8, 2021.
  8. ^ Alyssa Urish (November 18, 2007). . Dailycamera.com. Archived from the original on November 20, 2007. Retrieved December 5, 2007.
  9. ^ Abel, Ann (August 23, 2016). "Big House on the Prairie: Inside Ted Turner's Luxurious Casa Grande on His Vermejo Park Ranch". Forbes. Retrieved February 10, 2021.
  10. ^ a b Oakes, Yvonne R.; Zamora, Dorothy A. "The Coal Camps of Vermejo, Colfax County, New Mexico" (PDF). Museum of New Mexico. Retrieved September 5, 2013.
  11. ^ Brunt, Charles D. (2013). "Dawson disaster: 100 years later". Albuquerque Journal. Retrieved February 9, 2021.
  12. ^ Hoffman, Gretchen K.; Brister, Brian S. (PDF). New Mexico Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources, New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology. Archived from the original (PDF) on November 4, 2013. Retrieved September 5, 2013.
  13. ^ a b Wildermuth, Todd (November 8, 2011). . The Raton Range. Archived from the original on November 4, 2013. Retrieved September 5, 2013.
  14. ^ "Land Report 100". The Land Report. April 10, 2008. Retrieved March 19, 2019.
  15. ^ Google Earth; http://www.peakbagger.com/peak.aspx?pid=16478, accessed 4 Sep 2013 Different elevations are cited by different sources for Big Costilla Peak.
  16. ^ Google Earth; Delorme Topo 6.0
  17. ^ . Raton official city website. Archived from the original on November 4, 2013. Retrieved September 5, 2013.
  18. ^ Martin, Lisa (August 20, 2023). "Vermejo Honored as Best in the West". The Land Report. Retrieved January 2, 2024.
  19. ^ "Timeline". Blackfootedferret.org. Black-footed Ferret Recovery Implementation Team. Retrieved March 22, 2013.
  20. ^ "Turner Endangered Species Fund". TedTurner.com. Turner Enterprises. Retrieved September 5, 2013.
  21. ^ "Fish and Wildlife Service [FWS-R2-ES-2013-N147; FXES11150200000-134-FF02ENEH00]". Federal Register. Vol. 78, no. 140. Department of the Interior. July 22, 2013. Retrieved September 5, 2013.
  22. ^ "Conservation". Philmontscoutranch.org. Philmont Scout Ranch. Retrieved September 5, 2013.
  23. ^ Collins, Nancy (October 20, 2016). "Ted Turner's Vermejo Park Ranch in New Mexico". Architectural Digest. Retrieved February 9, 2021.
  24. ^ "First Solar-built Cimarron Solar Facility starts commercial operation". Semiconductor Today. February 2, 2011. Retrieved September 5, 2013.

Further reading edit

  • Legler, Ben S. (April 27, 2010). (PDF). Department of Botany, University of Wyoming. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 7, 2011. Retrieved January 8, 2011. (Master's thesis)

External links edit

  • Official website

vermejo, park, ranch, vermejo, ranch, vermejo, acre, nature, reserve, guest, ranch, northeastern, mexico, southern, colorado, turner, reserves, luxury, hospitality, company, founded, turner, includes, conservation, research, ecosystem, restoration, along, with. Vermejo Park Ranch 1 Vermejo Ranch or Vermejo is a 550 000 acre 220 000 ha nature reserve and guest ranch in northeastern New Mexico and southern Colorado Ted Turner Reserves the luxury hospitality company founded by Ted Turner includes conservation research and ecosystem restoration along with guest operations 1 The reserve which stretches from the Great Plains at an elevation of 5 867 ft 1 788 m to the summit of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains reaches an elevation of 12 931 ft 3 941 m The ranch produces significant quantities of coalbed methane a type of natural gas Vermejo Park RanchLooking west towards Valle Vidal the Great Plains in the foreground February 2011 LocationColfax Taos counties New Mexico and Las Animas Costilla counties Colorado United StatesNearest cityRaton New MexicoCoordinates36 53 21 N 104 58 45 W 36 88917 N 104 97917 W 36 88917 104 97917OperatorTed Turner ReservesWebsitehttps tedturnerreserves com vermejo Contents 1 History 1 1 Coal natural gas and oil 2 Description and geography 3 Vegetation and climate 4 Wildlife 4 1 Conservation 5 Infrastructure 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory editVermejo Park was originally part of the Maxwell Land Grant After Vermejo Park went through several owners in the late 19th century William H Bartlett 1850 1918 of Chicago Illinois bought 205 000 acres 83 000 ha from the Maxwell Land Grant Company in 1902 Bartlett evicted a number of Hispanics living at Vermejo Park 2 He hired close friend and Chicago architect Joseph Lyman Silsbee to help him make improvements including three large residences including the main Casa Grande and a power plant He re introduced elk to the park and built and stocked several lakes with trout He expanded the property to 300 000 acres 120 000 ha Bartlett died at the ranch in 1918 and his sons who had managed the ranch died within two years A syndicate of New York St Louis and Chicago businessmen took an option to buy the ranch and organized the Vermejo Park Club selling memberships to Tex Austin Billy Mitchell Amon Carter and the Frederick Guest family A member of the Guest family shot an elk which at the time was the ninth largest in the world it is now on display at the Museum of Natural History in New York The syndicate however was unable to raise the US 1 8 million asking price and the original club was disbanded 3 In 1926 Los Angeles Times baron Harry Chandler bought the property from Bartlett 4 In 1927 Chandler and his investors opened a new Vermejo Park Club attracting Will Rogers Cecil B DeMille Douglas Fairbanks Mary Pickford Harvey Firestone and Herbert Hoover The club was disbanded during the Great Depression although ranching operations continued 5 W J Gourley a Fort Worth businessman began buying property in the Vermejo Park area in 1945 and increased its area to 480 000 acres 1 900 km2 He used the ranch for recreation as well as cattle ranching On December 23 1955 the large middle guest house burned and the stables were renovated to become the ranch s main social and dining area now called The Stables 3 6 Gourley died in 1970 and Pennzoil bought the property from his estate in 1973 for US 26 5 million and increased its area to 588 000 acres 2 380 km2 Pennzoil continued cattle ranching and expanded the facilities for guests 6 In 1996 Ted Turner purchased the property from Pennzoil put emphasis on managing wildlife He used much of the former cattle pasturage for bison 7 traditionally called buffalo in North America Ralphie V the mascot of the Colorado Buffaloes was born there 8 After living there for awhile he decided to open it to paying guests 9 Coal natural gas and oil edit Vermejo has large hydrocarbon resources estimated to consist of a 300 year reserve of bituminous coal trillions of cubic feet of natural gas and unknown quantities of oil 3 Coal mining on land later belonging to Vermejo began by 1880 Seven coal mining settlements and mines were established on the ranch Blossburg Brilliant Tin Pan Canyon and Swastiks in Dillon Canyon and Gardiner Koehler and Waldron canyon nearby All were located at the lower elevations on the ranch between 6 460 feet 1 970 m and 7 220 feet 2 200 m elevation The coal mines employed 3 563 miners in 1911 These miners consisted primarily of local Hispanic workers and many recent immigrants to the United States especially from Italy and Greece 10 Other coal mines were located just outside the boundaries of Vermejo notably at Dawson New Mexico where in 1913 263 miners were killed in the worst mining disaster ever to happen in the United States 11 Coal production slowly declined to insignificant levels and ceased altogether in 2002 due to the high cost of coal extraction 12 Land polluted or disturbed by the coal mining is still being reclaimed When Pennzoil sold the property to Turner in 1996 it retained mineral rights Turner however was able to impose upon the company strict environmental controls for natural gas extraction In 1999 Pennzoil sold its mineral rights to El Paso Natural Gas By 2011 there were 970 natural gas wells on the property 840 of them in New Mexico and 130 in Colorado 13 Although touting the coalbed methane production at Vermejo as environmentally friendly El Paso Natural Gas ran into public opposition when it attempted to exploit natural gas resources in the neighboring publicly owned area of Valle Vidal In 2007 Congress withdrew the 101 794 acres of Valle Vidal from energy development and mining 13 Description and geography edit nbsp Big Costilla Peak is one of the two highest mountains on the ranch This photo was taken from the publicly owned Valle Vidal Vermejo just west of the city of Raton is the biggest component of Turner s ranch empire of 2 000 000 acres 810 000 ha that consistently keeps him in the top ten of private landowners in the United States 14 It lies mostly in western Colfax County New Mexico but smaller portions extend into northeastern Taos County New Mexico as well as southwestern Las Animas County and southeastern Costilla County in Colorado Elevations of Vermejo range from 5 850 feet 1 780 m on the Canadian River near Maxwell New Mexico to Big Costilla Peak which rises to 12 931 feet 3 941 m on the western boundary of the reserve and the border between New Mexico and Colorado Most of the reserve consists of the Park Plateau part of the Raton Basin a much dissected tableland with elevations from 6 500 feet 2 000 m to about 9 000 feet 2 700 m The westernmost extension of Vermejo is in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains with elevations from 9 000 feet 2 700 m to above timberline An eight mile long north south ridge with four summits above 12 750 feet 3 890 m including Big Costilla Peak form the western boundary 15 Most of Vermejo is drained by the Canadian River and its tributary Vermejo Creek The Canadian is part of the Mississippi River drainage basin A small portion in the western part of the ranch the East Fork of Costilla Creek drains into the Rio Grande Costilla Reservoir is on the East Fork of Costilla Creek About 20 lakes both natural and artificial are scattered around the higher elevations 16 Vegetation and climate editVermejo has the typical life zones of the southern Rocky Mountains Below 6 500 feet 2 000 m Great Plains grassland and steppe vegetation is dominant From 6 400 feet 2 000 m to 7 800 feet 2 400 m Pinon pine juniper woodland is common especially on south facing slopes Ponderosa pine forests are found between 7 100 feet 2 200 m and 8 400 feet 2 600 m elevations A mixed conifer forest consisting mostly of Douglas fir white fir and ponderosa pine is found between the elevations of 7 000 feet 2 100 m and 9 800 feet 3 000 m Between elevations of 9 800 feet 3 000 m and 12 000 feet 3 700 m is a subalpine conifer forest consisting mostly of Engelmann spruce subalpine fir and limber pine Quaking aspen is scattered in both the mixed conifer and subalpine forests at elevations from 8 000 feet 2 400 m to 10 300 feet 3 100 m Above the treeline at approximately 12 000 feet 3 700 m is alpine tundra Grassland and meadows are interspersed with forest at all elevations The climate of Vermejo is mostly semi arid The lower elevations receive an average of 15 or 16 400 mm inches of precipitation annually mostly in summer Middle and higher elevations receive about 22 inches 550 mm of precipitation annually Temperatures vary depending upon elevation and slope exposure with a wide range between the lower and higher elevations Snow accumulation is significant during winter at higher elevations 10 Wildlife editGame animals include 6 000 to 8 000 elk 3 000 to 4 000 mule deer pronghorn 1 400 bison black bear cougars Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep and Merriam s turkey a subspecies of the wild turkey 17 18 Game fish include several species of trout including the Rio Grande cutthroat which survives only in a few small streams in its former range Conservation edit The black footed ferret was declared extinct in 1979 but a remnant population was found in Wyoming 19 In cooperation with the U S Fish and Wildlife Service Vermejo introduced ferrets to the reserve in 2008 with the goal of establishing a population of 120 ferrets More than 8 000 acres 3 200 ha of shortgrass prairie on the reserve are occupied by prairie dogs the chief prey of ferrets 20 Vermejo also has an agreement with the Fish and Wildlife Service to help conserve the Rio Grande cutthroat trout in the small headwater streams in which it lives The Rio Grande cutthroat is declining in numbers and is only found in about 10 percent of its former range 21 Vermejo is also cooperating with Philmont Scout Ranch in restoring Ponil and Bonito Creeks to conditions in which they can support trout populations 22 Vermejo is improving the quality of its ponderosa pine forest by selective cutting and controlled burning and encouraging the expansion of declining quaking aspen forests 23 Research on various factors influencing the wildlife on the property and reclamation of land impacted by abandoned coal mines are on going projects See also Conservation of American bisonInfrastructure editThe Cimarron Solar Facility on 364 acres 147 ha produces 30 megawatts of electric power sufficient for 9 000 homes 24 References edit a b Vermejo Park Ranch Turner Enterprises Retrieved February 9 2021 Laurie 1976 a b c Pappas Mike J 2003 Raton History Mystery and More Coda Publications pp 83 86 ISBN 0 910390 69 X McDougal Dennis 2002 Privileged Son Otis Chandler and the Rise and Fall of the L A Times Dynasty Da Capo ISBN 0 306 81161 8 Stanley F 2008 The Grant that Maxwell Bought Sunstone Press pp 221 222 a b Laurie Karen Pillmore 1976 History of Vermejo Park PDF Guidebook of Vermejo Park New Mexico Geological Society Vermejo Park Ranch Turner Bison Exchange Retrieved February 8 2021 Alyssa Urish November 18 2007 Fans welcome new Ralphie Dailycamera com Archived from the original on November 20 2007 Retrieved December 5 2007 Abel Ann August 23 2016 Big House on the Prairie Inside Ted Turner s Luxurious Casa Grande on His Vermejo Park Ranch Forbes Retrieved February 10 2021 a b Oakes Yvonne R Zamora Dorothy A The Coal Camps of Vermejo Colfax County New Mexico PDF Museum of New Mexico Retrieved September 5 2013 Brunt Charles D 2013 Dawson disaster 100 years later Albuquerque Journal Retrieved February 9 2021 Hoffman Gretchen K Brister Brian S New Mexico s Raton Basin coalbed methane play PDF New Mexico Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology Archived from the original PDF on November 4 2013 Retrieved September 5 2013 a b Wildermuth Todd November 8 2011 Purchase involves Vermejo drilling firm The Raton Range Archived from the original on November 4 2013 Retrieved September 5 2013 Land Report 100 The Land Report April 10 2008 Retrieved March 19 2019 Google Earth http www peakbagger com peak aspx pid 16478 accessed 4 Sep 2013 Different elevations are cited by different sources for Big Costilla Peak Google Earth Delorme Topo 6 0 Vermejo Park Ranch Raton official city website Archived from the original on November 4 2013 Retrieved September 5 2013 Martin Lisa August 20 2023 Vermejo Honored as Best in the West The Land Report Retrieved January 2 2024 Timeline Blackfootedferret org Black footed Ferret Recovery Implementation Team Retrieved March 22 2013 Turner Endangered Species Fund TedTurner com Turner Enterprises Retrieved September 5 2013 Fish and Wildlife Service FWS R2 ES 2013 N147 FXES11150200000 134 FF02ENEH00 Federal Register Vol 78 no 140 Department of the Interior July 22 2013 Retrieved September 5 2013 Conservation Philmontscoutranch org Philmont Scout Ranch Retrieved September 5 2013 Collins Nancy October 20 2016 Ted Turner s Vermejo Park Ranch in New Mexico Architectural Digest Retrieved February 9 2021 First Solar built Cimarron Solar Facility starts commercial operation Semiconductor Today February 2 2011 Retrieved September 5 2013 Further reading editLegler Ben S April 27 2010 A floristic inventory of Vermejo New Mexico and Colorado PDF Department of Botany University of Wyoming Archived from the original PDF on July 7 2011 Retrieved January 8 2011 Master s thesis External links editOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vermejo Park Ranch amp oldid 1216044346, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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