MLaird
Well-known member

BLM proposes 11,000-acre land purchase along lower Musselshell River
This story has been corrected to reflect that Craig Egeland is one of four partners owning the 73 Ranch and Hunt Club LLP and that the sell price of $5
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It says RMEF facilitated the purchase. Did they use capital or were they just involved in negotiations or starting the conversation?That would be good news. Hope it goes through.
Both, from what I understand. I'm no longer on the Board, so I wasn't involved in the project approval as I would have been while on the Board.It says RMEF facilitated the purchase. Did they use capital or were they just involved in negotiations or starting the conversation?
Done. Thank-you.Link to submit a comment.
Pretty close to more than half the objective number of elk for the entire unit 700 in that herd.I watched hundreds of elk on that ground last season. It would be a great purchase but the BLM would need to continue to operate the irrigation pivots to fully utilize its potential. I'm sure the elk will get pressured out, but last year it was a sanctuary for them. Here is a picture.View attachment 176151
I'd like to know more details but I'm not answering some survey to access the website. Sounds good. I wonder what Senator D feels about this. I don't have to guess Testter's position.![]()
BLM proposes 11,000-acre land purchase along lower Musselshell River
This story has been corrected to reflect that Craig Egeland is one of four partners owning the 73 Ranch and Hunt Club LLP and that the sell price of $5billingsgazette.com
I suspect the current status quo for grazing and access (none?) would work if the elk herd is that large now.When submitting your comments, consider mentioning other resource issues BLM should consider during the analysis of the acquisition. For example, travel management of existing roads. Livestock grazing management. The BLM's process for analyzing the impacts of acquiring new land is not just to inform the decision maker on whether or not to acquire the land. It also provides an opportunity to analyze impacts from different management alternatives if the land is acquired. No grazing vs. reduced grazing vs. current grazing OR X miles of existing road designated as open vs X miles closed.
They just walk across the river and become 410 elk.Pretty close to more than half the objective number of elk for the entire unit 700 in that herd.
Consider that when you hear “over objective” used by FWP or ranchers.
The roads are pretty much in place. No need to add more. The issue will be the land is managed for elk and deer with cattle ranching being secondary (IMO). That’s why the elk are there. It will need to be managed this way by the BLM. I don’t really know if they do that.I hope if it this goes through they dont just open up blm roads all over the "new BLM" including the area that is currently landlocked.
It was homesteaded in 1900 By my Grandpa's Grandpa William Coon that passed in 1934. Williams Dad (William T) came and homesteaded just south of him a few years later at 84. At that time the county seat was Glendive and he had to ride his horse back and forth a few times before finally getting a claim that wasn’t spoken for.Wicked cool @Schaaf
Do you know what year it was homesteaded?
Do you know if there are plans to restore the homestead site? Or is this preservation in current condition?