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Different question for Idaman
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<blockquote data-quote="Idaman" data-source="post: 754030" data-attributes="member: 14119"><p>We seldom ran cattle down in those hill and it got a lot flatter up on top. We still had ten to one hundred thousadn acre pastures to contend with.</p><p></p><p>From a house along the river you could look up the chimney and check the cows in the meadow.</p><p></p><p>Actully since I have visited many many end of the road ranches in hopes of finding the perfect one I would say that the Imnaha country in northeast Oregom is the steepest that it is possible to run on. Across the river in Idaho a friend of mine said that when he was a kid they saw an old horse way up on one of the ridges above their house. His dad said "See that horse, watch for him he will die there." For a long time the horse remained there and then one day he disappeared and rolled down onto their road.</p><p></p><p>I would love to have a ranch that is up there and is for sale by the man who we bought our present ranch from. He has always had it priced way above the market so it hasn't sold. I may offer him all I can when this place sells and see if he would go for it. No harm in offering. 18000 acres all deeded some timber and never have to feed hay again. Probably the best ranch in the whole northwest.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Idaman, post: 754030, member: 14119"] We seldom ran cattle down in those hill and it got a lot flatter up on top. We still had ten to one hundred thousadn acre pastures to contend with. From a house along the river you could look up the chimney and check the cows in the meadow. Actully since I have visited many many end of the road ranches in hopes of finding the perfect one I would say that the Imnaha country in northeast Oregom is the steepest that it is possible to run on. Across the river in Idaho a friend of mine said that when he was a kid they saw an old horse way up on one of the ridges above their house. His dad said "See that horse, watch for him he will die there." For a long time the horse remained there and then one day he disappeared and rolled down onto their road. I would love to have a ranch that is up there and is for sale by the man who we bought our present ranch from. He has always had it priced way above the market so it hasn't sold. I may offer him all I can when this place sells and see if he would go for it. No harm in offering. 18000 acres all deeded some timber and never have to feed hay again. Probably the best ranch in the whole northwest. [/QUOTE]
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