CAREY — Nearly 9,000 acres of prime sage grouse habitat in Blaine County is for sale at a discounted price.
The Nature Conservancy is selling the Cenarrusa Ranch, once part of the family’s sheep empire northeast of Carey, between the Pioneer Mountains and the Craters of the Moon National Monument.
The Cenarrusa name is well known in Idaho. Pete Cenarrusa, Idaho Secretary of State for more than three decades, owned land adjacent to the Cenarrusa ranch. The ranch was previously owned by the politician’s nephew Jim Cenarrusa.
The younger Cenarrusa sold the property earlier this year to The Nature Conservancy, so that the ranch — covered with sagebrush, native grasses, fish-filled creeks and wildlife — could be protected from future development.
Sage grouse and pronghorn inhabit the region, and that’s created increased efforts from multiple conservation agencies. The Pioneers Alliance, a coalition of conservationists (including the Conservancy), scientists, residents, ranchers and elected officials, began the efforts to conserve ranches in the area. The Cenarrusa Ranch is one of the largest of those ranches.
Tess O’Sullivan was part of the group that studied the pronghorn migration corridor north of Craters, as the fleet-footed mammals were “riding the green wave” of grass revealed as snow retreated into higher elevations. Pronghorn migrate through the Cenarrusa Ranch on their way to and from winter feeding grounds.
O’Sullivan now works for The Nature Conservancy as a species protection specialist.
The purchase of the ranch was a little out of the norm for the Conservancy, she said.
Most efforts taken by the group involve helping landowners conserve their own property by placing restrictions on their land. The restrictions, or conservation easements, lower the monetary value of the land and reduce property taxes, while making the property eligible for conservation money through the Department of Agriculture’s Natural Resources Conservation Service and other conservation entities.
Landowners give up certain rights to their property to protect the habitat from development, O’Sullivan said. One such conservation easement would allow public access to the land for hunting, fishing and hiking. Another would restrict grazing in wetland areas. Still another would require wildlife-friendly fencing to control cattle.
The conservation easements, which are voluntary and legally binding, stay with the property from owner to owner.
The Nature Conservancy purchased the ranch with the intention of reselling it to a buyer willing to accept restrictions on its use in exchange for a lower, more affordable price, O’Sullivan said. The price the organization gets from the resale of the land will depend on what conservation easements are negotiated in the sale.
“The intent,” she said, “is to keep the ranch undeveloped and open for all to enjoy.”
The Conservancy declined to say what it paid for the ranch, or its asking price. The online property listing says the price is “negotiable.”
“It’s a special place out here,” Pioneers Alliance member and conservation partner Kathy Molyneus said in a statement. “I’m excited that the Conservancy recognizes how much this land means to us as neighbors and has stepped up to protect it for the long term.”
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