Conservation Properties
at Ulm, Montana - 2008
Conservation Properties
at Ulm, Montana - 2008
Large ranches predominate in this landscape. Conservation easements on private lands have been established to protect agriculture along both sides of the Missouri River and into the drainages of the Smith and Sun Rivers. The country on and around the 7 Bar Heart Ranch is spectacular from many landscape perspectives and for it's bountiful ecosystems. People comment on the beauty of this historic ranch landscape South and West of Great Falls, Montana.
The prairie is an historic range of the American Bison. These are the grasslands lying between the Rocky Mountain Front and the Big and Little Belt Mountains to the South. Here we have the mouth of the Smith River flowing West into the Missouri at Um; the nearby confluence of the Sun River flowing southeast meeting the Missouri; and the majestic landscape markers of Square Butte, Crown Butte and Shaw Butte lying to the sunset. When you stand on the grassy ridge, the Adel Mountains mark the southern line of the big valley. Here you contemplate the Lewis and Clark exploration upstream as they moved towards the Gates of the Mountains seeking the Headwaters of the Missouri. Standing on any ridge in this country you experience an expansive valley and the cottonwood bottoms as signatures of a prairie river.
The Montana Land Reliance and private landowners who value the special natural qualities have established a corridor of conservation easements on the Missouri below the Holter Dam. An easement on the 7 Bar Heart Ranch will complement this conservation corridor and become the open-space guarantee for a reserved home-site parcel and the tradition of ranching activities.
We seek a conservation buyer who will purchase the reserved parcel and allow for continued agriculture uses of the land. Sale of the property to a conservation buyer satisfies their wishes for preservation of family goals in favor of wildlife and ranching, while allowing the buyer to take advantage of recreation amenities within the ranching way of life.
Conservation buyers have two options for land acquisition. One is to buy a ranch in fee, and then protect it with a conservation easement. The second is to compensate a rancher who grants a conservation easement which reserves a single homesite, and to receive in return a parcel of deeded land including that homesite with recreation privileges on the rest of the ranch.

The "Small Homestead, Large Landscape" Choice
One way for conservation buyers to increase their benefits is to team-up with existing ranch families, rather than replace them. The "small homestead" solution, developed by American Conservation Real Estate and the Montana Land Reliance, works as follows:
The rancher grants a conservation easement which limits
development to a secluded homesite
The rancher sells the homesite, along with a parcel of deeded land and
recreation rights to the entire protected ranch to a conservation buyer
The rancher retains agricultural use rights to the deeded homesite parcel
The small homestead solution keeps ranchers in business. Ranchers may use the cash to buy out family members, alleviate debt, and otherwise position themselves to weather the vagaries of livestock markets. Moreover, their conservation easements are statements of personal commitment to a future for traditional ranch families, creating a climate in which other ranchers become more likely to grant easements.
Small homestead solutions allow conservation buyers to obtain the open space and recreational amenities they seek. Buyers can leverage their land purchase into the protection and enjoyment of ranches where market values may exceed their financial ability. Conservation buyers can leverage their purchase dollars into protection of the most expansive and spectacular ranches.
Perhaps most significantly, the small homestead solution brings together newcomers and historic families to share a landscape and learn about each other's values and goals. Contrary to popular perception, most ranchers care about native plant and animal communities, but are forced by market pressures to manage primarily for productivity. Conservation buyers can help these ranchers finance projects to enhance the prospects for native species. Human communities benefit, and so does nature.

Offering to a Conservation Buyer
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The owners of the 7 Bar Heart grant a Conservation Easement over 844-acres of private land, and reserve a single parcel of 320-acres for division and sale, with no other reservations for residential use.
The reserved parcel will have one designated building envelope of
5-acres in size to allow a single residence with a guest cabin and outbuildings.
Recreation rights to transfer with the parcel include: Fishing rights on the Missouri from the 7 Bar Heart at Ulm with floating put-in and take-out sites; Pheasant hunting on the ranch and river bottoms; Waterfowl hunting; Archery hunting of White-tailed Deer, Mule-deer and Pronghorn; Upland Game-bird hunting rights; and other recreation and non-commercial rights. Rights include access on adjacent State lease lands managed by 7 Bar Heart Ranch of approximately 760-acres.
7 Bar Heart, in exchange for the recreation rights, retains an agricultural easement across the 320-acre parcel, excepting the cow-free zone of the building envelope, consistent with the permitted and restricted uses of the conservation easement.
Offered at $1,500,000

Cottonwood bottoms along the Missouri River
GENERAL DESCRIPTION - THE RANCH
The 7 Bar Heart here consists of approximately 844-deeded acres, The operation includes 760-acres of adjacent State lease. The grassland benches contain intermittent and ephemeral drainages and ponds. A well and a system of tanks provide stock water to pastures used in grazing rotation.
The main ranch headquarters of another 2000-acres is five miles east at the town of Ulm. The Missouri River is the dominant water resource on the 7 Bar Heart property, and sits at the mouth of the Smith River flowing from the south. The Missouri flows north and east towards Great Falls and past Fort Benton into the Wild and Scenic stretches of the Missouri.
WILDLIFE AND ECOSYSTEM
Cascade and Ulm, Montana are part of a grassland ecosystem north of the Belt Mountains. These grasslands consist of a thick growth of annual and perennial plants, particularly grasses and forbs. The climate is extreme, characterized by sleet, hail and howling winds which desiccate the soil. Still, animals and plants live here in perfect harmony with their environment.
Many of the small mammals – prairie dogs, ground squirrels, pocket gophers, mice and badgers take shelter in burrows in the cool earth. Larger mammals such as the coyote, deer and pronghorn have thick coats that allow them to withstand the elements.

Ferruginous Hawk Burrowing Owl
A variety of birds inhabit the grasslands. Undisturbed grasslands shelter birds such as the sharp-tailed grouse, bobolink, long-billed curlew and the western meadowlark. Ponds river sloughs and marshes provide habitat for waterfowl, herons, shorebirds, gulls, terns and a number of water-loving song-birds. Agricultural areas, rocky breaks and river bottoms also have their corresponding complement of feathered inhabitants.
The adjoining forests provide shelter for an even greater variety of birds ranging from hummingbirds to jays to hawks, turkeys and Tanangers and warblers and woodpeckers. The waters associated with cottonwoods provide food for the Bald Eagle, Golden Eagle, osprey, red-breasted merganser, kingfisher and the dipper.

Common Snipe Short-eared Owl
Within this ecosystem, each species has its own set of environmental requirements and its own set of activities that enable it to survive and make its living. Each species, then, has its own ecological niche, composed of a particular habitat and a particular means of feeding and surviving in that habitat. More than a physical space, a niche is a way of life, believed to be unique for each species. Although species may be similar, they usually are separated either spatially, temporally or behaviorally.
The birds of prey demonstrate all three types of ecological separation. The American kestrel feeds primarily on insects, the osprey on fish, the falcon on birds and the great horned owl on mammals. Some, such as the golden eagle, hunt the open areas while others such as the sharp-shinned hawk, hunt the woodlands. The eagles, hawks and falcons hunt by day or at dusk while most owls hunt at night.
White-tailed deer are the most common big game on the ranch, found on the riparian bottom-lands. Mule deer frequent the range, sagebrush and mountainous areas. Pronghorn are common, black bear, river otter, beaver, bobcat and the occasional mountain lion and Elk can be seen in this region.

Pronghorn
The Missouri River supports a wide range of waterfowl species in different seasons. Commonly seen during spring and fall migrations are Mallard, Canada Goose, Snow Goose, Tundra Swan, Cinnamon, Blue-winged and Green-winged Teal, American Widgeon, Northern Pintail, Redhead, Canvasback, Northern Shoveler, Common Goldeneye, Lesser Scaup, Grebes and Common Merganser.

Missouri River Slough
Other species associated with the rivers and prairies in this region include White Pelican, Great-blue Heron, Double-crested Cormorant, Common Loon and Spotted and Upland Sandpiper, Wilson's Phalarope, Long-billed Curlew and other prairie shorebirds on ponds and reservoirs during migration and nesting. Prairie species are Sharp-tailed Grouse, Hungarian Partridge, Burrowing Owl, Short-eared Owl and prairie bird species many of whom can be found on the Bird List for the Benton Lake Wildlife Refuge just north of Great Falls:
http://www.npwrc.usgs.gov/resource/birds/chekbird/r6/benton.htm
Raptors known to nest on rock cliffs and in prairie habitat include Golden Eagle, Bald Eagle, Red-tailed Hawk, Swainson's Hawk, Ferruginous Hawk and Northern Harrier. Prairie falcon, American kestrel, Rough-legged Hawk (during winter), and Turkey Vulture are commonly seen. Long-tailed Weasel, Badger, Striped Skunk, Raccoon, Coyote occur in this area.
(Information taken from the Baseline Report for the Morgens Conservation Easement, and from Roadside Geology of Montana by David Alt and Donald Hyndman, 1986; MONTANA WILDLIFE, Montana Geographic Series #3, published by Montana Magazine)
Visit the “First Peoples Buffalo Jump State Park”
First Peoples Buffalo Jump State Park, formerly known as Ulm Pishkun, is an archaeological site with possibly the largest bison cliff jump in North America. Native peoples used this site for at least two thousand years prior to Lewis and Clark's expedition through Montana. The kill site consists of a mile long sandstone cliff; there are remnants of drive lines on top of the cliff and the remains of millions of 'processed' bison below. The park has an interpretive trail, picnic tables, and a protected black tailed prairie dog town to help the visitor better understand the epic history of hunting on the high plains.
In an effort to pay homage to the buffalo and the people who honor this mighty animal, First Peoples Buffalo Jump State Park has a on-site education center. Of more than 300 bison kill sites in Montana; First Peoples Buffalo Jump is the first of its kind. The 6,000 square foot center offers visitors buffalo culture exhibits, a storytelling circle, classroom, gallery and bookstore.
A pow-wow area and demonstration site are featured outdoors.
http://visitmt.com/categories/moreinfo.asp?SiteID=1&IDRRecordID=3100
CONSERVATION EASEMENT
A conservation easement is the strongest measure a landowner can take to protect the natural and agricultural character of his or her ranch. Conservation easements are perpetual restrictions on certain land uses, and are enforced by non-profit organizations known as land trusts, such as the Montana Land Reliance, who may be contacted in Helena, Montana at 406.443.7027.
The rights which the Montana Land Reliance would seek in a conservation easement are:
"to identify, to preserve and protect in perpetuity and to enhance by mutual agreement, the natural and open space, and the ecological and aesthetic features and natural flora and fauna on the land."
The exact provisions of the conservation easement will be determined through negotiations between the Montana Land Reliance and the grantor.
American Conservation Real Estate Co.
Missoula, Montana
406.443.7085
Lane Coulston, Broker
E-mail:
Spring 2008
Offering
to a Conservation Buyer
The owners of the
7 Bar Heart grant a Conservation Easement over 800- acres of private land, and reserve a single parcel of 320-acres for division and sale, with no other reservations for residential use.
Small Homestead Choice
One way that Conservation Buyers can increase their benefits is to team-up with existing ranch families, rather than replace them.
The "Small Homestead" solution developed by American Conservation Real Estate Company
and the Montana Land Reliance, works as follows:
"to identify, to preserve and protect in perpetuity and to enhance by mutual agreement, the natural and open space, and the ecological and aesthetic features and natural flora and fauna on the land."
Visit the "First Peoples Buffalo Jump State Park"
First Peoples Buffalo Jump State Park, known as
Ulm Pishkun, is an archaeological site with possibly the largest bison cliff jump in North America. Native peoples used this site for at least two thousand years prior to Lewis and Clark's expedition through Montana.
Square Butte and the Missouri River Country
Ulm Road West on the Benchlands