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Sunday, June 21
by
EvaG
on Sun 21 Jun 2009 10:05 AM PDT
We visited the newly remodeled lodge at Rock Springs Guest Ranch a few days ago. The new owners had an open house to show the work they've done to it. Most of it was much needed and added a lot. A couple of things I would not have done. So it always is once you've sold something and the new owners remodel. Good to see some investment back into it by someone with the resources to do so.
First, they put a large covered entry on the front, something we've talked about doing for years, and fixed the weird front door next to the slider thing. It is really lovely. I would not have taken out the trees and flowerbeds from the front of the lodge, myself. Inside, they replaced the sliders by the fireplace with very nice tall windows, and raised the roof toward the pond, improving the view that way greatly. They put in all slate floors through the whole building, except the service areas. The juniper room where the retail and ping pong table were is now another living room space/ seating, with nice ADA bathrooms off it. The doors and glaoss into the pond room were removed, and it is part of the dining room now. Much nicer look, although we could never have done it because we were feeding the kiddos in there. They did also remove the entire upstairs and the bar, so everything is open. It adds a lot of light, but there's no pool or poker tables anymore, and the bar/stairwell sort of divided the space. The beams are all open, and the dining room and living room are all one now. Would not have been my choice. They also built in a fireplace and BBQ on the patio, extending the times when it is comfortable to sit out there, another thing that was on our wish list we could never afford. They've matched the wood walls pretty well where they have had to put up new pine, and I was glad to see they stayed with multiple, smaller sitting areas, the layout to the furniture is similar to when we had it. Large living spaces don't bring people together very well. I know many people are curious about what's happening there. They are working with a meeting planner, Ali Kiing, to bring in some conference groups and weddings. I suppose a group of our former guests could rent the whole place out, if they wanted to. I would have to say, in light of state of the world, including this morning's cautionary headlines about tourism in Central Oregon, I am so very relieved not to be running a dude ranch right now! If you are interested in what John and I are doing, find us at http:www.gilladventures.com. Happy Trails. Eva Gill Thursday, February 5
by
EvaG
on Thu 05 Feb 2009 07:48 PM PST
I am not sure why, but this site is still up. We were letting it lapse, but I thought I'd check on it. I have the new www.gilladventures.com site up with the new design. I plan to add some more content over the next two weeks, then announce the new site to everyone. Right now on the site we have:
http://www.gilladventures.com/family-dive.html - a story about scuba diving with the family in Mexico http://www.gilladventures.com/alvord-tokyo.html- a story about the contrast between Tokyo and the Alvord Desert, when we visited both within two weeks. http://www.gilladventures.com/codys-num-nums.html - thoughts about the process of chosing horses for ourselves after the sale of Rock Springs Guest Ranch http://www.gilladventures.com/SFO-with-monkey.html - a story about how I came to taking my girls on trips alone with mom and my most recent one to San Francisco. http://www.gilladventures.com/dude-ranch-stories.html - old stories from Rock Springs Guest Ranch newsletters. http://www.gilladventures.com/hannahs-pages.html - my daughter's thoughts on the sale of the ranch. http://www.gilladventures.com/image-gallery-SFO.html - San Francisco images http://www.gilladventures.com/image-gallery-tucson.html - Tucson images http://www.gilladventures.com/image-gallery-tucson-2.html- more Tucson images More is on it's way. Keep checking in there. Cheers!! Eva Tuesday, January 13
by
EvaG
on Tue 13 Jan 2009 02:13 PM PST
This is it, I guess: our last post on blogduderanch.com. The site comes up for renewal at the end of the month. There seems no point in keeping it up, now that Rock Springs Guest Ranch is sold and we are no longer dude ranchers. I will renew this domain name, and point it to the gilladventures.com site, which I will talk about more in a minute. January, as always, is a time for closing out the books, getting everything in order for the accountant. The true end of the year, before we turn our attention to the coming year. Writing this last post seems fitting to be posted now. The months since we closed the sale have been filled with sorting through the details of closing down a business, not unlike the sifting through of the estate of a lost loved one. Finally the cascade of unfinished business has reached an angle of repose and we are just working on the last tailings. John and I will be heading out on new adventures which we will write about on www.gilladventures.com. Right now, there is just a rudimentary site up there holding the space. I am working on a new site with stories, photos, and eventually video. It will be a non-linear look into our lives, and include mostly travel stories from our past and future. It’s intended to be entertaining, as well as a way for us to keep in touch with those whom we have met through the ranch and beyond. My hope is to have it up in the next couple of weeks, but I'm learning two new programs in the process. I will also set up a blog soon, there will be a link from the gilladventures.com site. The other contributer here at blogduderanch.com over the past couple of years was Heather Barklow. To catch up on her life in Texas, her new blog is http://handgadventures.blogspot.com/. So, this is goodbye from blogduderanch.com. Thanks to those of you who followed the posts here. I always loved having someone tell me “Oh, I read on your blog…” Happy Trails! Eva Wednesday, November 5
by
EvaG
on Wed 05 Nov 2008 10:21 AM PST
Things here are good. We were maybe a little naive about how soon we'd be able to relax and get everything wound down. I'm actually still working pretty much full time, and I'm not sure when I'll be done. I may be on payroll until the end of the year, or beyond even. I will say that the emotional relief has arrived, and I feel so much lighter than I have in a long time. The last few years were tough on me. I haven't told many people about the brinksmanship. There were several times that I thought we were headed for a financial train wreck. Just as we were completely out of money, something would happen to pull us through. A piece of ranch property would sell and close as a really big payroll was due. A huge family reunion group would put down a large deposit just when I had no idea how we were going to pay all the bills. Then things would be OK for a while, but this happened at least once a year for the past several. Teetering on the edge made everything else so much more difficult. Finally, though, I was able to think it through to the conclusion: OK, we go bankrupt. Or rather, the ranch does. We have enough assets to pay off the debt, eventually. At least we would not lose everything, personally. We would still have our home, our family. And, although buying our shares was a big stretch for us at the time, John and I were really only 17.5% owners, anyway. I tried hard not to hold on so tight, but that's most difficult at 3AM. So much of who we were and how we viewed our identity was tied up in Rock Springs Guest Ranch. The place was a part of us. Or, maybe, we were a part of it.
Anyway, I've not lost any sleep over the past month, and it is wonderful. John and I have managed to muck out the house. It was a disaster zone by the end of September. We'd not had the time or energy to do anything at home from early July on, as we were working on stuff we needed to put together for the sale during our busiest time of year, when John and I were already at the ranch 12 hours, 5 days a week. Being on top of this, the sale stuff took up our days off and any energy we might have for more than the laundry scramble and cleaning the stinking cat boxes. The garden still looks like the Adams family yard, but we've managed to get the file cabinets and boxes out of the driveway, the office supplies, notebooks, and files out of our upstairs hallway, and our own accumulation of life picked up to a state of what we might consider normal. John and I have set up desks in our loft area, once used for storing wrapping paper and the girls' art supplies. We have boxes shoved under the piano, filling our garden shed, and in the storage above the garage, but at least they are not in our face anymore. We have the visual noise out of the living space, anyway.
So, as I said, every time I realize that the ranch is gone, I feel a great rush of relief. Especially with the current state of the economy, I have serious doubts as to whether we would have survived had the sale not gone through. We've always felt the bumps of the stock market in our bookings, people don't book an expensive vacation when they are not feeling secure in their future.
We are looking forward to a Thanksgiving weekend with no responsibilities. We'll run off to the cabin on the lower Deschutes River and watch the water flow by, cook a feast for just us, and escape.
Monday, October 6
by
EvaG
on Mon 06 Oct 2008 08:27 PM PDT
I love the way Cody looks at me when he wants treats. Ears perked, eyes eager, his full attention is on me. He’ll even throw in a little nicker if I don’t respond. He can smell the pellets and apple slices in the saddlebags, and his mind is set on making me understand that he wants some num nums. He’s a beautiful animal, really. His sorrel skewbald patches on gleaming white, muscular body, and lovely shape draw your eye to him when he is in the field with the herd. But it is something less obvious and hard to articulate that draws me to him. He is always very curious about me, and watches like he wants to know what I am doing. At a trot or a canter, he holds his head much higher than he should. I’ve been told that this is not correct form, and we need to work on getting him to lower it. Somehow, though, it feels joyful to me. The way he bumps his nuzzle against my arm and side when I lead him through the field. The way he begs for treats. I often find myself on the verge of a giggle in his company. As the whole story of how we came to choose our horses is really too long to be a blog entry, the rest of this article is on our family site at http://www.gilladventures.com/codys_num_nums. If you are interested in reading it, you can finish it there... Cheers! Eva
Sunday, October 5
by
EvaG
on Sun 05 Oct 2008 03:17 PM PDT
After spending many hours of their vacations with “their” horses, our guests naturally become rather attached to them. This is especially true for those people who feel that they made real progress in their riding abilities and those who have come back to spend another vacation with the same mount several times. We have a private social network site for those former guests and staff who would like to keep in touch, and I see that people are using this as a tool to keep in contact. Unfortunately, we cannot maintain a relationship with our horses through cyberspace. I thought I’d take a few minutes to give you all a quick rundown as to the new homes and humans of our herd. Heather has worked really hard to find the right placement for each horse, and we are down to five who still need homes from the 80 some that were on property two months ago. When we announced the sale of the ranch, I mentioned in the e-mails to our guests that we would be looking for homes for the horses, and several have gone to new homes with those who fell in love with them during vacations. The farthest afield is Ginger, who joined Kiya for the long trip to Massachusetts where Rob Sepersky (Talia’s dad to many of you who have not been here with him) is her new human. Jesse and little Hank have made their way together to Mary Daniel’s farm in the Portland area. And Hollywood leaves soon on his journey to Arizona and his new home with Laurie Brooks (aka Carson.) Baja was bought by one of the photographers from the last photo clinic here, which was after the regular summer season, and headed to Portland with her. Of course, those horses who already belonged to our wranglers have gone back with them. Talia, Sarai, and Lander’s horses arrived only for the summer. Jenny the pony joined Stormy as she went back to Lydia Singer, longtime friend of Heather and sometimes wrangler. Julia from the kitchen is the proud owner of Hobo, and they are both living on Rocky Gill’s property across the street from the ranch. Jamie, our maintenance manager, gave Billy to his daughter Jasmine for her birthday, along with a saddle and a shiny new pink helmet! He will also keep his own horse Maverick. Jamie has stayed on working on the ranch for the new owners and both of their horses are also being kept on Rocky’s property (commonly known to us as fields 3-7 and the dry-lot.) Murphy and Lightning are going to Texas with Garrett and Heather. Yes, that is the new plan, Texas. And for those of you who remember Jaime Hickton, formerly Heather’s assistant head wrangler from Pennsylvania, she has brought Rowdy home across the country. Chris’ horses are living down the street, and he has also added Clover to his little herd. We Gills have also made homes for our favorites. Rocket, the last horse in our herd to have been born on Rock Springs Guest Ranch, has made her home with John’s sister Leslie just down the road. Jake moved to Idaho with Carrie Gill-Joseph, another sister of John’s. And the girls and I have kept Honey for Marlie, Rodney for Hannah, and Cody for me. There is a longer story there, which I will tell later. Naturally, Suzanne has kept Aladin.
A few of our horses will continue their work as dude horses and one will go into law enforcement. Both Blackjack and Casey are living at a dude ranch in Lakeview called Willow Springs. Long Hollow Guest Ranch in Sisters picked up Sage for their larger riders. Splinter went to a riding program in Redmond with Heather's friend Rusty, and Opie and George both went to the FlySpur Ranch here in Tumalo, another small guest ranch. And, Squirt has joined the sheriff’s posse in Newport. Several of our friends and neighbors in the Tumalo area now share the trails and arenas with quite a number of our horses. Country, Kenny, Yancy, Reilly, Duster, Opossum, Chief, Cisco, Twister, Cricket, Skipper, Ruger, Raven, and Jericho are all living not far from home. Staying in central Oregon are Sister, Fancy, Buckshot, Willy, Roany, and Scooter. Jazz and Dusty moved to LaPine and they have a 6-year-old for Jazz and a 16-year-old son for Dusty. Whiskey and Banjo moved to Christmas valley. Susan Kernutt Bale, lifelong guest and former long time employee has Joe for her little girl Scout.
Dozer went to a rehab farm in Arkansas, perfect for him. Sadly, there were those with serious health issues who will live on only in our hearts. Sunday, Mr. Tee, Shooter, Handy, Poco, Hawk, and my own children’s first horse, dear sweet Dori are all no longer with us. Callie and Tanna went back to previous owners, as did Cole. As of last night, we still have 5 left to place: Bandit, Duke, Bosco, Sammy, and Chip. We had a commitment to sell Duke, but the woman backed out at the last minute. We had been holding him for her since mid-summer, and she backed out just the other day. I am sure we will sell him, but it’s unfortunate that we could not have been showing him while selling the others. Heather managed to stay until now, helping with the sale of the horses. Knowing them as well as she does has helped a great deal in her being able to find the right match for each of them.
Happy trails!!
Eva Tuesday, September 30
by
EvaG
on Tue 30 Sep 2008 08:25 AM PDT
Phew. The last couple of weeks have been difficult. The sale closed last week, on Wednesday the 24th. We had an auction on the 13th, and sold off all the furniture. That single day was longer than any week of the summer. It’s a very strange feeling to see all the furniture that I picked out (leather in the lodge, all those little cowboy print chairs…) sitting on the lawn the day before. We had one last staff gathering at the campfire on the 11th, roasting marshmallows and making s’mores. Smash took the sign from the YC building, it will live with her. Seems like an appropriate place for it, after she spent so many years counseling youth and building piñatas there. The staff were incredible to the end. All sticking around to help us through, and sad but supportive. Moving furniture, cleaning out buildings. Not easy stuff, and it was really nice to have all of them there with us. Such terrific people we have had the pleasure of working with. John and I still have filing cabinets and boxes all over our house and in our garage. We’ll start sifting through that stuff once we have everything else wrapped up. I saw the plans for the lodge remodel. They are planning a portico on the front (we wanted one for years, but could never afford to build one) and they are raising the roof in the pond room to improve the view from the dining room. They’ll also put in doors from the pond room directly onto the patio, to improve the traffic flow. Oh, and add ADA bathrooms, of course. It looks really nice.
Saturday, September 6
by
EvaG
on Sat 06 Sep 2008 07:29 PM PDT
The closing of the sale of Rock Springs Guest Ranch is fast approaching. Our current closing date is scheduled for the 24th, just a couple of weeks away. In the mean time, on Saturday the 13th, we are having a huge auction to sell off almost all of our furniture, tools, truck, housekeeping "Mr Bean car" (the Taylor Dunn,) riding lawn mower, a bunch of saddles, etc., etc. The new owners are going to refurbish the rooms and the lodge, starting from scratch so everything matches. Not something a little mom and pop like us could have afforded, but how larger companies work. The cabins really do need new carpet and bathroom finishes, like tile and stuff. We've had all kinds of people calling about the horses, Heather has been crazy busy selling them. Many have gone home with guests who spent a week (or many) riding them here on vacation. She's sold a bunch of the tack, too. We'll sell a good chunk of the tack at the auction, and John's sisters will be selling the really nice or collectible saddles individually. The new owners don't want the artwork, either. We'll probably be selling off at least a couple of the Phil Tyler paintings, the A. Kelly Pruit drawings, and maybe the Penny Onstot sculpture later. I moved my office home this week, a ton of work but it's good to have all the stuff I need to close up the business out of the way while we go through everything and put it together for the auction. tomorrow the cousins come in and help with the sifting through of things. Friday, August 29
by
EvaG
on Fri 29 Aug 2008 09:47 AM PDT
Today is the last day of our last season here at Rock Springs Guest Ranch. The sale will close in a couple of weeks, and John and I will move our offices to our house while we wrap up business. The new owners of the ranch want the domain name and the phone number, so contact with us will not be so very easy. I have put up a new website for our own adventures, and have set up e-mail addresses through that. You can track us down at www.gilladventures.com, my address being eva@... and John being john@... . We will use one of the cell phones for remaining RSGR business, and I'll post that number on the new site soon, as well as a PO box mailing address. We'll be leaving up the social network site for our former staff and guests to keep in touch and share where they go from here. Many people have asked me for recommendations of ranches who are most like us. I am putting together the information based on the horseback riding, youth program, and ethics. I'll post that as soon as I finish getting the information gathered and have had a chance to talk with the other ranchers. I want to do this right, not just off the cuff.
Sunday, August 10
by
EvaG
on Sun 10 Aug 2008 12:01 PM PDT
There have been many questions and concerns about what will happen to the ranch when we turn it over to the new owners, and I thought I’d take a moment to allay some fears. First, we have been impressed by this company’s people and culture.
Here is what I know from them so far: They intend to keep the name Rock Springs Ranch. The buyer has been talking with John about consulting with them about the operation before and after the change in ownership. They are also looking into their operational and staffing needs. Those who live around us in Tumalo will not see any major change in the operations. They also assure us that they plan to be the same good neighbor that Rock Springs Guest Ranch has always been.
Soon after closing the purchase, they are intending to re-roof and re-carpet the cabins, and put a portico on the front of the lodge. These are all things we had on our list, but did not get to. A few years ago, we had a conditional use permit to build a new guest accommodation and remodel the lodge. We ended up putting those plans on hold, and never got back to them. The changes the new owners are anticipating were ones we would have done ourselves. Interestingly enough, John e-mailed me this morning with an article in the Denver Post today.
Dude ranch tradition disappearing By Colleen O'Connor The Denver Post Maggie Palazzari evangelizes about Sylvan Dale Guest Ranch on the Big Thompson River.
She raves about the "Cowgirl Round-Up" — like a slumber party with horses, plus a cowboy serenade. She so adores this Western lifestyle — riding horses and driving cattle — that she has visited four times in four years and recently invited her sister to meet her at the ranch for a family reunion.
Jenny Mayer didn't take long to accept. It took just momentary reflection upon the history of dude ranches, and these changing times.
"I thought, 'Are they going to go away or be here? I'd better do it before it's impossible,' " said Mayer, eating a steak-and-baked-potato dinner at the picnic tables as dusk fell on this 62-year-old dude ranch. "I don't know what the future holds."
That is a key question as the Old West morphs into the New West, and dude ranches fall victim to soaring land prices, tough economic realities and a new generation of guests who would rather eat bruschetta than beans and who demand a hot tub after a long day in the saddle. In the past 25 years, the Colorado Dude and Guest Ranch Association has lost more than half its members, from about 68 to 30. In
"The dude-ranching tradition is a little bit endangered, especially in places where there is development pressure," said David Jessup, who co-owns the Sylvan Dale Guest Ranch with his sister, Susan. They've started to sell homesteads, a small collection of 4-acre lots that start at $250,000, plus a membership fee of $9,000 that gives access to all dude-ranch amenities. The slogan on the marketing brochure captures the zeitgeist: "New
The Jessup siblings, who grew up on this family-run dude ranch, are intent upon preserving the place. "The ranch has diversified over the past 30 to 40 years in order to survive," Susan said. They do weddings and holiday dinners and bunk-and-breakfast weekends, along with the Cowgirl Round-Up with a yoga class, moonlight ride, campfire and s'mores. They've also put 60 percent of their land into conservation easement, which ensures the land won't be developed — and also lowers their taxes. And, in 2006, they finally added a hot tub to the dude ranch, fulfilling the No. 1 request from guests. These days, most dude ranches have Jacuzzis and also offer activities such as rock climbing and foot reflexology.
"We're starting to drift toward the resort side even as we try to stay true to the cowboy image and make sure people get the ranch experience," said Bob Foster, president of the Colorado Dude Ranch Association, who owns the
The solution for Penny Persson at the Colorado Cattle Co. & Guest Ranch is to offer a "hybrid experience" that blends a working cattle ranch with the comforts of a five-star resort. Guests can work the ranch all day, branding and roping, then return at night to soft chenille bathrobes, huge bath sheets — not mere towels — and fall into cushy beds with deluxe mattresses and down comforters imported from Sweden.
For those who correctly sleuth out what guests want, and protect their core business of horses, "the future of dude ranching is very bright," said John Fisher, president of The Home Ranch, which he says has been full all summer. That's how Melanie Timmins sees it too. She and her husband, Patrick, recently bought the scenic Rawah Guest Ranch near Glendevey at the
That's how Melanie Timmins sees it too. She and her husband, Patrick, recently bought the scenic Rawah Guest Ranch near Glendevey at the
When the couple bought Rawah Guest Ranch, they embarked on a flurry of renovation and redecoration. "Everything was stripped, from linens to mattresses," Melanie said. "The cabins are still rustic, but when people are done hiking, they can get into a nice shower with granite countertops."
At the Bar Lazy J in Parshall, the "spa ride" — part of its weekly package — is particularly popular, a trek on horseback to the Hot Sulphur Springs Resort & Spa, where dude-ranchers can soak in the hot mineral springs or book a massage. On a recent Friday, a group of guests dismounted their horses across from the Hot Sulphur Springs Spa after lunch in nearby
At Bar Lazy J, where the word spa so easily becomes a verb, the onsite masseuse is swamped with business. "If someone told me that I'd be having a masseuse on board and that the swimming pool would be the focal point of the ranch and that people would be doing rides to soak in the hot spa, that's not the kind of ranch I'd want to buy," said co-owner Jerry Helmicki. "But that's what the guests want, so we offer it."
Over at the Laramie River Dude Ranch, co-owner Bill Burleigh closely monitors these developments. "People are looking for amenities that they didn't have before, like improved food," he said. "People used to associate steak and beans with the dude ranch, but now they're looking for vegetables and alternatives."
At Sylvan Dale, during a recent lunch, there were four choices of pizza: meat, cheese, vegetarian and bruschetta. Guests snatched up the trendy Italian bruschetta first and fast, leaving an empty pan.
That same week, at Bar Lazy J, Angela and Martin Reilly, visiting from
Colleen O'Connor: 303-954-1083 or coconnor@denverpost.com More profitable to sell Land prices can make selling a dude ranch more profitable than running one, causing some owners to sell the land to developers or private interests.
• In 2005, former eBay president Meg Whitman paid $20 million for the 150-acre Skyline Guest Ranch near Telluride — buying it from owners exhausted after running a dude ranch for decades — and turned it into a private residence.
• Peaceful Valley Guest Ranch near
• The
• Beaver Meadows Resort Ranch in
• The C Lazy U Guest Ranch at Sunday, July 27
by
EvaG
on Sun 27 Jul 2008 11:40 AM PDT
Our announcement went fairly well last week, letting everyone know we are selling the ranch. Reactions have been mixed. Although everyone is sad to see this bit of our lives pass on, everyone seems to approach their grief in a different way. Most of our staff and guests have been very supportive. Many staff members have come into my office to let me know they are with us, and will see things through to the last day. Although they are sad to leave the ranch, they understand the decision and are happy for us as we start a new adventure. Even some whose personal reaction was very emotional tell us they understand and wish us the very best. Several of our guests have shared what the ranch has meant to them and their families over the years, or told us of those milestones they were looking forward to: the toddler who would be able to ride a big horse, the child or teen who wanted to be a wrangler. And yet, in the same breath, these same guests have been able to give us their encouragement in our new life. They know that all things must eventually change, and are grateful for the ways in which the ranch has touched their lives. I very much appreciate the notes and words of encouragement. The grace with which staff and guests have taken the news, and the appreciation for what we have given them. There have been a small handful of people who have taken the news too personally to find it in themselves to be encouraging. They are not yet able to let go of the future and simply be grateful for what they have had in the past, as the change is too painful for them. This pain has led a couple of people to be angry with us, as grieving usually includes an element of anger. Others have expressed their ideas of how things should have been handled differently. I’d like to address one or two of these. First, we had not really decided to sell the ranch until we were approached with an offer. We’ve talked about how we might exit, but no options were very appealing. Let’s follow some of our options through their courses. Some speculate that it might have been better to put the ranch on the market and see if we could find a buyer who would run it under the same program. Here is the scenario: We announce to the staff and guests we plan to put the ranch on the market. The staff do not feel secure in their jobs, and begin to look at their options. Perhaps they would rather stay with us, but the security of a good permanent position elsewhere is awfully appealing. Turnover starts, and the experience goes downhill for everyone. Sales decline. A few years ago, the land down on highway 20 where our sign used to sit was for sale. The owners put a big “for sale” sign up that literally wrapped around our directional sign to the ranch. Rumors flew around that we were for sale. Two retreat groups and one large family reunion group for the summer told us they would not book because they heard we were for sale. The retreats did end up coming when we explained that it was only rumor, but the reunion had already placed a large deposit elsewhere. Nobody wants to place their faith in plans with a company which may not be there a few months down the road. If we were truly for sale, our sales would spiral downward. A long time on the market. Any way you look at it, this type of business does not make the return on investment that someone looking for just a business opportunity would consider. Those ranches that are successful are those where the land has been in the family for a long time and there is no huge mortgage to meet, those who are owned by someone who made their fortune elsewhere, love the idea of dude ranching, and are willing to support it, or those properties who are large enough to get better economies of scale. This makes the market for an operating dude ranch really, really small. Most are on the market for quite a while before selling, years even. The combination of a downward spiral in staff and revenues with a potential time on the market of three years would have been devastating. Not to mention, usually new ownership and management brings changes that those who love our creation may or may not like. Others feel that we should have had one of John’s sisters run the ranch. I don’t think they understand the commitment. During the summer, John and I cannot leave town, and are here typically 12 hours a day, 5 days a week. We turn our lives over to this place for the experiences of others. Their father, Rocky, has talked about selling the ranch for the past several years. In these conversations, none of John’s sisters has ever mentioned a desire to buy John and me out and take over. And lastly, others simply cannot understand why we would walk away from something so beautiful. I’ve talked about this at length in my previous post, so I will not go into detail here. Suffice it to say that the commitment we’ve made for the past 20-sonething years is enormous. Now, we would like to focus our lives on our own experiences for a time. Again, I thank everyone for your understanding and encouragement. It makes me satisfied and even joyful to end with so much support and such a wonderful summer. In Joy~ Eva Wednesday, July 23
by
EvaG
on Wed 23 Jul 2008 02:20 PM PDT
Over the past decades, we have spent our summers sharing the “ranch life” with people from around the world. Families spent a week or two of their summer vacation with us, horseback riding, relaxing, and sharing meals together. This summer we are doing the same, but with a huge difference. This summer will be our last, as we have entered into an agreement to sell the ranch. We will be finishing out the summer, as well as two weddings at the end of the season. (We could not see putting their nuptials in the lurch, and felt we really needed to see them through.) Certainly, this change brings many mixed emotions. Grief for the end of an era. Sadness at the thought of losing touch with our wonderful guests. Regret for our staff as we will no longer be their employer. Angst about venturing into the unknown. Uncertainty that comes with change. But also excitement at new beginnings. Hope for more time with our children and to explore our own possibilities. We have known for quite some time that it would come to this. The irrigation district is working toward “improving” their water delivery system to minimize loss. This means our wonderful Also, it seems that offering a remarkable program and taking care of our staff is no longer enough to make it financially. We have been scraping by for about seven years now. Several things have contributed to this. Schools start earlier to have more time to get ready for the federal standardized testing. No more full weeks in late August, children are in the classroom starting on the 15th. The travel industry started discounting heavily after 9/11. Because this changed to traveler’s perception of value, many people are no longer willing to pay full rate. People are increasingly looking for the best “deal.” Having always based our pricing directly on our costs, we can’t compete without changing our service or programs. We have always offered the programs people find in a larger facility, but without the crowds of people to pay for it. The skyrocketing cost of food, hay, and fuel have further eroded our position. We have made it our priority to take care of our staff as well. Many ranchers put their staff on salary to avoid paying overtime, or use their gratuities to cover their wages. Unfortunately, our idealistic views are not in line with profitability when much of the public is not ready to pay for these practices. We can either be someone we do not wish to be, or get out of the business. This has all taken its toll on us. Where we used to feel the passion for the ranch every day, now we are getting tired. It is disheartening to put so much energy into something without success in all aspects of it. Although we know from our guests that by the measure of their experience we have been successful, that does not re-roof the cabins or re-tile the pool. So, when we were approached about this, we were ready to let go. The ranch will be a wonderful fit for the company buying it. We have liked everyone we have met in their group, and love that it will still be a place to “unplug and reconnect.” As for ourselves, we are not sure where we will go from here. John and I should have enough buffer to be able to take time to think through “what we want to do when we grow up.” We will not be able to retire, but at least can decompress and explore our options. He is exploring video production, travel logs, and podcasting. His degree is in finance and real estate, and he may turn toward something in that arena. I have long wanted to write but lacked the time. I’ll spend my time exploring travel and copy writing, as well as committing to words the stories in my head and see where they take me. I hope that our paths will cross again. Perhaps in our own wanderings. Sunday, June 22
by
EvaG
on Sun 22 Jun 2008 06:12 PM PDT
Holy Cow, We've already finished the first week of our summer. It will be week 7 before I know it! Things are going really well so far. We've got a wonderful crew, and some really outstanding people here this year. Of course, we all miss having Hud here every day. Wednesdays are not enough, especially since that's my day off and I really don't see him at all. Hmmm- I wonder if that was on purpose... But, Alex and Paul have not missed a beat running the youth program, and both Hollie and Alice are really outstanding with the kids. They've both worked with children a lot, and it shows. This week started pretty quiet down in the YC building this morning, I imagine that will change as the week goes on and the kids all get to know each other better. Chris, our new head wrangler, is doing well in the barn. A little nerves here and there, but he's relaxing into it. I think Heather is enjoying her last summer with much less weight on her shoulders. It's great to have the familiar faces of Talia, Lander, and Sarai back. Talia just graduated in astrophysics, and Lander just took his LSAT. They're all taking out great rides and visiting with the guests at dinnertime. The new wranglers are a lot of fun. Emily is excited to be trying out Chris' barrel racing horse, Brittany is getting lost on the back roads in her Jeep, having to back out of windy dirt roads for miles, and Karalyn will probably never try to drink out of a horse watering trough again! Both Josh and Alison in the office are terrific. They are really competent and reliable, and also engaging. Naturally, Tricia and Heather are both still amazing and also very happy to have such great help. The kitchen crew is mostly the same, with Steven, Shaun, Bryan, and Vera cooking things up. They are joined this year by Nancy, who is just delightful. This summer, we also brought in a friend of Alex, opera singing Harrison. He totally gets the guest thing, and is both hard working and gracious. The dining room looks great, thanks to Julia. Our housekeeping is no less friendly or competent. Charlie, Dawn, and Darla all work really hard, yet never fail to say hello or stop to chat if they have time. The new international girls this year are Renae from Jamaica, who will not hesitate to take on any task, and yet is so gracious and poised. And, the ever giggling Aika and Dina from Kazakhstan both add laughter and work hard to keep everything clean as well as serve in the dining room. The maintenance crew is all returning, with Jamie, Charlie, Joe, and Derek. They are all so very helpful, and jump right on fixing anything that is broken. So, we are very fortunate! Everywhere I look I see faces of people I enjoy and respect. It also helps that this week includes some of my favorite guests, as well...
Friday, May 30
by
EvaG
on Fri 30 May 2008 03:25 PM PDT
Irish Times newspaper (in Ireland- duh) included us in an artcle they called 10 Great American Holidays. We were very excited to make this list. The other trips they included were mostly general areas, such as Florida Family Fun, Fall For New England, Viva Los Vegas, and Shop in New York. The only other individual property featured was Canyon Ranch Resort in Tucson, Arizona. And, they are about 8 times our size! I've attached a copy of the article, if you'd like to see it. Here's what they said about us: (no, we did not tell them we had log cabins...I don't even remember talking with the writer) 10 Ride the Oregon trail If it's a dude ranch you're looking for, look no farther than Rock Springs, in Oregon. This 26-room venue punches so far above its weight that it has featured in National Geographic and won accolades from Condé Nast Traveller. Visitors stay in their very own log cabin, and you know you've come to the right place when you hear a place advertise a lack of mobile-phone coverage and e-mail facilities as a plus. Visitors are paired with horses for the week before setting out into the sagebrush and ponderosa pines. And when not doing your Billy Crystal City Slickers impersonation, there's yoga, massage, tennis, swimming, golf, fly-fishing and rafting to choose from, as well as more barbecues than you could shake a refried bean at. It's a family affair, too, with a children's programme of riding (below), games, crafts and nature walks. The ranch is open from June until the end of August, with some vacancies still available this summer. Prices start at about €1,785 for a week; the local airport is served by connections from Los Angeles. 00-1-541-3821957, http://www.rocksprings.com/
Friday, May 23
by
EvaG
on Fri 23 May 2008 03:44 PM PDT
For summer!! Steven and the kitchen crew put in a new fire pit for cooking down by the campfire, and Jamie is putting in new log tables and benches, like the ones out at the breakfast ride site. He's planning on cooking out one night a week, and we are very excited to try out the new space. John just ordered a new peddle boat. The old one imploded last year. OK, not really, but it did become un-pondworthy. Tricia and Heather C. have been replacing bedding. Chris and Heather B. are buying some new horses. (You can see a couple of the new ones on our horse of the month on the website at http://www.rocksprings.com/Dude_Ranch/Horseback_Riding/Horse_of_the_Month/) Kent (former Rock Springs Guest Ranch employee) came out and cut another window into the little bar in the lodge. Now it will be open toward the living room, not just toward the walkway between the living and dining rooms. It opens up that corner, and will allow the person working in the bar to see and talk with everyone better. John sanded down a juniper slab countertop for the window, which turned out very pretty. And another big purchase of the kind I really dislike (because nobody sees them, and it does not improve the guest experience,) a new commercial washing machine. I know housekeeping is excited, but as I said in an earlier post when I was talking about the new kitchen stove, it's sort of like having the breaks done on your car. Gotta have them, but it feels like money just vanished. Oh, and another fun one (not,) some re-working of the new pool heater. Early arrival staff are starting to show up, things are coming together for the new season. Hope to see you soon!!
Friday, May 9
by
EvaG
on Fri 09 May 2008 10:51 AM PDT
Ahh. Spring is here...finally. It's turning warm, although the sprinklers create an icy landscape in the early hours. Things are just beginning to green up, and the daffodils are blooming in the garden. It's been a long time coming this year. We have a few new residents here at Rock Springs Guest Ranch. Besides Chris, I mean. Our numbers have grown in fur, feathers, and fins. First, we had a stray feral cat move in this winter. Nasty thing that kept attacking little Bo Kitty. Poor Bo would make a run for the door to try to get inside any time she could. We trapped the little wild thing, which left us in a dilemma. The local humane society always puts down feral cats as they come in. Although extremely shy and wild as heck, she was healthy and pretty, and we struggled with the thought of taking her to her death. So, we contacted the local "sniphouse," a spay and neuter clinic/ no kill shelter. They were completely full, as they recently rescued a large number of cats some crazy had "collected" in a trailer somewhere. We couldn't have Bo living in constant fear, so I made them an offer. We traded Bo's attacker for another semi-wild kitty and her sister. Both were very scared little kitties, and we set them up with a bed and food in John's new international recycling center. (If you weren't here last summer, that is a whole other story...) Sadly, one of the sisters disappeared the second night. Actually, they both disappeared on the second night, and one reappeared under our deck a couple of days later. She has progressed from very scared to letting us pet her some of the time. Some of you may remember that Bo was a scared little wild kitty when she showed up, too. That was before she realized she was a princess. Between Marlie and the staff here, I think we've settled on the name Pookie Blue for the new kitty. I'll post a picture. As for feathers, well, the babies only have down yet, the feathers are just starting to come in on the older three goslings. The usual two couples are back, along with a could of other geese, and they are leading around their mini flock. And lastly, the fins are the new load of fish for the pond. We had a delivery yesterday, so the Osprey and the Eagles should be showing up to fish soon... Hope they leave a few for our guests.
Tuesday, April 29
by
Heather Barklow
on Tue 29 Apr 2008 10:33 AM PDT
Hello everyone! Heather here, just trying to stay warm on this 40 deg. day at the end of April. Funny that May begins in 2 days and we still aren't out riding every evening. :-) Besides that, all is quite well. I am enjoying my time with Chris. He will be a fabulous Head Wrangler. We have been looking at a lot of new horse prospects and have even brought a few home to the ranch. Other than that, we are spending a lot of time going over our programming, taking out rides, and more generally, giving Chris a crash course in Head Wrangler 101. Just 5 more weeks until our 2008 staff arrive and about 7 weeks until go time. Of course my life continues to change and evolve.. I am no longer heading to massage school. I start a Reiki Master program tomorrow and then I am attending a 2-week intensive acupressure course in Sept. After completing the course, I will be certified in Equine/Canine acupressure and will continue to learn/practice energy work and healing. I have re-opened my business, "Equine Connections,llc" and I plan to specialize in Equine assisted programs... It is quite expansive really. I will be doing anything from consulting to energy work to instruction to soul directed therapy. Garrett and I are still heading south to AZ for at least the winter season. We also have plans to travel abroad and work in the next year or 2. There are so many options, we love it! Well, enough about me. :-) I hope to see all of you soon and I appreciate all the kind words and wishes. I am happy to spend another fabulous season with all of you at RSGR. I know that we are gearing up for the best one yet! In joy and appreciation~ Heather Barklow Saturday, April 26
by
Chris Mercier
on Sat 26 Apr 2008 08:45 PM PDT
Hi everyone! So, I finally made it to Rock Springs and have settled in.
I left Kentucky on April 15th and made it to the ranch on the 19th,
2,300 miles later. Well, I must say the trip was definitely worth it. I
brought along my dog Harley for company and a good roommate. She'll
never hog the remote and I doubt she'll complain that we go out riding
too much. I am having two of my horses shipped out too to join the herd
and make some friends. Everyone at Rock Springs has been awesome and I
am really excited to be here and can't wait for the season to begin.
Heather and I are already working on what is going to be an amazing
season.
Friday, April 25
by
EvaG
on Fri 25 Apr 2008 11:55 AM PDT
Yesterday Jamie and the folks from The Leadership Challenge were here a the ranch setting up the dismount from our new zipline, and were working through the details of operating it. Several of our staff were able to go out and take a run on it. There was much laughter, some some more nervous and some less. Heather C. from guest services, Julia, our new dining room lead, Chris, our new head wrangler, and Chef Steven all took a turn. John and I had cameras in hand and captured a large part of it, well, not really on film. We're hoping to get it set up so we can use it during the summer, but we have some things to work out first. We built it for our conference groups, and open it for them. It takes several people to run, and we schedule a crew for the day to do it. In order to open it up for our summer families, we need to work out kids full harnesses (rather than the seat kind) and scheduling for it, even though there will be weeks when nobody is interested. Like I said, we are hopeful, but not ready to advertise it on our website. I'll post a few pictures, too.
Tuesday, April 8
by
EvaG
on Tue 08 Apr 2008 01:12 PM PDT
I've been working with Paul and Alex to put the plan together for our summer youth program. They will be heading it up, now that Hud has followed his wife to LaPine for her teaching job. Knowing that he would be leaving the ranch, Hud spent quite a lot of time with them last summer while he was working with them to let them know the "management" side of things they will need to know to make sure all of our younger guests have a really fun vacation with us this summer. He'll come out before the summer, too, to help them get everything set up. But the best news yet is that he's planning to be here every Wednesday this summer!! He's arrange things with his new employer so he can come work one day a week here to see everyone. I know we will miss him, and I know my girls will miss him. They're already figuring out how they can be here on Wednesdays, which we usually take off together as a family. We have the other people hired for the season, as well. One is a good friend of Paul's who has been a youth counselor for several years named Alice. The other is a girl named Hollie who has nannied and been a teen program intern/coordinator at the High Desert Museum. We are very excited to have this terrific youth counseling crew here at the ranch this summer!
Wednesday, April 2
by
Heather Barklow
on Wed 02 Apr 2008 02:16 PM PDT
Hello everyone! It has been I while and I apologize for that. :-) It seems like we went straight from Feb. to April around here. I am back from vacation and we are gearing up to welcome Chris, our new head wrangler this month. He will be starting by the end of the month and is even bringing a few horses and his dog! YAY! Other news.. We have had 2 days in a row over 50 deg. and we are out on the trails again. Some of you may not believe this but there is already 'dust'. HAHA... Most of our wrangling staff will be arriving the first week of June and we will surely get lots of riding and training in before our guests start to join us on the 14th of June. It will be a full house this summer in the area of staff housing, which is great for guest and staff interaction. I even heard a rumor that Hud may be helping out a bit this summer. A little reunion at Rock Springs! Besides all of that, we are starting to get the horses in shape and I am traveling around the state looking to add another 8-10 fabulous horses to our already outstanding herd. It is a joyous time! :-) Happy Spring to everyone and I am sure that I'll write again soon. With love and joy~Heather B. Friday, March 28
by
EvaG
on Fri 28 Mar 2008 03:21 PM PDT
Hello from Japan! We have had the rare experience of finding ourselves on three continents in one month. Late February, we left for France, on the ski trip to Meribel and the Three Valleys that John has always dreamed of. We were favored with the best snow they've had in the past few years, and the skiing was all John had hoped for. We were joined by our long time friends Kris and Becky. The apex of the trip for John and Kris was a day with new snow and their guide Andre'. They are both steeps junkies and spent the day climbing to chutes and jumping off cliffs they had only dreamed of anywhere else. Becky and I stuck to the blue and red runs... We took a side trip to Nice and Monaco, and fell in love with Nice. We sprang for rooms at the Hotel Negresco, and they upgraded us to a suite. Our room looked out over the Bay of Angels and the promanade by the water. The hotel is a grand old, regal landmark, and their art collection was really impressive. Everywhere we went, the people were delightful. The French in our group was limited to my few weeks of listening to Fodor's French for Travelers in the car before our trip. Living about 3000 miles from French Canada, it is not a language that makes it's way into our everyday lives very often. Almost everywhere we went, people spoke at least a little English, and where they didn't I could stumble through. The girls stayed home this trip, and again this could not have turned out better: Hud stayed with them. Since his move to LaPine, they miss him like crazy, and there is no adult in this world they would rather have stay with them while John and I are away. It was so nice to talk with them and have their "I miss you" no less casual than when I'm gone for a day. The other high of the trip was the Savoie foods. We ate the most amazing cheeses and sausages, and drank so many wonderful Vin de Savoies. It has been fun for us to juxtapose the French foods with the fish and sake here in Japan, which we also love. The other curiousity is meal times. Dinner in France is never early, the restaurants do not open until 7:00 and are not crowded until 9:00. Here in Japan, dinner is 6:00 or 6:30. The downside of the trip, which was not a small one for us, is the weak dollar, especially against the Euro. It hit an all-time low while we were there, and seemed to purchase about 25 cents worth of anything. We broke records for us in money spent on a dinner out and a hotel room. Needless to say, we did not come back with many souvenirs. Next time, we will try to time our trip when there is a more favorable exchange rate. I do wonder, though, if it will bring more Europeans to the states, as it makes travel in the US a bargain for them. Shortly after we set our France trip dates and paid for our apartments there, my brother told us he is moving from Tokyo to Yakima, Washington. While this makes it so much easier to visit him and his family, it takes away the cultural element from any visits. Although we really can't afford to make two huge trips like this back to back, we decided we really should take the girls back over spring break. We started our trip heading to Izu-Oshima Island, and stayed in a charming little fishing town called Habu. We love finding out of the way, remote places that are not influenced so much by tourism. Children in the grocery store here stared at our little blondies, and the Japanese we told we were going there could not understand why, even those on the island. I admit it would be difficult to navigate without by brother and sister-in-law to interpret, but our stay was lovely. Right now we are staying on Lake Chuzenji, in a traditional Japanese inn called Hotel Kojoen. It's right on the water, and we had snow the other morning. The view was breathtaking. We drove down to Nikko yesterday, spending half of the day in shrines and temples and the afternoon at Tobu World Square. The latter has miniatures of over 100 of the archetectural marvels of the world. Many were from Japan, some of which we've seen the real buildings on a previous visit. Most were from all over the world. As excited as I was about the Tosho-gu Shrine, the girls were even more thrilled with the miniature world. Our guests often "complain" that we feed them too much food. Now I am glad that we do so on the buffet, where they can choose to take as much or little as they like. Our rooms both here at the Hotel Kojoen and at the Sea Cliff in Habu have included breakfast and dinner. The food has been amazing, and the quantities overwhelming. We are learning to come to meals as hungry as possible, as we have not been able to finish otherwise. Today we head back to Tokyo for our last couple of nights before heading home. It has been a wonderful trip. Traveling with my brother and his wife has been a great way to reconnect and get to know them better. We were never close as children, and he left for college when I was a sophomore in high school thirty years ago. Just as we see with extended family groups who stay with us at Rock Springs Guest Ranch, sharing new experiences together where nobody has to cook for or clean up after anyone else offers a unique opportunity to grow closer. And, lastly, we always feel that our own travels make us better at what we do; host travelers. I always learn more about things that work in the rooms, remember how it feels to arrive road weary, and see what information these places have on their websites.
Friday, February 22
by
Heather Barklow
on Fri 22 Feb 2008 09:34 AM PST
Hay Y'all, it's Heather~ Just wanted to let all of you know that we have hired our new Head Wrangler, Chris Mercier. He is amazing and experienced and best of all... he comes with a KY drawl. :-) He will be starting in April and will be taking over as Head Wrangler by the time June rolls around. I am so excited to work with him and show him the RS way. I know that he will pick up where I am leaving off and take the program to a whole new level. I also have finished hiring the summer wranglers and it is going to be a great crew. Talia, Lander, Sarai and I are all returning for another summer. I will be helping into week #7 and maybe a bit in 8/9. We have Erin Timony helping us out part-time and 3 other new wranglers besides Chris. Brittany, Karalynn, and one pending wrangler will be joining us this summer. Of course, from time to time, we will have some guest wranglers as well. The situation is great for all involved and I am happy that I can spend some more time with all of you at RS in a different capacity. It will be fun for me to watch our new, up and coming staff excel. Oh yes, don't worry, Heath France is still at RS, he will be working in Maintenance with Jamie and helping in the barn from time to time. Other than that I am starting to buy horses for the program and getting ready for my honeymoon/vacation. Garrett and I are going to be spending 9 days in Sayulita, MX in March. We are looking forward to good food, great surf, kayaking and fishing. :-) YAY!!! So,until next time... love, joy and Happy Trails!! Heather :-) Thursday, February 14
by
EvaG
on Thu 14 Feb 2008 04:38 PM PST
We are almost finished tiling the dining room. We had a window of a few days to get it done, so everyone dropped what they were doing, and pitched in to make it happen. We did it ourselves, and turned it into a team project. We don't all get the opportunity to work side by side like that very often, and it was very cool. All of us may rely on each other on a daily basis, but we are scattered about in our various departments, separated by physical space. Over the past couple of days, people from almost every department worked shoulder to shoulder. The value in this beyond just having a floor that is not peeling up will be felt for a long time. Thank you, Steven and Shaun from the kitchen, Heather and Heath from the barn, Tricia and Heather from the office, Jamie from Maintenance, John, and even Tricia's Mike!! (Just ask Mike...)
Tuesday, February 5
by
EvaG
on Tue 05 Feb 2008 10:18 AM PST
We spent a few days last week off with the staff for our annual retreat. We stayed on Mount Hood - up at Silcox Hut. This a building sitting above timberline at about 7000 feet. The weather was insane. The winds were up to 80 mph, and the snow was falling so hard you sometimes couldn't see much more than 10 feet. The wind was the sort that steals the words from your mouth, along with your breath. To be heard by the peson next to you, yelling is required. Steve, our host at Silcox did a fine job. He kept us well fed and warm by the fire. He dug out the windows and doors repeatedly, and manned the snowcat when we needed rides to and from Timberline Lodge. Best of all, he was entertaining and gracious. Eleven staff and our two kids made the trip, which was one of our better retreats. Our meeting was typical: discussion followed by some resolution and some things unfinished. Of course, the most important part was the time spent together. Braving the weather to snowshoe, playing Taboo by the fire, and drinking Heath's crazy Mexican moonshine. It's amazing, though, how something so simple as being together in a different environment can solidify bonds and open communications.
Friday, January 25
by
EvaG
on Fri 25 Jan 2008 11:27 AM PST
John, Tricia, and I were just out in the dining room talking about new tile. We've gone through several renditions on our plan: starting with tile, moving through cork and marmoleum, and ending up back at tile. It'll be really nice, and I'm excited to do an improvement that is actually something fun when it's done. Or at least, visible. Over the past few years, we've ended up spending hundreds of thousands on some really, really, unbelievably boring improvement projects. New septic (sewage) system, (Eeww, but you really don't want that stuff coming back...) New underground electrical infrastructure. Woo Hoo. That one sure gets a lot of compliments from our guests. Not! Of course, again, people like electricity in their cabins. A new roof on the lodge. There is a fun one! OK, I guess the added insulation helps, and no leaks is a good thing. A new stove in the kitchen. Unfortunately, the one that we had to replace a couple years ago because of the electrical re-do was the newer one. Something about three phase and single phase power, whatever that means. A new well pump. Gotta have water, right? Heater for the pool, compressor for the walk-in... They're all sort of like getting new brakes in your car. I hate spending money on new brakes, or new tires. Obviously, the alternative is not so pretty, either. But it ranks right up there with a root canal. Or the time the dogs got into some rat poison. Let's just throw some c-notes out the window while we're driving. At least then, someone would find them and be excited. Enough rant. We do have some fun things going on. We've cut a hole for a door in Meadowview cabin, from the living room of room 1 into room 3. This makes a nice two bedroom with a living room. Room 2 is still not connected, although we'd like to figure that one out, too. We're replacing beds and some furniture out there, getting rid of a couple of queens and twins and putting in new king beds. The old stove in the kitchen died, I think that one was circa 1940. It's pretty amazing it lasted as long as it did. When maintenance pulled it out, they disassembled it. It looked like a nightmare inside there. The old wires and grease that had made it through the seams in the metal - gross. Thank God it never caught on fire. And, another fabulous money pit! John finished the new recycling center project, finally. For as much flack as he got over that one, it did turn out very nicely. You'd think there was nothing cool about a new place for the trash and cardboard dumpsters, recycling bins, and bottle sorting space, and really, there isn't. Except that the dishwasher sorting the stuff can stand under a roof and the trash guy does not have to blow an artery when the wheel of the dumpster breaks through the old plywood floor. But, moving it opens up the whole south end of the lodge. We can put a couple of picnic tables in the shade there, and you can see the pond and the rocks now as you drive in the driveway. And best of all, no more walking past the dumpster on your way to lunch on a hot summer day, either! (Yes, it was screened, so you couldn't see it, but the garbage company will only switch it out for a clean one once a month or so... nicely.) Steven is working on putting together a better dining area down by the fire pit. He'd like to serve a dinner down there, which would be super fun. We'd set it up a lot like the breakfast ride site. Tricia and Heather are working on new bedding for the rooms. They have new sheets in the rooms already, which are very nice, and are working on the rest of it. Otherwise, at this point, we just have a little more re-landscaping to do; where the dumpster and recycling used to be, by Meadowview, and by cabins 5 & 6. If any other major projects come up, I'll keep you posted here. Some really fun stuff, like a new furnace or something...
Tuesday, January 15
by
EvaG
on Tue 15 Jan 2008 11:14 AM PST
I just about had a heart attack yesterday. I don't have much time to "surf" online, and just came across a scathing review of us on Yahoo Travel that was left last summer. We've never had a bad review online before, and this one was about as bad as could be. When I started breathing again, I looked at the date, the group size, and the one incident they mentioned that I remember well. I am fairly sure the family reunion group it came from, and which sister likely wrote it. Before she arrived, she and her husband sent us a letter stating that their children would not be participating in the youth program and none of them would be riding or participating in any equestrian activities. Well, OK- they were coming with a large group, and sometimes it is tough to pick a reunion venue where everyone is overjoyed about everything. We would do our best to take care of them. Once they were here, they were yelling at their children in the dining room and their children were livid that they were not allowed to eat with their cousins because they were eating with the youth counselors. They left property each morning and came back just in time for dinner. They participated in nothing. There have been three other times I remember that we have had guests here that were really a bad fit for the experience here and who were obviously unhappy. The other three times, we offered to give them back their deposit if they wanted to leave and finish their vacation elsewhere. (Bend has a lot of options.) Twice in the last 20 years guests have chosen to do so, and the other time the family was so surprized by it they stopped complaining and ended up having a good time. This time, we were assured by the rest of the family that it was just them, and their father was paying for it anyway. So, yesterday I am reading this angry, bitter review of us and questioning what we are doing here. There is nothing like a direct public attack to fuel self doubt. I e-mailed the woman who planned the reuinion to follow up and find out if there was anything we might have done differently, but have not heard back from her. Then I pulled a dozen or so e-mail addresses of our guests and told them about it. The response from those I e-mailed was overwhelming. Some responded to me directly and several posted reviews of their own, telling of the wonderful experiences they have had here. It brought me to tears last night to read what they said (and again right now as I write this.) That yes, it is a very special place and experience here at Rock Springs Guest Ranch. That although there are much easier ways John and I could make a living, (and a lot more money) what we are doing is providing an experience for people that touches their souls. There are people who do long for an experience that is uncontrived, natural, and human. Maybe not everyone. Large crowds of people still want to go where they can be seen, to stay where the designer's focus while planning spaces was how they would look rather than how they would facilitate conversation, and to have synthetic experiences. To stay where image is more important than relationships. But there are others, a smaller group perhaps, who do want for the unaffected and genuine. So I thank you, our guests who responded, from the bottom of my heart. You are why Rock Springs is still operating, the reason we are still here. If you are interested in reading the yahoo reviews, good and bad, the link is: http://travel.yahoo.com/p-reviews-7035052-prod-hotel-action-read-ratings_and_reviews-i;_ylt=AmgsO0ppHmnOV.fJkSOkNBkJ8b8F Monday, January 14
by
EvaG
on Mon 14 Jan 2008 11:05 AM PST
Wow- I had the most wonderful mini-trip with my book club girl friends this weekend. We spent the night at the new Five Pines Lodge in Sisters, which is a beautifully appointed new facility. Regretfully, I was not able to work in any time at the spa, although my friends loved it. The highlight of the weekend was snowshoeing on the McKenzie Pass road. In winter, the snow on this older highway over the mountains makes it unpassable, and the route is closed for the season. Or rather, closed to vehicles using tires. A few snowmobiles passed us, although most of the way the silence was disturbed only by our own laughter and the crunch of the snowshoes on the crusty snow. One of my favorite things in the world is the green of the trees contrasted with the blue of the sky. On a sunny winter day here, the blue is unbelievable. The ponderosa pines take on a shimmer this time of year, as well. Add in a little (or a lot) of snow, and the combination is stunning. Yesterday was one of those magical days that remind me of why I live in central Oregon. Thursday, January 10
by
Heather Barklow
on Thu 10 Jan 2008 10:24 AM PST
Hi guys! It is me again. I know I was just on here yesterday but I want to keep all of you interested readers in the KNOW! I am planning to stay here at Rock Springs until the end of July. John and I have decided that it would be a great thing if I am here to bring our new Head Wrangler up to speed. I am excited to be of service and to help the ranch get off to a great start in 2008! I am thrilled to be a part of the hiring and preparations once again. Do be in touch with us and if you have any questions or concerns do not hesitate to email me at heather@rocksprings.com In Love and Joy, Heather Barklow Wednesday, January 9
by
Heather Barklow
on Wed 09 Jan 2008 10:20 AM PST
IS CHANGE. Well, I must say that Eva's blog yesterday on my upcoming changes was really heart warming. I appreciate her, John and Rock Springs very deeply. It has truly been an amazing experience to work here and make so many great memories with our guests and staff. I feel that life just keeps getting better and that I am stepping into a new phase of life. I would love to give all of you a little update on our plans... Garrett Gregory and I were married on the 21st of December at our house in Tumalo. Tricia Maxson and Mike Paul were our witness and minister. It was a great ceremony and we plan to have a reception in the middle of August in Glide, Or, where I grew up. With our new commitment, Garrett and I have decided that we want to take a few years to travel and move around. I am thinking more about what I want out of life and how I want to support myself financially. I love working with horses and people but I have come to realize that I want horses as a hobby again. I am very interested in the healing arts and am looking into a career in Massage and energy work. There is a holistic Massage school in Sedona that I am checking out and I feel that this may be my next venture. I like the idea of helping others as I have been guided through the healing arts of massage, craniosacral, and acupuncture work. I also am thinking of the fact that we are going to want a family eventually and I want an occupation that supports flexibility. :-) Like Eva said, I will be leaving sometime before July and I will be around Bend through Aug. so I will come visit. I know that the New Head Wrangler will be an amazing fit. I am sure that he or she will bring in new insight and freshness to our horse program. As far as I know we will have 3-4 returning wranglers and 3-4 new folks as well. It will be an exciting year for the barn. Once again, I want to thank each guest, staff, friend, employee and especially horse :-) for making my time at Rock Springs a magical experience. I know that there will never be a time in my life again like this one. I appreciate that and anxiously look forward to the next adventure. I find that no matter how great my life is I am always eager for a new adventure and expansion. Love and Joy, Heather |
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