Arapaho Ranch produces the kind of beef your inner cowboy wants
to eat. With 595,000 acres sprawling across Wyoming's wild and
rugged Owl Mountains, the ranch is home to native grasses,
wolves, mountain lions, and grizzlies. The cattle are herded by
Indian cowboys, each with his own fleet of seven horses -- one
for each day of the week.
It's the largest certified organic cattle operation in the U.S.,
which isn't saying much given what's permitted under today's
organic standards, which regulate an animal's diet more than its
lifestyle. While organic cattle can be confined for up to eight
months a year without losing their certification, the cattle at
Arapaho Ranch spend their entire lives grazing outside. They
follow the melting snow up the mountain in springtime and
retreat to lower ground in fall. The cattle breed naturally,
without the help of artificial insemination, as do the ranch
horses. The word "organic," while applicable to the beef
produced on Arapaho Ranch, doesn't do it justice.
When the Arapaho Ranch, which is owned by the Northern Arapaho
Tribe, made a deal to market its beef at Whole Foods, it was a
dream come true: an economically feasible way for the tribe to
steward its land in an ecologically responsible way. It created
a revenue stream that stands in stark contrast with gas drilling
and casino gambling.
Whole Foods celebrated the agreement with great fanfare,
featuring eagle feather headdresses and traditional Arapaho
prairie chicken dances in the parking lot of a Denver store.
"[It] was a great idea," says David Ruedlinger, Whole Foods'
meat coordinator for the Rocky Mountain region. "They could
supply us with beef 52 weeks a year. Their cattle grazed
year-round and knew their way around the ranch, which
microclimates would have grass in winter. Everything at the
ranch seemed as it should be according to Mother Nature."
Everything, it turns out, except the bottom line. In March,
barely a year into the deal, Arapaho Ranch pulled out.