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Cat Scratch Diva

    



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Web


remember my rant the other day about the cheap cowboys that complain about the prices of glasses? My worst customers this week were from your area, they drive to Broken Bow to their shopping...they compared my prices to the ones there. laughing.gif They thought coming to the city they would get a better deal.no.gif

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Ah, "Sandhillers" . . . gotta love 'em. They probably thought that by spending $50 in gas to go to the big city, they might be able to save $25 on their glasses.

I had one here a couple days ago. The lady brought in an old rocking chair that she wanted restored. She wanted two prices, one to just fix what was broken and the other to totally restore it stating that she thought it would probably be too much to restore it.

I told her $300 to restore it and she quickly went into sad mode. She was almost tearing up as she told stories of that being her grandmother's rocker and her sister saying that is the only chair she remembers grandma sitting in, etc. After all the stories, she said "I really want it restored, but I just can't afford it. $300 is just too much." She then told me to think about it and see if I could do it any cheaper as she walked out the door and climbed up into their brand new Ford four door, extended cab 4wd pickup.

I looked at my '94 Astro van with 140,000 miles and then back at her new truck and though "No, It won't be any cheaper".



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For those who don't know . . .

Starting just North of us and extending from North-Central to Western Nebraska are known as the "Sandhills".

Nebraska-01.jpg

The land is literally quite sandy. It is mostly ranching territory because the ground doesn't grow crops very well. Because of the sand and thus lack of moisture, the grass is really thin. This means that to be able to run cattle on the land, it takes a LOT more land to maintain the same number of cows as it does further South.

There are many HUGE family ranches in this area. I mean HUGE . . . thousands and thousands of acres that have been maintained in family ranches for generations.

Ted Turner owns a very large Buffalo ranch in that area.

There are some good, normal people living there, but there are also a bunch of "different" people living out there that are known as "Sandhillers". Its like the term is used as a description of the "breed" of human. There are people that live in the Sandhills, and then there are "Sandhillers". The best way I can think to describe them is "Cowboy Hillbilly".

Most of them are nice folks, but it just seems that they have an attitude that the rest of the state somehow "owes" them something. Its hard to explain.






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MULLEN, Neb. Ted Turner's men didn't flinch. As the price climbed past $8 million, $9 million, $9.5 million, they continued bidding at a rapid-fire pace.

When the auction was over, they walked away with what they came for: 26,300 acres of prime ranch land, at a cost of nearly $10 million.

"It hasn't taken long to find out he's serious," said Duane Kime, a rancher and Turner neighbor who was outbid by about $100,000 by the CNN founder.

But what exactly is Turner serious about?

The question gnaws at folks here and in other rural areas of the country where people once thought the billionaire just wanted to play cowboy.

Turner has amassed 2 million acres over the past two decades to become the largest private landowner in the country. He owns land in at least nine states, with most of his holdings in New Mexico, Nebraska, Montana and South Dakota, and is restoring buffalo, cutthroat trout, wolves, black-footed ferrets and other flora and fauna that filled the Plains before the West was won.

His front men say their boss doesn't have a secret agenda he just wants to be a rancher. But each big buy only heightens the anxiety and gives rise to conspiracy theories, the most ominous of which hold that the swashbuckling Atlanta executive is bent on putting Nebraska ranchers and farmers out of business.

"With him it's such a concern," said Cindy Weller, who lives on the family ranch near Mullen. "You don't know what his plan is and what he's going to do."

Among the theories: Turner is trying to corner the land over the Ogallala Aquifer, the world's largest underground water system, to gain power in the water-starved West.

Or: He is scheming, perhaps with the United Nations, to create a vast wildlife refuge and turn it over to the federal government, removing the land from Nebraska's tax rolls. That could hurt Nebraska schools and other services, which are already starved for cash.

"The entire way of life here is threatened, and it's not just Turner, but he's one reason. The whole area is economically depressed," Weller said.

Mike Phillips, executive director of the Turner Endangered Species Fund, a Turner offshoot, insisted his boss is just a "doggone serious rancher," though one dedicated to preserving the environment.

But Phillips' very presence is making people wonder. He once worked with The Wildlands Project, an environmental group that wants to create a continent-wide network of nature preserves to save endangered species. The Turner Foundation, the charity arm of Turner's empire, has contributed money to it and gives millions to dozens of other environmental groups.

Turner's organizations also have been in discussions with the World Wildlife Fund and the World Conservation Union about conserving bison. The groups have expressed interest in developing a huge park where bison could once again roam the Great Plains.

Actually, Turner's spokesmen say, the driving force behind Turner's land purchases is the desire to make money. Turner's Vermejo Park Ranch in New Mexico, for example, offers weeklong elk hunting excursions at $12,000 a pop. He has also entered the restaurant business with gusto, opening more than 50 Ted's Montana Grill restaurants across the country that feature bison meat.

Turner declined to be interviewed, only accepting written questions answered by spokesman Phillip Evans.

"Our agenda is not to create a vast wildlife preserve," Evans, vice president of Turner Enterprises, said in an e-mail. However, he said, Turner is concerned about preserving animal habitat while ranching. "We think we can do both."

Ron Arnold, head of the Center for the Defense of Free Enterprise and author of several books critical of the environmental movement, said he has studied Turner's activities and come to his own conclusion.

Turner is amassing land for "his own sense of grandiosity," he said. "If he wants to hunt ducks on it, he hunts ducks on it. If he wanted to raise buffalo, he raised buffalo on it. That's all I could conclude."

Turner owns the largest buffalo herd in the country, 45,000 strong, many of them on the 425,000 acres he owns in Nebraska.

The sturdy bison need less attention than cattle, requiring fewer ranch hands. That adds to people's worries here in Hooker County, where there is about one person for every 721 square miles, just 15 kids graduated from high school last year, and the population dropped 3.4 percent from 2000 to 2006.

Another persistent complaint is that Turner's extraordinary ability to outbid just about anyone is driving up land prices, making it tougher for longtime ranchers to expand and keep their operations afloat.

Over the past decade, ranch land in the Sandhills region of the state where Turner owns all his property has more than doubled in price to over $300 an acre.

Kevin McCully, a Mullen-area land broker, said only a part of the increase can be attributed to Turner. Maybe, said Kime, but he just knows he can't compete: The recent auction was the third time in recent years that he was outbid by Turner, who now borders about three-quarters of Kime's ranch.

Kime now wonders whether someday he might have to sell the ranch that has been in the family for generations.

"Turner might be the only one around that would want to buy it," he said.



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Cat Scratch Diva

    



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Thats the ones!


I had a guy givin me crap the other day that he couldnt afford it, giving me his sob story...the cost of hay cost of gas ect....I decided to take a break after I had had enough of the BS and I see him walking outside to his $50000 truck and behind that is his $30000 horse trailer/camper.

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Do I look a little pale to you?

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That's very interesting hmm.gif

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I think every area has people like that. Around here we call them Hilljacks. The Hilljacks around here live up in the hills in the woods. They don't have that sense of entitlement like you described, and they're not entirely unpleasant, they're just different. It's hard to explain. They're kind of like nice, respectable, cleaner, not-really-trasy white trash.

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Cat Scratch Diva

    



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That describes most people from Nebraska wink.gif

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Doesn't Do Windows



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allycat wrote:

That describes most people from Nebraska wink.gif




Phew, glad she didn't say "all". aww


 

 



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Chocolate Pip Cookie

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aaahhh.... The Dingles....or the Clampets biggrin.gif

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