Yeah, the hunting lodge was the Kiva....this incredible round accommodation with guest rooms around the outside and a huge center 'grand room' (musta been 100' across) with a massive elk shoulder mount over a 10' wide fireplace. Honestly, the place looked like something out of a James Bond film. The owner was Pat Dunigan..a true character and legendary individual that was in a protracted legal battle with the US govt over the control of his land (he had 2 other partners in the ownership of the Baca Ranch). Prior to his ownership, the ranch had been the victim of clear cutting by the logging industry and Pat made some major changes. I remember that he was trying to work with some local Native Americans because of certain holy grounds located within the ranch boundaries and their access to said areas.
I spent one day on horseback just riding a couple of the canyons and it was unforgettable. Valle Grande was about 5 miles by 8 miles and an optical illusion as to how big it was for me. Scattered clouds on an otherwise sunny day caused the most amazing shadows to flow across the bottom of the caldera and watching the wind bend the tall grasses in that lighting was the stuff of dreams for a kid sitting out there on horseback.
Pat also had over 100,000 head of cattle (at least that is the way I remember it, so take this with a grain of salt) on the place at one point and told us about the roundups that often left some wild cattle that ended up living off the grid from the rest.
Here is some info on the ranch I took off the internet:
http://www.livestockweekly.com/papers/99/12/02/whlbaca.aspAnyway, I remember going up to one area where the first of 2 or 3 steam 'test' wells had been drilled. I was given a pair of ear protectors and told I could open the well to atmosphere. It had about a 6" gate valve on top of it and I slowly opened the wheel on the gate valve to the roar of the steam blowing over 200' into the air. It was their own private geyser and the reason my father was there: He was working with Pat to estimate the quality and reserves of the steam potential for power generation. Although geothermal energy is pretty green, environmentalists prevented any commercial exploitation of the potential leaving the subsurface rights owners without compensation because those rights were not addressed as to title in the sale of the land to the govt. Eventually, a small settlement was made with the subsurface owners and the issue was closed. My involvement, as an extension of my father's earlier work, help that owner in his action with the govt to either allow him to exploit the potential or to be justly compensated. IMO, he got neither, but at least his position was recognized legally and he recovered some of the money he spent in what he believed was a clean form of energy that was needed back in the Carter years.
Small world, isn't it?
[This message has been edited by Yuccadoo (edited 4/16/2014 4:32a).]