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“Coldstream Ranch is right in the middle of suburbia. Most ranches, if the cattle did get out, they’re on someone else’s range. If the Coldstream cattle get out, they’re on somebody’s lawn . . . People are understandably annoyed that there are cows tromping in their rose beds. Then we come along and have to gallop through the beds. We’ve tripped over lawn furniture trying to round up cows.”
Coldstream Ranch, on the outskirts of the Okanagan city of Vernon, wasn’t always crowded in the ’burbs. One of the oldest continually operating ranches in Canada, it was on the far edge of the far West when Charles Houghton founded it to provision the Cariboo Gold Rush in 1863. It’s been operating so long Vernon is actually named after its second owners, the Vernon brothers. For decades it was owned by a succession of British bluebloods, including the quixotic Lord Aberdeen, who resigned his appointment as Governor General after he and his profligate brother-in-law Coutts squandered a fortune on grandiose schemes at Coldstream. Nevertheless, they proved drybelt soil could be turned into fine farmland with the aid of irrigation and pioneered the region’s world-renowned orchard industry. |