![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
|
DESCRIPTION: The Triple
U Ranch was founded as a cattle ranch by the late Roy and Nellie Houck
and their family in 1959 after much of their original cattle ranch ended
up under water as part of the land flooded by the Oahe Dam project -
a federal dam that backs water all the way north to Bismarck, North
Dakota. At around the same time in 1959, Roy purchased 12 buffalo at
an auction in Montana and brought them to the ranch.When the Houcks
moved onto the fifty thousand acres in northwest Stanley County, South
Dakota, the land was virtually as it had been in 1804 when Lewis and
Clark traveled that way on their trip west. The unbroken sod, deep breaks,
and rambling creeks had been undisturbed for centuries. Deer and antelope,
prairie dogs and coyotes roamed the land. All that was missing were
the buffalo! So, it was fitting for Roy to buy a few buffalo for the
ranch. Houck began to question the feasibility of his cattle operation
not long after he moved onto the 60,000 acres that the ranch currently
occupies. During the winter of 1966, there was a snowstorm so bad the
Houcks couldn't get out of the house for days to feed the stock. When
the storm finally broke, they found that many cattle didn't survive
the storm, but the buffalo were running and playing in the snow. So
the Houcks started buying more of the hardy buffalo. By 1974, the ranch
had switched entirely to buffalo. The herd steadily increased in size
and today is maintained at 3,500 head. The ranch itself encompasses
60,000 acres of natural prairie in central South Dakota near Lake Oahe.
Along with the buffalo, an abundance of other animals flourish on the
ranch including registered Quarter Horses, Clydesdale horses, deer,
antelope, coyotes, prairie dogs, and many species of birds and other
wildlife. The ranch is currently run by Roy Houck's daughter, Kaye Ingle,
and her family. Today, the Triple U Buffalo Ranch still sprawls along
enormous Lake Oahe northwest of Pierre, South Dakota. A curved sign
complete with a bleached buffalo skull welcomes visitors to the Triple
U.
|