Bliss Homestead Treed Pastures

Bliss Homestead

Bliss Ranch Main House

This house has an interesting history. The Bliss Family purchased this ranch from the Garst family (who had settled the ranch) in the summer of 2000. The home in this picture looked considerably different that it does here. This newly refurbished, modern home was in a bad state of disrepair and was very dated to the 1960's. It had at least 4 different stages of construction evident, as well as several varieties of wiring, plumbing and various problems. Patty Bliss (who you see in the photo below) is a very patient wife as we moved into a construction zone. Concrete dust, walls torn down to studs, no water, no kitchen and a lack of basic comforts welcomed us into this formerly old ranch house. After months of renovation, many tens of thousands of dollars and hundreds of man hours, we found ourselves living in a pretty comfortable, if not smallish, home. The original structure was an 500 square foot, 1940's vertical log cabin moved to the site in the early 1960's. Next came a 1600 square foot basement addition and upstairs section in the mid to late 60's. They a room was added to the front in the 1970's with a 130 square foot porch somewhat later. Our job was to take all the separate pieces, tie them together and finish the project in a reasonable time. We completely rewired and replumbed the structure of course. All the heating was modernized and central air added (replaced the swamp cooler with central air). All of the windows were replaced with high efficiency modern versions. Every surface in the home was replaced, covered or repainted in some way or another. In other words, it would have been easier to tear it all down and stick a big triple wide mobile home in place. But then I wouldn't have all this fun story to tell would I? 

Frank Bliss Family

Here we are at Christmas 2004. The little one in the center is my 16 year old son Chris, the cute cowgirl on the left is Patty, and that leaves Frank on the right.

GardentTouches of home and civilization.The great thing about living on a ranch with lots of sandstone on it is free garden decorations. We have always been frustrated gardeners and will over the next couple of years, continue the renovation of the landscape around the homestead. In this arid country, even green grass is a luxury hard fought for with summer watering. Fortunately, the Garst family had some wonderful established plant and shrubs already around the home. They hadn't been worked with for a while but we decided to use them wherever possible.You will notice a light brown box in the picture to the left. This box reflects a necessity of life out here. This box is actually a Twenty Kilowatt automatically transfered generator. Electricity is an essential commodity anywhere but more so on the ranch. We are literally at the end of the electric line. The Montana/Wyoming border is the boundary between two electric co-ops and as such, part of the ranch is in an electric "no mans land". We have regular grid outages from storms and other events that can last for days which can leave our stock without water. Some other things are mission critical on the ranch too. Our walk-in freezer is usually full of beef, propane heat is distributed with electric fans and most tools are electric. We have to be electrical grid independant during outages. The fuel for the generator is a 1000 gallon propane tank which would power the ranch for up to two weeks straight.

 

Front view

Here is a picture of the rock garden above two years later after extensive planting and lots of watering. Most of the plants are hardy to this cold climate but they have to like direct sun at this spot. It is nice to see hard work pay off.

Bliss Ranch

This shot is an overview during cold early spring day in 2002. It looks to the northwest toward Montana.

guest quarters bed and breakfast

The blue building is our new guest quarters for clients to the Dinosaur Bed and Breakfast. This building is expected to be finished on the inside by the summer of 2007. It will be very nicely done with only the best of all things inside for our company. It has been an interesting project for me to work on when the climate doesn't allow me to walk around looking for dinosaurs.

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Bliss Homestead Treed Pastures