There are several historical structures on the Caribou Ranch. Many of them still bear the traces of the property’s storied history dating back to the 1860s when the area’s early railroad line, the Switzerland Trail Narrow Gauge from Boulder, flooded the area with miners seeking their fortunes. Today, the ranch is a tranquil respite with hints of its colorful past.
Primary Residence
Constructed in the 1980s using a cabin from the 1860s, this residence is a 9,133± square-foot, three-bedroom, two-bath homestead. This primary residence is a two-story building with a walk-out basement, constructed of primarily log and stone. Features include multiple stone fireplaces, a wood front porch and upper deck, and a multidirectional gabled roof. (Please note this residence is not habitable and can either be wholly remodeled or torn down and material donated to Habitat for Humanity).
Guest Cabins
There are five guest cabins, each named for notable Native American persons:
- Ouray (3,126± square feet, four bedrooms and two baths built in 1953)
- Redwing (554± square feet, two bedrooms and one bath built in 1910)
- Wigwam (1,174± square feet, three bedrooms and two baths built in 1919)
- Chipeta (860± square feet, two bedrooms, and one bath, built in 1920)
- Running bear (1,768± square feet, three bedrooms, two baths, built in 1919)
Barns and Outbuildings
The property includes an 11,100± square-foot equipment barn and shop, a 1,904± square-foot horse/hay barn (both built in 1968), a 2,145± multi-purpose barn (built in 1937), an equipment shed (built in 1919), and a 486± square-foot blacksmith shop.
Additional Improvements
In addition, there is an office (1,688± square feet), a six-bedroom guest lodge (2,781± square feet, built in 1947), a dining hall (4,136± square feet), a historic recording studio (6,662± square feet) and a 3,372± square-foot caretaker unit on buffer lands.
Any and all seller-owned water rights appurtenant to the property are included in the sale.
The Caribou Ranch includes an extensive water rights portfolio, generally sourced from Como Creek and North Boulder Creek, that facilitates the various irrigation, piscatorial, stock watering, and domestic uses on the property, utilizing ditch rights with appropriations dating back to the 1870s, adjudicated ponds, contractual water rights, springs, and plans for augmentation. Key elements include:
- Irrigation water sources. Several hundred acres of meadow/pasture are irrigated on the Caribou Ranch from sources including:
- Como Ditch Nos. 1 through 4 were adjudicated for irrigation use in Civil Action 4842, Boulder County, District Court (1907), with appropriation dates between 1871 and 1873. These decreed ditches have combined diversion rates of up to 58 CFS and allow for annual diversions of up to 585 acre-feet from North Boulder Creek and Como Creek.
- Up to 156.8 acre-feet of water is annually available pursuant to a contractual agreement between the city of Boulder and the ranch. Such water can be diverted from North Boulder Creek for irrigation on the ranch in Sections 1 & 2, T1S, R73W, and Section 36, T1N, R73W.
- There are 15 adjudicated springs on the ranch, cumulatively decreed for the irrigation of up to 211 acres. The springs were adjudicated in Case Nos. W-7179 and W-7222, District Court, Water Division No. 1, Colorado.
- Domestic water sources.
- A natural spring tributary to Como Creek supplies potable water for the various ranch homestead structures, including the main hall and recording studio. The spring was adjudicated in Case No. 16CW3134 and is included in a plan for augmentation approved in the same case. Augmentation water is supplied by the city of Boulder pursuant to a contractual agreement.
- Several “exempt” wells are located on certain ranch parcels and provide domestic water for such parcels.
- Four trout ponds, with a total surface acreage of approximately eight acres, have been constructed as part of the ranch's overall fishery habitat enhancement projects. Water rights for the ponds, including a plan for augmentation, were originally adjudicated in Case No. 98CW447, District Court, Water Division No. 1, Colorado, and are further subject to certain agreements between the ranch and the city of Boulder.
- Piscatorial water rights.
- Several additional ponds on the ranch were adjudicated in Case Nos. W-7255 and W-7238, District Court, Water Division No. 1, Colorado.
- The city of Boulder’s municipal water supply includes rights on North Boulder Creek, and several of the city’s municipal diversion and storage structures are located both upstream and downstream of the ranch. As noted above, the ranch has entered into certain agreements with the city of Boulder that, among other things, provide for irrigation and augmentation water to be used by the ranch and seek to ensure live stream flow in North Boulder Creek through the ranch.
Additional information regarding the Caribou Ranch water rights is available upon request.