Morgan & Scotlyn Flitner – RanchHER Season 2, Ep. 2

Premieres Tue, 5/7/24 – 9 PM ET | 8 PM CT | 7 PM MT | 6 PM PT

RanchHER TV Host Janie Johnson enjoys a rip-roaring time with Morgan & Scotty Flitner, tenacious sisters working the family ranch, raising horses & cattle on 300,000 acres of Wyoming badlands.

The Flitner Ranch, founded in 1906 by Arthur Flitner, started as 160 acres. Today it spreads from the top of the Big Horn Mountains, across Big Horn Basin, to the McCullough Peaks near Cody, covering 300,000 acres. Horses and cattle are the cornerstones of the operation, which boasts some of the best riding horses in the country. Sisters Morgan and Scotlyn have big hearts, and bigger personalities. Cowgirls since day one, they play an instrumental role in breeding, raising, halter-breaking and riding horses all year round. Among many other things.

Watch RanchHER Season 2, Episode 2 featuring Morgan & Scotlyn Flitner when it premieres on Tuesday, April 30 at 9 pm ET only on RFD-TV and RFD-TV Now!

You can also catch encore airings of the episode on Fridays at 9:30 pm ET and Saturdays at 11:30 am ET, or stream any episode of RanchHER and FarmHER any time with your RFD-TV Now subscription.

Related Stories
On this week’s episode of FarmHER + RanchHER, host Kirbe Schnoor travels to Wilson’s ranch to see how she blends tradition and technology to raise elite Red Angus cattle.
Mother-daughter RanchHER duo, Lyn and Sherrie Ray, joined us on Wednesday’s Market Day Report for a sneak peek at tonight’s brand new episode of FarmHER + RanchHER.
The Wild Ride of Raising Ranch Kids, Writing Books, and Traveling the Rodeo Trail with Paige Murray

LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

The Fertilizer Research Act, reintroduced by Sens. Grassley, Ernst, and Baldwin, would direct the USDA to study and publish public reports on competition and pricing trends in the fertilizer market.
Allowing year-round sales of E15 nationally could deliver billions in economic gains, according to a new study from the Renewable Fuels Association and National Corn Growers Association.
U.S. aquaculture may gain competitive ground as harmful subsidies are phased out abroad, but producers should monitor shifts in import supply chains and trade enforcement closely.
Producers may need to prepare for margin pressure in livestock feeding, while dairy farmers could benefit from stronger product demand.
Farmers await concrete trade commitments from China. Until then, export prospects for soybeans, corn, and sorghum remain uncertain against strong South American competition.
U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke L. Rollins today issued a new memorandum to modernize and strengthen America’s wildfire prevention and response system.