Ranger Road Fire Now 55% Contained as Ranchers Count Losses, Start Recovery

Ranger Road Fire has burned 283,000 acres across Kansas and the Oklahoma Panhandle and is nearing containment, as ranchers begin assessing cattle and infrastructure losses as they look toward recovery.

SOUTHERN PLAINS (RFD NEWS) — The Ranger Road Fire is still burning in the Oklahoma Panhandle. As of Sunday evening, officials report that the wildfire burned 283,000 acres and is now 55 percent contained.

First responders have been working tirelessly over the last week and have made remarkable progress in containing the fire, which was just 20 percent contained on Friday. There is no word yet on what may have started the fire, but it has left a path of destruction in its wake.

At the Gardiner Angus Ranch, ranch owner/manager Greg Gardiner told RFD NEWS on Friday that the fire resulted in the loss of a few hundred cattle that could not reach safety.

“Somewhere between 250 to 300 cattle perished, or we’ve had to put them down; there’ll be some more that will not,” Gardiner said. “We’ve given them a chance to live, but they’ll tell us whether we need to destroy them or not. But when you put it in perspective, I know on either side of us, there’s been operations that have lost homes, they’ve lost whole herds. And so, as in agriculture, everything’s very specific to how each operation is run, and the totality and the scope of how each one’s hit is also up and down the line, different for each person. But it’s been pretty tough for this region.”

The Ranger Road Fire is not the only devastating wildfire that Gardiner Angus Ranch has dealt with in the last decade. In 2017, the Starbuck Fire also hit the ranch, and Gardiner said the damage was much, much worse.

“In 2017, in a couple of hours, we lost over 42,000 acres of grass in totality,” he said. “When it was all said and done, counting the pregnant cows, we lost over 1200 head of cattle. We lost 270 miles of infrastructure, of fences that had to be rebuilt. Because of how we rebuilt those fences this time — one of the emotional uplifts of this experience — those fences are standing when we went out the next morning to see. They were rebuilt with pipe and steel, so that was a very huge encouragement.”

Officials have not yet identified the cause of this fire, and it is still too early for any solid damage estimates. Because this is farm country, several relief efforts have been set up to help some of these operations get back on their feet.

To find a running list of ways to help, and to watch our full interview with Gardiner Angus Ranch, where Greg talks about the power of neighbors coming together to lift each other up, CLICK HERE.

Related Stories
Ag Secretary Brooke Rollins surveys Nebraska wildfire damage as cattle losses, tight supplies, rising imports, and beef industry investigations impact U.S. markets. Roger McEowen outlines legal and tax considerations for ranchers recovering from wildfire damage.
USDA Cattle-on-Feed report for March shows slightly lower inventory and higher February placements, signaling a tighter supply but steady outlook for the U.S. cattle herd.
The Midwest event will feature hundreds of horses and offer nationwide bidding access to participants
Nebraska Cattle Rancher Joe Van Newkirk shares his firsthand insight on devastating wildfires in the Sandhills, discusses challenges facing ranchers, long-term calf health concerns, and the recovery efforts underway.
Nebraska Cattlemen’s Association President Craig Uden shares the latest on Nebraska wildfire conditions, discusses challenges facing producers, and outlines relief efforts underway.
Ranchers have a lot going on at the moment, but some ‘friendly’ news could be coming with this month’s Cattle-on-Feed Report from the USDA.

Marion is a digital content manager for RFD News and FarmHER + RanchHER. She started working for Rural Media Group in May 2022, bringing a decade of digital experience in broadcast media and some cooking experience to the team.

LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

The failure of a grain elevator can cause large problems for farmers and for the local community it serves. A farmer who knows their rights and where they stand if an elevator fails can be in a better position than those farmers who aren’t as well informed. That is the topic of today’s blog post by RFD-TV Legal Contributor Roger A. McEowen.
Financial matters in farming can be frustratingly complicated, especially when it comes to the process of filing for bankruptcy. That is the topic tackled in today’s blog post by Farm-Legal Expert Roger A. McEowen—the definition of “insolvency” for purposes of the exclusion from income of CODI.
The “farm products rule,” and the 1985 Farm Bill modification and its application – that is the topic of today’s blog post from Agri-Legal Expert Roger McEowen.
Now that Washington lawmakers have passed a 45-day stopgap, they have some breathing room to work through some hot-button topics like the high cost of the upcoming Farm Bill, which is due in large part to the funding necessary to support the Nutrition Title.
A recent news story involving a group of farmers in Mississippi reveals the potential downside of selling grain under a deferred payment contract. The risk of deferred payment ag commodity sales and what can be done for protection—that is the topic of today’s blog post.
Recently, a bank in Texas got confused on the financing rules governing agricultural crops and lost its security interest as a result. Ag financing and priority rules among competing security interests—that is the topic of today’s post.