John Merwin showed up 45 minutes early for the 18,800-acre Belvoir Ranch’s grand opening Wednesday afternoon at a trailhead about 8 miles west of Cheyenne.
He just couldn’t resist the chance to sneak in a 7-mile bicycle ride before all the speeches began.
“I worked for the Board of Public Utilities when they bought this back in the early 2000s, and I knew there was a master plan to have bicycle trails out here,” he told Cowboy State Daily. “I’ve looked forward to this ever since then, and I know this has been in the works for several years.”
The short ride was great, Merwin added.
“It’s nothing real technical,” he said. “But it’s some open, flowy trails.”
The trails roll up and down gentle hills with just enough curve and rock features to be fun without being intimidating, he added. There are also accessible trails for those using wheelchairs or walkers.
Merwin was one of 40 to 50 mountain bikers and hikers who showed up not only to hear all the speeches, but to break those trails in properly the minute all the speeches ended.
The opening marks the first time Cheyenne residents can freely access the city-owned Belvoir Ranch for recreation since the city bought the sprawling property west of town in 2003.
The new trailhead and roughly 13 miles of singletrack and shared-use paths give hikers and cyclists a long-promised playground in the city’s backyard, turning what was once mainly an insurance policy for future water and landfill needs into a full-fledged outdoor destination.
Remembering A Champion
Wednesday’s opening of the Belvoir Ranch also tugged at heartstrings for everyone who knew former Cheyenne City Councilman Scott Roybal, who died suddenly in September and was the project's longtime champion.
“He saw the recreational side of it right from the start,” said Councilman Pete Laybourn.
While the ranch was officially acquired for water and landfill options, Roybal “really understood” the solitude, the beauty, and the recreational opportunity, he said.
Roybal faced a skeptical public, but never backed down, Laybourn added.
“We wouldn’t be here today if he wouldn’t have just consistently kept working on it,” he said. “He had to be patient. A lot of patience went into it, and everyone remembered him. It just felt like, ‘Man, we wish you were here with us.’”
Roybal’s absence was the emotional undercurrent of the day for Mayor Patrick Collins as well.
“Scott had a deep love for this community, and he had a genuine passion for the ranch and making the Belvoir Ranch (a place) that would one day be open to the public, where everybody could enjoy it,” Collins told a crowd of close to 100 gathered for the occasion. “He understood that protecting the land wasn’t enough.
"We needed to open it up so residents and families, children, and future generations would experience its beauty firsthand. I know he would have taken great pride in seeing this ribbon cutting today.”
Belvoir Ranch’s trailhead and trail system were paid for through a combination of a $486,000 grant from the Wyoming Office of Outdoor Recreation and money from windmill leases on the ranch.
The total price tag for the recreational project came to $1,230,736.93, said Collins.
“Now, I would have rounded that up,” he added. “But I’ll never do that again, because … Scott, when he was on the finance committee on the City Council, the first thing (he) would ask is, ‘Mr. Mayor, what do I get for that 93 cents?’”
On Wednesday, Collins said he finally has an answer for that question.
“Scotty, today what you get for that 93 cents is the last piece of the puzzle to open up this beautiful 13 miles of trails, the trailhead and all that we have today,” he said. "So, Scotty, that 93 cents was the last piece, and brother, we miss you.”
Big Hole Still The Dream
Even with the ribbon finally cut, city officials stressed that Wednesday’s opening is only the first phase of plans for the ranch.
Still to come is the dramatic “Big Hole” on the south side of the Union Pacific tracks — a landscape Roybal and other early champions long dreamed of opening. That remains off-limits for now.
Collins said the city has spent five years trying to negotiate a tunnel or underpass beneath the railroad, but safety and flooding concerns have stalled those plans.
“I call the railroad tracks the Great Wall of China,” he told the crowd. “We can’t get under it, we can’t get over, we can’t get across it.”
It was Cheyenne City Engineer Tom Cobb who suggested the city pivot from waiting on that piece of the project and instead build trails on the north side.
“His pivot got us started,” Collins said. “But this trailhead is perfectly located so that when the day comes that they allow us to build a trail to the Big Hole — which is the most beautiful place, I can’t wait to get there — this trailhead will be able to service that also.”
Outdoor Recreation As Economic Engine
Beyond local riders and hikers, tourism officials believe the Belvoir Ranch has great economic potential.
Visit Cheyenne CEO Jim Walter told Cowboy State Daily the ranch fits neatly into how the city already markets itself to visitors.
“When we market the Cheyenne area, I call it our three-legged stool,” he said. “One is our Western heritage, one is what we call ‘downtown chic’ — our bars, our breweries, our restaurants — and then the third leg of that stool is outdoor recreation.
"This gives us another opportunity to promote coming up to Cheyenne and hiking and mountain biking and having access to this open space.”
He added that Belvoir knits together other recreation opportunities, such as Curt Gowdy State Park and the trails around Pole Mountain and Vedauwoo.
The idea that Belvoir Ranch will one day link all the way to Colorado’s Soapstone Prairie and Red Mountain open spaces will be tremendous and something else to look forward to, he said.
Family Sees A Fitting Tribute
Roybal’s family — his mother, brother, sister and niece — had all come to stand where Roybal had long hoped to be when Belvoir Ranch finally opened to the public.
His brother, Jon Roybal, told Cowboy State Daily the occasion was a “real tribute” to Scott’s years of work.
“He’s a piece of Wyoming and now this commemorates it,” Jon said. “So we’re super proud.”
His sister, Chris Dittmar, liked that Mayor Collins highlighted the 93 cents anecdote, saying it had captured Scott in a “nutshell.”
“He always had a little something to say about something like that,” she said. “That was just his personality.”
The repetition of the joke, with the $20.26 cost of the stone monument, was also perfect, she and Jon said, capturing both the year of the dedication and Roybal’s personality.
“This was a big, big project for him,” his mother Mary Roybal said. “He’s looking down from above. It’s emotional.”
Renée Jean can be reached at renee@cowboystatedaily.com.





















