
Like most young adults, Cloe Parker was eager to spread her wings and explore more of what life had to offer. Two and a half years ago, she ventured from her family鈥檚 ranch鈥斺攊n Gunnison, Colorado, to gain experience at other ranching businesses. She imagined that someday, she might use that knowledge to start a business of her own. She鈥檇 always enjoyed the work. It offered peace and solace in a detached, sometimes distressing world.
鈥淚鈥檝e learned that ranching is very connecting and centering and grounding. Whether it鈥檚 watching a new calf being born or listening to the birds sing, there are all of these experiences that are very beautiful and healing,鈥 Cloe says.
Meanwhile, Cloe鈥檚 family was listening to the sound of birdsong more than ever back at home on Parker Pastures. That鈥檚 because in 2020 they partnered with 约炮视频鈥檚 Conservation Ranching Initiative (ACR), a program that certifies bird-friendly ranches across America鈥檚 rangelands. Participating ranches鈥攍ike Parker Pastures鈥攚ork with 约炮视频 to implement management plans to bring back North America鈥檚 imperiled grassland birds.
In 2021, ACR biologists recorded 41 bird species on Parker Pastures, including Mountain Bluebirds, Wilson鈥檚 Snipe, and Vesper Sparrows. Meanwhile, Cloe鈥檚 family was hard at work running the family ranch and all was business as usual鈥攗ntil it wasn鈥檛. That winter, Cloe received terrible news: her mom, Kelli Parker, had been diagnosed with cancer.
鈥淚 came back home. It just felt like it was the right thing to do,鈥 Cloe recalls. 鈥淏ut I was also very grateful for the experience that I gained elsewhere and the ways that I pushed myself so that I could take care of our company.鈥 Still, she says, it wasn鈥檛 easy to run the family business through a crisis.
鈥淭here were so many challenges. Some just basic like, I鈥檝e never done this before, how the heck do I do this? Or, is there going to be enough money in the bank account to pay bills? A lot of that responsibility landed on me, navigating the ups and downs of business, but also ranching. There鈥檚 cows out there, I鈥檝e got to go move cows.鈥 It was a lot to juggle at just nineteen years old. Her parents still supported her, 鈥淏ut it was different when it was me and I was in charge and I鈥檓 the boss,鈥 Cloe remembers.
Luckily, she thrives under pressure. 鈥淩anching and business is such an opportunity for personal development, so through all of those trials and hard times, I just leaned into that instead of having a victim mentality.鈥
In addition to her perseverance, Cloe credits the support she received from others, like her parents, for helping her navigate the transition into managing the business. 鈥淚鈥檓 grateful for my parents always giving me opportunities,鈥 she says. 鈥淎nd the other ranches that I鈥檝e worked for, too鈥 I think there were a lot of things that were meant to be so that I could do what I鈥檓 doing now.鈥 And what she鈥檚 doing now is something even bigger: Cloe Parker was named the new owner of Parker Pastures by her father, Bill, in February of 2023.
As the new owner of the Parker Pastures, one of Cloe鈥檚 favorite parts of the job is being able to help provide high-quality, nutrient-dense meat for people to enjoy with their families. 鈥淔ood is such a centerpiece for connection and relationships,鈥 she explains, 鈥淚 get to be a part of that and it鈥檚 such an honor.鈥
Creating those kinds of connections is important to Cloe, especially in a world that can feel chaotic and detached. 鈥淚 feel like we live in a very disconnected world even though it鈥檚 called 鈥榗onnected鈥 because we have social media, etc.,鈥 she says. 鈥淏ringing people into the beauty and magic that happens with connections to the land and the animals is something I鈥檓 super passionate about.鈥 Sharing their love of helping the environment is core to Parker Pastures.
Throughout all of the changes at Parker Pastures over the years, it鈥檚 remained a haven for birds. A flock of Gunnison Sage-Grouse鈥攁 federally endangered bird鈥攚as even spotted on the ranch in 2022. Scientists estimate there are only about 5,000 Gunnison Sage-Grouse that remain in the wild. With such a small population, quality habitat is extremely important for their survival.
On well-managed ranches, beauty and wildlife are in no shortage. There is, however, one beloved piece of Parker Pastures that is absent: Kelli Parker, Cloe鈥檚 mother, passed away in June of 2023. It鈥檚 another challenge that Cloe is facing with strength and wisdom.
鈥淚 hope my story is an example to other people that even when things are hard or don鈥檛 go as planned or are different than what people said you should do or even what you thought your own life would look like, you can persevere and you can do really hard things. And on the other side of that hard is a lot of beauty and a lot of strength,鈥 Cloe says.
At Parker Pastures, that beauty and strength shine through birdsong, golden grassland, happy cattle, and the connections that Cloe continues to tend there.
In June, the 约炮视频 Conservation Ranching community lost a monumental figure when Kelli Parker passed from this world to the next. Kelli鈥檚 contributions to agriculture and her community were known far and wide and she was a prominent figure in the regenerative agricultural movement. She will be forever remembered as a wonderful mother, an excellent steward of the earth, and someone who valued family, community, honesty, and integrity. She is and will always be missed.