Wyoming
Candy Moulton: New Trails and New Stories
Except for my computer and my camera (and of course the electricity to charge them), I could be comfortable living in an earlier period – say about a hundred years before I was actually born. In my half a century of writing about Wyoming, I’ve had plenty of opportunity to experience a taste of that time.
First with Jason Goodman, a teenager from northern Wyoming, and later with Morris Carter and his four teenage daughters, and then with Ben Kern, I have ridden more miles in a wagon as a working journalist than any other in my generation. When I add up the miles, I might even have more wagon road time than Mark Twain who is best known for his classic book, “Roughing It.”
On my first wagon adventures as part of the Wyoming Centennial Wagon Train, and subsequent journeys on the Oregon, Mormon, and California trails for their sesquicentennials, I slept in a tent – rain or shine, wind, cold, or stifling heat.
I’ve also slept in the two-room log cabin that was my grandmother’s homestead house. I have quite unsuccessfully tried to bake a pie in a wood stove in that cabin, but rather marvelously have celebrated the Fourth of July and New Year’s Eve with four generations of my family in those old hand-hewn walls.
The cabin originally stood on the ranch where I was reared, outside of Encampment. Nearly 20 years ago, we moved it to our property just up the road. By then the cabin was in rough shape and it took a lot of time, dedication, and just plain hard work to restore it. Full disclosure here, my husband Steve did most of the work; my sister, brother-in-law, a handful of other relatives, and I helped.
When my grandmother arrived in Wyoming in March of 1903 and moved into that two-room cabin her first husband had built, she must have believed her life in the American West would be better than what she would have found in her homeland.
Certainly, they had more land on his homestead than they could have imagined in Bruges and the surrounding countryside of northern Belgium, where she had been born and lived. Peter Verplancke, her first husband, had been the first of the Belgian immigrants to claim land along Antelope Creek, in southern Wyoming. He was on the Wyoming land by 1893. Other homesteaders already lived in the area.
Peter grubbed sagebrush so he could begin raising hay and grain. With neighbors he hand-dug irrigation ditches and built reservoirs to store water. In 1903, when Emma came with him to the homestead southeast of the then booming town of Grand Encampment, she was twenty-one years old. She had skills honed in her native land that would serve her well: she knew how to raise a garden and turn cabbage into kraut. She could make Belgian bobbin lace, or render a hog. She could kill and dress chickens, or make a dress for her daughters.
Even though her life on the homestead began forty years after the first homestead was claimed in America, she faced some of the same issues as earlier settlers: isolation, hard work, and in her case, difficulty understanding the language of her new home.
For my grandmother, the American Homestead Act provided opportunity just as it did for 1.6 million other people who claimed more than 270 million acres in the West.
Her life was not easy. She had five young children when she lost her first husband, Peter, in an accident with a wagon and team. But quite fortunately for me, she married my grandfather and then they had seven more children. The youngest was my dad.
My sister, brother, and I grew up on the homestead, living next door to our grandparents and one aunt and uncle with their two daughters.
Sundays, however, the ranch was the gathering place as dozens of aunts, uncles, and cousins converged. There was always food, music, and what I liked best: storytelling.
My only regret about those great and wonderful times is that I didn’t start writing earlier.
These days writing is both my work and my hobby. I tried retiring a couple of times and it didn’t take. So here I am, off on a new trail and a new adventure. I hope you’ll join me as we explore Wyoming and the American West.
Candy Moulton can be reached at: Candy.I.Moulton@gmail.com
Wyoming
Wyoming Town Rivalries – Feuds & Hate
Since moving to Wyoming many years ago, and having lived in a few towns around the state, I find that some town and city rivalries must be addressed. Some are based on past conflicts that still cause pain to this day. Some are unexplained.
For example, to this day, all of Johnson County still does not trust Cheyenne after the Johnson County War of 1892. Cattlemen in Cheyenne sent a hit squad hired by the barons to invade Johnson County to eliminate alleged rustlers. A shootout that lasted several days ensued.
Other town rivalries include:
Green River vs. Rock Springs: The two towns are close together and share one of the most intense and oldest community, cultural, and athletic rivalries in the state.
Lander vs. Riverton: Located in Fremont County, this rivalry dates back to 1922 and divides the area over high school football bragging rights. They talk a lot of smack about each other.
Cheyenne vs Casper: The towns just HATE each other. I’ve lived in both, and I can tell you that there is nothing wrong with either town. But I’ve come across people in both towns who talk about their hatred of the other.
There is not a lot of love across Wyoming for Jackson, mostly because of the mega-rich liberals who live there. Many of those mega-rich liberals look down on the rest of Wyoming.
Folks talk smack about Laramie, but in a very different way than people talk smack about Gillette.
Having traveled around Wyoming, I can tell you that most of this hate is just nonsense and a waste of time. In the end, we are all Wyomingites. Just one big bickering family who still have each other’s backs when it comes down to it.
The Charmingly Odd Town Of La Grange Wyoming
It is well worth the long drive to see one of the most interesting and quirky little towns in Wyoming.
Stay for lunch. You won’t regret it.
Gallery Credit: Glenn Woods
Jay Em, Wyoming, Frozen In Time
Jay Em, what an unusual name for a town.The few people who live there are proud of what their spot on earth once was, and they work to preserve it. They keep this little community frozen in time.
Gallery Credit: Glenn Woods
Wyoming
Wyoming mountain bike hotspot Curt Gowdy wants to know how it can improve
Wyoming
Hoping to draw Colorado interest, construction begins at $80M betting facility in Laramie County
CHEYENNE, Wyo. — Foundation work is beginning this week on Wyoming’s next horse betting and gaming house.
The $80 million Wyoming Downs facility in Laramie County, one of two the company is investing in over the next couple of years, is poised to be one of the largest facilities of its kind in the state. The company is aiming for a spring 2027 opening.
The facility will host upwards of 600 historic horse racing machines, Wyoming’s largest TV wall, multiple dining options and more across 58,000 square feet. More land was bought for future hotel development. Commuters driving between Cheyenne and the Colorado border can see clearly from Interstate 25 the expansive development.
That placement along the travel corridor is purposeful, Wyoming Downs and 307 Horse Racing President Kyle Ridgeway said.
“I think that the targeted consumer for this is from Colorado or from the Front Range,” Ridgeway said. “I anticipate we’re going to have plenty of people from Cheyenne come down here to play and enjoy the amenities, but when you look at 600,000 people within a 30-minute drive, that’s what justifies this investment and brings all that tax revenue in from another state, which is fantastic.
“We don’t get the opportunity to do that in Wyoming very often.”
There is still plenty to offer Cheyenne residents besides the facility’s amenities. Ridgeway said in a speech to attendees at the project’s groundbreaking Tuesday, June 2, that more than 150 permanent jobs will be supported by the facility on top of the dozens supported by the companies’ corporate offices and the 400-plus involved in the project’s construction.
Groathouse Construction, a Wyoming business, is the project’s general contractor. Wyoming Downs said it believes putting the project in local hands also helps keep the project uniquely Wyoming-focused.
Ridgeway added the facilities have already proven themselves to be effective tax revenue generators for the local governments. The Wyoming Gaming Commission’s 2025 report, released in late May, shows bettors wagered $2.49 billion on historic horse racing machines last year, a jump from the $2.11 billion wagered in 2024.
Wyoming Downs facilities generate roughly $25 million in taxes annually across the state, and Ridgeway estimated after the ceremony that the upcoming $80 million facility alone will generate an additional $3 million for Laramie County once the property has been in operation for a few years.
Horse betting sites have been increasingly popping up across Wyoming this decade. The Wyoming Downs location will be Cheyenne’s second large-scale horse betting facility since 2024, when the 30,000-square-foot Horse Palace at Swan Ranch opened. Ridgeway said Wyoming Downs is still offering something fresh for tourists and residents.
“This’ll have amenities that Swan Ranch doesn’t have, including the largest TV wall in Wyoming and a pretty super-cool sports viewing area with a restaurant and just a level of finish and class that I don’t think Wyoming has quite seen yet with these types of properties,” he said.
Ridgeway said he thinks resident fatigue with these facilities isn’t as strong as it appears, especially given the tourism benefits of off-track betting.
“Wyoming’s been built on mineral extraction and tourism, and what this is is a touristic facility. I’m not aware of any particular pushback about this specific facility outside of — you see random social media comments where people say, ‘Oh, another gambling facility.’ But where this is located, I think people in Cheyenne have generally been supportive of,” he said.
The Laramie County facility will be just one part of a larger project Wyoming Downs is working on over the next few years. Construction will begin in early 2027 on a similar facility in Evanston looking to draw in Utah and western Colorado crowds.
Some of the company’s current facilities, notably in Casper, Cheyenne and Rock Springs, will see millions poured into renovations as well. New smaller-scale parlors will also go up in Gillette and Green River this year, according to an information packet provided by the company.
More details will come as the construction process develops, Ridgeway said. Details about amenities, such as what the complex’s dining options will look like, remain undisclosed, though Ridgeway promised that options will be “excellent.”
“We haven’t made final selections on what the options are, but we have a number of different options on the table that we’re considering for what we want to offer for the customers,” Ridgeway said. “You have to have something that’s high quality for where this is located. If somebody’s going to drive 25 or 35, or even 45 minutes to come here, they got to be able to sit down and have a quality meal.”
For more information as it becomes available and to learn more about Wyoming Downs facilities and 307 Horse Racing‘s events and offerings, see the companies’ websites. Renderings for the upcoming Cheyenne facility commissioned by the company are available for viewing below.







Related
-
South-Carolina4 minutes agoWATCH: Gov. McMaster signs bill protecting SC police animals
-
South Dakota11 minutes agoSouth Dakota primary results leave Legislature seats in limbo
-
Tennessee14 minutes agoFranklin police ticket 13-year-old after e-bike crash, and a new Tennessee law brings more changes July 1
-
Texas19 minutes agoNational Democrats aim to flip 12 Texas House seats under newly expanded target list
-
Utah26 minutes agoUtah’s wonderful women took Kevin O’Leary to school over his…
-
Vermont29 minutes agoHundreds of housing units in the works at closely-watched project in Burlington’s South End – VTDigger
-
Virginia34 minutes agoCrews put out house fire in Bristol, Virginia
-
Washington41 minutes agoDeputies use drone to catch man wanted for damaging car in Washington County