RANCHESTER — U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright arrived at Wyoming’s newest rare earth mine Friday carrying more than ceremonial shovels. The Denver-based Liberty Energy CEO turned Trump cabinet member brought a comprehensive worldview that challenges much of the Biden administration’s energy policies.
He’s been on the forefront of Trump’s push for fossil fuels, and a target for climate change advocates who disagree.
In Wyoming, surrounded by a friendly audience of coal industry supporters — including most of the state’s top elected officials — Wright took on what he described as politically motivated energy policies that ignore economic realities.
Projecting a dynamic personality and energetically speaking to the crowd gathered for a ribbon cutting ceremony, and then later for a mine tour, Wright showed off political skills and his command of the technical details when it comes to everything from mining rare earth minerals to the politics of climate change.
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Opening the first new rare earth mine in the United States in 70 years had all eyes on Ranchester in northern Wyoming and Ramaco’s Brook Mine.
Cowboy State Daily covered Wright’s rise into the public eye in 2022, when he launched a viral campaign against The North Face for refusing to provide co-branded gear to oil and gas workers.
Wright called the policy “ridiculously hypocritical” since North Face products are partly petroleum-based, and he took out billboards in Denver thanking the company for being “such a great customer of the oil and gas industry.”
North Face responded with a measured statement explaining that associating with oil and gas companies would harm its brand while touting a commitment to make all apparel recyclable by 2030.
Wright’s visit to Wyoming’s newest rare earth mine provided a window into his social media friendly personality, while also offering glimpses of Wright’s guiding philosophy and ambitious agenda as energy secretary.
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Through his extensive remarks at the Brook Mine tour and in interviews that followed, Wright articulated a vision that challenges states like Wyoming to keep up with demand in a future that prioritizes energy abundance.
U.S. Secretary of Energy Chris Wright was among a laundry list of state and federal officials at Ramaco’s Brook Mine for a ribbon cutting for the first new rare earths mine to open in the U.S. in 70 years on Friday, July 11, 2025. (David Madison, Cowboy State Daily)
Bipartisan Support
While the climate science community continues to line up against Wright and Trump, Wright received bipartisan support during his confirmation earlier this year.
Colorado Democratic Sens. John Hickenlooper and Michael Bennet endorsed his nomination, with Hickenlooper stating, “Chris Wright is a scientist who has dedicated his life to the study and use of energy. He believes in science and supports the research that will deliver the affordable, reliable and clean energy that will not only lower costs but make our country more secure.”
Wright studied engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and UC-Berkeley before launching his successful career in fracking.
Bennet noted this, stating Wright “is a successful Colorado entrepreneur with deep expertise in energy innovation and technology.”
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Both senators acknowledged they “don’t agree on everything” with Wright but expressed willingness to work with him.
Industry Philosophy
Wright’s positions reflect his background building Liberty Energy into a $3 billion fracking company and donating nearly $230,000 to Trump’s campaign, according to an ABC News profile.
In a 2022 Cowboy State Daily interview, Wright articulated his pro-industry stance, refusing to apologize for oil and gas production.
“I’m frustrated with our own industry that writes these kinds of, ‘We apologize we’re in the oil and gas industry’ ESG reports,” he said.
ESG stands for environmental, social and governance areas.
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At the Ramaco Resources mine near Ranchester on Friday, Wright framed discussion around these topics in scientific and economic terms.
“Climate change is a slow-moving, real physical phenomenon,” Wright told a gaggle of reporters gathered for the mine tour. “But the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, their own economic work, shows if you extrapolate current pathways by the end of this century, we might reduce per capita income 2% or 3% at the end of this century.”
Wright continued, “Compared to 2 billion people today, burning wood and dung to cook their daily meals and 2-3 million easily preventable indoor guest deaths from indoor air pollution, climate change is just not nearly as critical of an issue today as affordability, quantity and supply of energy to better human lives.”
He then dismissed any notion that demand for and consumption of energy could go down.
“The idea that somehow we’re going to peak energy demand in the next 10 years, you know, these projections, and then energy consumption is going to decline for the next 40 years,” he said. “What does that say to the 7 billion people on the planet that want to live lives like you and I?”
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Wright argued renewable investments have failed despite massive spending.
“We’ve had a lot of money and a lot of focus on wind and solar. They haven’t been effective at reducing greenhouse gas emissions at all,” Wright said.
A 2025 report from the research firm Ember found wind and solar combined produced a record 17% of U.S. electricity in 2024, overtaking coal at 15% for the first time. That’s according to data from the Energy Information Administration (EIA).
Wind alone accounted for 10.3% of generation while solar contributed 6.9%. Coal generation fell by 3.3%, continuing its long-term decline since peaking in 2007 when coal accounted for nearly 50% of the electricity in America, according to EIA data.
For Wright, that’s not the key takeaway when it comes to wind and solar, reflecting on lessons he said the U.S. should take from pro-renewable countries in Europe.
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“Blue collar industrial jobs have just left their countries,” he said. “They still consume steel. Those wind turbines have a giant amount of steel. It’s just not produced in Europe anymore. It’s produced in Asia, powered by coal.”
U.S. Secretary of Energy Chris Wright was among a laundry list of state and federal officials at Ramaco’s Brook Mine for a ribbon cutting for the first new rare earths mine to open in the U.S. in 70 years on Friday, July 11, 2025. (David Madison, Cowboy State Daily)
Strategic Independence
Wright sees Ramaco’s new rare earth mine as emblematic of his vision for domestic production rather than foreign dependence.
“Unquestionably, the Trump administration wants to restore smelting and processing of mining,” Wright said. “We want to bring those jobs and investment back to the United States.”
Wright described Wyoming as a place with “a common-sense mentality” when it comes to fossil fuels, and that “Wyoming is positioned to be a leader” in everything from coal to rare earths to nuclear power.
Wright’s press secretary Ben Dietderich, who also attended Friday’s tour, pointed to Wright’s role as co-chair of the National Energy Dominance Council, which will likely track progress at Ramaco’s Brook Mine.
“In order to compete with China, the United States needs to start mining again,” Dietderich said.
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Dietderich emphasized broader goals: “Americans are excited to be a country again that takes pride in building things. With that comes lower energy costs, more jobs and opportunities at home.”
The press secretary highlighted grid reliability concerns, referencing a July 7 Energy Department report warning that continuing to retire coal and natural gas plants could lead to “100 times the level of blackouts” by 2030.
The report asserts that current plans to replace 104 gigawatts of retiring fossil fuel generation plants with mostly intermittent renewable sources will create reliability risks as electricity demand surges from AI-driven data centers and manufacturing growth.
As Dietderich explained, Wright has already “issued, like, four emergency authorizations to keep coal plants, natural gas plants” operating to maintain grid capacity.
As energy secretary, Wright has articulated ending “the foolish, wrongheaded war on domestic American hydrocarbons.”
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His department now focuses on maximizing domestic energy production across all sources, he said.
“President Trump is re-embracing reality, re-embracing the benefit to the American people,” Wright said. “And we’re going to embrace all energy production in the United States, all mining in the United States.”
Climate Debate
There’s a long list of organizations disappointed to see the U.S. completely flip its policies around coal and climate change. Wright is one of many federal officials now steering policy into a U-turn back toward coal and other fossil fuels.
Those trying to throw up roadblocks include the Powering Past Coal Alliance, which stated earlier this year, “The science is clear: coal is the single largest source of carbon emissions and needs to be phased out first and fastest to avoid the worst impacts of climate change.”
To slow rising temperatures on the planet, the Alliance points to scientific consensus around the belief that, “Countries need to immediately stop building new coal power plants, and phase out existing ones by 2030 in advanced economies, and 2040 in all other countries.”
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To this, Wright offers an emphatic no thanks.
“Most everything we’ve done in the name of climate change has not had any meaningful impact on global emissions, but it has had a negative impact on human lives by making energy more expensive,” Wright said.
Dietderich emphasized other practical considerations.
“You can recognize that climate change is real, but you also have to be serious about its impacts and also be serious about, I think separate the science from the politics,” he said. “And when it comes to governing, you got to make decisions that also puts your constituency — people — first.”
Wright’s spokesperson argued rapid transitions would harm Americans.
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“The trade offs of shutting down a grid that has relied on — our world is entirely dependent on hydrocarbons — and you can’t shut that off just immediately without having really, really terrible effects on everyday people’s lives,” he said.
Former U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin, I-West Virginia, who is now a board member of Ramaco Resources, was at the ceremony. (David Madison, Cowboy State Daily)
Innovate, Not Eliminate
Former U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin (I-West Virginia), who joined Wright for the mine tour Friday, now works for Ramaco and told Cowboy State Daily he understands the conspicuous position Wright puts himself in when he promotes the burning of more coal.
That’s what Manchin did while in office, and the friction eventually caused him to leave the Democratic party.
“I was a spear catcher. I was a spear catcher for a long time,” said Manchin, referring to the incoming political fire his promotion of coal triggered. “The bottom line is we got to have dependable, reliable and affordable energy.
“And if you want to lift yourself or lift anybody in our society or any other country out of poverty, do it with energy, available energy.”
Manchin added, “I’ve said you cannot eliminate your way to cleaning your environment, but you can innovate it through technology.”
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Wyoming Gov. Mark Gordon also keyed in on the technology of cleaner burning coal-fired power plants, offering reminders that Wyoming has found ways to balance environmental concerns with ongoing energy production.
“We’ve done that since the 1970s,” said Gordon. “Some of the provisions that Al Simpson put into the Clean Air Act broke out of sulfur because we had acid rain in the East. You know, we changed.”
Gordon underscored coal’s foundational role in the state’s history and economy, telling Cowboy State Daily, “We supply 22 states with coal. The technology, the burner technology over the years has also advanced. We’re not using 1950s technology. When we’re building a new plant, we’re using newer, better stuff.”
When it comes to newer, better research into climate change, the scientists at the Department of Energy are world leaders, Wright said.
Asked if he supports ongoing climate change research at his department, Wright lit up and emphatically expressed his support.
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“I get the science of climate change,” he said. “That’s what brought me into it, like, 20-plus years ago. It’s so cool to look back at the past and what’s going on. I’m all for research and data and understanding.”
David Madison can be reached at david@cowboystatedaily.com.
CASPER, Wyo. — Two Wyoming residents died and a third was injured in Arapahoe, Wyoming, on Friday after their vehicle went airborne and struck a pole, according to the Wyoming Highway Patrol.
The crash was reported around 10:39 p.m. May 8 near Goes In Lodge and Mission roads south of Riverton. According to the WHP’s investigation, the Dodge passenger vehicle was driving at a high speed north on Mission Road and failed to make a left-hand curve, driving off the road.
“The Dodge drove up the roadway embankment toward Goes In Lodge Rd and vaulted approximately 154 feet,” the WHP said. The Dodge rolled end-over-end about three times, struck a utility pole while airborne and came to rest on its wheels, where it caught fire.
23-year-old Wyoming residents Kalvin Yellowbear and Rosario Lopez were killed in the crash. Another passenger was injured. No seat belt use was indicated for the deceased.
Speed and other factors are under consideration by investigators, the report said.
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There have been 40 highway fatalities so far in 2026, the WHP said, compared to previous years to-date:
34 in 2025
27 in 2024
46 in 2023
This story contains preliminary information as provided by the Wyoming Highway Patrol via the Wyoming Department of Transportation Fatal Crash Summary map. The information may be subject to change.
County 17 publishes letters, cartoons and opinions as a public service. The content does not necessarily reflect the opinions of County 17 or its employees. Letters to the editor can be submitted by emailing editor@oilcity.news.
Dear Gillette,
I am writing this letter because I am fed up with being forced to make impossible decisions just to live and work in Gillette.
We are constantly told that Campbell County is a great place to build a life, but the reality on the ground is exhausting. We are facing a double penalty here: a dwindling, high-cost economy and an almost non-existent dating scene. I am tired of having to choose between paying outrageous rent for a basic apartment or moving away from friends and community because I cannot find a genuine, long-term partner.
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The dating pool in Gillette feels more like a shallow puddle. Many of us are doing everything right — working hard, staying stable — yet we are coming up empty-handed due to limited public social spaces and transient culture that isn’t conducive to long-term relationships.
It is disheartening to see the “Wyoming Advantage” disappear while we are stuck in a dating desert. Rising costs and limited supply make housing a heavy burden, with residents struggling to find affordable options. Skyrocketing fuel, utility and grocery prices have put families under extreme financial pressure.
I am tired of sacrificing my personal happiness and financial stability to live here.
We need more than just industrial growth; we need quality of life that allows us to find love and build a future here, not just by a paycheck.
Kevin McNutt Gillette
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Rich Renner always knew he had pretty good neighbors, but he found out just how good when his new rescue dog from California got himself lost in a Wyoming whiteout.
Renner had taken the goldendoodle named Charlie out ahead of this past week’s storm to relieve himself. There was some snow on the ground at the time, but Charlie wasn’t having a thing to do with that strange, cold, white stuff on the ground.
At least not at first.
“I had taken him out to the barn, but he was staying under the overhang,” Renner said. “He wouldn’t go out to the snow.”
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Given the dog’s reluctance, Renner decided to shovel a path from the barn to the house to make it a little easier for the pooch to get around.
While Renner was doing that, the dog finally decided maybe the snow wasn’t so bad after all.
“He kind of got the zoomies,” Renner said. “So, he was running around and went around the corner, out of sight. I had boots on, so I followed after him.”
By the time Renner turned the corner, there was no sign of Charlie.
A dog named Charlie a Wyoming couple rescued from a California shelter running off with a whiteout blizzard on the way triggered a 24-hour search. It was a miracle, Charlie’s owners believe, that a newlywed couple in the middle of nowhere found him. (Courtesy Rich and Barb Renner)
A California Dog Meets His First Wyoming Whiteout
At first, Renner wasn’t too concerned. It wasn’t the first time the dog had done a little bit of exploring around the house.
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Normally, he came back on his own.
But this time was different. There was a huge snowstorm expected later in the day, and the forecast was for temperatures in the range of 25 degrees.
Charlie is a rescue dog fresh from California, which means the goldendoodle didn’t have much in the way of fat stored in his body. Nor was he yet acclimated to the cold.
Renner followed his dog’s tracks down to a forested edge, and there saw what had captured Charlie’s attention.
“There were deer tracks all over,” Renner said. “Boom, he was gone.”
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Renner was at first more worried about the deer than the dog.
He’d just put an AirTag on the dog’s newly arrived collar right before they went outside that morning. The collar also had the couple’s names and phone numbers.
“An hour later, that AirTag pinged at a neighbor’s house about a half mile away,” Renner said. “So I zoomed down there on a four-wheeler and I saw tracks, but no Charlie.”
Renner roamed around on his four-wheeler for about an hour, looking for and calling for Charlie. Then he had to go to work.
“My wife, Barb, stayed home all day and worked off and on and looked for him some, too,” he said.
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A dog named Charlie a Wyoming couple rescued from a California shelter running off with a whiteout blizzard on the way triggered a 24-hour search. It was a miracle, Charlie’s owners believe, that a newlywed couple in the middle of nowhere found him. (Courtesy Rich and Barb Renner)
A Long, Cold Night
Once Renner returned home, he and his wife did more searching until about 10:15 p.m. that night using a headlamp to see.
“I thought I’d see his eyes somewhere with that headlamp,” Renner said. “But to no avail.”
By this time, a sick feeling was growing in the pit of his stomach.
He was thinking about how the dog had chased after an animal three times his own size and how sometimes deer had charged, unafraid, at the couple’s older husky.
Maybe Charlie had been hurt. And Wyoming’s famous winter winds were picking up.
Was his California pooch stuck somewhere outside in this Wyoming whiteout, where the temperature was just getting colder and colder?
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“It had snowed all day,” Renner said. “It was just a lot of snow.”
That snow covered the dog’s tracks, making him impossible to track.
The AirTag was proving next to useless as well, suggesting the dog had gone somewhere very rugged, some place with little to no data to transmit a signal.
Tuesday night, Renner could barely sleep thinking about Charlie, lost in this heavy snowstorm, with temperatures forecast to get into the lower 20s that night.
“Since we didn’t find him, I’m thinking, ‘Oh my God, he’s not going to survive the night,’” Renner said. “I kept waking up a lot and thinking about him. Like, ‘Oh my gosh, what’s he experiencing right now? Where’s he at? Did a mountain lion get him?’”
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The next day, Renner and his wife were both exhausted but had not lost hope they would yet find Charlie.
They were looking, their neighbors were all looking. They even hired a drone company to come look for Charlie using an infrared camera.
A dog named Charlie a Wyoming couple rescued from a California shelter running off with a whiteout blizzard on the way triggered a 24-hour search. It was a miracle, Charlie’s owners believe, that a newlywed couple in the middle of nowhere found him. (Courtesy Rich and Barb Renner)
Neighbors Rally As Storm Deepens
The Renners had been putting messages out on Facebook and social media about Charlie, asking for the community’s help to find him.
Renner was amazed at how his neighborhood sprang into action.
It seemed that everyone he knew — and even some people he didn’t know yet — were looking for his pet, who he feared was too skinny to survive another night out in the cold, much less the cold, wet snowstorm that continued into Wednesday.
“Before, I lived in Cheyenne for a lot of years, and you didn’t even hardly know your neighbors,” he said. “You maybe said ‘hi,’ to them when there’s a snowstorm and you’re shoveling your snow at the same time.
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“But other than that, we didn’t even know our neighbors.”
Mountain Meadows, though, proved to be a different kind of friendly — the kind that doesn’t smile and wave in passing; the kind that shows up on the doorstep and asks, “How can I help?”
“There were probably six different vehicles or side by sides at different times looking for him Tuesday night,” Renner said. “And then people were passing the word on through Facebook and emails and everything.
“And just everyone was praying for him. I mean the number of prayers that went up for Charlie is just amazing.”
A Blind Date, A Snowy Hike, And A Lost Dog
While a small army of neighbors continued to search for Charlie with drones and side-by-sides, a newlywed couple the Renners had never met were on a surprise date.
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Jada, a Laramie native, and Collin Szymanski, from Utah, are newlyweds.
Since Collin is new to Wyoming, Jada has been making a point of showing him some of her favorite places.
That day, she’d decided on a literal blind date, complete with blindfold, to one of her favorite places in Curt Gowdy State Park — Hidden Falls.
The falls are a couple miles from where the Renners live as the crow flies, and maybe 10 miles or more away in twisting, winding, dog-chasing-a-deer miles.
By the time Jada and her husband arrived at the Hidden Falls Trail, snow was picking up speed and Jada was starting to question the idea of hiking that afternoon.
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“There was, like, snow everywhere,” Jada said. “I was like, ‘Oh man, I thought it was going to be a little less snow than this.’
“So I unblindfolded him and I was like, ‘Should we still go?’”
The couple are young and in love, so of course the answer to that question was, “Yes!”
As they hiked into the thick carpet of new snow, they soon found themselves with a new-but-stand-offish friend.
“All of a sudden we see this little dog running around,” Jada said. “We’re thinking, ‘Oh well, his owners must have decided to go on a hike in the snow, too.’”
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A dog named Charlie a Wyoming couple rescued from a California shelter running off with a whiteout blizzard on the way triggered a 24-hour search. It was a miracle, Charlie’s owners believe, that a newlywed couple in the middle of nowhere found him. (Courtesy Rich and Barb Renner)
The Sound Of Loneliness
When they got to the end of the trail, though, there were no owners around.
That was when Charlie began to howl, a haunting, lost sound.
“You could tell he was so sad,” Jada said. “So we were trying to get to him, but he was a little scared of us.”
Once Jada managed to get close enough to see Charlie’s collar, things changed. The second she said his name, the dog immediately calmed down and came over to them.
It was remarkable, given that Charlie had only had that name for about four weeks. But it clearly meant everything to the dog to hear that one word.
These were friends, Charlie decided, because somehow they knew his name.
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An Answer To A Prayer
By noon, with no further sight or sign of Charlie, the Renners’ hopes were dwindling.
Their property backs up to some very rugged country with deep draws and thick timber. It’s a maze of places to get lost.
It’s also a maze full of obstacles and dangers much larger than Charlie — mountain lions, deer, moose. Then there are box canyons easier to get into than out.
Their skinny California dog, chasing a deer in a full Wyoming whiteout, could easily become lost, trapped, or hurt. More and more, it seemed like that’s what had happened.
Just as they were about to give up and call it a day, Renner got a phone call from a man he didn’t know.
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“Hey, are you guys missing a dog?” the man asked.
Relief flooded through Renner at those words as the man told him he’d just found a golden-colored dog at Hidden Falls in the box canyon.
Thanks to the collar, which had the Renners’ number on it, he’d been able to immediately call from the canyon.
“I couldn’t believe it,” Renner said, noting that calls from the canyon are usually impossible to make.
It felt like a minor miracle.
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Charlie had spent all day and night Tuesday in a snowstorm that got down to about 25 degrees, and had somehow managed to bump into what were the only other hikers on the Hidden Falls Trail, somehow none the worse for his adventures.
Soon, Renner and his wife were headed in their cars to go pick up Charlie from the Szymanskis, meeting halfway between their home and Hidden Falls.
For Rich, who describes himself as a person of faith, all these details add up to something bigger than coincidence.
“I know that God makes things happen,” he said.
Jada felt that as well, considering how things happened.
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“Their whole neighborhood had been looking for him,” she said. “He told us he had just been praying so hard. We felt like we got to be the answers to those prayers.”
A dog named Charlie a Wyoming couple rescued from a California shelter running off with a whiteout blizzard on the way triggered a 24-hour search. It was a miracle, Charlie’s owners believe, that a newlywed couple in the middle of nowhere found him. (Courtesy Rich and Barb Renner)
Celebrity Life On A Leash
Back home, Charlie acts as if nothing miraculous has happened at all.
“He’s happy to be home for sure,” Renner said. “He spent yesterday in the barn, and he’s in the barn today.”
But he’s not going outside any more for a while without a leash, Renner said, as he remains just a little too fascinated with Wyoming wildlife, particularly moose, which are 100 times heavier than he is.
Renner is looking into electric fences to keep Charlie and his moxie corralled so that the pooch’s future adventures won’t be quite so harrowing.
“We’re chuckling now, because he’s like a celebrity,” Renner said.
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For all the worry and all the searching, what’s really sticking with the Renners is how his Wyoming neighbors were there when needed, crawling the snowy hills in their trucks and side-by-sides, looking for a California pooch with no idea what a Wyoming whiteout really means.
“That’s the real story,” Renner said. “It’s the community, the neighborhood, how everyone just rallied behind this to help.”
Renée Jean can be reached at renee@cowboystatedaily.com.