Wyoming
Hedge Against Inflation? Alternative Currency “Goldbacks” Catching On In Wyoming
T-Joe’s Steakhouse and Saloon owner Sherry Lyle collects about $1,000 a month in a type of currency that at first looks like it must come from a foreign country or a board game.
The flashy golden bills capture attention around the dining room whenever they come out, but were actually designed and developed specifically around Wyoming.
They’re called Wyoming goldbacks, and they are offered in denominations of 1, 5, 10, 25 and 50 online at wyominggoldbacks.com. Each denomination is decorated with art that showcases the Cowboy State while also highlighting a different virtue — liberty, loyalty, respect, and so on.
But what’s really unique about these bills is that they’re made of pure gold that has been laid down inside a protective polymer using the latest, cutting-edge technology.
The smallest denomination — a 1 — is 1/1000th of a troy ounce of gold. That bill has Devils Tower as a backdrop, with a buffalo, an eagle and sunflowers framing a Shoshone woman named Reverentia (Latin for “respect”).
The caption below her translates that idea to “revere what is sacred.”
The Art Of Business
It’s a work of art, and the beauty is part of the reason Lyle started accepting goldbacks at her restaurant. She likes collecting different kinds of currency.
She also likes that these bills were designed specifically for Wyoming.
“They’re unique to Wyoming and a couple of other states,” she said. “And it kind of shows our independent spirit.”
Lyle estimates that she has a party wanting to pay a check or tip a server in goldbacks about every other week.
Sometimes, the transaction confuses those who are watching.
“One of our servers was like, ‘Oh, we can tip our bussers in pesos?” Lyle recalled, laughing. “That was kind of funny, but like, ‘No, you can’t.’”
Because the currency contains real gold, the bills can gain or lose value over time with the value of gold. And like the commodity, gold mostly goes up in value.
Over time, Lyle has watched the value of her goldbacks rise, and now she actually has some from every state with a series — Nevada, New Hampshire, South Dakota, Wyoming and Utah, the latter being where the series first began.
“It doesn’t go up a ton,” she said. “But it’s just been a neat thing, and it’s nice to support the businesses that sell these. We will use them eventually, but we’ll always keep a couple just for, you know, the collector value.”
Apocalypse Not
T-Joes isn’t the only Wyoming business accepting goldbacks.
Adam Mathes, owner of A-1 Tire in Casper, started taking them about a month ago after one of his customers showed him a few of the bills.
He wasn’t looking at it from any sort of apocalyptic perspective. He just sees goldbacks as another option to differentiate his store from corporate chains.
“It looks like we’re the only tire store that will accept something like that around here,” Mathes told Cowboy State Daily. “Being a locally owned small business, I don’t know if some of the corporations would even consider that. So, it’s another way for people to see our business and to be able to have a different form of payment.”
Tyler McCann, owner of Cowboy Cuts in Pavillion, thinks goldbacks might serve as a great hedge against inflation, in case there are any more price surges.
“I think gold is more stable,” he said. “Even though it’s going up and down, I just see so much inflation that I would like to have that available for our customers.”
So far, neither of them have had any takers, but McCann was particularly keen.
“I think they are fascinating,” he said. “You can feel the difference in the weight between different denominations. You can almost immediately tell the difference when you hold them in your hand.”
In all, about 160 Wyoming businesses now accept goldbacks in an incredible range — pet stores, restaurants, barber shops, carpenters, auto parts and more.
It Came From A dream
Goldbacks arose from a dream that the company’s founder, Jeremy Cordon, had about some sort of an apocalypse or emergency.
“There was some sort of national emergency,” Goldback Chief Operating Officer Kevan Mills told Cowboy State Daily. “He didn’t know what it was, whether it was a war, or an earthquake, or what. But he was at a grocery store trying to buy groceries and everyone in the store was trying to pay with credit cards and dollars.”
The store owner wasn’t having it.
“We don’t take that here, it’s no good anymore,” the dream grocery store owner said.
Someone else came up to the owner with an impossibly thin, rectangular piece of gold, and offered that to the owner instead.
“Would you take this?” the customer asked.
“Gold?” the owner replied. “Absolutely I’ll take gold.”
It was then Cordon woke up and immediately called his business partner to tell him about the dream.
“We have to do this,” Cordon told him. “It’s incredibly important.”
Making Gold More Practical
While the idea for goldbacks may have come from a dream, the bills do solve a practical, real-world problem for those who’d like to use gold for transactions.
A single gold coin weighing an ounce is worth just over $2,000 — a bit hard for most grocery stores, restaurants, beauty shops and the like to break down.
But a single goldback with a thousandth of an ounce of gold — worth about $4.66, according to Tuesday’s exchange rate — is a much easier denomination to work with.
“For perspective, a thousandth of an ounce, if you took a BB from a BB gun and cut it into 12 pieces, one of the pieces of that BB would be 1,000th of an ounce,” Mills told cowboy State Daily. “So how do you carry that around? If you’re going to carry that little teeny — I mean it’s not much bigger than few grains of sand.”
But gold is highly malleable, so a small amount of it can be spread very thinly.
“A 50-cent piece of gold, hammered to as thin as you can possibly make it would cover an entire football field,” Mills said. “That’s how thin you can make gold.”
Then, it’s just a matter of something to protect the integrity of such a thin sheet of gold, keeping it all intact so that every bill has exactly what it says it has regardless of trades.
That’s where the polymer comes into play. It both protects the thin layer of gold and makes it easy to carry around.
“Now you can put it in your wallet and carry it safely,” Mills said.
Goldbacks are also what’s called “fungible,” which means they are available in readily interchangeable denominations. Five 1s, for example, can be traded for a 5 goldback, which is 1/200th of a troy ounce, or 10 ones could be traded for a 10 goldback, which is 1/100th of a troy ounce. Denominations of 25 and 50 are also available, which are 1/40th and 1/20th of a troy ounce respectively.
At First Utah Was It
Although goldbacks can be used anywhere that a business is willing to trade in gold, the bills started out initially as strictly a Utah series. There was never any intention of doing goldbacks that highlighted other states, Mills told Cowboy State Daily.
But once the Utah goldback series started circulating, they almost instantly attracted interest from investors who wanted to see their states highlighted with a goldback series.
Soon, there were even sponsors willing to help front the cost of that.
Wyoming was actually the fourth state to get its own series, and the sponsor was Natrona County state Sen. Bob Ide, R-Casper.
Ide was not a state senator at the time he sponsored the development of the Wyoming goldback, just someone who Mills said was interested in seeing it happen.
Wyoming may have been the fourth state to get its own series, but it’s been tops when it comes to embracing goldbacks, according to investor Abram Taylor.
“Whenever I check Google trend reports, Wyoming is usually the top one or two every day of people looking them up,” he told Cowboy State Daily. “And whenever we have gone up to Jackson Hole to, you know, have lunch and get out of town, I always tip with goldbacks and they’re always very well received. The waitresses are always like, ‘Oh my, what is this? This is cool.’”
Taylor even recalls buying his wife an expensive fur coat in Wyoming, and was pleasantly surprised when the shop’s owner was willing to take goldbacks for the purchase.
Not only that, the shop owner seemed really eager to get them.
The Midas touch
Goldbacks have had something of a Midas touch so far, trading in all 50 states and on every continent in the world except Antarctica.
Everyone who touches them seems to fall in love with them.
“So, our first year in business we did $250,000 in goldbacks,” Mills told Cowboy State Daily. “Our second year, we did $1 million dollars in goldbacks. Our third year, we did $6 million and our fourth year, we did $12 million. Last year, we did $34 million.”
Mills credits the exponential growth in part to the way gold can work as a hedge against inflation.
“In the two years since we released the Wyoming goldback in September 2022, the value of goldbacks has gone up by 28%,” Mills said. “So, if someone bought gold two years ago and then sold them to Alpine Gold for 5% under the daily rate today, they would have made 23%.”
Inflation rates from October 2021 to October 2022, by comparison, were 7.7%, according to the Consumer Price Index, making Goldbacks a clear winner for that particular time frame.
Mills said one important distinction to make with goldback bills is that they’re not meant to replace the U.S. dollar. They are what is called a local currency, of which there are about 3,000 in the United States.
“The federal government issues all the currency and there’s actually in the Constitution it’s written that states cannot produce their own currency and that nothing shall be used as money unless it be gold or silver,” he said. “So that’s what we do. We’re just giving people an alternative currency.”
Renée Jean can be reached at Renee@CowboyStateDaily.com.
Wyoming
Wyoming 3A and 4A Boys Basketball Regionals Tip Off Postseason Play
The 2026 postseason has arrived for Wyoming High School boys’ basketball teams in Class 3A and 4A. They participate in regional tournaments from Thursday through Saturday. The regionals will be in Buffalo, Evanston, Gillette, and Lovell. Three sites will use the format: two wins qualify a team for the state tournament next week in Casper, or two losses eliminate a team. The 4A East Region has three loser-out first-round games on Thursday, followed by two days of games for seeding. The 4A East Regular Season champ draws a first-round bye and has qualified for the state tournament.
WYOPREPS 3A-4A BOYS BASKETBALL REGIONAL TOURNAMENT SCHEDULES
Except in the 4A East Regional, Friday starts with elimination games. The regional semifinals are on Friday night. The final seeds for next week’s state tournament will be determined on Saturday. The schedules below for this weekend are based on the brackets sent to WyoPreps. It is subject to change.
THURSDAY, MARCH 5:
Final Score: (3) Pinedale 58 (6) Mountain View 40
Final Score: (2) Cody 58 (7) Powell 46
Final Score: (1) Lovell 75 (8) Lyman 43
Final Score: (4) Lander 65 (5) Worland 40
FRIDAY, MARCH 6:
Game 5: Mountain View vs. Powell, noon – loser out
Game 6: Lyman vs. Worland, 1:30 p.m. – loser out
Game 7: Pinedale vs. Cody, 6 p.m. – semifinal
Game 8: Lovell vs. Lander, 7:30 p.m. – semifinal
SATURDAY, MARCH 7:
Game 9: Winner Game 5 vs. Loser Game 8, 11 a.m. – loser out
Game 10: Winner Game 6 vs. Loser Game 7, 11 a.m. – loser out (at LMS)
Game 11: Winner Game 9 vs. Winner Game 10, 5 p.m. – 3rd Place Game
Game 12: Winner Game 7 vs. Winner Game 8, 2 p.m. – Championship Game
THURSDAY, MARCH 5:
Final Score: (3) Douglas 85 (6) Rawlins 50
Final Score: (2) Wheatland 57 (7) Burns 40
Final Score: (5) Torrington 35 (4) Newcastle 28
Final Score: (1) Buffalo 69 (8) Glenrock 44
FRIDAY, MARCH 6:
Game 5: Rawlins vs. Burns, noon – loser out
Game 6: Newcastle vs. Glenrock, 1:30 p.m. – loser out
Game 7: Douglas vs. Wheatland, 6 p.m. – semifinal
Game 8: Torrington vs. Buffalo, 7:30 p.m. – semifinal
SATURDAY, MARCH 7:
Game 9: Winner Game 5 vs. Loser Game 8, noon – loser out
Game 10: Winner Game 6 vs. Loser Game 7, 1:30 p.m. – loser out
Game 11: Winner Game 9 vs. Winner Game 10, 7:30 p.m. – 3rd Place Game (if necessary)
Game 12: Winner Game 7 vs. Winner Game 8, 4:30 p.m. – Championship Game
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WyoPreps Coaches and Media Basketball Polls 2-25-26
WyoPreps Boys Basketball Week 10 Scores 2026
WyoPreps Coaches and Media Basketball Polls 2-18-26
WyoPreps Boys Basketball Week 9 Scores 2026
WyoPreps Coaches and Media Basketball Polls 2-11-26
WyoPreps Boys Basketball Week 8 Scores 2026
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THURSDAY, MARCH 5:
Final Score: (NW-3) Kelly Walsh 64 (SW-2) Riverton 49
Final Score: (NW-1) Natrona County 77 (SW-4) Jackson 23
Final Score: (NW-2) Green River 50 (SW-3) Evanston 40
Final Score: (SW-1) Star Valley 62 (NW-4) Rock Springs 60 – Erickson makes a turnaround jumper at the buzzer off an offensive rebound for the Braves.
FRIDAY, MARCH 6:
Game 5: Riverton vs. Jackson, noon – loser out
Game 6: Evanston vs. Rock Springs, 1:30 p.m. – loser out
Game 7: Kelly Walsh vs. Natrona County, 6:30 p.m. – semifinal
Game 8: Green River vs. Star Valley, 8 p.m. – semifinal
SATURDAY, MARCH 7:
Game 10: Winner Game 6 vs. Loser Game 7, 11:30 a.m. – loser out
Game 9: Winner Game 5 vs. Loser Game 8, 1 p.m. – loser out
Game 11: Winner Game 10 vs. Winner Game 11, 4:30 p.m. – 3rd Place Game (at EMS)
Game 12: Winner Game 7 vs. Winner Game 8, 4:30 p.m. – Championship Game
THURSDAY, MARCH 5:
Game 1: (1) Sheridan = Bye
Final Score: (2) Cheyenne Central 75 (7) Cheyenne South 35 – Bison are eliminated
Final Score: (3) Thunder Basin 75 (6) Laramie 59 – Plainsmen are eliminated; Bolts qualify for state
Final Score: (4) Campbell County 59 (5) Cheyenne East 39 – loser out; Thunderbirds are eliminated; Camels qualify for state.
FRIDAY, MARCH 6:
Game 6: Cheyenne Central vs. Thunder Basin, 4:30 p.m. – semifinal
Game 5: Sheridan vs. Campbell County, 7:30 p.m. – semifinal
SATURDAY, MARCH 7:
Game 7: Loser Game 5 vs. Loser Game 6, 11:30 a.m. – 3rd Place Game
Game 8: Winner Game 5 vs. Winner Game 6, 2:30 p.m. – Championship Game
James Johnson Winter Showcase Basketball Tournament 2026
Photos from game action at the James Johnson Winter Showcase tournament in Cheyenne.
Gallery Credit: Courtesy: Shannon Dutcher
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