Wyoming
Susan Bigelow Announces Candidacy for Wyoming House District 51
Susan Bigelow, a dedicated economic development and education leader and lifelong conservative Republican, officially announced her candidacy for the Wyoming House of Representatives for District 51 today. A thirty-year resident of northeast Wyoming and recognized leader in economic development, she played a significant role in attracting Weatherby, Inc. to Sheridan. Bigelow enters the race with a mission to protect Wyoming’s values, empower the state’s workforce, ensure fiscal responsibility in Cheyenne, and work for a prosperous future for the next generation.
“Wyoming is at a crossroads where we must strengthen the path between our classrooms and our economy and invest wisely in Wyoming’s future,” said Bigelow. “I understand how to build the talent pipelines our energy, agriculture, manufacturing, tourism and small business sectors need to thrive. I am running to ensure our government stays out of the way of hardworking families while providing the educational tools necessary for our next generation to stay and work right here in Wyoming.”
Bigelow’s campaign platform centers on three conservative pillars:
- Workforce Training & Economic Diversification: Utilizing her economic development expertise and community college experience to strengthen career technical education from junior high through university level programs, focusing on programs that meet the demands of Wyoming’s current and future industries.
- Fiscal Responsibility: Balancing saving for anticipated economic downturns in the energy sector with investing in needed infrastructure, educational programs and other services needed to maintain and strengthen the quality of life for all Wyomingites.
- Defending Wyoming Values: Standing firm on constitutional rights, supporting local control, protecting the state’s traditional energy and agricultural heritage and preserving state and federal public lands.
Bigelow spent over 35 years in leadership roles, where she successfully managed budgets in the defense, non-profit and public sectors and spearheaded initiatives that strengthened technical education for Sheridan College and other Wyoming community colleges. Bigelow believes that Wyoming’s education providers, both public and private, are the engine of economic diversification, and that principled, conservative leadership is required to keep that engine running efficiently. She brings a thoughtful and solutions-oriented approach to the challenges Wyoming faces.
“Wyoming needs leaders who understand what businesses need and know how education and technical training can meet those needs,” added Bigelow. “I look forward to meeting with neighbors across the district to discuss how Wyoming can connect business and education to provide jobs for future generations.”
Asked about her personal reason for entering this race, Bigelow responded, “My commitment to my family, my church, and the people of Sheridan County is the reason I’m running. I believe that being a good steward of our community means more than just showing up—it means taking the hard-earned lessons from our neighborhoods, our local businesses, and our classrooms to Cheyenne to ensure Wyoming remains a place where our children and grandchildren can thrive.”
For more information about the campaign or to join the volunteer team, please visit bigelowforHD51.com.
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About Susan Bigelow:
Susan Bigelow earned a Bachelor of Science in Electronic Engineering degree, a master’s degree in business administration (MBA) and a Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) with a focus on Community College Leadership. Bigelow’s first college degree was awarded by Laramie County Community College in Cheyenne, WY where she resided in the early 1980s. She has dedicated her career to strengthening Wyoming’s economic and educational landscape as the economic development director for Campbell, Crook, Weston, Niobrara and Converse Counties from 1996 to 2006. She served as the Vice President for External Relations and Economic Development for Northern Wyoming Community College District/Sheridan College from 2006 to 2018. She was a committee precinct woman for the Sheridan County Republicans and represented the Sheridan GOP at the 2016 State Convention. Bigelow is an active member of the Holy Name Catholic Church in Sheridan, a 30-year Rotarian, a member of the Sheridan County Chamber of Commerce, past president of the Wyoming Economic Development Association and has lived in Sheridan since 2006. Dr. Bigelow has supported many projects across Wyoming as an independent consultant for the past eight years. As an outdoor enthusiast, she enjoys year-round activities in the Big Horn Mountains.
Wyoming
TV Show Explores Wyoming’s Strangest House
The Amazon Prime show Forbidden Mysteries has an episode on one of the strangest architectural oddities in Wyoming.
Deep in Wyoming’s rugged landscape stands a strange wooden structure that defies explanation. The Smith Mansion was built over decades, yet its true purpose remains an unsolved mystery. (Forbidden Mysteries).
The Smith Mansion, also known as the Smith Family Cabin, is a large, prominent structure with a height of roughly 75 ft in the Wapiti Valley in Wapiti, Wyoming.
You can watch the cut of this episode on YouTube video below
There was nothing traditional about this house. Even the way they lived here. Forget beds and bedrooms. The video above explains.
Each week, Forbidden Mysteries uncovers the hidden truths, dark secrets, and extraordinary stories that history tried to forget. From royal scandals and unsolved murders to secret societies, ancient relics, and mysterious ruins, every episode takes you deeper into the shadows of the past.
The iconic Smith Mansion (or Smith Family Cabin) in Wapiti, Wyoming, is a notable 75-foot-tall, five-story log structure built by Francis Lee Smith between 1971 and 1992.
October 2019 to Zhiru Huang of Mountain Lodging for an undisclosed amount, although it was listed for roughly. It was sold by his daughter to preserve the legacy and stop vandalism.
If you want to drive out and see it for yourself, the Smith Mansion (or Smith Family Cabin) in Wapiti, Wyoming, is situated on the North Fork Highway between Cody and Yellowstone. This uniquely designed, rustic landmark is privately owned but easily viewed from the road.
Sure, you’ll want to go up and explore it for yourself. You’ll want to go inside. But, alas, you can’t. It’s probably not even safe.
The Beautiful Homes Of Sheridan Wyoming
Should you be visiting Sheridan, Wyoming, you MUST drive up the hill, past downtown, to see these wonderful homes.
There is no way to show them all.
So here are some of our favorites.
Gallery Credit: Glenn Woods
Wyoming
Spring is a good time to view sage-grouse
CHEYENNE — With warmer weather and greener landscapes, April is one of the best months of the year to view sage-grouse on their leks in Wyoming.
The sage-grouse is the largest species of grouse in North America. Each spring male sage-grouse performs an elaborate sunrise display on communal breeding grounds known as leks. While sage-grouse require sagebrush landscapes to survive, leks are often located in open areas where the males can be better seen and heard by females.
“The dramatic display makes viewing sage-grouse a popular recreational activity during the spring across much of Wyoming,” said Nyssa Whitford, sage grouse biologist for the Wyoming Game and Fish Department. “This year’s conditions are mostly dry across the state. We may still receive spring storms so be vigilant, watch the weather and pick a string of dry, clear mornings for your lek visit this year.”
To guide your lek outings, Game and Fish launched the Sage-Grouse Lek Viewing Guide to take you to the best publicly-accessible viewing locations across Wyoming. The guide provides directions to each lek location.
Game and Fish urges individuals when viewing to:
- Arrive at lek sites at least one hour before sunrise.
- Park away from the edge of the lek. Do not drive onto the lek.
- Turn off vehicle lights and engine.
- Use binoculars and spotting scopes to observe birds.
- Stay in your vehicle.
- Avoid making loud noises or sudden movements.
- Let the birds leave before you do.
- Leave pets at home.
- Respect private land and do not trespass.
- Postpone your visit if roads are muddy.
“Late-April is a good time to visit because most of the breeding is complete, but the males are still actively strutting. The weather is usually better, too,” Whitford said.
Wyoming has a long history of sage-grouse conservation, and was the first state to implement a statewide conservation strategy for the species. Through partnerships with landowners, other state and federal agencies and conservation organizations, Game and Fish has worked to balance land use with conservation efforts and help protect and restore sage-grouse populations throughout the state. For more information on our conservation efforts, please visit our sage-grouse management page.
—WGFD—
Wyoming
The Punjabi Truck Stop Serving Wyoming’s Best Indian Food
Inside Akal Travel Center, a 24-hour truck stop on Wyoming’s high plains, the smells of sizzling garlic and earthy curry powder permeate the air. It’s a gray, windy day in late January, and Ediquis Brown has parked his rig at the fuel station off Interstate 80, about 20 miles from downtown Laramie, Wyoming. He walks past aisles stocked with candy bars and kitschy souvenirs to the checkout counter, where he orders without even looking at the faded whiteboard menu. His go-to: tandoori chicken, garlic naan, one mango lassi, and two cups of creamy chai.
Based out of Fort Lauderdale, Brown travels east to west every week in his 18-wheeler, often driving up to 11-hour shifts and eating in his vehicle to stay on schedule. He is one of the dozens of motorists who come to Akal each day for house-made batches of beautifully blistered naan, golden-hued butter chicken, and biryani bejeweled with carrots and peas.
“We attract customers with the cheapest diesel—and the food,” says Gurjot Singh, who has been the truck stop’s manager since 2014, just two years after owners Mintu Pandher and his wife, Amandeep, bought the property. All 10 of their employees relocated to Laramie from the Punjab state of northwest India and now reside in a housing complex behind the gas station.
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