Well sit right back and I'll tell you a little story! Jim was a real life - third generation western cowboy and farrier. Always Handy at ranch repairs, he found himself graduating a heavy diesel school and following his heart to the great State of Alaska. What about Flo? How'd she get here? Living in Northern Michigan, and involved with Agriculture- Flo moved here after hearing the "call for working farmers to Alaska" in 1983. She departed her native state to escape to a place where drunken Detroit deer hunters could not be found in as large of numbers. As a farm employee she helped to clear the land and build the Point Mackenzie Agricultural District. Later she cared for the cattle. Alaska had indeed delivered on it's promise to both of them that it could provide beautiful scenery, more space and opportunities. OK so now Jim and Flo are in Alaska and working, what next? Jim and Flo met each other in 1994. By this time Jim was a well established Heavy Mechanic and jack of many trades! Flo had stopped farming with the downfall of the Ag district and started an art business in 1986 that had flourished. As an Artist she served many galleries and museums including the Anchorage Museum Shop, Pratt Museum Homer, and University of Washington Museum, 40 galleries in all. NOW what do you get when you put a mechanically inclined cowboy type with an artistic Farm gal who lives horses? (LOL!) SPARKS! They combined their lives and talents into a dynamic high tech manufacturing facility that served Alaskan artists, inventors and manufacturers via the University of Alaska. The operating base was a log cabin office overlooking the Knik Arm and Chugach Mountain Range. Yup, they started a Corporation together. It was the first high tech CNC machine shop in Alaska. Eventually the neighborhood grew, the business also outgrew the location. On their lunch break they would head out and ride horses for the hour....and then return to their desks! But Jim and Flo really needed a bigger place. High tech businesses should be located in a big city right? Not Always. Jim and Flo searched in earnest for an appropriate facility for their high tech fine art business. Yet they just could not bring themselves to buy Real Estate in the City. I mean....just because a person has had U of A Executive Privilege dose not mean they want to live in a City after all the work of finally making it to Beautiful Alaska! These two horse loving people just could not bring themselves to plop down all their hard earned money on a city spread. SO AT THE TIME...They did a wild and Crazy thing! They put in a bid on a former Dairy Farm in Point Mackenzie that had been defunct for a decade! On New Years Eve 2000 they were told they "won" themselves the right to try to qualify to buy the farm. They celebrated their butts off! Jim and Flo addressed the State Board of Agriculture (BAC) to let them know that even though they both had extensive Agricultural backgrounds, they were NOT going to rejuvenate the old dairy into a new dairy. In a booklet called "Pitcher Ranch" They announced their future plans to raise fine quarter horses, repair tractors, make hay and eventually create art work too, to the Alaska State BAC. The Board voted. Jim and Flo were approved! The Chairman advised them to "grab their seats with both hands and hang on for the ride", and they did. It was exciting! With so much work to be done, and so much planning to do they packed up their High tech equipment and put it into storage until the ranch buildings were better suited for their high tech operations. The large buildings on this farm all needed money and work. Jim went back to work on the North Slope to create a steady income, while Flo put her successful career on hold. She stayed on the ranch to take care of the horses, making repairs and improvements to the ranch. On his time off Jim also works hard on improvements for Pitcher Ranch. Today this process is ongoing. It has been a long road of work and sacrifices. Grateful people? Jim and Flo are both very grateful for the simple fact that in the history of the making of Pitcher Quarter Horse Ranch they got to do it together. No person died and left them any money, no one was robbed, shot, or even sued! No settlement money, not even one big easy break! We are equally grateful that many folks in our community have been happy with what we have to offer. What? Jim and / or Flo were not given a "free ride"? The answer is no. Making the Pitcher Quarter Horse Ranch "happen" in Alaska was accomplished by doing all the unglamorous hard work that comes with country life in Point Mackenzie, done by the sweat off our own backs. As you can see by this little story, we're not finished growing yet. What happened to the artwork? I suppose in a way, it found it's way into the Pitcher Ranch quarter horse herd. All of Jim and Flo's equipment is still safely stored away for the day when they decide they are ready to re-open their art business. For now beauty can still be found in the Pitcher Ranch Quarter Horse herd. Which is indeed a labor of love. |
| The husband and wife team has more than 80 years experience with horses. We enjoy the fine sport of riding and keeping horses! the main barn sports approximately 22,000 square feet of insulated, interior space. There are numerous lakes on the ranch to enjoy. We have dedicated approximately 100 acres to becoming luxurious horse pasture. The Ranch's private lands border the "point Mackenzie game ranch" where exotic elk and buffalo herds can be seen roaming. The ranch also boarders the State Game Refuge. There is much wild life to be seen and enjoyed. Pitcher Ranch is an ongoing project and each year that we work on it with our friends, the better it becomes. We like to relax in western style. We work hard, and we play hard. We like live music, "b" rated western movies, and good look'in horses! |
| At Left: Jim Pitcher 2005, many moons after farrier school |
| Grand Father George Pitcher |
| Father Darvin Pitcher |
| Flo at H&R Dairy (Now Broste Dairy) in 1985. |
| Flo as ASQHA show manager in 2007 pictured with friends and AQHA judge Richard Shrake |
| 1994 Jim and Flo |
| At Right: Jim, Flo and Hope working at Alastech in 1999. |
| At Left: A few of our 2000-2001 Hooves N Harmony 4-H club kids. Jim Pitcher, District leader of the year |
| Jim and Flo Pitcher in 2007. |