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The Bighorn Mountain Ranch near Greybull, Wyoming, is back in the hands of its original owners after six years under Kanye West’s ownership.
According to Cowboy State Daily, Greg and Pam Flitner have officially repurchased the 6,713-acre property for $14 million. The sale was finalized on September 17 in Zurich, notarized by West’s wife, Bianca Censori.
West originally bought the ranch in 2019 from Greg’s father, David Flitner, and his wife, Paula — just months after purchasing his nearby 3,885-acre Monster Lake Ranch. At the time, West had ambitious plans to build a “Yeezy Campus” and manufacture shoes in Cody, Wyoming, but those ideas never came to fruition.
For Greg Flitner, buying back the family’s historic property was deeply personal. “A lot of times, the estate plan isn’t fully done until you’re in your 50s,” he explained. “Those deals don’t always go the way you think they might. Pam and I were partners in the ranch with my dad and his wife — that’s just how it went as far as the estate plan.”
During the six years West owned the ranch, the Flitners tried unsuccessfully to lease it back. The property was listed for sale several times, and the couple eventually discovered it was back on the market in September — by chance.
“It was not listed publicly at first,” Pam said. “It was honestly a fluke that we found out it was listed, and then it was taken down again. We rushed to contact the realtor because a lot of potential buyers were speculators. We were really worried someone would buy it and turn it into a giant subdivision.”
The Bighorn Mountain Ranch holds deep generational importance for the Flitner family. Founded in 1906 by Arthur Flitner, it has long been a cornerstone of the family’s cattle and grazing operations. Among the historic structures still standing is the Baldridge Cabin, a cherished log cabin that has served as the ranch’s cow camp headquarters for decades.
Fortunately for the Flitners, Kanye West left the ranch largely untouched.
“He did not knock down — unlike Monster Ranch — any of the buildings,” Pam noted. “They may need a little TLC, but they’re all solid. He didn’t go in with a bulldozer and take them down.”
The sale marks a full-circle moment for the Flitner family, restoring their legacy on the land their ancestors began more than a century ago.
