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HomeServicesArts and CultureThe Denver Broncos Mascot's $23 Million Ranch Is For Sale

The Denver Broncos Mascot’s $23 Million Ranch Is For Sale

At the time Sharon Magness Blake’s first husband, Tele-Communications Inc. founder Bob Magness, died in 1996, she estimates they had a ranch with about 900 Arabian horses. She continued racing for about five years after her husband’s death, she says, “but then it became overwhelming.”

Magness Blake began to sell the horses off, and by the time she began looking for a new ranch in 2002 with her future husband Ernie Blake, “I only had about 30 horses,” she says. Of the steeds she kept, one was of particular importance: Thunder, the official mascot of the Denver Broncos.

Since the early 1990s, she and her husband had been the owner of the pro football mascot. Unofficially, Magness Blake says, there are actually four Thunders. The first died seven years ago; the second is retired; the third is on active duty—he leads the team onto the field before each game, and every time they score he carries a flag down the field—and the fourth is in training. (She refers to them as Thunder 1, Thunder 2, Thunder 3, and Thunder 4.)

So the Blakes’ new ranch wouldn’t just be for their vacations, it would be for the Thunders, too.

The Ranch
After a search, they found a 255-acre ranch about an hour and a half drive from Denver. It had been developed in the ’90s by two Texan friends who’d each built their own houses on the property about a quarter-mile apart.

“For us it was just perfect,” says Ernie Blake, a retired attorney and the onetime mayor of Breckenridge, Colo. “One of the houses we call the main house, and that’s our home, and the other we call the guest house,” and use it for their frequent visitors.                     

Magness Blake says they spent about $11 million to purchase the property, and they moved in in 2003. Almost immediately, they set about making improvements that she estimates cost another $6 million to $7 million. Most of the additions were horse-related, including adding stables directly to the house so Thunder 3 was never far away. “I guess it’s more of a pet-type thing,” she says. “We’re really close to him.”

That Thunder, currently employed as a mascot, grew up on the ranch, she says, though Thunder 4 is training elsewhere.

The Blakes, Thunder in tow, would go to the ranch for some relaxation and horse riding, but at this point, Magness Blake says, “we have a huge life in Denver, and we don’t get there as much.” As a consequence, they’ve put the Silverthorne ranch on the market with Jack Wolfe of LIV Sotheby’s International Realty for $23 million.

The Buildings
The property is configured with a heavy emphasis on horse riding. There’s a large indoor riding arena, 10-stall stable (separate from the attached one previously mentioned), and miles of riding trails, which the Blakes made with wood chips from felled pine trees on the ranch.

There are other maintenance buildings and staff quarters, including a three-bedroom ranch manager’s house at the property’s entrance, a refurbished barn with its own apartment, and an equipment shed that houses tractors, their boat, and other machinery.

The houses are reached by a 2-mile-long road that snakes halfway up the property.

The “guest house” is 7,500 square feet and has six en suite bedrooms, which include a master bedroom and a two-bedroom mother-in-law apartment. (The mother-in-law apartment has its own kitchen and living area.) The guest house, the Blakes say, is the grander of the two homes. It has a lodgelike, open-plan living area with a cathedral ceiling.

“That’s where we do all the entertaining and cooking,” says Magness Blake. “One time we took the furniture out and had 200 people in it for a nonprofit event.”

The main house, which the Blakes live in, is more homey, they say. It’s slightly smaller—under 7,000 square feet—though it also has six bedrooms. “When people visit us,” Blake says, “we show them both homes and we ask each of them: If you were us, which would have chosen to live in?” Answers, he says, are split 50/ 50. “They just have a different feel,” he explains.

There’s also a restored cabin, which Blake calls a “a big wooden tent for the grandchildren,” and a winterized log cabin used by workers on the ranch.

The Property
Most of the property is uninhabited, with several creeks that run through it, seven ponds, rolling fields, and aspen groves. With the exception of 60 cows that graze on the property and wild turkeys (the Blakes bred the turkeys themselves, “but they’re so doggone good we don’t ever see them anymore”), the ranch is an oasis of calm. “It’s not unusual, when you wander out and keep quiet, to see both elk and moose,” he says.

But given their obligations, and the fact that they visit it so seldom—“we haven’t gotten there more than a week a year, for the last several years,” Blake says—the cost of operating the ranch “got hard to justify.”

“We’re very sad about selling,” Magness Blake adds. “We’re conflicted, but it gets down to being practical. We’re getting older, and we have to look forward to doing things appropriate to our age.”

This article was provided by Bloomberg News.

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