Listen Live
Listen Live

Southwest Alberta rancher protects provincially rare habitat

Lethbridge, AB – The Nature Conservancy of Canada (NCC) is announcing a new conservation site in southwest Alberta. This 303-hectare property, dubbed Chapel Rock, has coniferous forests, grasslands, vital riparian zones and is one of the rarest habitats in Alberta.

Chapel Rock is in the Castle-Crowsnest Watershed Natural Area and was first homesteaded by Joseph Pisony in 1912. The land has since been passed down through five generations, each one acquiring more land around the original homestead to grow the ranch. Now, the Pisony family has decided to place a conservation easement on a portion of the land.

This new agreement between NCC and the Pisony family voluntarily restricts development rights on the land. The legal contract will ensure that the property can continue operating as a working cattle ranch, while maintaining the landscape in a natural, healthy, unfragmented state.

Current landowner Berwyn Pisony says he couldn’t be more pleased with the land designation. “We’re going on five generations. Time goes on and things keep changing and I just hope that whoever else runs the land in the future, we want to see them honour the use of the land and take care of it.”

Each working ranch conserved in this region benefits the ranching community and native wildlife, and the waters flowing into the Oldman River. NCC’s conservation of this significant stretch of working rangeland will assist in conserving water quality, flood mitigation and the maintenance of an important watershed along Alberta’s southern foothills.

Emilie Brien is the National Area Manager for the Castle-Crowsnest Watershed, and she says ranching is the perfect use for this conservation land. “This way it is a working landscape. I think ranching and environmental protection as they can be done together. It’s the best of both worlds.”

Wetlands like those found at Chapel Rock are directly linked to the survival of many species, as they provide nesting, breeding, and feeding opportunities while also playing an important role in maintaining water quality for people and species.

The Chapel Rock property is also part of a natural corridor where mammals move through the foothills along the eastern edge of the Rocky Mountains. It offers critical habitat for mammals such as elk, bighorn sheep, moose, and mule deer. Grizzly bears, listed as a species of special concern under Canada’s Species at Risk Act, have also been spotted ambling across this property.

This conservation project was made possible with funding from the Government of Canada’s Natural Heritage Conservation Program, part of Canada’s Nature Fund, and the Government of Alberta’s Land Trust Grant Program.

- Advertisement -

cjoc Now playing play

ckbd Now playing play

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

Kidney Walk happening in Lethbridge later this month

At the end of the month members of the Lethbridge community are invited to come together to raise funds and awareness about organ donation during the Lethbridge Kidney Walk. 

Taber to host national handgun competition in July

Over the next three months, Alberta will be welcoming 12 major sporting events to the province, including the IPSC Canadian Handgun Nationals July 28 to Aug. 3 in Taber. 

More measles cases confirmed in southern Alberta

More measles cases have been reported in southern Alberta, prompting an advisory from Alberta Health Services.

UPDATE: Man wanted in connection with alleged sexual assault investigation

Lethbridge Police need your help to locate 26-year-old Terrance Cooper Dayne Many Grey Horses wanted in connection with an ongoing and alleged sexual assault investigation. 

Coaldale council approves 2.85 per cent property tax increase

Coaldale council has approved the 2025 Property Tax Bylaw, resulting in a 2.85 per cent property tax increase.
- Advertisement -