Wyoming Ranch Family Celebrate July 4 With Legions of Flags Lining Highway on Farm—Tell Reason Why

Wyoming Ranch Family Celebrate July 4 With Legions of Flags Lining Highway on Farm—Tell Reason Why
The Rhodes family putting up dozens of flags on July 2 for the Fourth of July. (Illustration by The Epoch Times, Courtesy of Salt River Ranch)
Michael Wing
Updated:
0:00

America is a fancy cut of steak shipped on dry ice to your doorstep from Wyoming. America is grass-fed, grain-finished ground beef raised by a family who fled corporate finance careers to start a farm.

America is more than a country—it is an idea, a spirit, a way of life.

On July 1, we asked Amy Rhodes, 39, a mother and the wife of a cattle rancher on Salt River Ranch, how she and her family will celebrate the Fourth of July. And we asked what America is.

For her family, on July 4, there will be flags by the bundle flown on the farm. “Close to 50,” she told The Epoch Times. They plan to line the highway with fluttering red, white, and blue all along the fence line of their property by planting them in brackets set in fenceposts. “We’re gonna try to cover all of it if we can, the whole stretch,” she said.

The Rhodes moved to Wyoming to start a cattle ranch about seven years ago, after moving from Orange County, California. (Courtesy of <a href="https://saltriverranch.com/">Salt River Ranch</a>)
The Rhodes moved to Wyoming to start a cattle ranch about seven years ago, after moving from Orange County, California. (Courtesy of Salt River Ranch)

That planting of flags began on July 2 so that travelers along the highway would have a few days to appreciate the patriotic gesture. Last year, most of the Rhodeses inaugurated this family affair. This year, it will be solidified as tradition as, at the time of writing, they prepare a tractor to haul their flags and four kids, who will unload and raise the stars and stripes along the highway again.

“They had so much fun doing it,” Mrs. Rhodes said of their first year’s occasion. “They were asking us if we can do it again this year.”

The Rhodes family setting out flags days ahead of the Fourth of July. (Courtesy of <a href="https://saltriverranch.com/">Salt River Ranch</a>)
The Rhodes family setting out flags days ahead of the Fourth of July. (Courtesy of Salt River Ranch)

Mrs. Rhodes’s 77-year-old father, Darcel Hulse, also participates. He screws in the braces for each flag on each fencepost in advance, so the kids can mount them with ease. Brynn is 11, Brody is 9, Josie is 7, and Covey is 4. Their new bundle, Livvy, is 8 months old. In their brood, Mrs. Rhodes and her husband, Chris Rhodes, hope to instill American values.

“We were just trying to think of a way that we could show our love for our country,” she said. “And we were trying to instill in our kids the importance of the flag.”

What is America?

America is “a gift from God,” she told the newspaper. “The only way to really change the trajectory of our nation is to raise a generation to love our country, and to love and respect our flag, and understand the freedoms that it really represents.”

Last year, the Rhodeses’ children gained a reverence for the flag, she said, and felt united with fellow Americans as they saw and heard truck drivers on the highway, blaring their horns and waving in support of their first flag-raising.

“There’s so much division in our country—right now especially,” Mrs. Rhodes said. It seems now they have found some common ground with their neighbors.

The family has forged a new tradition of patriotism, setting up flags by the bundle. (Courtesy of <a href="https://saltriverranch.com/">Salt River Ranch</a>)
The family has forged a new tradition of patriotism, setting up flags by the bundle. (Courtesy of Salt River Ranch)

The family’s life began in California where Mr. Rhodes, worked in corporate finance and Mrs. Rhodes in marketing. She said they were dissatisfied with what they saw going on in the nation, and began to feel it was impossible in Orange County to raise their children in the way they had hoped. They would teach them to appreciate the land. They would learn “to love the land,” she said.

“So we moved out to Wyoming, and my parents bought a cattle ranch out here,” she said, “and asked my husband and I to run it.”

That was nearly seven years ago. Today, the Rhodeses lead a lifestyle that is the diametric opposite of suburban California, but they still hold no regrets. “We’ve never looked back,” Mrs. Rhodes said. “It’s a great place to raise a family. The winters are very long. We don’t have the beach anymore, but we wouldn’t trade it for anything.”

(Courtesy of Salt River Ranch)
Here in Star Valley, Wyoming, the Rhodeses take pride in raising cattle “the right way,” she said. Now Americans nationwide can order premium beef from them by the cut online. They ship it in insulated boxes every Tuesday, to arrive on doorsteps still frozen the next day. “People love to be able to know their rancher personally,” Mrs. Rhodes said.

And that most certainly is America.

After setting up dozens of flags today, July 2, Mrs. Rhodes informed The Epoch Times prior to publishing this article that it was a marvelous success. She sent photos and video (above). They received many positive text messages, and she says the kids are loving their new family tradition and want to expand it. Four-year-old Covey asked, “Why is everyone honking at us?” His mom replied, “They like what we are doing and are showing their support by giving us some honks.”
Share your stories with us at [email protected], and continue to get your daily dose of inspiration by signing up for the Inspired newsletter at TheEpochTimes.com/newsletter
Related Topics