Hibbits Ranch, Lompoc

Conserved for

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If you have driven on Highway 246 into Lompoc, you have seen the sunlight flickering through the big walnut groves that are the hallmark of Hibbits Ranch, a 395-acre farm just east of the city limits. Four generations of the Hibbits family have farmed the Lompoc Valley, building a diverse and successful farming operation run today by Art Hibbits. His ranch features prime topsoil over 30 feet deep in places, and has supported a wide array of nuts, vegetables, seed crops as well as cattle grazing, for over a century.

The Hibbits family decided to protect the enduring scenic and agricultural value of their land through a voluntary conservation agreement with the Land Trust for Santa Barbara County. The Hibbits Ranch is the largest single land holding within a block of scenic and highly productive farmland framed by the City of Lompoc, the Santa Ynez River and Santa Rosa Hills, and La Purisima Mission State Historic Park. Located less than 2,000 feet from the Lompoc city limit, there have been several attempts to extend city limits on to this and adjacent farm properties. In recent years, hundreds of acres of agricultural land west and north of the city have been annexed for residential and commercial development—an irreversible conversion that changes the topsoil and landscape forever.

A long-standing advocate for the protection and improvement of local agriculture, Art says,

“Our family’s goals in pursuing this conservation easement are to protect and encourage the continued agricultural uses on the ranch in a long term, sustainable manner, whereby productivity and economic viability are maintained and enhanced. We want future generations to have the maximum flexibility in future choices of crops, equipment, agricultural related facilities, and farming practices and our agreement with the Land Trust will clearly state these objectives.”

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