Retirement Property Defense: How One Man Protected His Mountain Cabin Investment and Family Legacy Through Strategic Legal Planning
“Two of these,” I said.
“Three hundred forty dollars,” he replied, processing the transaction.
I paid with cash.
Wednesday afternoon at the cabin, I installed both cameras methodically. One covered the driveway approach. The other angled toward the front porch and clearing beyond. I tested the motion sensors, verified signal strength, adjusted positions repeatedly until coverage was optimal.
The engineering component of my brain, honed through forty years of solving structural problems, found deep satisfaction in the precision work. Conceal the cameras sufficiently to remain unobtrusive. Position them for maximum capture effectiveness. Test, adjust, verify results.
Both cameras successfully connected to my phone despite only one bar of cellular service. Weak signal, but functional.
Thursday morning, I drove back to Cody once more. The butcher shop occupied a side street off the main commercial district, the kind of establishment serving ranchers and local restaurants, featuring a hand-painted sign and a faded American flag in the front window.
“Need twenty pounds of beef scraps,” I said. “Organ meat, fat trimmings. For dogs.”
The butcher didn’t react with surprise or curiosity. “You got it.”
Forty-five dollars later, I walked out carrying meat wrapped in thick white paper and loaded into coolers I’d brought in the truck bed. The smell manifested immediately and powerfully. Blood, fat, raw flesh.
Thursday afternoon, I stood in the clearing behind my cabin with the coolers open before me. Wind originated from the west. I verified direction the old-fashioned way, wetting my finger and holding it aloft.
I walked thirty yards from the structure, positioning myself upwind. Then I distributed the meat in three separate piles, spreading them to maximize scent dispersion through the forest. Not random placement, but calculated. Close enough to draw predators to the general area, distant enough that they’d focus on the meat piles rather than the building itself.
I wasn’t attempting to endanger anyone.
I was attempting to educate them about reality.
Back inside the cabin, I moved through each room systematically. Locked windows. Disabled unnecessary electrical systems. Set the thermostat to minimal heat, protecting my investment while simultaneously establishing my trap.
I paused at the door, took one final look at the space I’d inhabited for less than three complete days, and departed without hesitation.
The drive back to Denver consumed approximately five hours, carrying me down from high country back into suburban sprawl, fast-food chains, endless traffic lanes. I arrived at my old house just before midnight. I still owned it, hadn’t sold it yet, so it sat partially furnished but hollow, echoing.
I unloaded my truck, established my laptop in the living room, positioned my phone where I could monitor the camera feeds continuously. Then I waited.
Friday morning at ten o’clock, a sedan materialized on my phone screen, rolling up my Wyoming driveway in crisp morning light. Leonard and Grace emerged, dressed for what they’d clearly conceptualized as rustic inconvenience rather than genuine wilderness.
They surveyed their surroundings with expressions I recognized even on the small display screen. Displeasure. Judgment. A quiet calculation of how much discomfort they’d be forced to tolerate.
The camera microphone captured their voices with surprising clarity.
“This is where he’s living now?” Grace wrinkled her nose visibly. “It smells like pine trees and dirt.”
“At least it’s free accommodation,” Leonard said, walking toward the cabin entrance. “We’ll stay a few months. Let Cornelius figure out the next step. I don’t understand why we had to drive all the way out to—”
Grace stopped abruptly. Froze completely.
“Leonard,” she whispered urgently. “Wolves.”
Three shapes emerged from the northwest tree line. Gray and brown bodies moved with cautious purpose toward the meat piles. Not aggressive, not interested in the humans at all, just hungry.
Leonard saw them and his face drained of color.
“Get in the car. Get in the car right now.”
They ran. Grace stumbled, recovered her balance. Car doors slammed shut. The engine roared to life, and gravel sprayed wildly as they reversed, then accelerated back down the driveway, fleeing toward highways and their manicured suburban lawns somewhere far from Wyoming.
The wolves, completely unbothered by the human drama, continued toward the meat.
I closed the laptop and retrieved my coffee. Took a slow, deliberate sip.
Twenty minutes elapsed before my phone rang.
“What did you do?” Cornelius’s voice had shed its businesslike edge entirely. Now it contained pure fury. “My parents nearly got attacked by wild animals.”
“I didn’t do anything,” I responded calmly. “I warned you this property sits in genuine wilderness. You created this situation.”
“You baited those animals deliberately.”
“Cornelius, I live in wolf country. Wolves inhabit these mountains. This is their natural home. Perhaps you should have inquired before assuming you could appropriate mine as a retirement facility for your parents.”
“You’re completely insane. I’m going to—”
“You’re going to what?” I asked quietly. “Sue me because wildlife exists on my property? I wish you luck with that legal strategy.”
“This isn’t finished,” he snapped.
“No,” I agreed, “it’s just beginning.”
I pressed the end call button, set the phone down deliberately, reopened the laptop, and watched the wolves finish consuming the meat before disappearing back into the forest.
Outside my Denver window, the mountains rose in the distance, blue and remote. Somewhere up there, my cabin waited in its clearing. I’d been planning defense, constructing barriers. But sitting there, watching the recorded footage one more time, I recognized something had fundamentally shifted.
This wasn’t about defense anymore.
Two weeks passed before Cornelius made his next move. I spent those days attempting to settle into the routine I’d originally imagined. Splitting my time between Denver and Wyoming while tying up remaining loose ends. Coffee on the cabin porch at dawn, watching elk drift through the clearing like ghosts. Reading books I’d postponed for decades.
But the peace felt conditional now, fragile, like standing on ice that might fracture beneath my weight at any moment. I checked my phone more frequently than I wanted to admit, kept the camera feeds open on my laptop constantly, listened for vehicles approaching along the dirt road.
Mid-April brought warmer afternoons and the first serious wildflowers along Wyoming highway shoulders, purple and yellow blooms emerging against the brown earth. I was splitting firewood beside the cabin when my phone rang.

“Dad, please.” Bula’s voice fractured on the second word. She was crying, unmistakably crying. “Cornelius showed me the footage of the wolves. That situation could have been so much worse.”
I set down the axe and walked to the porch, looking out over the clearing that had nearly hosted my uninvited guests.
“Bula, honey, wolves live in these mountains naturally. I didn’t create that situation. I explicitly warned Cornelius this wasn’t appropriate housing for his parents.”