John Heily, the chairman and chief executive of Continental Mills Inc., which owns such brands as Krusteaz and Buck Wild, is not, by his own account, a sportsman. “There isn’t a bone in my body that’s a cowboy or even an outdoorsman,” he says.

Still, during a family trip to the Montana fly-fishing lodge Ruby Springs, Heily, in the midst of what he describes as “a pretty generous cocktail hour,” decided he needed to have a ranch of his own, despite being based in Seattle. Even after the effects of cocktail hour had subsided, he stuck with his plan. He and his wife Deeanna chartered a helicopter in Missoula to look at various properties that were for sale, and “we tooled around, but we didn’t see anything we enjoyed.”

“One of the things about Montana is that a lot of people build a lot of palatial houses,” Heily explains. Those people “do it for the right reasons—security, privacy, etc.—but they find they don’t have any support. There’s no plumbing or internet or electrical, and it becomes a burden.”

Heily was understandably eager to avoid the same trap, so when a 225-acre plot of land that abutted Ruby Springs’s property came up for sale, “I was given a very short period of time to say yes or no, and I said ‘Absolutely,’ not having a clue about what I was getting myself into.” He paid roughly $11,000 an acre, he says.

That was eight years ago. Today, Heily is the proud owner of a nearly 10,000-square-foot house on what’s now become a 400-acre property named Ruby River One and Done Ranch. The name, he says, came via a friend: “We used to end up in a saloon, and I’d say I had to go home, and he’d say: ‘Johnny? One and done. After all, you’re going to be dead a long time!’”

The name, in other words, “is about making memories,” Heily says. “As you get older, memories get to be an awful lot more important.”

It’s for that very reason, though, that Heily put the ranch on the market with Keith Lenard of Hall and Hall for $14.2 million. When one of his adult children moved away, “It made us think: Maybe there’s something closer to home that would better fit our current needs.”

Figuring Out What to Do
After Heily bought the land, he set to figuring out a plan. He hired Seattle-based architect George Suyama, along with interior designer Christian Grevståd, and gave them a single brief. “My major contribution was: I don’t want to out-Montana Montana,” Heily says. By that, he says he didn’t want to create a faux-rustic lodge with moose antlers and wool blankets; he wanted something that looked and felt contemporary.

With both designer and architect in the driver’s seat, Heily said the building process was “so doggone much fun.” He shares a private plane with two other partners, and he, his wife, the architect, and the designer would use it to fly the 105 minutes from Seattle to Twin Bridges to work on the property, a 15-minute drive from town.

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