Your Basecamp for Birding
From the moment you arrive, you’re just minutes away from some of the best birding opportunities in the region. Stay close to the action, maximize your time in the field, and unwind in comfort at the end of the day.
Experience the quiet, wide-open beauty of northwest Oklahoma with a stay in our comfortable on-site guest house—your home base for birding, photography, and rest between adventures.
Our guest house is clean, comfortable, and fully equipped for your stay. It features a full kitchen, bathroom, WiFi, and two bedrooms with bunk beds that can accommodate up to six guests. Whether you’re here for a weekend getaway or an extended birding trip, you’ll have everything you need to feel at home.
Experience the land the way it was meant to be—quiet, open, and untouched. Selman Ranch offers a private, immersive stay designed for those who value nature, wildlife, and wide-open spaces.
$200 per day for 2 guests
$40 per day for each additional guest
Includes 2 meals daily
$100 per tour
Available for morning and evening birding sessions
Want to make the most of your time on the ranch?
We offer guided birding tours in the morning and evening—prime times for activity—helping you spot more species and better understand the land.
Tour Rate: $100 per session (morning or evening)
Whether you’re an experienced birder or just getting started, guided tours provide valuable insight into the habitat and species that make this ranch unique.


Selman Ranch is home to a wide variety of bird species year-round, with even greater diversity during migration seasons. No long drives. No crowded parks.
Selman Ranch offers a comfortable on-site guest house so you can wake up and step directly into the experience.
• Sleeps up to 6 guests
• Fully equipped kitchen
•Clean, comfortable accommodations
• WiFi available
Pricing:
$200 per night for 2 guests
+$40 per additional guest
(Includes 2 meals)
Selman Ranch has been recognized for its commitment to preserving habitat and supporting bird populations:
• Audubon Important Birding Area (Private)
• Oklahoma Ornithological Society – Certificate of Merit
• US Fish & Wildlife High Plains Partnership
• Four-C’s Conservation Award
• Recognition from Quail Forever
This is land that has been intentionally cared for—decades in the making.
This isn’t a staged getaway—it’s a real, generational cattle ranch with deep roots and authentic western heritage you can feel the moment you arrive.
We’ve spent generations caring for this land—balancing livestock and wildlife to create a thriving habitat recognized by Audubon and conservation partners.
Located along the Central Flyway, our diverse landscape attracts a wide variety of resident and migratory birds, making every visit a unique experience.
We’ve spent generations caring for this land—balancing livestock and wildlife to create a thriving habitat recognized by Audubon and conservation partners.
With limited guest access across 14,000 acres, you’ll experience wide-open space, quiet surroundings, and a level of privacy that’s hard to find anywhere else.

Sue Selman put us up in a spacious 2-bedroom guest house on her enormous ranch in Oklahoma. She personally drove us out almost daily to different locations for viewing and photographing many bird species.
Sue, an excellent birder with intimate knowledge of her property, knew where all the birds could be found. The ranch features an amazing variety of landscapes—from cliffs and meadows to trees and salt flats.
My favorite destination was finding gorgeous scissor-tailed flycatchers building a nest above a field with Indian blanket flowers. Another highlight was the salt flats, where snowy plovers were chirping along the water’s edge. And I can’t leave out the vividly-colored painted buntings.
I highly recommend a birding or bird photography trip to Sue’s ranch!
Rob Palmer
Wildlife Photographer & Raptors Expert featured in Audubon Magazine, National Wildlife, and BBC Wildlife

Selman Ranch remains one of best places to bird rare high plains grassland. The ranch offers a mix of habitat types including mesas, inland salt flats, cottonwood stream corridors, sand sage grassland, shortgrass uplands and tallgrass valleys. You'll see raptors on the mesas, least terns and snowy plovers on the salt flats, wild turkeys and a variety of owls along the river corridors. Grasslands provide a mix including grasshopper sparrows, loggerhead shrikes and a variety of flycatchers and nighthawks. Sue Selman is a wonderful host and the history of the place is as interesting as the birding is diverse.
Gary Lantz
Gary Lantz writes about natural history. His work has appeared in publications including National Wildlife, American Forests and Birder's World.