Author Topic: Arivaca Boys Ranch  (Read 21486 times)

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Offline NIGEL

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Arivaca Boys Ranch
« on: November 03, 2011, 03:48:28 PM »
I recently talked to someone who is thinking about sending their son to the Arivaca Boys Ranch.  I told her I would help her do some research on the place.  Does anyone have any info on it?  Thanks.
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Offline none-ya

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Re: Arivaca Boys Ranch
« Reply #1 on: November 03, 2011, 09:59:56 PM »
Anything ending in "boys ranch" can't be good.
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Offline cmack

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Re: Arivaca Boys Ranch
« Reply #2 on: November 04, 2011, 04:16:23 AM »
From http://www.heal-online.org

Quote
Arivaca Boys Ranch--Located in Arivaca, AZ (on Mexican Border).  It looks to be a basic slave/labor camp.  These ranchers get free labor that they can exploit and abuse while charging families big money.  The website plays into the scapegoating of children by taking all responsibility off the parents or family dynamic and blaming the child.  This is a sign of an abusive environment.  Children, teenagers, and the adults in their lives all contribute to the overall social environment that can create imbalance, lack of good communication, and a complete breakdown of the family dynamic.  It is up to everyone to work together to resolve family issues.  Any program that sets parents and children against each other and takes the "side" of the parent without having properly assessed the needs of the family, including the child in question, is likely fraudulent and abusive.  We would recommend against placing any child at such a facility as Arivaca Boys Ranch.  Please   contact us if you need to expose abuse or violations at this facility.  For staff and background info,    click here.

http://www.heal-online.org/childtortureusa.htm#arivaca
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Offline cmack

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Re: Arivaca Boys Ranch
« Reply #3 on: November 04, 2011, 04:28:55 AM »
From the Arivaca website: http://arivacaboysranch.com/index.php

http://arivacaboysranch.com/troubled-te ... -signs.php

Message to parents:

Quote
What Arivaca Boys Ranch offers, most parents cannot provide...

Most of all, the staff at Arivaca can teach you how to detach from the guilt associated with this traumatic experience...

http://arivacaboysranch.com/troubled-teen-transport.php

Quote
Once the decision to enroll your son into a program is made, the method to get him there becomes and important issue...
 
Transport Services. For the young man that simply will not come, you can hire the services of a transport company. These professionals are bonded and insured and know how to get your son to the program with little incident. They generally help the young man understand what is happening and work to lessen the anxiety. Costs run from $1500 to $3500 for transport. We are happy to provide some referrals.

Once a young man arrives at the Ranch, several things happen to make it easier for him.

    * First, we are happy, upbeat, and enthusiastic about his attendance and participation in our Ranch.
    * Secondly, we tour the ranch and get him settled in.
    * Thirdly, we let him talk to the other boys who have all gone through the similar experience and will tell him that the Ranch is great and that he will actually like it.

It is amazing how the other boys reach out to a new placement. Some of the more difficult boys take a little more time to adjust and accept their enrollment into the program. This is not a problem, but is part of the therapeutic process that helps us direct him to change.
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Offline Ursus

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Re: Arivaca Boys Ranch
« Reply #4 on: November 04, 2011, 05:46:40 PM »
Their primary selling point appears to be that youth get to tame and train a wild horse from start to finish. Arivaca Boys Ranch also claims to adhere to Arbinger Principles, although usage of involuntary transport to the ranch would appear to be in serious conflict with that. There are, moreover, other such inconsistencies, which may suggest a degree of unreliability in the info presented via their marketing efforts.

Here's their homepage:

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Therapeutic Boarding School & Boys Ranch in Arizona

The Arivaca Boys Ranch serves 40-50 boys, age 14 to 18, on a 23,000 acre, 140-year-old ranch. The ranch is specifically designed to therapeutically help teenage boys learn how to make better decisions and become more mature in their thinking, while learning life skills right along with "book learning" in our accredited on-campus school.

Arivaca Boys Ranch uses three powerful tools to help teen boys get on a right path in life. First, a unique form of equine therapy, commonly used to help teens who are struggling, but we take it one step further, we teach the boys to become "horse whisperers." Known as the "Arivaca Way," our therapeutic model teaches boys to understand how their behavior or mood affects their horse and others around them, that helps them be more aware and responsible for their actions. Secondly, we use Arbinger Principles to help provide a foundation for moving behavior from anger to positive motivational action. The principles were developed by the Arbinger Institute, which is a worldwide leader in training on anger management. And third, we use the working ranch setting for training, responsibility and positive peer influence as a means of helping the teen grow in maturity.

If your son is struggling, consider Arivaca Boys Ranch for helping him find his way back to right tinking and to a renewed relationship with you. We have a full academic program, 24/7 care, as well as our unique and effective 3-tiered therapy. The Arivaca ranch is at a higher elevation, with a climate similar to inland San Diego.


© Copyright 2011, Arivaca Boys Ranch, a therapeutic ranch for boys, located in Arizona, but boys come from around the country. Phone: 877­-886-9766
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Offline cum guzzler

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« Reply #5 on: November 04, 2011, 11:01:23 PM »
.
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Offline Che Gookin

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Re: Arivaca Boys Ranch
« Reply #6 on: November 05, 2011, 02:10:00 AM »
That horse training bit could be interesting, not all that sure about the rest of it though. I mean just who are they breaking.. the kids or the horses?
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Offline Oscar

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Re: Arivaca Boys Ranch
« Reply #7 on: November 05, 2011, 03:40:18 AM »
Both HEAL-online and Antiwwasp share the information that a former staff member from Casa by the Sea is working at the facility. As result we have recreated a datasheet on Fornits wiki
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Offline Froderik

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Re: Arivaca Boys Ranch
« Reply #8 on: November 05, 2011, 10:51:50 AM »
Quote from: "none-ya"
Anything ending in "boys ranch" can't be good.

 :rofl:  :rofl:  :rofl:  :notworthy:  :roflmao:  :twofinger:  :rofl:  :rofl:  :rocker:  :jamin:
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Offline Ursus

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Re: Arivaca Boys Ranch
« Reply #9 on: November 08, 2011, 11:47:09 AM »
From Strugglingteens.com:

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New Perspectives
May 3, 2010, 05:59


ARIVACA BOYS RANCH

Arivaca, Arizona
Ron Searle
Managing Partner
877-886-9766
http://www.arivicaboysranch.com

Originally founded in the 1870's, Arivaca Boys Ranch is a therapeutic boarding school and teen boy's ranch, situated in southern Arizona on 23,000 acres. This working ranch works with young men ages 13-17 years old who are struggling with academic issues and ADD/ADHD, ODD and conduct disorders, anger management, drug and alcohol abuse, negative peer relationships, depression and negative behaviors that may include lying, stealing and sneaking out of the house.

Managing partner at Arivaca Boys Ranch is Ron Searle who holds a masters degree in business and has worked over 26 years in youth education as an instructor and principal at private schools. D. Hyrum Wright is the Clinical Director who holds an EDS and a master's degree from Brigham Young. He is currently the director of the ASU Institute of Religion. Mike and Margaret Stroud are the ranch directors and live on the ranch while giving the boys a sense of stability and are the acting "mom and dad" at the ranch.

Arivica offers an accredited high school curriculum through Sequoia Choice Distance Learning, which is accredited by the Commission on International and Trans-Regional Accreditation (CITA) and the North Central Association Commission on Accreditation and School Improvement (NCA CASI). Academics include computer lab work, hands on lab work and classroom instruction in general academic subjects in addition to vocational training in welding, construction and agriculture.

In addition to individual, group and family therapies, the young men at Arivaca participate in equine therapy systematically doled out through their "five levels of therapy". Through this level system the boys learn the basics of caring and riding horses by staff trainers and wranglers to training their own 2-3 year old horse. At level five the boys are then eligible to participate in activities that include roundups, horse shows and community and ranch events. Twice yearly cattle drives are a highlight of the program, working on horseback with lariats, boys assist in the round up and branding of 300 young steers.

[This information came from the Arivaca Boys Ranch website.]


© Copyright 2012 by Woodbury Reports, Inc.
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Offline Ursus

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Arivaca Boys Ranch - Facebook group
« Reply #10 on: November 08, 2011, 11:53:37 AM »
Program Facebook group:
    Arivaca Boys Ranch - "Building Men of Integrity"[/list]
    From their (facebook) Info page:


      Founded
        Historic Working Horse and Cattle Ranch Founded 1878
      Location   
        877-886-9766, Arivaca, AZ
      About
        Arivaca Boys Ranch - Building Men of Integrity
      Description   
        Arivaca Boys Ranch is a therapeutic boys boarding school and teen boys ranch located in Arivaca, AZ providing an alternative to boot camps for teens and boys' military schools.
      Mission
        Through hard work and equine therapy using the Arbinger principles, an academic program, our high school for troubled teens helps out-of-control teen boys become young men with integrity and honor.

        The goal at our teen boys working ranch is to place young men on the path to live happy, healthy, normal lives. Most times that simply cannot be done at home. For parents, there is hope that there really is help.

        Whether you live in Arizona, Colorado, Utah, Texas, Montana, California, Nevada, or anywhere in the United States, we can help your son. Contact us today for more information about our therapeutic boarding school for troubled teens.
      Email
      Phone
        1 877.886.9766
      Website
        http://www.arivacaboysranch.com[/list][/list][/size]
        « Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »
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        Offline Ursus

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        Arivaca Boys Ranch - Ranch Living
        « Reply #11 on: November 08, 2011, 12:16:03 PM »
        From the program's webpage titled "Ranch Living," emphasis as per original:

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        Ranch Living at Arivaca Boys Ranch and Home

        Historic and Serene Ranch Setting

        Historic 23,000 Acre Western Ranch Founded in 1878

        Located in the rolling hills of Southern Arizona, Arivaca Teen Boys Ranch and Academy is a unique and historic ranch founded in 1878.

        The campus is rich in history and stories. Old adobe barns and houses, built in 1890, are still used on the ranch. This creates a reverent and healing feeling on the ranch that is hard to explain. The Old West is still alive on the Arivaca Boys Ranch -- it's an experience few will ever get a chance to discover.

        Cattle and horses graze on the 23,000 acre property, a fitting part of the working ranch. At night it is not uncommon to hear the coyotes howling. Deer, javelina, quail, and even an occasional cougar are residents of our boys ranch.

        Round-ups are held twice a year as nearly 300 young steers are branded. The night air is full of the sound of bawling babies (calves) separated from their mothers for the first time. Round-up's are done the old-fashioned way, with horses and lariats.

        The hills are combed on horseback looking for cows and their babies for a week before the day of branding. Visitors come from near and far (even from overseas) to witness the Arivaca Roundup. Tortillas and beans are cooked up and served, and everyone feels like it is a fiesta . . . it is!

        The boys ranch is at 3800 feet elevation. Moderate winters and summers, similar to the climate of inland San Diego, create the perfect year-round climate for "horse play." Arivaca gets about 17 inches of rain a year. At times of the year, the rolling hills are green with high grass. Evenings and mornings are always cool and pleasant.

        This is a perfect environment for working with teen boys and horses in therapy - a great way to teach responsibility and true manliness.
         
        The Western Ranch Community

        The community of Arivaca is located less than an hours drive southwest of the Tucson International Airport. Green Valley is 30 minutes away. The Phoenix airport is approximately 3 hours away.

        We invite you to visit the teen boys ranch. Once you feel the serenity and peace of the Arivaca Boys Ranch, you will want to come back again and again.

        By the way we have never had an issue with illegal immigrants in our area due to a strong local force of border patrol agents.


        © Copyright 2011, Arivaca Boys Ranch, a therapeutic ranch for boys, located in Arizona, but boys come from around the country. Phone: 877­-886-9766
        « Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »
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        Offline Ursus

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        Re: Arivaca Boys Ranch
        « Reply #12 on: November 08, 2011, 12:33:02 PM »
        I had mentioned earlier that all is not as it seems with this program. There's something a bit dodgey with how they market themselves. Here is one such example:

        • From the program's website, copied above:
            Historic 23,000 Acre Western Ranch Founded in 1878

            Located in the rolling hills of Southern Arizona, Arivaca Teen Boys Ranch and Academy is a unique and historic ranch founded in 1878.
          [/li][/list]
          • From the program's Facebook site, copied above:
              Historic 23,000 Acre Western Ranch Founded in 1878
            [/li][/list]
            • From Lon Woodbury's New Perspectives piece, copied above:
                Originally founded in the 1870's, Arivaca Boys Ranch is a therapeutic boarding school and teen boy's ranch, situated in southern Arizona on 23,000 acres.
              [/li][/list]
              A naive parent might easily presume, from the above, that Arivaca Boys Ranch is a stable program which has been around a long time, and has probably long ago worked out all those potentially dangerous kinks and bugs in their methodology.

              Not so.

              The ranch may have been around that whole time, but not this program. The program investors didn't even purchase the property 'till just a few years ago.
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              Offline Ursus

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              Boys ranch planning to rein in troubled teens
              « Reply #13 on: November 08, 2011, 12:43:11 PM »
              Here's some reportage from back in May of 2007, shortly after the ranch was purchased, and before Arivaca Boys Ranch opened for binnis:

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              The Arizona Republic
              Boys ranch planning to rein in troubled teens

              Kim Goetz
              Special for The Republic

              May. 25, 2007 09:42 AM


              A vision of bringing horses and troubled teens together has led Ron Searle of Gilbert to the purchase of one of the oldest cattle ranches in Arizona.

              Searle and five partners from the Southeast Valley on March 23 acquired Arivaca Ranch, a 575-acre spread southwest of Tucson. They said they plan to open Arivaca Boys Ranch in October.

              The ranch, along with an additional 23,000 acres that will be leased from the government, will allow the program to run 350 head of cattle, 200 head of Arabian horses and house facilities set up for 50 boys who will immerse themselves in chores, school, counseling and horses.

              The boys ranch plans to start with five boys and add five more every seven weeks.

              Three years in the making, Searle said he has put a program in place that will use natural horsemanship as the tool to help troubled boys work on their issues.

              "We want to teach the boys to be horse whisperers, and in that process we're hoping that they learn about themselves and communication with their parents," said Searle, the managing general partner. "The idea is to use the horse as a mirror for the boys to become responsible and basically see themselves."

              Boys 14-18 will train their own horse over a 10-month stay at the ranch. They will progress through five levels of natural horsemanship starting with horse psychology and groundwork and ending with riding their once green horse.

              The program will breed 50 mares each year to provide the horses necessary for the next year. Searle says he has talked to people who are interested in donating breeding services.

              With 26 years of experience in youth education and business, the current teacher for the LDS Institute of Religion on Arizona State University's Tempe campus said he has watched kids over the years go into all kinds of programs.

              "Our therapy is using horses," said Searle, who has 15 years of experience with the animals and has seen first hand how they can reflect the issues of the person that is working with them. "It's not the only way to do it. It's just a way to do it, and I think it's an effective way and it can be a real powerful tool."

              Searle said there are other horse therapy programs that teach kids how to be more responsible by caring for a horse, but he is unaware of any other program that gives a boy the opportunity to train a horse from start to finish using natural horsemanship.

              "We're looking for the young man who their parents just don't know what to do," Searle said. "He's lying, he's stealing, he's out of control and their frustrated."

              Application and enrollment for the program will take place at the ranch's office in Mesa. Once the boys arrive at the ranch, counselors, horse trainers, wranglers and a ranch director will guide them.

              Searle said a non-profit foundation will form that will help supply scholarship money to youths who can't afford the program.

              The program costs $3,000 per month.

              "It's an expensive program, and we don't want it to be a rich kids camp," he said.

              The boys coming to his ranch most likely will be from a city, hate horses and not want to be there, Searle said.

              "We're really ready to deal with that those first couple months," he said. "By the end of the sixth or seventh month when he's actually galloping a horse across the field, when he's chasing cattle, when he's doing stuff he never thought he was ever going to do, he's a different kid then."

              Information: http://www.arivacaboysranch.com


              Copyright © 2009, azcentral.com.
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              Offline Ursus

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              Re: Arivaca Boys Ranch
              « Reply #14 on: November 08, 2011, 01:28:45 PM »
              Here's another problematic statement. This from the same page on the Arivaca Boys Ranch website, copied above, color emphasis added:

                The Western Ranch Community

                The community of Arivaca is located less than an hours drive southwest of the Tucson International Airport. Green Valley is 30 minutes away. The Phoenix airport is approximately 3 hours away.

                We invite you to visit the teen boys ranch. Once you feel the serenity and peace of the Arivaca Boys Ranch, you will want to come back again and again.

                By the way we have never had an issue with illegal immigrants in our area due to a strong local force of border patrol agents.
                [/list][/size]
                Hmmm. Something 'bout that last bald assertion tickled my suspicions. Maybe I'm wrong, but I tend to think that it's not the illegal immigrants themselves who are a potential danger to kids at Arivaca Boys Ranch (as the statement seemed to imply). Most of those folk are trying real hard to be invisible.

                Well... don't know if you followed the news earlier this year 'bout the associated murder trial, but... back in 2009, some vigilante border patrol splinter group (with ties to Aryan Nation) savagely assassinated two members of a local family, one of them a 9-year-old girl, shot twice point blank in her face while she pleaded for her life. That happened right in Arivaca. See also: Murders of Raul and Brisenia Flores

                So much for some of those positive features of a "strong local force of border patrol." I s'pose this incident could be spun as a strong deterrent to boys running away, though I'm sure Arivaca Boys Ranch will refer to it as "Arbinger Principles." :D
                « Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »
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