“How Rip Finally Found Out Who Started the Cow Disease | Dutton Ranch S1E4
How Rip Finally Found Out Who Started the Cow Disease in Dutton Ranch Season 1 Episode 4
Just when Beth Dutton and Rip Wheeler believed they had found a place to start over, Dutton Ranch Season 1 Episode 4 proved that peace was never really waiting for them in Rio Paloma. What looked like a fresh beginning quickly turned into one of the most devastating setbacks of their lives, and by the end of the episode, Rip finally began to understand that the cow disease outbreak was not just bad luck.
It was sabotage.
The episode centers on the aftermath of the foot-and-mouth disease outbreak that destroys Beth and Rip’s entire cattle herd. For them, this was not only a business disaster. The herd represented their future. After leaving Montana and trying to build something of their own in Texas, those cattle were the foundation of everything they hoped to create. They were proof that the Duttons could survive outside Yellowstone. They were the beginning of a new legacy.\
Then, almost overnight, that dream was infected, condemned, and buried.
The disease came through the bull they purchased, an animal that was supposed to strengthen their operation. Instead, it became the thing that ruined it. At first, the situation looks like negligence. Maybe someone missed a test. Maybe a broker cut corners. Maybe the wrong animal slipped through the system. But Beth and Rip know better than to accept simple answers when the damage is this large.
Beth begins digging into the records connected to the bull. The paperwork claims that the animal had been cleared by a veterinarian, Dr. Pool, before it was sold to them. But when Beth contacts the doctor directly, the truth starts to unravel. Dr. Pool says he has never heard of J.R. Simon, the broker who sold them the bull.
That single detail changes everything.
If the doctor never cleared the animal, then the medical documents were forged. That means someone deliberately created a false paper trail to make the bull look safe. And if the bull was knowingly moved into Beth and Rip’s herd while infected, then the outbreak was not an accident. It was an attack.
For Rip, that realization is unbearable. He is not a man who processes betrayal with long conversations. He acts. But before he can fully turn his anger toward the people responsible, he has to face the immediate horror on his own land. The infected cattle cannot be saved. The disease has spread too far, and the risk is too great.
What follows is one of the darkest sequences in the series so far.
Rip digs a massive trench, gathers the herd, and prepares to put down every animal they own. Beth stands beside him, even though he warns her that this is not something she wants to see. But Beth refuses to leave him alone. She understands that this is not just ranch work. This is the death of their dream.
One by one, the cattle are destroyed. The most painful moment comes when Beth begs Rip to spare the calf, the one small piece of hope left in the herd. But Rip knows the truth. The disease has already reached everything. There is no saving one without risking more destruction later.

When the task is done, there is silence, grief, and a sense of finality. Zach sings over the buried herd, turning the moment into something almost spiritual. The scene is brutal, but it also makes one thing clear: whoever caused this did not simply cost Beth and Rip money. They took something personal from them.
That is why Rip’s next move feels inevitable.
Once Beth confirms that the records were forged, Rip goes straight to J.R. Simon. J.R. claims he does not know anything about the false documents, but Rip is not interested in excuses. Whether J.R. was the mastermind or just a disposable middleman, he was still part of the chain that brought the infected bull onto Dutton land.
Rip’s confrontation is less about getting answers and more about sending a message. He banishes J.R. from Rio Paloma and makes it clear that if he ever sees him again, there will be consequences. Then he sets fire to the man’s trailer while Beth watches calmly from outside.
It is classic Beth and Rip: violent, direct, and unforgettable.
But the real mystery is bigger than J.R. Simon. The forged records suggest planning. The infected bull suggests intention. And the timing suggests that someone wanted Beth and Rip weakened before they could establish themselves in Texas. That points the story toward the Jackson family and the 10 Petal Ranch.
Beulah Jackson has been positioned as one of the most powerful figures in Rio Paloma. She controls land, people, money, and influence. She is not the type of woman who would welcome outsiders easily, especially outsiders with the Dutton name. Beth and Rip arriving in Texas threatened the balance of power. Their cattle business could have disrupted the local market. Their presence could have challenged the Jacksons’ hold on the region.
So if someone wanted to stop them early, infecting their herd would be a devastatingly effective move.
Still, Dutton Ranch is careful not to give the audience every answer at once. Beulah may look guilty, but the show continues to make her more complicated than a simple villain. Her scenes with Everett reveal sadness, regret, and a painful history. She is ruthless, but she is not empty. That complexity makes the mystery more interesting.
Did Beulah order the sabotage herself? Did someone inside her ranch act without her approval? Or is there another player, like Mariano Reyes, quietly manipulating both families from the shadows?
The episode also brings back the mystery of the body found on Rip’s land. That corpse never felt random. Someone placed it there for a reason, and Rip knows it. If the body is connected to the Jacksons, then the cow disease may only be one piece of a much larger conspiracy. Rio Paloma may be hiding a network of secrets involving land, illegal business, corrupt law enforcement, and old family loyalties.
Meanwhile, Carter’s storyline adds another layer to the emotional fallout. While Beth and Rip are dealing with the destruction of their herd, Carter is pulling away from them. He wants independence. He wants responsibility. He wants to be treated like a man, not a child. His friendship with Dwight gives him a taste of that freedom, while his connection with Oriana Jackson ties him even closer to the very family Beth and Rip may soon be fighting.
That creates a dangerous emotional collision. Beth and Rip are preparing for war, but Carter may be caught between both sides.
By the end of Episode 4, Rip has not uncovered the entire conspiracy, but he has found the first real proof: the bull’s paperwork was fake. Someone lied. Someone sent that animal into their herd. Someone wanted the Duttons damaged.
And now Rip knows it.
That discovery changes the direction of the season. Beth and Rip are no longer simply trying to survive in Rio Paloma. They are hunting for the truth. Their enemies may think they weakened them by destroying the herd, but they may have done the opposite.
They gave Beth and Rip a reason to strike back.
And in the Dutton world, that is always a dangerous mistake.
