antlerradar
Well-known member
And the police give the visiting team and escort out of town even after they got beaten by 40 points.They got game though...b-ball.
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And the police give the visiting team and escort out of town even after they got beaten by 40 points.They got game though...b-ball.
decent mexican food is still a low bar...2 spots are vying for that low bar but are randomly closed so often the bar is on the ground. Taco Bus lost its rank as decent when they changed ownership.
Rudyard is full!I moved to Montana in 1983 and yes I've seen lots of changes over the years. However, it didn't really start to depress me until the past couple years and the massive influx of remote workers due to covid. It was already happening, but the pandemic accelerated it by 1,000 percent. Probably the saddest part for me is that my kids will likely never be able to afford to live here. Maybe if they move to Rudyard or something (where my wife and I spent two years), but still. I try not to think about it.
However, last April MSU Spring Rodeo was held again in the fieldhouse and the place was electric! The beer line was a mile long! Concerts draw thousands as well. And you can't beat the rah-rah tailgate atmosphere of Bobcat Football game day.A friend born and raised in the Gallatin Valley always says Bozeman started going downhill after the CNFR stopped being held there. That was in 1996 so it appears to hold true.
That’s about what the price was in 2002. Recently, it was about $800k, but that’s because they are building high-end stuff. The town started to take off around ‘91.What would you say is the cutoff date for moving to Bozeman/Missoula/Kalispell etc "before it was cool"? When the median home price was <$200K?
I can’t remember the name of that place either, but they had a massive platter of chicken fried steak. It was next to the Western Inn. It became a urgent care type clinic or a veterinarian clinic.There was a dive restaurant back in 1998 east of downtown nearer to the east exit. It had a unusual menu of big portion, cheap, and surprisingly decent food. Kind of a ski bum hang out that played a lot of Greatful Dead on the speaker. For the life of me can't remember the name of the place.
I think it was called the country kitchen and it was okay but not great by any means. Was on top the hill on east main past the Lindsey park but before you got to “KO’s”.I can’t remember the name of that place either, but they had a massive platter of chicken fried steak. It was next to the Western Inn. It became a urgent care type clinic or a veterinarian clinic.
K-hoes….. that place was also fun. We had a knife pulled on us there one night. That dampened the mood. Prolly left there to go to power hour.I think it was called the country kitchen and it was okay but not great by any means. Was on top the hill on east main past the Lindsey park but before you got to “KO’s”.
I'd be in Ekalaka living on the ranch my grandmother grew up on if my wife would move there, but for now I'm stuck in Bozeman. I grew up here and have seen many of the changes through the years. It's definitely tough. I don't hunt anywhere around here anymore. Draw a 3 hr circle around Bozeman and that's where I start. You can make a decent living here because of the growth, but the housing is just plain rediculous.Probably 2004 or 2005 but it was "cool" around 1990. 1992 was when A River Runs Through It was released.
I should admit I moved to MT in 2003 so I get preachy about a place I'm not actually "from" but since I lived in Ekalaka I feel adopted by the state. lol
The garage was open later in the 2000s. I think that they remodeled around 2016 and became a taproom. Shine or something like that. I haven't been there since.The menu was Spaghetti, barbecue chicken and ribs, and something weird like an eggplant dish. Also a barbecue vegetable plate. Think they closed down in the early 2000's. The spaghetti was a huge plate full for around $4.00. Good food when you were working outdoors all day.
Not really, although I prefer Hingham. Of course, if you want to live there, I got a lead on a couple of lots that I could talk my dad into selling. Another Montana town I could live in although there aren't many elk there and the old hill county sneak puts a big hurt on the deer population. The wind is another thing that you have to contend with thoughRudyard is full!
“Die Way 191” is a good and appropriate name for Hwy 191 south of Bozeman into the Gallatin Canyon to Big Sky. It has to be among if not the most dangerous road in the country. I think, as previously stated, as out of control as the development is in Bozeman, it’s worse in Big Sky.
“I began musing about my capacity to live successfully with someone as competent as Louise..” how many men??Téa Obreht Reads Thomas McGuane
Podcast Episode · The New Yorker: Fiction · 05/01/2021 · 58mpodcasts.apple.com