They’ve discovered the last best pockets of the west.

I've got a foster sister that lives part time in Wolf Point. They snowbird now, but they ran a small wheat farm around there. I could easily live in Eastern MT, but my wife wouldn't be joinging me, which is like 97% of a dealbreaker.
This is our first winter snowbirding in MT, summering back at our home in Alaska.
Loving it...pheasant/duck hunting every morning.
We lived here in 2000 and really like that it does not get dark until after 5pm.
When I lived across the range in Moscow, ID it was dark by 4pm due to the time zone.
 
I had some work in Scobey a couple years ago. I grew up in SD and ND. I'm pretty sure you could pick up Scobey and plop it down anywhere in the Dakotas or Nebraska and it would fit right in. Radishes on the steak house salad bar and everything.

The only reason Scobey hired us all the way from CO is that they were so far east that even the MT consultants didn't want to work there and never visited!
 
i must own the cheapest 16ac ranchette in the west,,,,,, looking at prices anywere else in montana, no move to trees and trout and elk in my future,,,,
 
Hunting Husband and I were accosted outside the bar in Glasgow one evening a few months ago by an interesting looking woman who was just moving to town with her family, from Washington. Went on and on about how much they love winter and 20 degree weather is no problem for them. Asked if we knew of places for sale with acreage because they like to grow their own food.

I really wanted to ask if she preferred course clay soils, or hard pan?
 
Hunting Husband and I were accosted outside the bar in Glasgow one evening a few months ago by an interesting looking woman who was just moving to town with her family, from Washington. Went on and on about how much they love winter and 20 degree weather is no problem for them. Asked if we knew of places for sale with acreage because they like to grow their own food.

I really wanted to ask if she preferred course clay soils, or hard pan?
You should have kilt her dreams.

A city lot w/ a green house and raised gardens in the backyard will produce someone more food than a 20 acre ranchette up on a subdivided, cheatgrass-covered bench. Until the same greenhouse and raised beds get put in there after a couple years of horrible failure growing much of anything, of course.
 
Hunting Husband and I were accosted outside the bar in Glasgow one evening a few months ago by an interesting looking woman who was just moving to town with her family, from Washington. Went on and on about how much they love winter and 20 degree weather is no problem for them. Asked if we knew of places for sale with acreage because they like to grow their own food.

I really wanted to ask if she preferred course clay soils, or hard pan?
I'm interested in hearing what an "interesting looking woman" looks like, in your opinion of course!
 

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