Garfield County, Montana Land For Sale (19 results)
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12/04/2024
$5,990,000
10557 ac.
ACTIVE
Garfield County - 1287 W Little Dry Rd, Cohagen, MT
A well-watered, low overhead, Montana grass ranch, these are the first things that come to mind when discussing the 10,557+/- acre Badger Creek Ranch. The owners have operated the ranch as a 300-400 mother cow and calf operation for over 25 years. The amount of head and of course the weather dictates how much winter feed will need to be purchased and brought onto the ranch for the winter months.
These folks have done extensive fencing and water projects throughout the ranch. This includes fencing most of the ranch into 2 section pastures with a minimum of two sources of water per pasture.
The water sources in each pasture are one reliable spring and one tank on a pipeline from a well. There are 7 wells on the ranch that provide terrific quality and quantity of water for livestock and human consumption.
On the East side of the ranch, there are eight 200 acre grazing cells that the owners have used as intensive grazing cells that they cycle livestock through. The water tanks in the different pastures are both thermal sinks that provide the appropriate amount of water for livestock in both summer and winter months combined with traditional plastic tanks protected with drill stem pipe. There are several hundred acres of historical dryland hayfields that are currently being grazed but could be put back into production if desired.
The headquarters of the ranch consist of two modular homes that have been fixed up and are very comfortable. There is a hunting camp set between the houses that the owners have leased out over the years. The shop is in great shape with half of the floor being dirt and the other half having concrete. The livestock working facilities are built in a Temple Grandin fashion and have made processing livestock a breeze.
10,557+/- Total Acres
9,129+/- Deeded Acres
788+/- BLM Lease
640+/- State Lease
12/04/2024
$5,990,000
10557 ac.
ACTIVE
Garfield County - 1287 W Little Dry Rd, Cohagen, MT
A well-watered, low overhead, Montana grass ranch, these are the first things that come to mind when discussing the 10,557+/- acre Badger Creek Ranch. The owners have operated the ranch as a 300-400 mother cow and calf operation for over 25 years. The amount of head and of course the weather dictates how much winter feed will need to be purchased and brought onto the ranch for the winter months.
These folks have done extensive fencing and water projects throughout the ranch. This includes fencing most of the ranch into 2 section pastures with a minimum of two sources of water per pasture.
The water sources in each pasture are one reliable spring and one tank on a pipeline from a well. There are 7 wells on the ranch that provide terrific quality and quantity of water for livestock and human consumption.
On the East side of the ranch, there are eight 200 acre grazing cells that the owners have used as intensive grazing cells that they cycle livestock through. The water tanks in the different pastures are both thermal sinks that provide the appropriate amount of water for livestock in both summer and winter months combined with traditional plastic tanks protected with drill stem pipe. There are several hundred acres of historical dryland hayfields that are currently being grazed but could be put back into production if desired.
The headquarters of the ranch consist of two modular homes that have been fixed up and are very comfortable. There is a hunting camp set between the houses that the owners have leased out over the years. The shop is in great shape with half of the floor being dirt and the other half having concrete. The livestock working facilities are built in a Temple Grandin fashion and have made processing livestock a breeze.
10,557+/- Total Acres
9,129+/- Deeded Acres
788+/- BLM Lease
640+/- State Lease
12/04/2024
$5,990,000
10557 ac.
ACTIVE
Garfield County - 1287 W Little Dry Rd, Cohagen, MT
A well-watered, low overhead, Montana grass ranch, these are the first things that come to mind when discussing the 10,557+/- acre Badger Creek Ranch. The owners have operated the ranch as a 300-400 mother cow and calf operation for over 25 years. The amount of head and of course the weather dictates how much winter feed will need to be purchased and brought onto the ranch for the winter months.
These folks have done extensive fencing and water projects throughout the ranch. This includes fencing most of the ranch into 2 section pastures with a minimum of two sources of water per pasture.
The water sources in each pasture are one reliable spring and one tank on a pipeline from a well. There are 7 wells on the ranch that provide terrific quality and quantity of water for livestock and human consumption.
On the East side of the ranch, there are eight 200 acre grazing cells that the owners have used as intensive grazing cells that they cycle livestock through. The water tanks in the different pastures are both thermal sinks that provide the appropriate amount of water for livestock in both summer and winter months combined with traditional plastic tanks protected with drill stem pipe. There are several hundred acres of historical dryland hayfields that are currently being grazed but could be put back into production if desired.
The headquarters of the ranch consist of two modular homes that have been fixed up and are very comfortable. There is a hunting camp set between the houses that the owners have leased out over the years. The shop is in great shape with half of the floor being dirt and the other half having concrete. The livestock working facilities are built in a Temple Grandin fashion and have made processing livestock a breeze.
10,557+/- Total Acres
9,129+/- Deeded Acres
788+/- BLM Lease
640+/- State Lease
12/04/2024
$5,990,000
10557 ac.
ACTIVE
Garfield County - 1287 W Little Dry Rd, Cohagen, MT
A well-watered, low overhead, Montana grass ranch, these are the first things that come to mind when discussing the 10,557+/- acre Badger Creek Ranch. The owners have operated the ranch as a 300-400 mother cow and calf operation for over 25 years. The amount of head and of course the weather dictates how much winter feed will need to be purchased and brought onto the ranch for the winter months.
These folks have done extensive fencing and water projects throughout the ranch. This includes fencing most of the ranch into 2 section pastures with a minimum of two sources of water per pasture.
The water sources in each pasture are one reliable spring and one tank on a pipeline from a well. There are 7 wells on the ranch that provide terrific quality and quantity of water for livestock and human consumption.
On the East side of the ranch, there are eight 200 acre grazing cells that the owners have used as intensive grazing cells that they cycle livestock through. The water tanks in the different pastures are both thermal sinks that provide the appropriate amount of water for livestock in both summer and winter months combined with traditional plastic tanks protected with drill stem pipe. There are several hundred acres of historical dryland hayfields that are currently being grazed but could be put back into production if desired.
The headquarters of the ranch consist of two modular homes that have been fixed up and are very comfortable. There is a hunting camp set between the houses that the owners have leased out over the years. The shop is in great shape with half of the floor being dirt and the other half having concrete. The livestock working facilities are built in a Temple Grandin fashion and have made processing livestock a breeze.
10,557+/- Total Acres
9,129+/- Deeded Acres
788+/- BLM Lease
640+/- State Lease
12/04/2024
$5,990,000
10557 ac.
ACTIVE
Garfield County - 1287 W Little Dry Rd, Cohagen, MT
A well-watered, low overhead, Montana grass ranch, these are the first things that come to mind when discussing the 10,557+/- acre Badger Creek Ranch. The owners have operated the ranch as a 300-400 mother cow and calf operation for over 25 years. The amount of head and of course the weather dictates how much winter feed will need to be purchased and brought onto the ranch for the winter months.
These folks have done extensive fencing and water projects throughout the ranch. This includes fencing most of the ranch into 2 section pastures with a minimum of two sources of water per pasture.
The water sources in each pasture are one reliable spring and one tank on a pipeline from a well. There are 7 wells on the ranch that provide terrific quality and quantity of water for livestock and human consumption.
On the East side of the ranch, there are eight 200 acre grazing cells that the owners have used as intensive grazing cells that they cycle livestock through. The water tanks in the different pastures are both thermal sinks that provide the appropriate amount of water for livestock in both summer and winter months combined with traditional plastic tanks protected with drill stem pipe. There are several hundred acres of historical dryland hayfields that are currently being grazed but could be put back into production if desired.
The headquarters of the ranch consist of two modular homes that have been fixed up and are very comfortable. There is a hunting camp set between the houses that the owners have leased out over the years. The shop is in great shape with half of the floor being dirt and the other half having concrete. The livestock working facilities are built in a Temple Grandin fashion and have made processing livestock a breeze.
10,557+/- Total Acres
9,129+/- Deeded Acres
788+/- BLM Lease
640+/- State Lease
12/04/2024
$5,990,000
10557 ac.
ACTIVE
Garfield County - 1287 W Little Dry Rd, Cohagen, MT
A well-watered, low overhead, Montana grass ranch, these are the first things that come to mind when discussing the 10,557+/- acre Badger Creek Ranch. The owners have operated the ranch as a 300-400 mother cow and calf operation for over 25 years. The amount of head and of course the weather dictates how much winter feed will need to be purchased and brought onto the ranch for the winter months.
These folks have done extensive fencing and water projects throughout the ranch. This includes fencing most of the ranch into 2 section pastures with a minimum of two sources of water per pasture.
The water sources in each pasture are one reliable spring and one tank on a pipeline from a well. There are 7 wells on the ranch that provide terrific quality and quantity of water for livestock and human consumption.
On the East side of the ranch, there are eight 200 acre grazing cells that the owners have used as intensive grazing cells that they cycle livestock through. The water tanks in the different pastures are both thermal sinks that provide the appropriate amount of water for livestock in both summer and winter months combined with traditional plastic tanks protected with drill stem pipe. There are several hundred acres of historical dryland hayfields that are currently being grazed but could be put back into production if desired.
The headquarters of the ranch consist of two modular homes that have been fixed up and are very comfortable. There is a hunting camp set between the houses that the owners have leased out over the years. The shop is in great shape with half of the floor being dirt and the other half having concrete. The livestock working facilities are built in a Temple Grandin fashion and have made processing livestock a breeze.
10,557+/- Total Acres
9,129+/- Deeded Acres
788+/- BLM Lease
640+/- State Lease
12/04/2024
$5,990,000
10557 ac.
ACTIVE
Garfield County - 1287 W Little Dry Rd, Cohagen, MT
A well-watered, low overhead, Montana grass ranch, these are the first things that come to mind when discussing the 10,557+/- acre Badger Creek Ranch. The owners have operated the ranch as a 300-400 mother cow and calf operation for over 25 years. The amount of head and of course the weather dictates how much winter feed will need to be purchased and brought onto the ranch for the winter months.
These folks have done extensive fencing and water projects throughout the ranch. This includes fencing most of the ranch into 2 section pastures with a minimum of two sources of water per pasture.
The water sources in each pasture are one reliable spring and one tank on a pipeline from a well. There are 7 wells on the ranch that provide terrific quality and quantity of water for livestock and human consumption.
On the East side of the ranch, there are eight 200 acre grazing cells that the owners have used as intensive grazing cells that they cycle livestock through. The water tanks in the different pastures are both thermal sinks that provide the appropriate amount of water for livestock in both summer and winter months combined with traditional plastic tanks protected with drill stem pipe. There are several hundred acres of historical dryland hayfields that are currently being grazed but could be put back into production if desired.
The headquarters of the ranch consist of two modular homes that have been fixed up and are very comfortable. There is a hunting camp set between the houses that the owners have leased out over the years. The shop is in great shape with half of the floor being dirt and the other half having concrete. The livestock working facilities are built in a Temple Grandin fashion and have made processing livestock a breeze.
10,557+/- Total Acres
9,129+/- Deeded Acres
788+/- BLM Lease
640+/- State Lease
04/01/2024
$4,625,000
5700 ac.
ACTIVE
Garfield County - Cohagen, MT
The Two Furrow Ranch has not changed hands in over a half-century. That ownership continuum reflects well in the fine condition of the ranch and the improvements. The developed stock water, which consists of five wells, five miles of pipeline, and 15 tanks, should be considered well-located, well-built, and well-cared for.
The ranch sits astride the boundary between the Langs Fork of Big Dry Creek and Duck Creek, which feeds into Little Dry Creek. Most of the ranch is considered a gently rolling country with sandier soils on the south end and more clay to the north. Much of the farmland has been seeded to permanent pasture, but there is farmland on the south end that is currently in a crop/fallow rotation and utilized for producing winter forage.
There are flood-irrigated meadows in the northwest part of the ranch that have been seeded to annual forage crops and put up for hay. Consider average yields in the one-and-a-half to two tons per acre on these meadows, depending on water availability. Historically, dryland winter wheat yields an average of about 40 bushels per acre. The ranch is estimated to carry 2,400+/- AUMs of grazing plus what winter forage can be put up on the dryland and irrigated fields. If one were to feed for four months and graze for eight months, the ranch would come close to balancing at nearly 300 Animal Units.
The Two Furrow Ranch is one of those ranches that may come on the market every couple of generations, a buy-and-hold ranch if there ever was one.
The Facts:
~ 5,700+/- deeded acres
~ 2,460+/- acres of BLM lease
~ 640+/- acres of state lease
~ Water features include nearly five miles of pipelines that service 15 stock ponds, over 25 reservoirs, and five producing wells piped into tanks
~ Langs Fork of Big Dry Creek runs through almost the entire ranch
~ Carrying capacity of 250 to 300 cow/calf pairs
~ Very well-kept 1,200+/- square foot home built in 1990 with a detached garage
~ Full complement of agricultural buildings, including grain storage, multiple shops, and sheds
~ Hunting on the ranch includes mule deer, pronghorn antelope, sharp-tails, and Hungarian partridge
04/01/2024
$4,625,000
5700 ac.
ACTIVE
Garfield County - Cohagen, MT
The Two Furrow Ranch has not changed hands in over a half-century. That ownership continuum reflects well in the fine condition of the ranch and the improvements. The developed stock water, which consists of five wells, five miles of pipeline, and 15 tanks, should be considered well-located, well-built, and well-cared for.
The ranch sits astride the boundary between the Langs Fork of Big Dry Creek and Duck Creek, which feeds into Little Dry Creek. Most of the ranch is considered a gently rolling country with sandier soils on the south end and more clay to the north. Much of the farmland has been seeded to permanent pasture, but there is farmland on the south end that is currently in a crop/fallow rotation and utilized for producing winter forage.
There are flood-irrigated meadows in the northwest part of the ranch that have been seeded to annual forage crops and put up for hay. Consider average yields in the one-and-a-half to two tons per acre on these meadows, depending on water availability. Historically, dryland winter wheat yields an average of about 40 bushels per acre. The ranch is estimated to carry 2,400+/- AUMs of grazing plus what winter forage can be put up on the dryland and irrigated fields. If one were to feed for four months and graze for eight months, the ranch would come close to balancing at nearly 300 Animal Units.
The Two Furrow Ranch is one of those ranches that may come on the market every couple of generations, a buy-and-hold ranch if there ever was one.
The Facts:
~ 5,700+/- deeded acres
~ 2,460+/- acres of BLM lease
~ 640+/- acres of state lease
~ Water features include nearly five miles of pipelines that service 15 stock ponds, over 25 reservoirs, and five producing wells piped into tanks
~ Langs Fork of Big Dry Creek runs through almost the entire ranch
~ Carrying capacity of 250 to 300 cow/calf pairs
~ Very well-kept 1,200+/- square foot home built in 1990 with a detached garage
~ Full complement of agricultural buildings, including grain storage, multiple shops, and sheds
~ Hunting on the ranch includes mule deer, pronghorn antelope, sharp-tails, and Hungarian partridge
04/01/2024
$4,625,000
5700 ac.
ACTIVE
Garfield County - Cohagen, MT
The Two Furrow Ranch has not changed hands in over a half-century. That ownership continuum reflects well in the fine condition of the ranch and the improvements. The developed stock water, which consists of five wells, five miles of pipeline, and 15 tanks, should be considered well-located, well-built, and well-cared for.
The ranch sits astride the boundary between the Langs Fork of Big Dry Creek and Duck Creek, which feeds into Little Dry Creek. Most of the ranch is considered a gently rolling country with sandier soils on the south end and more clay to the north. Much of the farmland has been seeded to permanent pasture, but there is farmland on the south end that is currently in a crop/fallow rotation and utilized for producing winter forage.
There are flood-irrigated meadows in the northwest part of the ranch that have been seeded to annual forage crops and put up for hay. Consider average yields in the one-and-a-half to two tons per acre on these meadows, depending on water availability. Historically, dryland winter wheat yields an average of about 40 bushels per acre. The ranch is estimated to carry 2,400+/- AUMs of grazing plus what winter forage can be put up on the dryland and irrigated fields. If one were to feed for four months and graze for eight months, the ranch would come close to balancing at nearly 300 Animal Units.
The Two Furrow Ranch is one of those ranches that may come on the market every couple of generations, a buy-and-hold ranch if there ever was one.
The Facts:
~ 5,700+/- deeded acres
~ 2,460+/- acres of BLM lease
~ 640+/- acres of state lease
~ Water features include nearly five miles of pipelines that service 15 stock ponds, over 25 reservoirs, and five producing wells piped into tanks
~ Langs Fork of Big Dry Creek runs through almost the entire ranch
~ Carrying capacity of 250 to 300 cow/calf pairs
~ Very well-kept 1,200+/- square foot home built in 1990 with a detached garage
~ Full complement of agricultural buildings, including grain storage, multiple shops, and sheds
~ Hunting on the ranch includes mule deer, pronghorn antelope, sharp-tails, and Hungarian partridge
04/01/2024
$4,625,000
5700 ac.
ACTIVE
Garfield County - Cohagen, MT
The Two Furrow Ranch has not changed hands in over a half-century. That ownership continuum reflects well in the fine condition of the ranch and the improvements. The developed stock water, which consists of five wells, five miles of pipeline, and 15 tanks, should be considered well-located, well-built, and well-cared for.
The ranch sits astride the boundary between the Langs Fork of Big Dry Creek and Duck Creek, which feeds into Little Dry Creek. Most of the ranch is considered a gently rolling country with sandier soils on the south end and more clay to the north. Much of the farmland has been seeded to permanent pasture, but there is farmland on the south end that is currently in a crop/fallow rotation and utilized for producing winter forage.
There are flood-irrigated meadows in the northwest part of the ranch that have been seeded to annual forage crops and put up for hay. Consider average yields in the one-and-a-half to two tons per acre on these meadows, depending on water availability. Historically, dryland winter wheat yields an average of about 40 bushels per acre. The ranch is estimated to carry 2,400+/- AUMs of grazing plus what winter forage can be put up on the dryland and irrigated fields. If one were to feed for four months and graze for eight months, the ranch would come close to balancing at nearly 300 Animal Units.
The Two Furrow Ranch is one of those ranches that may come on the market every couple of generations, a buy-and-hold ranch if there ever was one.
The Facts:
~ 5,700+/- deeded acres
~ 2,460+/- acres of BLM lease
~ 640+/- acres of state lease
~ Water features include nearly five miles of pipelines that service 15 stock ponds, over 25 reservoirs, and five producing wells piped into tanks
~ Langs Fork of Big Dry Creek runs through almost the entire ranch
~ Carrying capacity of 250 to 300 cow/calf pairs
~ Very well-kept 1,200+/- square foot home built in 1990 with a detached garage
~ Full complement of agricultural buildings, including grain storage, multiple shops, and sheds
~ Hunting on the ranch includes mule deer, pronghorn antelope, sharp-tails, and Hungarian partridge
04/01/2024
$4,625,000
5700 ac.
ACTIVE
Garfield County - Cohagen, MT
The Two Furrow Ranch has not changed hands in over a half-century. That ownership continuum reflects well in the fine condition of the ranch and the improvements. The developed stock water, which consists of five wells, five miles of pipeline, and 15 tanks, should be considered well-located, well-built, and well-cared for.
The ranch sits astride the boundary between the Langs Fork of Big Dry Creek and Duck Creek, which feeds into Little Dry Creek. Most of the ranch is considered a gently rolling country with sandier soils on the south end and more clay to the north. Much of the farmland has been seeded to permanent pasture, but there is farmland on the south end that is currently in a crop/fallow rotation and utilized for producing winter forage.
There are flood-irrigated meadows in the northwest part of the ranch that have been seeded to annual forage crops and put up for hay. Consider average yields in the one-and-a-half to two tons per acre on these meadows, depending on water availability. Historically, dryland winter wheat yields an average of about 40 bushels per acre. The ranch is estimated to carry 2,400+/- AUMs of grazing plus what winter forage can be put up on the dryland and irrigated fields. If one were to feed for four months and graze for eight months, the ranch would come close to balancing at nearly 300 Animal Units.
The Two Furrow Ranch is one of those ranches that may come on the market every couple of generations, a buy-and-hold ranch if there ever was one.
The Facts:
~ 5,700+/- deeded acres
~ 2,460+/- acres of BLM lease
~ 640+/- acres of state lease
~ Water features include nearly five miles of pipelines that service 15 stock ponds, over 25 reservoirs, and five producing wells piped into tanks
~ Langs Fork of Big Dry Creek runs through almost the entire ranch
~ Carrying capacity of 250 to 300 cow/calf pairs
~ Very well-kept 1,200+/- square foot home built in 1990 with a detached garage
~ Full complement of agricultural buildings, including grain storage, multiple shops, and sheds
~ Hunting on the ranch includes mule deer, pronghorn antelope, sharp-tails, and Hungarian partridge
04/01/2024
$4,625,000
5700 ac.
ACTIVE
Garfield County - Cohagen, MT
The Two Furrow Ranch has not changed hands in over a half-century. That ownership continuum reflects well in the fine condition of the ranch and the improvements. The developed stock water, which consists of five wells, five miles of pipeline, and 15 tanks, should be considered well-located, well-built, and well-cared for.
The ranch sits astride the boundary between the Langs Fork of Big Dry Creek and Duck Creek, which feeds into Little Dry Creek. Most of the ranch is considered a gently rolling country with sandier soils on the south end and more clay to the north. Much of the farmland has been seeded to permanent pasture, but there is farmland on the south end that is currently in a crop/fallow rotation and utilized for producing winter forage.
There are flood-irrigated meadows in the northwest part of the ranch that have been seeded to annual forage crops and put up for hay. Consider average yields in the one-and-a-half to two tons per acre on these meadows, depending on water availability. Historically, dryland winter wheat yields an average of about 40 bushels per acre. The ranch is estimated to carry 2,400+/- AUMs of grazing plus what winter forage can be put up on the dryland and irrigated fields. If one were to feed for four months and graze for eight months, the ranch would come close to balancing at nearly 300 Animal Units.
The Two Furrow Ranch is one of those ranches that may come on the market every couple of generations, a buy-and-hold ranch if there ever was one.
The Facts:
~ 5,700+/- deeded acres
~ 2,460+/- acres of BLM lease
~ 640+/- acres of state lease
~ Water features include nearly five miles of pipelines that service 15 stock ponds, over 25 reservoirs, and five producing wells piped into tanks
~ Langs Fork of Big Dry Creek runs through almost the entire ranch
~ Carrying capacity of 250 to 300 cow/calf pairs
~ Very well-kept 1,200+/- square foot home built in 1990 with a detached garage
~ Full complement of agricultural buildings, including grain storage, multiple shops, and sheds
~ Hunting on the ranch includes mule deer, pronghorn antelope, sharp-tails, and Hungarian partridge
04/01/2024
$4,625,000
5700 ac.
ACTIVE
Garfield County - Cohagen, MT
The Two Furrow Ranch has not changed hands in over a half-century. That ownership continuum reflects well in the fine condition of the ranch and the improvements. The developed stock water, which consists of five wells, five miles of pipeline, and 15 tanks, should be considered well-located, well-built, and well-cared for.
The ranch sits astride the boundary between the Langs Fork of Big Dry Creek and Duck Creek, which feeds into Little Dry Creek. Most of the ranch is considered a gently rolling country with sandier soils on the south end and more clay to the north. Much of the farmland has been seeded to permanent pasture, but there is farmland on the south end that is currently in a crop/fallow rotation and utilized for producing winter forage.
There are flood-irrigated meadows in the northwest part of the ranch that have been seeded to annual forage crops and put up for hay. Consider average yields in the one-and-a-half to two tons per acre on these meadows, depending on water availability. Historically, dryland winter wheat yields an average of about 40 bushels per acre. The ranch is estimated to carry 2,400+/- AUMs of grazing plus what winter forage can be put up on the dryland and irrigated fields. If one were to feed for four months and graze for eight months, the ranch would come close to balancing at nearly 300 Animal Units.
The Two Furrow Ranch is one of those ranches that may come on the market every couple of generations, a buy-and-hold ranch if there ever was one.
The Facts:
~ 5,700+/- deeded acres
~ 2,460+/- acres of BLM lease
~ 640+/- acres of state lease
~ Water features include nearly five miles of pipelines that service 15 stock ponds, over 25 reservoirs, and five producing wells piped into tanks
~ Langs Fork of Big Dry Creek runs through almost the entire ranch
~ Carrying capacity of 250 to 300 cow/calf pairs
~ Very well-kept 1,200+/- square foot home built in 1990 with a detached garage
~ Full complement of agricultural buildings, including grain storage, multiple shops, and sheds
~ Hunting on the ranch includes mule deer, pronghorn antelope, sharp-tails, and Hungarian partridge
10/15/2025
$3,000,000
3228 ac.
ACTIVE
Garfield County - 1500 Sand Springs Road, Sand Springs, MT
The Little Rosie Ranch is located one hour west of Jordan MT and 3 hours from Billings MT, in Garfield County. 3,228+/- deeded acres of rolling grass hills and draws with a 3,915+/- acre, 793 aum, BLM allotment that borders over 60,000 acres of BLM and State land that eventually leads to the Charles M. Russell National Wildlife Refuge. There are 510+/- farmland acres and 40 acres of dike flooded hay ground that is fairly productive. Pastures are crossed fenced for rotational grazing and feeding in the winter. One electric well runs a pipeline through the whole ranch that runs 6 water tanks, 4 in the deeded acres and 2 in the BLM allotment all in good working condition. Pipeline water is supplemented with 5 reservoirs. Owner estimates the stocking rate at 150 to 200 AU's year-round. Included are two small buildings, one being a bunkhouse and a shower house. The ranch is also equipped with a heavy duty set of steel corrals. This is a hunters paradise located in the 700 district which holds record breaking Bull Elk and Mule Deer, and also inhabits Whitetail, Antelope, Wild Turkey, Sage Grouse and Pheasants.
Please visit our website for an interactive map, drone video and brochure.
10/15/2025
$3,000,000
3228 ac.
ACTIVE
Garfield County - 1500 Sand Springs Road, Sand Springs, MT
The Little Rosie Ranch is located one hour west of Jordan MT and 3 hours from Billings MT, in Garfield County. 3,228+/- deeded acres of rolling grass hills and draws with a 3,915+/- acre, 793 aum, BLM allotment that borders over 60,000 acres of BLM and State land that eventually leads to the Charles M. Russell National Wildlife Refuge. There are 510+/- farmland acres and 40 acres of dike flooded hay ground that is fairly productive. Pastures are crossed fenced for rotational grazing and feeding in the winter. One electric well runs a pipeline through the whole ranch that runs 6 water tanks, 4 in the deeded acres and 2 in the BLM allotment all in good working condition. Pipeline water is supplemented with 5 reservoirs. Owner estimates the stocking rate at 150 to 200 AU's year-round. Included are two small buildings, one being a bunkhouse and a shower house. The ranch is also equipped with a heavy duty set of steel corrals. This is a hunters paradise located in the 700 district which holds record breaking Bull Elk and Mule Deer, and also inhabits Whitetail, Antelope, Wild Turkey, Sage Grouse and Pheasants.
Please visit our website for an interactive map, drone video and brochure.
10/15/2025
$3,000,000
3228 ac.
ACTIVE
Garfield County - 1500 Sand Springs Road, Sand Springs, MT
The Little Rosie Ranch is located one hour west of Jordan MT and 3 hours from Billings MT, in Garfield County. 3,228+/- deeded acres of rolling grass hills and draws with a 3,915+/- acre, 793 aum, BLM allotment that borders over 60,000 acres of BLM and State land that eventually leads to the Charles M. Russell National Wildlife Refuge. There are 510+/- farmland acres and 40 acres of dike flooded hay ground that is fairly productive. Pastures are crossed fenced for rotational grazing and feeding in the winter. One electric well runs a pipeline through the whole ranch that runs 6 water tanks, 4 in the deeded acres and 2 in the BLM allotment all in good working condition. Pipeline water is supplemented with 5 reservoirs. Owner estimates the stocking rate at 150 to 200 AU's year-round. Included are two small buildings, one being a bunkhouse and a shower house. The ranch is also equipped with a heavy duty set of steel corrals. This is a hunters paradise located in the 700 district which holds record breaking Bull Elk and Mule Deer, and also inhabits Whitetail, Antelope, Wild Turkey, Sage Grouse and Pheasants.
Please visit our website for an interactive map, drone video and brochure.
10/15/2025
$3,000,000
3228 ac.
ACTIVE
Garfield County - 1500 Sand Springs Road, Sand Springs, MT
The Little Rosie Ranch is located one hour west of Jordan MT and 3 hours from Billings MT, in Garfield County. 3,228+/- deeded acres of rolling grass hills and draws with a 3,915+/- acre, 793 aum, BLM allotment that borders over 60,000 acres of BLM and State land that eventually leads to the Charles M. Russell National Wildlife Refuge. There are 510+/- farmland acres and 40 acres of dike flooded hay ground that is fairly productive. Pastures are crossed fenced for rotational grazing and feeding in the winter. One electric well runs a pipeline through the whole ranch that runs 6 water tanks, 4 in the deeded acres and 2 in the BLM allotment all in good working condition. Pipeline water is supplemented with 5 reservoirs. Owner estimates the stocking rate at 150 to 200 AU's year-round. Included are two small buildings, one being a bunkhouse and a shower house. The ranch is also equipped with a heavy duty set of steel corrals. This is a hunters paradise located in the 700 district which holds record breaking Bull Elk and Mule Deer, and also inhabits Whitetail, Antelope, Wild Turkey, Sage Grouse and Pheasants.
Please visit our website for an interactive map, drone video and brochure.
10/15/2025
$3,000,000
3228 ac.
ACTIVE
Garfield County - 1500 Sand Springs Road, Sand Springs, MT
The Little Rosie Ranch is located one hour west of Jordan MT and 3 hours from Billings MT, in Garfield County. 3,228+/- deeded acres of rolling grass hills and draws with a 3,915+/- acre, 793 aum, BLM allotment that borders over 60,000 acres of BLM and State land that eventually leads to the Charles M. Russell National Wildlife Refuge. There are 510+/- farmland acres and 40 acres of dike flooded hay ground that is fairly productive. Pastures are crossed fenced for rotational grazing and feeding in the winter. One electric well runs a pipeline through the whole ranch that runs 6 water tanks, 4 in the deeded acres and 2 in the BLM allotment all in good working condition. Pipeline water is supplemented with 5 reservoirs. Owner estimates the stocking rate at 150 to 200 AU's year-round. Included are two small buildings, one being a bunkhouse and a shower house. The ranch is also equipped with a heavy duty set of steel corrals. This is a hunters paradise located in the 700 district which holds record breaking Bull Elk and Mule Deer, and also inhabits Whitetail, Antelope, Wild Turkey, Sage Grouse and Pheasants.
Please visit our website for an interactive map, drone video and brochure.
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