I am proud to say I was raised on a ranch doing all the hard work of a rancher. I come from a long line of ranchers. This is a hard yet very satisfying way of life.
Hey Andre you always make us laugh and smile because you are always so kind in your videos. We love your channel in our house and I watch your videos with my husband and son. Lots of love from Seattle Washington State USA.
I am from Montana, born and raised in Bozeman and Helena (the capitol). It is guaranteed that Western Montana rivals anything in the world. Yellowstone, Glacier National Park, the Bozeman area, Flathead Lake..all in Western Montana. Paradise Valley is one of my favorite places, and Bozeman was a great place to grow up. It is a boom town, growing steadily, the home of one of two universities in the state. Surrounded by mountains on all sides…I miss it so much.
The beauty of living in the north… it’s not 100 degrees for months on end. I live in Maine, on the north east coast. It’s got the ocean, mountains, state parks, wild life are protected. The north is beautiful.
I’m in Montana, but in the Northwest of the state near Glacier National Park. Those Mountains are small compared to what we have where I am. 😊 Come visit!
Remember, these are working ranches. Not only are they very expensive to buy but to run a ranch is very expensive and takes a lot of knowledge and its extremely physical work. You can never just leave and go on a weeks vacation. Well, unless you have a lot of hired hands to care for the animals and do herd check and checking fences. I grew up around farmers, ranchers, and dairies. They literally worked 24/7!!! Especially during calving season, planting, harvest, hay baling. It's some seriously dirty work!!!
These multi million dollar ranches with thousands of acres most definitely have a manager and staff hired to run them. The owners do little to no work. Have to be very wealthy to own these properties. Plenty of time for vacations. Lol
My friend remember what time of year you’re looking at in this video. In the winter Montana especially northern Montana is brutal and I can’t stress enough. The weather and temperatures are brutal. In fact, the lowest temperature ever recorded in the lower United States is in Montana at 70° below zero. Do you still want to move there?
The Inner West is a land of extremes. All of western Montana looks like that, in spring. Full green is usually mid June. By mid July things are drying up and temps are rising significantly. 30 - 40 Celsius in summer. 0 to -40 Celsius in winter. When spring rains stop, mid June, it is not uncommon to be dry till Halloween. Maybe a few showers in Oct. It's full green here in north Idaho. Wild Roses on my road to town. Soon a faint purple as grasses head out and then it goes hot and dry. Road trip. Visit Bozeman. South thru Yellowstone, as far as you want, then into Idaho. Stay on the east border. Cross into MT on I-15, visit Dillon. On to Wisdom to Lost Trail Pass. North on hwy 93, West at Lolo onto hwy 12. At Orofino, cross the river then left at the other end. North at Kendrick to Deary and north on hwy 3 to St Maries. East on St Joe River Road to St Regis MT. North from the center of town. Along the Clarke Fork River to a right turn just before Plains. Aim for Flathead Lake and Glacier Park. Going to the Sun Road in Glacier Park finished plowing the snow and opened this weekend. Reservations to drive over the pass. Leave before 6am and no reservations needed. Skinny road and lots of tourists but less in early am. An absolutely stunning drive. This whole route is stunning. Brilliant cattle lands, deep, deep river valleys, rugged mountains and mostly empty roads.
Born and raised in Livingston, Montana.I felt I was very lucky and very fortunate to live surrounded by such beauty. In the last 10-20 years many people have moved here and the open vistas are a bit more cramped now, but still amazing. Go there if you have a chance you will not regret it! Love your videos!
I grew up on a working cattle ranch, in far northern Nevada. It was two valleys and the mountain range in between, about 1,200,000 acres, a rough rectangle about 40 by 50 miles. The house was about 12 miles from the property line, near the river that ran though one of the valleys. It was high desert, so it was a hard life, but the place had a wild sort of beauty all its own. Now I live on 220 acres of forest land in the mountains, with a small river 20 minutes' walk away. If you ever come to America, I will take you fishing there!
I live in the best state in the country. There is nothing like Montana. The green doesn't last forever. Usually between March and August, then everything dries up and goes brown. Paradise Valley is gorgeous. Cold, but gorgeous. Livingston, MT is a hideaway for a few of the celebrities. Schwartzenegger use to go out there whenever he had problems with the Kennedys. Margot Kidder lived there before her death. Bozeman is right down the road. Texas is flat, I like the mountains around me.
Texas is flat???? Have you ever heard of Big Bend National Park in Texas? I think those are some pretty big mountains they have there...Not to mention the Rockies in the Panhandle region. Also...The Hill country of Central Texas, with it's green, rolling hills? I'm in North Texas, and it's not flat here either---green hills everywhere. The only "flat" part is an area of West Texas---which is actually a fairly small area in comparison with the rest of this huge state. We have every type of topography in Texas. Mountains, hills, desert, beaches, etc....We even have a smaller version of the Grand Canyon--Palo Duro Canyon--which is stunning. From Google-----"Texas's lowest elevation is sea level, at the Gulf Of Mexico. Texas landforms include a coastal plain in the southeast, the Texas hill country in the center, prairie and low mountains in the northwest, and the Davis, Santiago, and Guadalupe ranges of the Rockies in the west." It's obvious you know nothing about Texas---so your ignorance can be forgiven--but now you know.
@@dragonfly9209 The Rockies are not in Texas. Now you know, your ignorance can be forgiven. The most southern point for the Rockies is New Mexico. I lived in Texas, traveled all through the state compared to the Rocky Mountains, land use Texas is flat. Reminds me of Pennsylvania and the Poconos. Texas is just as flat as Eastern Montana.
@@rhiahlMT so now your going to change the goal post? (Typical) We were talking about mountains, not homes, not to mention those mountains are protected, it’s not allowed…
I lived in Bozeman for 3 years in the 2010's, it was beautiful. If you love the cold in the winter and amazing thunderstorms in the summer, it is the place to be.
I also am from Eastern Montana. We have a different kind of beauty here. I live near the badlands which are extraordinary! The Yellowstone River passes through my town too as it traverses to meet the Missouri River in the north east part of the state. Here we find beautiful Montana Agates, we have abundant wildlife and more cows than people.
Hey Andre this is where I grew up! You will see all kinds of wildlife from deer to elk to coyotes, bison, antelope and especially the people ha ha. Yes I was raised in Bozeman my dad was a dean at Montana State. All you will need to on your little bit of Paradise is about $26.5 million, so I hope you have a whole lot of T-shirts to sell to afford that ranch! Now this area is not as conservative as the rest of the state mostly because of the university. You would fit in so well there!
Andre I think you would enjoy Overlanding vids . Multi day trips through public wilderness or dessert in 4x4 vehicles camping along the way . Areas as beautiful as National Parks but designated for public recreation..
Great reaction ! : ) That's actually small for Montana ranches from what I've watched on YT, it looks like they put a LOT of money into that big house. Here are 2 examples: Montana Ranch Property for Sale: 30,654± Acre Cattle Ranch near Geyser, Montana Montana Ranch Property - SOLD - 42,215 Total Acre Ranch sold near Augusta, Montana
i don't live in Montana, i live in Wa State, but worked in Montana 4 days out of the week(it's only a 2 hour drive) for a few years it's amazing beautiful, i worked construction renovating the houses for dam operators we were staying at a campsite in an RV right by Bull river...so after work each day, i would go down to the river , take a puff of devils lettuce and just fish till it got dark
Andre, you could find something amazing to love in every state in the US. Have u watched any of 'Your New Zealand Family' videos of their RV camper trip? They are driving through several states. If you get to come here, that would be a great way to see so much of America in one trip.
The reason they don`t tell you the price is that they don`t want to scare you to death. 🙂 If I had to take a wild guess at the prices, I would say $40 million for the first one in MT and $30 million on the one in TX. The one in TX is a lot bigger, but with a lot less improvements to the land.
Dude, it would be a blast to take you fishing in my neck of the woods in America. Nothing fancy... no expensive boats, no complicated lure set-ups, just some worms on a hook at a few good fishing holes. I'll even teach you how to clean the fish and cook them. I am, honestly, not a huge fisherman today, but I was taught by my father and grandfather while I was young and it would be a joy to share it with someone interested in learning. Don't those ranches and beautiful landscapes just take your breath away?
Check out the Colorado Ranch (can’t remember the name of it) it’s being sold by the same company. Love these videos! Andre, don’t worry, I’m sure you’ll have plenty of people that will go fishing with you when you visit America.
Sort of connected, look up the history of barbed wire. The "wild west" was where cattle could roam free. But farmers, not wanting their food eaten or trampled, put up barbed wire. Completely changed "the West." Fascinating story about a really simple invention.
Montana still has open range. You have to fence cows out, ranchers don't have to fence them in. There are local restrictions around the cities, but for the most part it's open.
You should check out the small town of Red Lodge, Montana. It's a gateway to Yellowstone NP and also close by is the scenic drive over Beartooth highway.
From what you said about the green and the South I think you're thinking of the southwest. The Southwest is more desert or caves or rock formations. The southeast is luscious and green and full of beautiful trees, hills, rivers, lakes, caves and Mountains. I live in Tennessee and it is one of the most beautiful green places you'll ever see. Fall Creek falls State Park in Tennessee has the tallest waterfall east of the Mississippi River. The state of Tennessee has three geographical regions, mountains in the east, rolling hills in the middle, and flat Delta farmland on the East which borders the Mississippi river. The Tennessee department of tourism puts out some pretty good videos if you're interested. The state has the several cities including the capital, Nashville ,I live in a suburb.. We gave managed to keep much of our farmland and many small rural communities too.
In the Southwest, it all depends on altitude. It is said that for every 1000 ft of additional elevation, the ecology resembles that of 1000 miles north. My vacation home near Tucson, Arizona (where I go in winter) is at 3000 ft in a valley but next to 10,000 ft mountains and those mountains have pine forests on their slopes and tundra-like bare rock at their peaks. In winter, they normally are snow-capped. Across the valley where Tucson sits at the foot of another range, there is a ski resort at the crest of those mountains and many Tucsonans have summer cabins up there because it is 30-40 degrees cooler in summer. Also, supposedly the largest Ponderosa Pine forest in north America is in northern Arizona and New Mexico where the altitude generally is around 6000 ft. Places like Flagstaff, AZ and Taos, NM also have ski resorts.
Probably already mentioned somewhere but I heard near $26 million. I thought more for sure. The house line historic be 3-4 million. Excellent reaction my friend. I live in Montana. In my dreams anyway. While it would be incredible to live there I just have no need for a place that big. The small log cabin was much more my style. Wanna go 50-50%?
Dude. You probably know more about America and American History than most of us born here. 😂 You would not only fit in but be very welcomed in this country. 🥰 Gawddd! I wish the narrator's of these videos would just do a LITTLE research! We locals pronounce Absorka as (Ab-zor-kee). If you want to fit in, then say it this way. I've spent most of my life in Montana and North Idaho. We would welcome you. ❤
Bozeman is where Montana State University at Bozeman is. The town exists because the university exists. I would guess that they are including the close airports because this property is only accessible by air.
You will just have to make 8 or 9 trips to the US. LOL!! I have spent some time in Bozeman. And it is what they say in the video pretty much. It is probably a case, 'If you have to ask the price, you can't afford it anyway'. The one in Albany I live about an hour & half away from. Some properties in the US are quite affordable. Not these two of course. But you would be surprised.
This is my home! My ancestors lived in Paradise Valley. We live near Bozeman. Unfortunately, big ranches like this are only attainable by Uber wealthy who have been taking over our home. Housing prices have skyrocketed.
I was born and raised in Montana still live here and I'm 62 now! Everything is beautiful in Montana and we like to keep it that way!! But more and more millionaires are moving up here and buying all our land here and ruining the way of life it's suppose too have for generations!! You are very welcome too come we would love to have you..❤❤ oh and don't forget the Winters here!!! They are ❄️🥶
She said "half bath". It's a bathroom, but without a bath tub or shower. Just a sink and a toilet. In the USA, we call that a half-bathroom or half-bath. For example, you might say that a home is a "Two Bed, One-and-a-half Bath", meaning it has two bedrooms, one full bathroom, and one half-bathroom. Or simply "It's a 2, 1.5" :)
Add a shower but no tub and that used to be called a 3/4 bath but a lot of retirement communities with newly built houses don't offer tubs in the base package anymore and they call it a full bath.
Oh, come on. Yellowstone is mostly about the geothermal features and wildlife. Yosemite is about the tectonic features and unusual geology (granitic plutons). Both are wonders of nature but certainly one may appeal to some people more than the others. I wouldn't put either of them down. Both also have the advantage of being near to other parks and wilderness areas that have their own beauty. Near Yellowstone is the Grand Tetons. Near Yosemite is the Sequoia National Forest.
Awe.... Andrés, that made me sad when you said you didn't have anyone to go fishing with 😢. You should learn, that way you can take your son with you fishing in the future. I remember the first time I went fishing with my dad and brothers, I caught a. Old boot! But still had a great time.
Montana is great for hunting, fishing, and outdoor activity... winter is about 6 months, and insanely cold... and windy.... Just saying as someone who lived there for 7 years
The ranch in Montana's house is 13,000 square foot. So you could get about ten families to go in on it and splip that house into ten big, 3000 square foot units. Then onlt a couple million plus $$ for each family!😮😊
One of those properties where if you have to ask the Price, you can’t afford it. I’ll also note this would take hard work and savvy owner and manager to stay this gorgeous!
They don't tell you the price because: 1. If you have to know ahead of time, believe me, you can't afford it. 2. They want you to call so they can set up an appointment plus determine whether you're really serious (ie. rich)..
If you visit. You will have many to go with you. Have a fan meet and greet to where you would like to visit. You won’t be alone at all. I live in Texas. I recommend not to come in the summer. It can be dangerously hot for someone that is not used to the area.
You should check out At Home in Wild Spaces Yellowstone videos! He's a wildlife biologist who frequently visits national parks and makes informative videos about the parks, the trails he does, and the wildlife. He goes to Yellowstone all the time. His videos about the Grand Canyon are also excellent
Fishing is the kind of thing that you can do alone if you want to but in my opinion it's better with at least one other person. It can be a really peaceful activity. It's typically a time when you might have a good conversation or get lost in your thoughts. The only issue that I really have with fishing is worms! I really can't stand them!
@@OkiePeg411 got it my chief. LOL Actually it is Connors second in command. " No papers?, then I will live in Montana. I will raise rabbits and marry a round American woman, and have her cook them for me." Something like that. Haha
1200 hectares, $26.5 million.
The Texas ranch sold for $18.4 million
A "half bath" is a room with a toilet and wash basin, but no shower or tub.
Oh wow ❤
I am proud to say I was raised on a ranch doing all the hard work of a rancher. I come from a long line of ranchers.
This is a hard yet very satisfying way of life.
Same but cattle farmers instead of ranchers
If you have to ask for the price, you cannot afford it 😂
Montana is beautiful in the spring summer and Fall...all 6 months of it lolol
I lived Idaho and Montana, beautiful all year!
I lived Idaho and Montana, beautiful all year!
I lived Idaho and Montana, beautiful all year!
I lived Idaho and Montana, beautiful all year!
I lived Idaho and Montana, beautiful all year!
Hey Andre you always make us laugh and smile because you are always so kind in your videos. We love your channel in our house and I watch your videos with my husband and son. Lots of love from Seattle Washington State USA.
I was born and raised in Montana, it is very beautiful and I will never leave😊
I feel the same way about Utah.
I am from Montana, born and raised in Bozeman and Helena (the capitol). It is guaranteed that Western Montana rivals anything in the world. Yellowstone, Glacier National Park, the Bozeman area, Flathead Lake..all in Western Montana. Paradise Valley is one of my favorite places, and Bozeman was a great place to grow up. It is a boom town, growing steadily, the home of one of two universities in the state. Surrounded by mountains on all sides…I miss it so much.
The beauty of living in the north… it’s not 100 degrees for months on end. I live in Maine, on the north east coast. It’s got the ocean, mountains, state parks, wild life are protected. The north is beautiful.
I’m in Montana, but in the Northwest of the state near Glacier National Park. Those Mountains are small compared to what we have where I am. 😊
Come visit!
Remember, these are working ranches. Not only are they very expensive to buy but to run a ranch is very expensive and takes a lot of knowledge and its extremely physical work. You can never just leave and go on a weeks vacation.
Well, unless you have a lot of hired hands to care for the animals and do herd check and checking fences.
I grew up around farmers, ranchers, and dairies. They literally worked 24/7!!!
Especially during calving season, planting, harvest, hay baling. It's some seriously dirty work!!!
the ranch has a manager's house.
These multi million dollar ranches with thousands of acres most definitely have a manager and staff hired to run them. The owners do little to no work. Have to be very wealthy to own these properties. Plenty of time for vacations. Lol
Thanks for another fun one, Andre. Blessings to you and your little family.💜 U too!
Same to you!
My friend remember what time of year you’re looking at in this video. In the winter Montana especially northern Montana is brutal and I can’t stress enough. The weather and temperatures are brutal.
In fact, the lowest temperature ever recorded in the lower United States is in Montana at 70° below zero. Do you still want to move there?
The Inner West is a land of extremes.
All of western Montana looks like that, in spring. Full green is usually mid June. By mid July things are drying up and temps are rising significantly. 30 - 40 Celsius in summer. 0 to -40 Celsius in winter. When spring rains stop, mid June, it is not uncommon to be dry till Halloween. Maybe a few showers in Oct.
It's full green here in north Idaho. Wild Roses on my road to town. Soon a faint purple as grasses head out and then it goes hot and dry.
Road trip. Visit Bozeman. South thru Yellowstone, as far as you want, then into Idaho. Stay on the east border. Cross into MT on I-15, visit Dillon. On to Wisdom to Lost Trail Pass. North on hwy 93, West at Lolo onto hwy 12. At Orofino, cross the river then left at the other end. North at Kendrick to Deary and north on hwy 3 to St Maries. East on St Joe River Road to St Regis MT. North from the center of town. Along the Clarke Fork River to a right turn just before Plains. Aim for Flathead Lake and Glacier Park.
Going to the Sun Road in Glacier Park finished plowing the snow and opened this weekend. Reservations to drive over the pass. Leave before 6am and no reservations needed. Skinny road and lots of tourists but less in early am. An absolutely stunning drive. This whole route is stunning. Brilliant cattle lands, deep, deep river valleys, rugged mountains and mostly empty roads.
Not from Montana now, but lived four years in Great Falls and loved it! Definitely four seasons, but the views of the Bear Paw mountains was beloved!
I live in Billings , Montana, about 2 hours north east of this ranch. The Yellowstone River flows through our town, as well. Cheers!
America needs good people like you.
You were very close. The list price for Sitka Ranch is $26.5 Million. La Mariposa Ranch in Texas (I love the name!) sold for 18.4 Million
I think it means "the butterfly"---am I correct? If so---I love it too!
@@dragonfly9209 Correct. La Mariposa means The Butterfly in Spanish.
My mother was born in Livingston, Montana. My great grandparents had a ranch on the Yellowstone River. It is beautiful there.
Andre, the Yellowstone River carved the "Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone". It's what creates the waterfall at the head of the canyon.
It may be a dream home in the warm season but it's a nightmare in the winter. Montana gets a different kind of cold up there.🥶
26.5 million very close good job
Hi from Montana Andre!! Absolutely beautiful state! And we do love the small population 😅
Born and raised in Livingston, Montana.I felt I was very lucky and very fortunate to live surrounded by such beauty. In the last 10-20 years many people have moved here and the open vistas are a bit more cramped now, but still amazing. Go there if you have a chance you will not regret it! Love your videos!
I grew up on a working cattle ranch, in far northern Nevada. It was two valleys and the mountain range in between, about 1,200,000 acres, a rough rectangle about 40 by 50 miles. The house was about 12 miles from the property line, near the river that ran though one of the valleys. It was high desert, so it was a hard life, but the place had a wild sort of beauty all its own. Now I live on 220 acres of forest land in the mountains, with a small river 20 minutes' walk away. If you ever come to America, I will take you fishing there!
I live in the best state in the country. There is nothing like Montana. The green doesn't last forever. Usually between March and August, then everything dries up and goes brown. Paradise Valley is gorgeous. Cold, but gorgeous. Livingston, MT is a hideaway for a few of the celebrities. Schwartzenegger use to go out there whenever he had problems with the Kennedys. Margot Kidder lived there before her death. Bozeman is right down the road. Texas is flat, I like the mountains around me.
Texas is flat???? Have you ever heard of Big Bend National Park in Texas? I think those are some pretty big mountains they have there...Not to mention the Rockies in the Panhandle region. Also...The Hill country of Central Texas, with it's green, rolling hills? I'm in North Texas, and it's not flat here either---green hills everywhere. The only "flat" part is an area of West Texas---which is actually a fairly small area in comparison with the rest of this huge state. We have every type of topography in Texas. Mountains, hills, desert, beaches, etc....We even have a smaller version of the Grand Canyon--Palo Duro Canyon--which is stunning.
From Google-----"Texas's lowest elevation is sea level, at the Gulf Of Mexico. Texas landforms include a coastal plain in the southeast, the Texas hill country in the center, prairie and low mountains in the northwest, and the Davis, Santiago, and Guadalupe ranges of the Rockies in the west." It's obvious you know nothing about Texas---so your ignorance can be forgiven--but now you know.
@@dragonfly9209 The Rockies are not in Texas. Now you know, your ignorance can be forgiven. The most southern point for the Rockies is New Mexico. I lived in Texas, traveled all through the state compared to the Rocky Mountains, land use Texas is flat. Reminds me of Pennsylvania and the Poconos. Texas is just as flat as Eastern Montana.
@@rhiahlMTapparently in all your travels, you found a way to never go west of Austin…
Ever hear of the Guadalupe mountains?
@@timlubbers2884 Yes. It's the highest point in Texas, Where are the homes on that "mountain"?
@@rhiahlMT so now your going to change the goal post? (Typical)
We were talking about mountains, not homes, not to mention those mountains are protected, it’s not allowed…
I lived in Bozeman for 3 years in the 2010's, it was beautiful. If you love the cold in the winter and amazing thunderstorms in the summer, it is the place to be.
Its a gorgeous state!! Do
Good that you love our country. Wide open spaces and no urban sprawl in Montana
I also am from Eastern Montana. We have a different kind of beauty here. I live near the badlands which are extraordinary! The Yellowstone River passes through my town too as it traverses to meet the Missouri River in the north east part of the state. Here we find beautiful Montana Agates, we have abundant wildlife and more cows than people.
Hey Andre this is where I grew up! You will see all kinds of wildlife from deer to elk to coyotes, bison, antelope and especially the people ha ha. Yes I was raised in Bozeman my dad was a dean at Montana State. All you will need to on your little bit of Paradise is about $26.5 million, so I hope you have a whole lot of T-shirts to sell to afford that ranch! Now this area is not as conservative as the rest of the state mostly because of the university. You would fit in so well there!
If I had that kind of money, I'd pass on the Texas ranch and buy the Montana ranch in a heartbeat.
Greetings from Paradise Valley, Montana! Thanks for showing this! Love your channel! Keep up the good work, my friend.
Andre I think you would enjoy Overlanding vids .
Multi day trips through public wilderness or dessert in 4x4 vehicles camping along the way .
Areas as beautiful as National Parks but designated for public recreation..
If interested Venture 2 Roam or The Story Till channels have good content .
I am from Eastern Montana
❤ and blessings from CALIFORNIA. 🙏🇺🇲
Great reaction ! : )
That's actually small for Montana ranches from what I've watched on YT, it looks like they put a LOT of money into that big house. Here are 2 examples:
Montana Ranch Property for Sale: 30,654± Acre Cattle Ranch near Geyser, Montana
Montana Ranch Property - SOLD - 42,215 Total Acre Ranch sold near Augusta, Montana
i don't live in Montana, i live in Wa State, but worked in Montana 4 days out of the week(it's only a 2 hour drive) for a few years
it's amazing beautiful, i worked construction renovating the houses for dam operators
we were staying at a campsite in an RV right by Bull river...so after work each day, i would go down to the river , take a puff of devils lettuce and just fish till it got dark
Andre, you could find something amazing to love in every state in the US. Have u watched any of 'Your New Zealand Family' videos of their RV camper trip? They are driving through several states. If you get to come here, that would be a great way to see so much of America in one trip.
The reason they don`t tell you the price is that they don`t want to scare you to death. 🙂
If I had to take a wild guess at the prices, I would say $40 million for the first one in MT and $30 million on the one in TX. The one in TX is a lot bigger, but with a lot less improvements to the land.
Dude, it would be a blast to take you fishing in my neck of the woods in America. Nothing fancy... no expensive boats, no complicated lure set-ups, just some worms on a hook at a few good fishing holes. I'll even teach you how to clean the fish and cook them. I am, honestly, not a huge fisherman today, but I was taught by my father and grandfather while I was young and it would be a joy to share it with someone interested in learning. Don't those ranches and beautiful landscapes just take your breath away?
Check out the Colorado Ranch (can’t remember the name of it) it’s being sold by the same company.
Love these videos! Andre, don’t worry, I’m sure you’ll have plenty of people that will go fishing with you when you visit America.
You were so close Andre with your price!! I vote since you are the winner, they should give it to you!!!
Sort of connected, look up the history of barbed wire. The "wild west" was where cattle could roam free. But farmers, not wanting their food eaten or trampled, put up barbed wire. Completely changed "the West." Fascinating story about a really simple invention.
Montana still has open range. You have to fence cows out, ranchers don't have to fence them in. There are local restrictions around the cities, but for the most part it's open.
You should check out the small town of Red Lodge, Montana. It's a gateway to Yellowstone NP and also close by is the scenic drive over Beartooth highway.
From what you said about the green and the South I think you're thinking of the southwest. The Southwest is more desert or caves or rock formations.
The southeast is luscious and green and full of beautiful trees, hills, rivers, lakes, caves and Mountains. I live in Tennessee and it is one of the most beautiful green places you'll ever see.
Fall Creek falls State Park in Tennessee has the tallest waterfall east of the Mississippi River. The state of Tennessee has three geographical regions, mountains in the east, rolling hills in the middle, and flat Delta farmland on the East which borders the Mississippi river.
The Tennessee department of tourism puts out some pretty good videos if you're interested. The state has the several cities including the capital, Nashville ,I live in a suburb.. We gave managed to keep much of our farmland and many small rural communities too.
In the Southwest, it all depends on altitude. It is said that for every 1000 ft of additional elevation, the ecology resembles that of 1000 miles north. My vacation home near Tucson, Arizona (where I go in winter) is at 3000 ft in a valley but next to 10,000 ft mountains and those mountains have pine forests on their slopes and tundra-like bare rock at their peaks. In winter, they normally are snow-capped. Across the valley where Tucson sits at the foot of another range, there is a ski resort at the crest of those mountains and many Tucsonans have summer cabins up there because it is 30-40 degrees cooler in summer. Also, supposedly the largest Ponderosa Pine forest in north America is in northern Arizona and New Mexico where the altitude generally is around 6000 ft. Places like Flagstaff, AZ and Taos, NM also have ski resorts.
We love you too, Andre!! xo
Probably already mentioned somewhere but I heard near $26 million. I thought more for sure. The house line historic be 3-4 million. Excellent reaction my friend. I live in Montana. In my dreams anyway.
While it would be incredible to live there I just have no need for a place that big. The small log cabin was much more my style. Wanna go 50-50%?
Dude. You probably know more about America and American History than most of us born here. 😂 You would not only fit in but be very welcomed in this country. 🥰 Gawddd! I wish the narrator's of these videos would just do a LITTLE research! We locals pronounce Absorka as (Ab-zor-kee). If you want to fit in, then say it this way. I've spent most of my life in Montana and North Idaho. We would welcome you. ❤
Bozeman is where Montana State University at Bozeman is. The town exists because the university exists. I would guess that they are including the close airports because this property is only accessible by air.
You will just have to make 8 or 9 trips to the US. LOL!! I have spent some time in Bozeman. And it is what they say in the video pretty much. It is probably a case, 'If you have to ask the price, you can't afford it anyway'. The one in Albany I live about an hour & half away from. Some properties in the US are quite affordable. Not these two of course. But you would be surprised.
This is my home! My ancestors lived in Paradise Valley. We live near Bozeman. Unfortunately, big ranches like this are only attainable by Uber wealthy who have been taking over our home. Housing prices have skyrocketed.
Yes, I live about an hour or so from this area. It's beautiful country.
I was born and raised in Montana still live here and I'm 62 now! Everything is beautiful in Montana and we like to keep it that way!! But more and more millionaires are moving up here and buying all our land here and ruining the way of life it's suppose too have for generations!! You are very welcome too come we would love to have you..❤❤ oh and don't forget the Winters here!!! They are ❄️🥶
Andre, Alan from Maine here. I want the first "NO SHANCE" T-shirt!!!!!!
Born and raised in Montana. I live about an hour and a half from this ranch.
She said "half bath". It's a bathroom, but without a bath tub or shower. Just a sink and a toilet. In the USA, we call that a half-bathroom or half-bath. For example, you might say that a home is a "Two Bed, One-and-a-half Bath", meaning it has two bedrooms, one full bathroom, and one half-bathroom. Or simply "It's a 2, 1.5" :)
Add a shower but no tub and that used to be called a 3/4 bath but a lot of retirement communities with newly built houses don't offer tubs in the base package anymore and they call it a full bath.
I liked Montanna, and both of my children were conceived there... I was stationed at Malmstrom AFB in Great Falls Mt
Yellowstone is a tourist trap. Yosemite is epic.
Oh, come on. Yellowstone is mostly about the geothermal features and wildlife. Yosemite is about the tectonic features and unusual geology (granitic plutons). Both are wonders of nature but certainly one may appeal to some people more than the others. I wouldn't put either of them down. Both also have the advantage of being near to other parks and wilderness areas that have their own beauty. Near Yellowstone is the Grand Tetons. Near Yosemite is the Sequoia National Forest.
Born and raised in Montana and only about 2 hours from that house because of Montana we talk distance in time
Andre, you should check out going to a dude ranch. You can play cowboy!
Don't get too fond of the green grass, it's under snow about 8 months of the year. Temps reaching -40 are not uncommon.
Lived in big sky Mt for several years amazing place to be!
Awe.... Andrés, that made me sad when you said you didn't have anyone to go fishing with 😢.
You should learn, that way you can take your son with you fishing in the future.
I remember the first time I went fishing with my dad and brothers, I caught a. Old boot! But still had a great time.
Montana is great for hunting, fishing, and outdoor activity... winter is about 6 months, and insanely cold... and windy.... Just saying as someone who lived there for 7 years
Yes my recommendation! This place is amazing
I went to the H and H website, the Sitka Ranch is still for sale. Cost is $26,500,000.
Nobody needs that many acres.
Hey I just found out about Maderia island ! You have a beautiful country too!
Looks beautiful now….. under 1.5 meters on snow all winter
The ranch in Montana's house is 13,000 square foot. So you could get about ten families to go in on it and splip that house into ten big, 3000 square foot units. Then onlt a couple million plus $$ for each family!😮😊
so 10 X 3000 = 13000?
I have been so overpaying my taxes for I thought that math equaled 30000. Idiot me. 🙃🤣
@@robertevans2450 Yep, 1300 square. ft.
As they say, "If you have to ask the price, you probably can't afford it" 🤣
One of those properties where if you have to ask the Price, you can’t afford it. I’ll also note this would take hard work and savvy owner and manager to stay this gorgeous!
They don't tell you the price because:
1. If you have to know ahead of time, believe me, you can't afford it.
2. They want you to call so they can set up an appointment plus determine whether you're really serious (ie. rich)..
I live in Helena, Montana. Lincoln, MT was where the unibomber was living
You made a very accurate guess on the price!
Buying it is not the problem, maintaining it is. You need deep pockets to keep it going.
Montana in the house. I live about 85 miles from this ranch
Love your state!
The Texas ranch was $18,381,450
If you visit. You will have many to go with you. Have a fan meet and greet to where you would like to visit. You won’t be alone at all. I live in Texas. I recommend not to come in the summer. It can be dangerously hot for someone that is not used to the area.
It was "paradise" until winter came...🥶
Winter can be very beautiful.
Yay! I knew you would love it! ❤
You were close in the price. My dad is from Montana. I am a Texan to the bone but I'd move to Montana in a New York second
You should check out At Home in Wild Spaces Yellowstone videos! He's a wildlife biologist who frequently visits national parks and makes informative videos about the parks, the trails he does, and the wildlife. He goes to Yellowstone all the time. His videos about the Grand Canyon are also excellent
Like the old saying goes, "if you have to ask for the price, you can´t afford it".
So are you packing your bags right now? Don’t blame you. It looks beautiful. 😊
This is one of those "If you have to ask how much it costs you can't afford it" situations.
Love it here in Montana
My Mother used to say of such things, "If you *need* to ask how much it costs, then you can't afford it."
Great video. Thanks
In the last part she is trying to tell prospective buyers that they will need to build higher fences to keep invasive species out.
Keep growing the channel and you can buy this property.
The Sitka Ranch is about 27 million
To find out prices you have to go to their real estate site.
There are thousands of houses like that in every single state❤
You should check out Steeley mountain ranch
That is a really nice ranch. But Montana gets cold, and you can lose your livestock to bad weather.
Fishing is the kind of thing that you can do alone if you want to but in my opinion it's better with at least one other person. It can be a really peaceful activity. It's typically a time when you might have a good conversation or get lost in your thoughts. The only issue that I really have with fishing is worms! I really can't stand them!
You can take your son fishing in a few years. You have many memories to make.
❤❤
Love these videos the most
Go look at the largest and biggest esstate in the entire United States and it's in North Carolina and it's called Biltmore. Do a video on that❤🇺🇸🙏🏻👍🏻
With your "Russian" accent. LOL
Reminds me of a scene in "Hunt for Red October".
I know you ain't Russian.
LOL
When he says "Montana" I immediately envision Marco Ramius in the tower of the sub.
@@OkiePeg411 got it my chief. LOL
Actually it is Connors second in command.
" No papers?, then I will live in Montana. I will raise rabbits and marry a round American woman, and have her cook them for me." Something like that. Haha
She said "two half baths ". A 1/2 bath is just a toilet and a sink. And there are 2 in the house.