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$135,000 / 2br - 1152ft2 - Gleaming Glendive Home (Glendive, MT)

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Posted : Friday, July 19, 2024 06:34 PM

Step into this move-in-ready home with many updates! Offering a multitude of opportunities, this Glendive home puts you in proximity to Makoshika State Park and the Yellowstone River.
When you’re not exploring or fishing, enjoy the new flooring and fresh paint in the welcoming home.
Retreat to the backyard and delight in your private oasis guarded by the 6-foot privacy fence.
Accompanying the home is a workshop/storage area and there’s easy alley access to the detached garage.
The home encompasses 2 bedrooms and 1 full bathroom with 1,152 square feet of area.
What’s more, the seller is offering concessions towards closing costs and prepaids! Check out this enchanting home today! Local Area As the county seat of Dawson County, Glendive offers Montana a unique beauty and history.
It’s tucked between the badlands that span into the Dakotas and the mighty Yellowstone River.
It serves as eastern Montana’s hub city of the rich agricultural area and was incorporated on October 7, 1902 as a result of the railroad.
It contains the beautiful and one-of-a-kind Makoshika State Park, one of the largest state parks in Montana with more than 11,000 acres.
It is filled with rock formations and dinosaur fossils giving us a rare glimpse into the past.
Visit the Glendive Dinosaur and Fossil Museum to see the towering dinosaur replicas.
Join in on the annual paddle fishing season and snag one of these archaic fish.
With plenty to do and see, Glendive, Montana is sure to be on your destination list.
Area Attractions Makoshika State Park Montana’s largest state park features badland formations and fossil remains of dinosaurs! There is a newly remodeled visitor center that has Tyrannosaurus Rex fossils on display.
Enjoy scenic drives, hiking trails, camping sites, and picnic areas.
Calypso Trail and Terry Badlands Wilderness Study Area Head out of town for an inspiring drive through arches, bridges, flat table-tops, pinnacles, spires, and buttes of the Terry Badlands Wilderness Study Area.
Three miles northwest of Terry, the Terry Badlands WSA is a wonderland of awesome banded cliffs that overlook rolling prairie.
Grasses, wildflowers, and brushes such as sage, yucca, greasewood, and scattered juniper blanket the rolling benches.
You can view wildlife that includes mule and white-tailed deer, pronghorn, elk, badgers, many raptors, and reptiles such as horned lizards.
It is not unusual to encounter petrified wood in the WSA.
This area is excellent for hiking, backcountry hunting, rock/fossil collecting, and enjoying the spectacular scenery! Fort Peck Lake Fort Peck Lake is Montana’s largest body of water at 134 miles in length and a maximum depth of 220 feet.
The shoreline spans more than 1,520 miles.
That’s longer than the California coast! More than 50 different kinds of fish call this body of water home.
In 1933, a 3.
8-mile dam was constructed across the Missouri River creating the reservoir.
Anglers flock here for the Walleye, Northern Pike, Paddlefish, Sauger, Lake Trout, Small Mouth Bass, and Chinook Salmon.
There are several access points and boat ramps.
Sport Fishing and Local Tournaments Partake in the national event held in July at Fort Peck known as Montana’s Governor’s Cup Walleye Fishing Tournament.
This tournament is Northeast Montana’s premier walleye fishing tournament.
Another fierce fishing tournament held in this area is the Milk River Catfish Classic.
This “granddaddy” of the catfish tournaments is held annually in June in Glasgow, MT.
The night-time event boasts popularity as it books up months in advance.
Join the sport and have some fun! The Yellowstone River and Its Premiere Blue-Ribbon Fishing This constant, unwavering river flows throughout the Yellowstone River corridor just as it has for centuries: in its natural state.
It has not been dammed nor tamed and is the longest, free-flowing river as such in the lower 48 states.
It meanders through a variety of scenery and various topographies from steep canyon walls to lazily flowing through farm country.
Its fresh, clean waters provide fishing, floating, swimming, and rafting.
The nutrient-rich areas surrounding the river are a paradise for wildlife making hunting especially good as well.
Enjoy viewing wildlife such as bald eagles, elk, white-tailed deer, and black bears.
Certainly, you will want to take advantage of the world-class fishing known internationally.
These premier trout waters produce an abundance of big trout and native Yellowstone cutthroat trout.
In the upper half of the river, species found are cutthroat trout, rainbow trout, large whitefish, and brown trout.
In the lower half or warmer waters, species found are large walleye, catfish, and sturgeon.
The beauty of fishing the Yellowstone River is its length and ample space.
Anglers are not crowded with others and have the length of the river to spread out.
The beautiful landscape encompassing the banks enhances the whole experience.
The river offers excellent dry fly fishing is excellent as well as sub-surface fishing with nymphs and streamers.
Charles M Russell National Wildlife Refuge Known as the CMR Refuge, it surrounds Fort Peck Lake and is managed by the US Fish and Wildlife Service.
The Refuge provides over one million acres of public land for fishing, hiking, hunting, camping, bird-watching, and other outdoor activities.
If you’re looking to observe game in its natural habitat, this refuge shall reward you.
It is the second-largest refuge in the continental US.
In September and October locals and tourists from all over gather to watch the bull elk bugle and battle for the cow’s attention.
Miles of parked cars can be seen while people sit on lawn chairs and watch for hours the wild display the elk present.
Herds of deer, red foxes, and coyotes can also be observed.
Bird watchers can delight in spying mountain bluebirds and black-capped chickadees.
Osprey, spotted sandpipers, and white pelicans can be found along the coast of the reservoir.
Hunting Renowned for its hunting, Montana provides the habitat.
The Missouri River Breaks of the Fort Peck Area are no different.
Elk and mule deer like to gather near the ridges of Fort Peck Lake, some quite large.
White-tailed deer and pronghorn can be found as well.
Big Horn Sheep can be harvested in the area.
Whether it’s big game, waterfowl, predators like coyotes, or upland game birds, this area boasts some of the best in the state.

• Phone : NA

• Location : 412 E Towne St, Glendive, MT,MT

• Post ID: 9136986098


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