The agencies in Sublette County
These agencies offer a selection of luxury properties vente in Sublette County. Feel free to contact them for personalized assistance.
The Spring Creek Ranch offers an exceptional opportunity to own a productive cattle and recreational property in the highly sought-after Sublette County of western Wyoming. Encompassing approximately 2,550 deeded acres, the ranch combines outstanding cattle potential with unmatched scenery. Expansive mountain views, easy access to the Bridger-Teton National Forest, and abundant native wildlife create the ideal balance between work and play.The Spring Creek Ranch spans more than 2,550 deeded acres of diverse and scenic landscape. Rolling hills are accented by mature aspen groves that open into expansive sagebrush flats and native grasslands that provide outstanding wildlife habitat. Numerous natural springs are scattered throughout the property, feeding the namesake Spring Creek, which meanders for nearly five miles through the heart of the ranch. The ranch is near the Bridger-Teton National Forest, where a county road offers direct access to thousands of acres of public land and unlimited recreational opportunities. Several ideal building sites sit along the creek, each offering sweeping views of the Wind River Range, Wyoming Range and Gros Ventre Range. With its abundant live water and natural springs, the property presents excellent potential for recreation, cattle production, or habitat enhancement. Spring Creek's consistent flow also creates opportunities to develop private fishing waters or stock ponds, adding both beauty and function to this exceptional mountain ranch. The recreational opportunities on the ranch are endless. The land boasts elk, deer, antelope, moose, bear, wolves, waterfowl, and sage grouse. Elk tags are available over-the-counter in unit 92, while antelope unit 88 offers a draw hunt with excellent odds for trophy antelope. Deer hunting in unit 142 also features general over-the-counter tags. Fishing in North Cottonwood Creek is exceptional, with anglers able to catch a variety of trout, including cutthroat and rainbow trout. The surrounding Wyoming Range and Bridger National Forest offer fantastic hiking, camping, and horseback riding experiences. Additionally, the nearby Wind River Range and Gros Ventre Range provide even more opportunities for outdoor adventures such as mountaineering, rock climbing, and wildlife viewing. Big Piney, Wyoming, experiences a semi-arid climate characterized by cold winters and mild summers. Winter temperatures often drop below freezing, with average lows around 5°F (-15°C) and significant snowfall. Summers are relatively mild, with average highs around 80°F (27°C) and cooler nights. The region receives low annual precipitation, around 10 inches (25 cm), mostly falling as snow in winter and occasional thunderstorms in summer. The high elevation and clear skies contribute to significant temperature variations between day and night throughout the year. Big Piney, Wyoming, is a small town located in Sublette County in the western part of the state. It is situated approximately 90 miles south of Jackson Hole, making it a convenient drive for those looking to explore the renowned Teton and Yellowstone National Parks. The town is about 220 miles northeast of Salt Lake City, Utah, offering access to a larger metropolitan area for additional amenities and services. The closest town with amenities, such as grocery stores, dining options, and basic services, is Pinedale, located about 35 miles to the north. Pinedale also offers additional recreational opportunities and serves as a gateway to the Wind River Range. For air travel, the nearest major airport is Jackson Hole Airport (JAC), which is approximately 100 miles north of Big Piney. This airport provides regular flights to major cities across the United States. Additionally, Salt Lake City International Airport (SLC), about 220 miles to the southwest, offers a broader range of domestic and international flights, making it another viable option for air travel.
…By Annonceur International
Own a rare 320 acre holding with easement access to 5,000+ acres of private recreational haven and seamlessly reach into thousands of acres of National Forest. Maki 'MA-K-HA' Creek Ranch delivers premier hunting, fishing, and four-season adventure in the greater Yellowstone ecosystem-without the resort pretense. Quiet 5-acre building envelopes, come for the water and ridgelines; stay for the privacy, the story, and the legacy.This 320 acre collection grants owners shared, deeded access across 5,000+ acres of private ranchland plus trail/creek corridors into thousands of acres of National Forest. Parcels are sited for privacy and view-shed protection, wildlife-friendly fencing guidelines, and a land-stewardship program balancing habitat and ranch operations. A true four-season private National Park: walk-out access to Yellowstone Wildlife, elk, deer, antelope, Greater Sage Grouse, anything you have seen in Yellowstone are on this ranch. Aspen groves, creek bottoms, and panoramic ridge hikes. Cast to classic undercut banks, ride miles of two-track and timber edge, snowshoe or sled in winter, and glass migrating herds at first light. Owners enjoy priority for on-ranch activities and simple, low-key amenities (trailheads, wayfinding, day-use barn/gear storage). Set within the greater Yellowstone ecosystem of western Wyoming, the ranch enjoys low-humidity summers, cool nights, bright fall colors, and snow-reliable winters. Expect 4 distinct seasons, abundant sunshine, and clean mountain air. Elevation yields a shorter growing season, excellent wildlife habitat, and that crisp, high-country feel buyers seek for year-round adventure. The surrounding country is rooted in working-ranch heritage-hay meadows, cattle, and historic stock trails that double today as wildlife corridors. Maki Creek Ranch follows a light-touch, conservation-forward approach: limited homesites, dark-sky lighting, wildlife-friendly practices, and common-sense covenants that keep the landscape open, functional, and ranch-true for generations. Old trails, living waters. Long before survey lines, the upper Green River country was a seasonal homeland and travel corridor for the Eastern Shoshone (with close ties to Bannock bands from the Snake River/Fort Hall area). Their name for the Green River-Seeds-kee-dee Agie ('Prairie Chicken River')-still echoes in place-names and interpretive signs across Sublette County. The Shoshone and allied groups hunted these sage valleys and high parks, moving with bison, elk, and salmon-berry seasons; in the 1860s they entered treaties that later established the Wind River Reservation to the east. Trails you can still walk. On the forest just above the ranch, the 'Old Indian Trail - Maki Creek Crossing' is documented in Forest Service project records-one of many quiet reminders that these drainages were Indigenous routes long before they were blazed by stockmen or mapped by engineers. US Forest Service Mountain men & the Green River Rendezvous. In the 1820s-1840s, this valley sat at the beating heart of the Rocky Mountain fur trade. Jedediah Smith, William Sublette (namesake of Sublette County), David Jackson, and others wintered, trapped, and traded along the Green and its tributaries, crossing South Pass and convening the famous Green River Rendezvous near present-day Daniel/Pinedale-six of the sixteen Rocky Mountain Rendezvous happened right here in the Upper Green. Today, the Museum of the Mountain Man in Pinedale and annual Rendezvous Days keep that story alive. From traplines to haylines. As beaver hats faded, cattle and hay took over. The open valleys and reliable creeks around Maki Creek became classic working-ranch country-meadows in the bottoms, summer range on the benches, timber for posts and stove-wood up high. That working landscape-stock, hay, and wildlife moving through the same corridors-still defines the feel of the place.
…By Annonceur International
Covering over 1,580+- acres, the Maki Creek Ranch offers an exceptional opportunity for a world-class hunting or cattle operation. North Cottonwood Creek winds through the center of the property, which adjoins thousands of acres of national forest, providing limitless recreational opportunities.The Maki Ranch covers 1,580+- deeded acres. The landscape features rolling hills with large aspen groves and conifer trees, as well as expansive open spaces with sagebrush and native grasses that provide excellent wildlife habitat. North Cottonwood Creek meanders for nearly 3 miles through the heart of the property, lined with large cottonwoods that create a picturesque setting. The ranch borders the Bridger National Forest and offers great spots along the creek for additional building with views of the Wind River Range to the east and the Gros Ventre Range to the north. Maki Creek runs from the Northwest of the ranch and runs into North Cottonwood Creek. The recreational opportunities on the ranch are endless. The land boasts elk, deer, antelope, moose, bear, wolves, waterfowl, and sage grouse. Elk tags are available over-the-counter in unit 92, while antelope unit 88 offers a draw hunt with excellent odds for trophy antelope. Deer hunting in unit 142 also features general over-the-counter tags. Fishing in North Cottonwood Creek is exceptional, with anglers able to catch a variety of trout, including cutthroat and rainbow trout. The surrounding Wyoming Range and Bridger National Forest offer fantastic hiking, camping, and horseback riding experiences. Additionally, the nearby Wind River Range and Gros Ventre Range provide even more opportunities for outdoor adventures such as mountaineering, rock climbing, and wildlife viewing. Big Piney, Wyoming, experiences a semi-arid climate characterized by cold winters and mild summers. Winter temperatures often drop below freezing, with average lows around 5°F (-15°C) and significant snowfall. Summers are relatively mild, with average highs around 80°F (27°C) and cooler nights. The region receives low annual precipitation, around 10 inches (25 cm), mostly falling as snow in winter and occasional thunderstorms in summer. The high elevation and clear skies contribute to significant temperature variations between day and night throughout the year. Big Piney, Wyoming, is a small town located in Sublette County in the western part of the state. It is situated approximately 90 miles south of Jackson Hole, making it a convenient drive for those looking to explore the renowned Teton and Yellowstone National Parks. The town is about 220 miles northeast of Salt Lake City, Utah, offering access to a larger metropolitan area for additional amenities and services. The closest town with amenities, such as grocery stores, dining options, and basic services, is Pinedale, located about 35 miles to the north. Pinedale also offers additional recreational opportunities and serves as a gateway to the Wind River Range. For air travel, the nearest major airport is Jackson Hole Airport (JAC), which is approximately 100 miles north of Big Piney. This airport provides regular flights to major cities across the United States. Additionally, Salt Lake City International Airport (SLC), about 220 miles to the southwest, offers a broader range of domestic and international flights, making it another viable option for air travel.
…By Annonceur International
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These agencies offer a selection of luxury properties vente in Sublette County. Feel free to contact them for personalized assistance.