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About Bozeman Montana |
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| "America's #1 Best Place to Retire" |
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America's #1 Best Place to Retire; U.S. News & World Report; October 1, 2007 |
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| Gateway to Yellowstone and Grand Teton National Parks |
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Yellowstone National Park
Grand Teton National Park |
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| "He...Dreams of Living in Bozeman..." |
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Richard Ford, Pulitzer Prize-winning author in The Lay of the Land. page 113 (2006) |
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| America's #1 Dreamtown by American City Business Journals, Inc. |
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“This Rocky Mountain community is the ultimate dreamtown. It has a highly educated workforce -- thanks to the presence of Montana State University -- and it offers plenty of places to work. The number of small businesses has zoomed up by 27.7 percent in just five years.”
American City Business Journals, Inc.
August 7, 2006
Rated #2 - Jackson, Wyoming |
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| The Face of Bozeman |
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“No longer a cow town, Bozeman -- in Big Sky Country, Montana -- has been nicknamed Boz Angeles because of an influx of Californians and celebrities. This has resulted in ranchers cashing out and Wal-Mart moving in, although downtown Bozeman still has plenty of charm, along with mountain views. And while it has been known to snow in August, on most weekends you’ll find the whole town -- and its many dogs -- floating down the Madison and Yellowstone Rivers on innertubes.”
The New York Times Style Magazine
Summer, 2006 |
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| Bozeman Burns Brightly |
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“Bozeman has managed to reinvent itself. It may still have the soul of a cow town -
not to mention the geography of a Rocky Mountain mecca - but Bozeman has shed
cowboy persona in favor of a more sophisticated blend of wilderness paradise and
cultural Shangri-La.”
NWA (Northwest Airlines In-Flight Magazine)
June, 2006 |
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| Down-Home Ski Town |
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“Small-town simplicity with cosmopolitan amenities in a spectacular setting,
minutes from a no-nonsense ski area.
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USA Today
November 7, 2003 |
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Life 2.0: How People Across America Are Transforming
Their Lives by Finding the Where of Their Happiness |
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“The Bozeman airport is immediately on the other side of the Gallatin Pass,.
I taxi up to the Yellowstone Jet Center. The parking lot, or ramp as it is called, is filled with corporate jets glittering on black pavement--Citations, Gulfstreams, Falcons, Global Expresses. The superrich California/New York crowd has arrived for the month of August--David Letterman, Tom Brokaw, numerous Silicon Valley billionaires--all with fabulous spreads in Montana. Credit them for good taste. It's beautiful here in Bozeman, and for the next few minutes I feel like a card-carrying member of the billionaire crowd myself, my very own airplane parked alongside the $20 million jets.
“Sweet God, I enjoy feeling rich.”
“The city of Bozeman, Montana is what writer David Brooks calls a latte town in his achingly funny book Bobos in Paradise. It's a place where the rich go to don flannel shirts and Gap jeans, rent a Hummer, and then get back to nature--Kalispell, but with a university. It's a fun town, in a big bowl overlorded by ten-thousand-foot peaks, with great trout fishing and every possible outdoor activity.
“Bozeman still has much the same feel as when it was established in 1864. When gold was discovered sixty miles to the west, many took the new Bozeman Trail, which was established by a transplanted Georgian named John Bozeman. Many who followed this trail for gold returned to the valley to take up farming and business. So began the town of Bozeman in 1864.”
Life 2.0, pp. 149-150
Rich Karlgaard; Forbes Magazine's “Flying Publisher” Barnstorms America
Get it at Amazon.com
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Copyright © 2007 Downtown Realty Investors, LLC.
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