Search Land - Methow Valley Pivot Ground

Methow Valley Pivot Ground

price

$780,000|Listed: May 26, 2026

MLS#221314256

location

1941 State Route 153, Carlton, Washington

Status:Active

Property Type

  • Farm
  • Ranch
  • Acreage
  • Recreational Land
  • Hunting Land
  • Equestrian Property
  • Mountain Land
  • Cattle Ranch

Acreage

78 acres

Format

Sale

Description

Alfala Grass mix under 3 Zimmatic pivots in great shape, with historical adjudicated water rights, easy access, 3-4 cuttings per season, yielding 5 tons per acre on average. located on State Route 153 Land Approximately 78 acres with Pogue sandy loam soils, tillable with very little rock. Currently growing Alfalfa Grass mix.

Improvements Property has deer fencing on the N side along the highway

Recreation The Methow Valley offers unlimited recreation for the outdoor enthusiast. Hiking, fishing, hunting big and small game, river kayaking, and Rock climbing, to name a few

Agriculture The land has been used to grow alfalfa and hay for 80-plus years.

The Methow Valley is known for great production and high quality due to the hot summers, cool nights, low humidity, and abundant water.

Region & Climate The Methow Valley has a pretty unique climate for Washington State. It sits in the eastern rain shadow of the North Cascades, so it’s much drier and sunnier than the west side of the state, but still gets cold winters and good mountain snow at higher elevations.

General Climate Overview

Semi-arid valley climate in places like Winthrop and Twisp

Cold snowy winters

Hot dry summers

Roughly 300 days of sunshine annually

Large temperature swings between day and night

Typical Temperatures

Season Typical Temps

Winter 15°F–35°F

Spring 40°F–70°F

Summer 80°F–95°F daytime, cooler nights

Fall 40°F–75°F

The valley floor can get brutally cold during inversions. Winthrop and Mazama have recorded temperatures near -48°F historically.

Precipitation & Snow

Lower valley areas:

About 13–16 inches of precipitation annually

Around 40–65 inches of snowfall depending on elevation

Higher mountain elevations:

Much wetter and snowier

Heavy snowpack supports skiing and irrigation water

That’s why the area supports:

Dryland recreation

Irrigated hay and alfalfa

Excellent hunting habitat

Orchards in warmer pockets

Agriculture

The climate is very favorable for:

Alfalfa

Timothy hay

Orchard grass

Apples and cherries in some areas

Cattle grazing

The growing season is shorter than lower-elevation parts of Eastern Washington because of cold spring and fall nights.

Recreation Climate

The climate is a huge draw for outdoor recreation:

Hot dry summers for horseback riding, hiking, and river activities

Reliable winter snow for Nordic skiing and snowmobiling

The Methow is nationally known for its massive Nordic ski trail system.

One of the Biggest Climate Advantages

A lot of ranch and recreation buyers like the Methow because it has:

Mountain scenery without west-side rain

Four true seasons

Low humidity

Cooler summer nights than much of Eastern Washington

It’s kind of a blend between:

Montana-style mountain climate

Eastern Washington sunshine

Cascade scenery

History Carlton is a small unincorporated community in the Methow Valley of Okanogan County, located along the Methow River between Twisp and Methow. Today it’s known for ranching, farming, recreation, and resilience after major wildfire events, but its roots go back to the late 1800s frontier era.

Early Settlement

The Carlton area developed as settlers moved into the Methow Valley for:

Cattle ranching

Hay production

Orchard farming

Mining support

River and wagon-route travel

One important historical route near Carlton was the old Texas Creek wagon and stage route, which helped connect the Methow Valley to mining and settlement areas in north-central Washington.

Original Townsite

The original town of Carlton was actually located slightly away from the present-day community. In the early 1900s, Carlton became a small service center for local ranchers and travelers with:

A store

Garage

Hotel

Restaurant

Basic services for the valley

When the highway alignment changed in 1927, the town was bypassed. Many of the buildings were physically moved closer to the new roadway to form present-day Carlton. One old hotel reportedly remained behind because it could not be moved.

Agriculture & Ranching

Carlton has long been tied to the agricultural economy of the Methow Valley. The wider valley became known for:

Hay and alfalfa

Cattle ranching

Small orchards

Irrigated agriculture along the river bottoms

The dry climate, irrigation access, and large open valleys made the area attractive for homesteaders and ranch families.

Location Located in the heart of the Methow Valley, Carlton, Washington offers a central location for recreation, ranching, and year-round living. The community sits along the Methow River on State Route 153, approximately 8 miles south of Twisp and about 20 miles south of Winthrop.

Nearby towns include:

Twisp — approximately 10 minutes north, offering grocery stores, fuel, restaurants, hardware stores, medical clinics, schools, and local shopping.

Winthrop — approximately 25 minutes north, known for its western-style downtown, restaurants, lodging, outdoor outfitters, breweries, and year-round recreation.

Pateros — roughly 35–40 minutes south with additional services, Columbia River access, and Highway 97 connectivity.

Omak — about 1 hour northeast and provides larger shopping centers, medical facilities, farm and ranch supply stores, and regional services.

Air access includes:

Twisp Municipal Airport — approximately 10 minutes away with a public-use general aviation runway.

Methow Valley State Airport — located south of Winthrop and commonly used for private aviation access into the valley.

Pangborn Memorial Airport — approximately 2.5 to 3 hours away and offers commercial airline service with connections through Seattle.

Seattle–Tacoma International Airport — roughly 4.5 to 5 hours away for major domestic and international travel access.

Listing Agent

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company

FIGLENSKI SPRING’S RANCH

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