
Teton Valley Real Estate
Teton Valley Real Estate Offers Temptation For Prospective Jackson Hole Real Estate Buyers
Slip onto the straightaway – Idaho, Highway 33 – Big Holes to the West, Tetons to the East. The towns and real estate of Victor, Driggs and Tetonia are like unpolished diamonds. The of Teton Valley real estate lies in mountain-studded opportunities for recreation and casual mountain living. Jackson Hole real estate owners and area locals call Teton Valley the “quiet side of the Tetons,” but it won’t be this way forever. What was once fertile farmland, with only cattle and potatoes, maintains its friendly ambience while more buyers interested in Jackson Hole real estate stake their claims.In 2006 Wall Street Journal named Driggs one of the 12 tempting locations for vacation home buyers. Men’s Journal also weighed in, naming the Teton Valley town the “best all round” place to live. The Bridger-Teton National Forest runs for miles in every direction. Despite the obvious recreation advantages of temperate weather and extensive natural resources, Teton Valley ID can hardly be summed up as one type of lifestyle. The farming community is largely made up of generations of Mormon settlers who first developed these landscapes. Potatoes still lie cool beneath the soil, and long-timers’ appreciation for Teton Valley real estate has set a model for respectful growth.
Three major towns each evoke different lifestyle benefits in Teton Valley real estate. Victor real estate has become a bedroom community for Jackson Hole workers and feels more transient and still less developed. Driggs real estate composed a bona fide community long before Jackson Hole real estate boomed and it still feels western with a familial sense of warmth. Tetonia real estate is far from the bustle, Teton Valley real estate largely undeveloped either residentially or commercially. What unites the areas of Teton Valley real estate is a shared history and a conscientious desire to grow intelligently by maintaining their prized resource, open space.
Leaving the hubbub of Jackson Hole behind, Highway 33 twists over the pine-clad Teton Pass, dropping 25 miles, onto the outskirts of Victor, ID. Beside the stout and beautifully weathered barns, Teton Valley begins to open up as it wraps further northward. Victor's main street is a charming strip of highway serving up pizza, post office, and oversized gas stations with all the provisions. By the time the road reaches the edge of Victor, farmland dominates Teton Valley real estate in all directions and the highway arrives in Driggs after 10 miles. The entire Teton Valley has an estimated population of about 7,000.
Driggs commerce takes on a laid back style as it borders the highway with handy retail and gear shops, and a sampling of multi-cuisine restaurants. In the summer the weekly Music on Main is one of many highlights. This epicenter is also the access point to Grand Targhee Resort. Hosting a nationally recognized blue grass festival each summer, Grand Targhee also gets plenty of attention for its “heavenly powder” during the winter. The western slopes of the Tetons and the Big Holes speak to bikers, hikers, horseback riders, and fishermen. The fertile Teton Valley will also be home to five golf courses by 2010, with two well-designed greens currently in full operation.
Outside amusements for Teton Valley real estate owners rely on Teton Valley's climate, which is enjoyable any time of the year. Summer temperatures for Teton Valley average 40s to 80s Fahrenheit and single digits up to 60° in the winter. Fall is luxuriously temperate and spring promises much with its quick transformation to green and blankets of wildflowers.
As the hub of all this beauty and activity, Driggs has much to live up to because, according to the Valley Advocates for Responsible Development, the county and its real estate is one of the fastest growing in Idaho. Idaho is also expanding at a high rate. That’s why locals and owners of Teton Valley real estate tend to chat about the future of the Teton Valley area. Maintaining quality of life and preserving community character focus on economics and environment. In this vein, Victor and Driggs receive technical support from the EPA in the form of Small Growth Implementation Assistance.
Teton Valley real estate owners and locals rally, evidenced in over 17 acres of town parks around Driggs garnished with fields, courts, rinks, disc golf, skate and bike parks, and nature trails. For big shopping endeavors and airport service, folks drive to Jackson or go the quick 60 miles to Idaho Falls, which also meets I-15. Locally, Teton Valley Hospital, the class B-2 Driggs Reed Memorial Airport, and a healthy library offer their services to locals and owners of Teton Valley real estate.
By the time you get to Tetonia, 5 miles north of Driggs, you realize how Teton Valley once appeared. Open pastures and equestrian Teton Valley real estate enrich the landscapes. From here you find the best vista of the Grand Teton, framed in a canyon. Even main street has little commerce although people drive up to see the Steve Horn Mountain Gallery and the grand old barns that adorn the roadside. Highway 20 meanders just a few more miles before crossing the Henry’s Fork River, the entrance to Yellowstone, and the border of Montana.
Teton Valley real estate is a corridor for rural yet well-located living, and Teton Valley real estate development is flexing to meet the demands of would-be residents who have uncovered the secrets of these gemstone communities. //
Victor, Idaho Real Estate
Victor, Idaho, the southernmost town in Teton Valley, remains the most obvious bedroom community for Jackson Hole, only 24 miles away. Relative to the size of the valley, Victor, like Driggs and the other small towns in this area, is a communal focal point while most neighborhoods lie in the unincorporated, rural area in the valley but outside the town.
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