Talmage, UT Duchesne Country Land 80.00 acre for sale in Talmage, Utah

$795,000

Rock Creek has always been known for a stretch of river closed off for numerous miles by the Ute Indian Tribe. The name Rock Creek is deceptive certainly, for this is most definitely not a creek. This is a shallow river that is broad with a strong current. There are deep holes at every twist and turn. This premier blue ribbon trout fishery is particularly wonderful along a four mile area in the middle of this property, yielding a prospering, huge population of 8-12 lb. Rainbow and German Brown Trout. This property has the only private access to fish this part of an unbelievably beautiful and isolated canyon. This is a one of a kind! The Ute Tribe likewise stocks the river regularly across the river from this place.
Old growth pinion and juniper forest dotted with sage cover the entire home, but particularly so on the high, East rim and one mile East from the county road. Away East, are irrigate hayfields for numerous miles into a rolling lush-hay farming community. Numerous small bands of mule deer frequent the surrounding area and throughout the fall, the dollars pull back into the forest on the rim of the home and the bigger bucks go off the rim and bed down in the high ledge rock above the river. There is not a safer, more desirable habitat for the best and biggest of mule deer bucks anywhere for many miles around. Added searching acreage behind this locked access is also an opportunity.
You would not generally see this 80 acre home as a place to hunt elk, but distinct scenarios consider it fairly the opposite. The Ute Indian lands on the West side of the shown property and miles to the West, contain one of the largest herds of elk in the Northeastern Utah. The early tribal hunts that continue the Utah State elk hunt, drive elusive.
elk to cross the river onto the listed home and gain access to the same steep ledges that the best of dollars inhabit. Since of steep cliffs, there are few places for elk to cross the river. This home gain access to from the West by elk leaving secured Indian lands.
The history of Rock Creek is really rich in the earliest cultures of conquest for riches and expansion; the Spanish. Early stone carvings show 1650 when they first showed up in Northern Utah. Rock Creek was the website of among their earliest church objectives and there are many books and reviews of early immigrants who discovered proof of that early profession. Bronze church objective bells, Spanish helmets and swords and many other artifacts have actually been recorded from this location in Rock Creek. The most reputable history originates from statement of Ute Indians themselves who preserved a dental history of that earlier time and substantiate the cruel profession of Spanish conquest for gold.