The 406 Life: Exploring Montana with Montana Max

From Red Lodge to the World Stage Montanas Greatest Cowgirls

15 min · 5 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio From Red Lodge to the World Stage Montanas Greatest Cowgirls

Descripción

Montana Max digs into the true story of two rodeo legends who came out of Big Sky Country and changed the sport forever. Fanny Sperry Steele rode slick when everyone else took shortcuts. Alice Greenough Orr won four world titles and invented barrel racing when the arena tried to shut women out. This is Montana history worth knowing. Read the full blog post on The406Life.com [http://the406life.com] If you enjoyed please give us a 5-star rating so others can hear stories about women like these. And share it with your friends and family.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de The 406 Life: Exploring Montana with Montana Max!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

53 episodios

episode Montana Locals Have Known This for Years. Now Everyone Else Does Too. artwork

Montana Locals Have Known This for Years. Now Everyone Else Does Too.

The internet built a version of Montana that's cheap, empty, and drenched in golden-hour light. A place where you buy a ranch, work remotely, and live your best Dutton life. That Montana doesn't exist. In this episode, we're laying out the real numbers. Housing costs that rank Montana among the least affordable states in the country. A record 13.8 million visitors flooding places the algorithm promised were uncrowded. Wages sitting at 72 percent of the national average while home prices doubled. Winters that hit minus seventy degrees Fahrenheit and don't apologize for it. We also get into the Yellowstone TV effect — what it actually did, what it didn't do, and why the study making the biggest claims was funded by the studio that makes the show. Montana is remarkable. It's also being sold to people who've never had to drive over a mountain pass in black ice just to get to work. Those are two different conversations. This episode has both. If this one hits home, share it with somebody who needs to hear it. And if you've been listening to The 406 Life for a while, a review goes a long way — it helps more people find us, and frankly, it's the nicest thing you can do for a centuries-old creature of the timber who doesn't get out to socialize much. More Montana content, more real talk, more Max — find it all at the406life.com. Montana Max, over and out.

23 de jun de 202618 min
episode Montana Trails Need Better Manners artwork

Montana Trails Need Better Manners

Montana's trails are shared space — and half the people out there don't know the rules. In this episode, Montana Max breaks down the unwritten code for every user on the trail: OHV riders and side-by-sides, mountain bikers, and hikers. We're talking the finger count system, the fork-and-wait rule, dust courtesy, who yields to who, what to do when you come around a corner and there's a horse standing there, and why your dog and a loose leash near a spooked horse is nobody's good afternoon. This one was sparked by a conversation Mayor Anne over in Philipsburg kept having — about the gap between people who know how shared trails work and people who absolutely do not. She said it plainly. Max listened. Here's the result. If you get something out of this episode, leave us a five-star review wherever you listen. It takes thirty seconds and it matters more than you think. Full blog post, trail guides, and more Montana resources at The406Life.com [the406life.com/blog].

9 de jun de 202624 min