(#1) Cabin Chronicles: Why We Bought a Fixer Upper Near Yellowstone
If you had told us a few years ago that we'd be buying a fixer-upper near Yellowstone National Park, we wouldn’t have believed you. For years, we had been looking for a second home base… somewhere we could spend part of the year, host travelers part-time, and even use as a launchpad for our own adventures. But after looking at countless towns across Colorado, Utah, and New Mexico, nothing quite checked all the boxes.
That changed in October 2023 when, on a whim, we stopped by a property in Gardiner, Montana, just a stone’s throw from Yellowstone’s North Entrance. At first glance, it was rough. Unfinished projects, exposed wiring, and a laundry list of repairs stared back at us. However, the potential was undeniable, as multiple structures, walkability to town, and an unbeatable location next to one of our favorite national parks in the world made this property stand out in a way that nothing else had.
This is the story of how we found, bought, and are now renovating a fixer-upper near Yellowstone National Park, including what we saw in these cabins, why we took the leap, and the adventure that’s only just beginning!
How We Got Here: From Travelers to Hosts
Our journey to buying a fixer-upper near Yellowstone started long before we ever considered owning a rental property. For years, we were simply travelers who hit the road for weeks or months at a time, staying in short-term rentals and shaping our version of being digital nomads.
Early in our twenties, travel wasn’t a huge priority for us. We canceled numerous trips due to work commitments, cross-country moves, and life changes. By 2019, that had started to feel like a mistake, so when Jonathan was offered a fully remote role after I’d been working remotely for years, we took advantage of our location flexibility. We could work from anywhere with an internet connection and hit the road.
We started small with a one-week road trip to Virginia Beach to visit friends, then took a two-week road trip through North Carolina, splitting our time between Asheville and Raleigh. We traveled exclusively through short-term rentals because (1) our dog, Lincoln, joined our trips and (2) we needed more space to work and live from the road. (In 2019, pet-friendly hotels were rare, and short-term rentals were just generally more pet-friendly, affordable, and comfortable than hotels.)
After those first few trips, we were hooked. Traveling while working remotely was freeing; we finally had the flexibility to explore new places without sacrificing our careers.
We wanted to keep traveling, so in early 2020, we hit the road full-time. We mapped out a year of travel, planning trips to places like San Diego, Lake Louise, and even Europe. Of course, we all know how 2020 actually played out, and we found ourselves shifting our plans to road trips across the US instead. We gravitated toward quieter places like mountain cabins, small towns, and nature-focused destinations such as national and state parks.
From there, road life became our normal. We spent 2021 on a three-and-a-half-month road trip through Colorado and Utah. In 2022, we took a five-month road trip through New England. And in 2023, we split our travels between a three-week Alaskan adventure and a two-and-a-half-month road trip through the Rockies.
Along the way, we became experts in short-term rentals, not as hosts but as guests. We had stayed in dozens and dozens of Airbnbs and VRBOs by this point and knew exactly what we liked in a rental, what made a place feel welcoming, and what details or amenities elevated a stay.
The Idea of Owning a Vacation Rental
As flexible travelers who stayed in places anywhere from one night to one month or more at a time, we had a unique perspective as guests. We worked remotely, so we valued good Wi-Fi and a functional workspace. We traveled with a dog, so we had firsthand experience with the limitations of pet-friendly stays. We’d seen everything from luxurious mountain cabins to rustic apartments and tiny homes and had developed a strong sense of what we loved in a stay and what could be improved.
From there, a natural thought occurred: What if we tried hosting?
It wasn’t just about running an Airbnb. It was about creating the kind of experience we had come to appreciate. The best short-term rentals weren’t just places to sleep; they added to the travel experience, helping us connect with a destination in a meaningful way.
At the same time, we were also thinking about a second home base for ourselves. While we loved traveling to new areas and destinations, we also yearned for more tradition and stability, a place we could return to again and again.
The question was, where?
A Rental for Road Trippers
If we were going to invest in a vacation rental, it had to be in a place that aligned with how we traveled. We weren’t interested in a big-city rental or a traditional beach house. We wanted something that fit into the kind of trips we loved—designed for road-trippers, outdoor adventurers, and people who liked to explore a destination intimately.
Initially, we imagined buying land somewhere we loved and building from the ground up. We wanted something that could have multiple rentable spaces—maybe a few small cabins—so we could host multiple guests at once and have a place for ourselves, too. It needed to be in an area with a lot to offer: national parks, scenic drives, hiking trails, and enough attractions to make it a year-round destination.
We started looking in places that fit that vision:
Colorado – A road tripper’s paradise with Rocky Mountain National Park, ski towns, and endless outdoor recreation. We looked at Winter Park and Durango as potential locations.
New Mexico – We had loved our time in Angel Fire and explored the idea of setting up near the mountains.
Utah – Kanab was a standout option, with easy access to Zion, Bryce Canyon, and the Grand Canyon. Kanab is a roadtripper’s paradise!
We spent many months casually searching, watching listings in these areas we loved, and tossing around various ideas. But nothing quite felt right. Some properties didn’t have the zoning flexibility we needed. Others were too remote, too expensive, or didn’t offer the balance of activity we were looking for.
Our Short-Term Rental Checklist
Our goal was to create a stay that encouraged road trips, adventure, and immersive exploration of a destination. We wanted something that fit the Road Trip Local travel style, where guests could experience a region by car, taking in multiple attractions and outdoor experiences along the way.
With that in mind, here was our checklist:
✅ A Destination Near Multiple Attractions – We wanted a place where guests could road trip to multiple highlights. That’s why we considered places like Winter Park, Colorado, where visitors could explore Rocky Mountain National Park, Vail, and Denver. Or Kanab, Utah, which sits between Zion, Bryce Canyon, and the Grand Canyon.
✅ An Active, Outdoorsy Location – We wanted a destination that offered a variety of adventures and activities for people who enjoyed hiking, skiing, snowshoeing, rafting, scenic driving, or wildlife watching. That’s why we looked near national parks, mountain towns, and recreation areas rather than large cities.
✅ Multiple Rental Spaces – Whether it was a main house with a guest cabin or a small cluster of tiny homes, we wanted the option to host multiple guests at once. This wasn’t just about maximizing rental income; it was about having a place that felt like a second home for us when we wanted to visit.
✅ Walkability to Restaurants, Coffee Shops, and Breweries – While we didn’t want to be in a major city, we also didn’t want to be completely remote. We knew from experience that having a few restaurants or a small downtown within walking distance makes a big difference!
✅ Access to a Grocery Store Within 10–15 Minutes – This is another thing that makes a huge difference for us as guests. Easy and convenient access to a market was a must.
✅ A Year-Round Destination – Some places have a multi-month peak season and then sit empty the rest of the year. We wanted a location that had at least two distinct seasons, whether that was skiing in the winter and hiking in the summer or a mix of wildlife watching, road trips, and outdoor recreation.
✅ Pet-Friendly Potential – Since we had traveled extensively with a dog, we knew firsthand how difficult it could be to find great pet-friendly stays. We wanted a place where we could offer pet-friendly accommodations while maintaining high-quality hospitality for all guests.
✅ No HOA or Strict Rental Regulations – Some of the places we looked at had restrictions that made short-term rentals difficult, whether it was HOA rules or zoning laws. We needed flexibility, both for renting out multiple units and for using the property ourselves.
✅ A Place We’d Love Spending Time In – Ultimately, this wasn’t just an investment property. We wanted a place we’d actually want to visit over and over again. This would be a second home for us, a base for our own road trips, and a place we could see ourselves enjoying in all seasons.
With this checklist in mind, we kept searching, waiting for the right property to come along and, as we’d soon find out, sometimes the right place finds you!
The Year We Visited Yellowstone in All Four Seasons
Yellowstone has been one of our favorite national parks ever since we first visited during a 10-day Pacific Northwest Roadtrip. So, when we were planning our travels for 2023 and found ourselves roadtripping the Rockies, we decided to make Yellowstone one of our themes.
We were going to visit Yellowstone National Park in all four seasons within one calendar year!
Winter (February): We split our week-long trip between West Yellowstone, MT, and Gardiner, MT, spending our days searching for wolves in Lamar Valley, snowshoeing Yellowstone’s Northern Ridge, and snowmobiling the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone. The quiet, frozen beauty of Yellowstone in winter was unlike anything we’d seen before.
Spring (May): Spring is the best time of year to see bears and baby animals in Yellowstone, so we came back to Yellowstone’s Northern Range in May. Sure enough, bison calves dotted the valleys, wolf pups were emerging from their dens, and bears with cubs were active near Tower-Roosevelt.
Summer (July): On our way from Dallas to Jasper National Park in the Canadian Rockies, we stopped for a few days in Grand Teton National Park and Yellowstone. We hiked, watched the bison rut in full swing, and experienced the park at its busiest but also most colorful!
Fall (September & October): We ended our year of Yellowstone with a three-week trip during the peak of the elk rut. But this time, we weren’t just exploring for ourselves. Friends and family joined us, and we found ourselves playing the role of tour guides, helping them experience Yellowstone the way we had come to love it.
Tour Guides in Training
We planned our days around wildlife watching, knowing where to be at sunrise and sunset for the best chances to see wolves, bears, and bison. We mapped out efficient driving routes, keeping in mind the vast distances between major attractions. We gave tips on where to stand for the best views of geysers, when to expect traffic jams caused by bison herds, and which trails were worth the hike.
And as we guided friends and family through the park, we realized just how much we had learned over the course of the year. We knew which pullouts had the best views, where to find restrooms in remote areas, and how to avoid the crowds without missing anything essential.
For the first time, Yellowstone wasn’t just our adventure. It was something we were sharing. Watching our family light up at the sight of a bugling elk in the crisp fall air, seeing our friends in awe at their first glimpse of Grand Prismatic Spring, and hearing the excitement as they spotted their first bison or bear… it was rewarding in a way we hadn’t expected.
And unknowingly, this experience was laying the foundation for something bigger. Because only a couple of days later, we would stumble upon a listing that would make Yellowstone not just a place we visited but a place we called home.
Our Year of Yellowstone
The “Extra Cute Bungalow” in Gardiner
It was our fourth and final visit to Yellowstone in one calendar year, and we were getting ready to leave for Driggs, Idaho, where we planned to explore the Tetons before heading back to Dallas.
We weren’t planning to stay in Gardiner or Yellowstone again anytime soon. We were about to check out of our hotel and had only an hour left in town before hitting the road. That’s when Jonathan casually pulled up Zillow, something he had done countless times over the past few years. It was more of a habit than anything at this point.
“Hey, Kel, there’s a house for sale literally a block away from where we’re staying right now,” he said. “Should we go take a look?”
At first glance, the listing wasn’t exactly impressive.
The cover photo was an exterior shot of the house, and even from that, we could tell there was a lot of work needed. The siding looked incomplete, and there were clear signs of unpolished construction work with exposed wiring, missing soffit, and general rough edges.
We started flipping through the rest of the listing photos.
The kitchen looked old and outdated, with worn-out cabinets and countertops. One of the bathrooms had been built as an addition and was clearly unfinished, with exposed drywall, no baseboards, and missing trim.
From the description, it sounded like the property had multiple structures, which was the feature we were most curious about. There was supposedly a dry cabin, a shed, and even possibly an unfinished two-story apartment.
This is what piqued our curiosity most because the majority of the properties we had considered in the past either didn’t have multiple structures or were too expensive if they did. Here was a property with four separate buildings—a main house, a dry cabin, a historic shed, and an unfinished apartment—at a price that was far below anything else we had seen with similar potential.
Still, we were skeptical. The pictures looked like one of those places you’re trying to make nicer with bright lighting and wide-angle shots, yet it still screams ‘I need work’ …which isn’t exactly reassuring for what you expect to see in person.
And yet, there was something about this place that made us hesitate before ruling it out. The problem was, we were leaving town shortly, so if we were going to see it, it had to be now. Jonathan called the listing agent and asked, “Any chance we could take a quick look?”
The listing agent was out of town. So were the sellers. But to our surprise, she said yes… “You seem like nice people, so here’s the code.” (Truly.)
And just like that, we were about to solo tour a house we had only stumbled upon minutes before, in a town we weren’t even considering, with less than an hour to spare before leaving the area with no plans to return.
We drove one street over, parked in the driveway, and prepared ourselves for whatever we were about to walk into… Keep reading (#2) Cabin Chronicles: First Impressions of an Unassuming Fixer Upper
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