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LocationGreenough, United States
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Set on 37,000 acres of western Montana wilderness along the Blackfoot River, Paws Up holds two MICHELIN Keys and a place on Condé Nast's 2025 Best Resorts list at number eight. The property runs the gamut from safari-style glamping tents to 28 luxury vacation homes, all framed by 100 miles of trails and a year-round activity program that makes most wilderness resorts look timid.

Paws Up hotel in Greenough, United States
About

Where the Blackfoot River Meets Canvas and Cashmere

Driving out from Missoula, the transition is gradual and then sudden. Forty minutes from the airport, the highway gives way to unpaved ranch road, ponderosa pines close in on both sides, and the Blackfoot River announces itself before you see it. By the time you arrive at Paws Up Montana in Greenough, the architecture has already made its first argument: this is not a hotel that happens to sit in wilderness. It is a property that has organized itself entirely around that wilderness, with every structure, trail junction, and dining pavilion oriented to keep the landscape in permanent view.

That organizing principle sets Paws Up apart from the broader tier of American luxury ranches, which tend to treat the outdoors as backdrop rather than infrastructure. Here, 37,000 acres of Montana ranch land, ten miles of the Blackfoot River, and 100 miles of trails are not amenities listed below the spa menu. They are the operating system. Everything else, including the heated radiant floors, the flat-screen televisions, and the camp butler who prepares your s'mores, exists to make access to that wilderness frictionless rather than to compensate for its absence. Among comparable wilderness-adjacent properties in the American West, including Amangiri in Canyon Point and Amangani in Jackson Hole, Paws Up operates with more acreage per guest than almost any competitor in its price tier.

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The Architecture of Deliberate Discomfort Made Comfortable

The glamping sector has expanded considerably over the past decade, but most operators work within a narrow formula: canvas tent, wooden platform, outdoor shower, communal fire. Paws Up rethinks that formula at scale. Six camp sites are arranged along the Blackfoot River and Elk Creek, each with six safari-style tents and a dedicated dining pavilion. The tents open to en-suite bathrooms, overhead fans, and spacious decks. The camp's signature Last Leading Bed is designed specifically to make the canvas-over-ground reality of camping irrelevant to the quality of sleep.

This is a meaningful design decision, not just a marketing one. In wilderness hospitality, the moment a guest registers physical discomfort, the experience reorients around managing that discomfort rather than engaging with the landscape. By resolving the comfort question architecturally, Paws Up keeps the guest's attention where the property wants it: on the river, the trails, and the horizon. Post Ranch Inn in Big Sur takes a similar approach with its treehouse and ocean house structures, using architectural specificity to put guests in relationship with a particular environment rather than simply near it.

For guests who prefer a fixed roof, 28 vacation homes complete the accommodation picture. These run to full kitchens, laundry, hot tubs, fireplaces, and radiant heated floors, covering the full range of what a family or extended group might need for a week-long stay. The total inventory comes to 76 rooms across both formats, which keeps the property intimate relative to its acreage. An operation this size on 37,000 acres rarely reads as crowded.

The Activity Program as Architectural Element

In ranch resort design, the activity menu functions the same way a floor plan does in a conventional hotel: it determines how guests move through space and time, and whether the property feels coherent or merely large. At Paws Up, the activity roster runs from ATV riding and cattle roundups to water skiing at Salmon Lake, fly-fishing the Blackfoot, mountain biking, river rafting, and dog sledding in winter. Horseback riding operates across the working cattle ranch, meaning guests are not riding through a dedicated equestrian trail but through functional agricultural land, which changes the texture of the experience.

Winter programming deserves particular attention because many ranch resorts in this category thin out significantly between November and March. Paws Up runs snowmobile tours, snowshoeing, forest trails, and horse-drawn sleigh rides through the colder months, maintaining the same activity density year-round. The property sits approximately six and a half hours from Jackson Hole, placing it in a different geographic conversation than resorts clustered around ski infrastructure. It is not competing with the ski mountain. It is offering something the ski mountain cannot: wilderness access without the lift queue.

The scale of the activity program makes advance planning functionally necessary rather than optional. The resort offers a pre-trip concierge call to help guests sequence activities across their stay, which is sensible for any visit longer than two nights. Guests who arrive without a rough itinerary tend to spend the first day orienting rather than doing. For properties with comparable activity density, including Sage Lodge in Pray and Alpine Falls Ranch in Superior, the same planning logic applies.

Dining Without the Pretension of Dining

Meals are included in the stay, distributed across two venues: Trough handles breakfast and lunch, Pomp covers dinner. Camp sites have their own dining pavilions where a camp chef cooks on-site, producing dishes that lean on the regional larder: roasted rainbow trout, chili-dusted Black Angus hanger steak. A camp butler manages the fire and the s'mores. The format sits closer to a private dinner party than a restaurant service, which suits the overall property logic. This is not a place where the dining program competes with the landscape for a guest's primary attention.

Compared to properties where the restaurant carries significant independent editorial weight, such as SingleThread Farm Inn in Healdsburg or Auberge du Soleil in Napa, Paws Up inverts the hierarchy. The food is there to sustain the adventure, not to be the adventure. That is a coherent editorial choice, not a shortcoming.

Credentials and Competitive Position

Paws Up holds two MICHELIN Keys as of 2024, placing it in a peer set that includes properties recognized for consistent quality across accommodation, service, and setting rather than dining alone. La Liste ranked it at 90.5 points in its 2026 Leading Hotels index, and Condé Nast placed it eighth on its 2025 Best Resorts list. These are not niche recognitions. They position the property in the upper bracket of American wilderness hospitality, alongside operations with significantly more urban name recognition. Among Montana properties specifically, The Green O occupies a more design-forward, adults-only niche on adjacent land, but Paws Up runs the wider demographic range, with a Kids Corps of Discovery program that addresses families directly.

The children's programming splits into age bands: Little Discoverers (ages 4 to 5) covers pony rides and Western-themed activities, while Adventure Club (ages 6 to 12) runs to go-kart racing and river rope swings. The naming references Lewis and Clark's Corps of Discovery expedition, which historically crossed this specific terrain, giving the program a geographic anchor that goes beyond branding.

Starting rates sit at $1,948 per night, which puts the property in a tier where the comparison set shifts from regional ranch resorts to properties like Canyon Ranch Tucson or Little Palm Island Resort in Little Torch Key: all-inclusive formats where the headline rate absorbs a significant portion of what would otherwise be itemized spend. At Paws Up, meals and a substantial portion of activities are included, which changes the effective cost calculation considerably for guests planning a multi-day stay. For broader Montana context, see our full Greenough guide.

Planning Your Stay

Paws Up sits at 40060 Paws Up Road, Greenough, Montana, approximately 40 minutes east of Missoula International Airport. The drive is direct and well-signed. Given the property's size and the density of the activity calendar, a minimum stay of three nights is practical for getting meaningful traction across both the glamping and activity programs. Guests considering a split format, three nights in a glamping tent followed by four nights in a vacation home, can arrange this through the resort's concierge service and will see two meaningfully different sides of the property as a result. Book well in advance for summer; the activity windows along the Blackfoot River are finite and the camp sites, at six tents per location, fill without much lead time.

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