Texas
Grab your Stetson for the best Texas ranches up for sale this year

A massive 424,000 acre ranch is for sale for $267 million in Big Bend Country in West Texas.
Photo Courtesy of King Land & Water
With thousands of people moving to Texas every year, we’re all left looking for our own slice of Heaven. For those with deep pockets, they might want something a little bigger.
A massive 424,000 acre ranch is for sale for $267 million in Big Bend Country in West Texas.
Photo Courtesy of King Land & Water
Brewster Ranch, the 5th largest in Texas, now for sale in Big Bend Country
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The biggest on this list is Brewster Ranch in Big Bend Country. At roughly half the size of Rhode Island, the 424,000-acre property was listed at $267 million, an appropriate price for the 5th largest ranch in Texas. Brewster can also be broken into seven-different ranches for those who can’t spring for the entire patch.
A gorgeous Guadalupe County ranch has a marvelously decorated home.
Photo Courtesy of Dos Rios
128-acre Jahns Ranch ‘secluded paradise’ in Seguin hits the market
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After being owned for five generations, Jahns Ranch in Seguin hit the market at an unlisted price in June. Although small in comparison to some of the ranches we’ve gathered here, the Guadalupe County ranch provides 128 acres of “secluded paradise” and country living.
Living Waters Ranch
Photo courtesy of Dullnig Ranches
$17M Uvalde County ranch offers ‘one of a kind’ Nueces River views
Living Waters Ranch got its name by having 7,000 feet of frontage along the Nueces River in Uvalde County. The one-of-a-kind 705-acre property was listed at $17 million.
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The Oasis Ranchette in Bexar County has a luxurious lazy river.
Photo Courtesy of Texas Ranch Sale LLC.
Bexar County’s Oasis Ranchette offers 11 acres of cool luxurious waters
Nawi Ranch, just 21 miles outside Hebbronville, is for sale and offers plenty of hunting and entertaining opportunities.
Photo Courtesy of West and Swope
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Hebbronville’s $15M ranch offers a paradise for quail and deer hunters
Parker’s Branch Ranch in Blanco County for sale has prehistoric ties and is less than a mile from Garrison Brothers Distillery.
Photo Courtesy of Texas Ranch Sale LLC.
Parker’s Branch Ranch is a mile from a popular Texas Hill Country distillery
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Parker’s Branch Ranch in Blanco County was unlisted when it hit the market. For bourbon drinkers, the 186-acre property is less than a mile away from “Texas’ first legal bourbon distillery.” For Jurassic Park fans, you’ll reportedly find fossils of dinosaur footprints scattered on the property.
Y.O. Ranch Headquarters in the Texas Hill County is selling 25 tracts of land that could be your new home.
Photo Courtesy of West and Swope
Y.O. Ranch Headquarters offers resort living in the Texas Hill Country
Y.O. Ranch Headquarters, originally bought by Texas Ranger Captain Charles A. Schreiner in 1880, became famous for driving over 300,000 longhorns from Texas to Dodge City. “America’s Original Game Ranch” started selling 25 tracts of land in April. The tracts ranged in size from 101 to 174 acres, costing anywhere from $1.1 million to $1.9 million.
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A Frio County ranch is a perfect place for any hunter.
Photo Courtesy of Texas Ranch Sales LLC.
1,100-acre South Texas ranch and resort listed as hunter’s paradise
G2 Ranch in Frio County offered 1,100-acres of hunting resort in South Texas. Between the wildlife, golf range, and multiple gun ranges, the property is the perfect mix of exotic and luxury. The price is unlisted.
Olmos Grande Ranch is a perfect hunting home for $11.4 million in South Texas.
Photo by Matt Mortellra
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$11.7M Olmos Grande Ranch, ‘crown jewel of maverick county,’ is for sale
Colorado River Ranch in Lampasas County is now on sale for $60 million by TT Ranch Group of Briggs Freeman Sotheby’s International Realty.
Courtesy of Briggs Freeman Sotheby’s International Realty
$60M Lampasas County ranch along Colorado River is a wildlife paradise
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Another hunter’s paradise, the 3,304-acre Colorado River Ranch sits on three miles of the Colorado River in Lampasas County. The $60 million ranch offers exotic wildlife and stunning views of the Texas Hill Country.
Rodeo enthusiasts will fall for this Parker County ranch.
Photo Courtesy of Texas Ranch Sale LLC.
69-acre North Texas ranch is perfect for the high-end cowboy lifestyle
For those looking for a high-end cowboy lifestyle, checkout the 69-acre RPX Ranch in Parker County in North Texas. Between the luxury home and the rodeo barn, you’ll have everything you need. The price is unlisted.
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San Francisco Creek Ranch is the “perfect private getaway.’”
Photo Courtesy of Texas Ranch Sale LLC.
San Francisco Creek Ranch is ‘perfect private getaway’ from San Antonio
Sabinal Vista Ranch in Bandera County is on sale for $1.2 million and offers great views for stargazing.
Photo Courtesy of Bownds Ranches
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$1.2M Sabinal Vista Ranch in Bandera County is a ‘stargazer’s dream’
The “Ring of Fire” eclipse may have passed, but the Great American Eclipse in April 2024 is right around the corner. Sabinal Vista Ranch in Bandera County is the perfect viewing spot for eclipse watchers and stargazers. The 57-acre property is listed at $1.2 million.
El Chaparral Ranch in Smithville is perfect for fishing enthusiast.
Photo by Siggi Ragnar
El Chaparral Ranch is perfect for the fishing enthusiast in your life
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Bass fishermen need to head to Smithville to check out this property. With multiple lakes and rivers on 866-acres, El Chaparral Ranch can be your fisherman’s paradise for $17.2 million.

Texas
Women's College World Series: Liberty softball stuns No. 1 Texas A&M for historic upset
Liberty softball made history on Sunday night in College Station, Texas.
The Flames knocked off hosting Texas A&M 6-5 in their regional matchup Sunday, which sent them into the Super Regionals for the first time in program history. That also left the Aggies, who were the top seed in the region and a favorite to win the Women’s College World Series, on the wrong side of a historic upset.
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The Aggies are now the first No. 1 seed in history to ever fail to make it out of the regionals round since the current format started two decades ago.
The Aggies held a 3-1 lead entering the sixth inning of the winner-take-all game Sunday afternoon. That’s when the Flames erupted. Savannah Jessee hit a two-run homer to left field to tie the game early in the inning, and Rachel Roupe followed suit with a three-run shot. That put LIberty up 6-3.
While the Aggies added two runs at the bottom of the inning, Liberty held on and took the one-run win after closing out the final inning.
Texas A&M had to beat Liberty twice Sunday to make it out of the regional, as it had already fallen to the Flames on Saturday. That sent the Aggies to the elimination bracket, where they beat Marist to set up Sunday’s pair of games. The Aggies then took the first game 14-11 in extra innings.
Liberty will now take on either Stanford or Oregon next in the Super Regionals. If it wins there, the Flames will earn a trip to the Women’s College World Series — which starts on May 29 in Oklahoma City.
Texas
Texas A&M Head Coach Mike Elko Entering ‘Must Win’ Game vs. Notre Dame?

As the Texas A&M Aggies head into Year 2 under head coach Mike Elko, it seems the expectations are rising. That is despite a disappointing finish to his first season, where the Aggies lost four of their final five games.
Yet, after a productive offseason where Texas A&M has garnered praise from the national media as they filled holes on their roster via the transfer portal in addition to signing the nation’s No. 9 ranked recruiting class, there is a narrative building that the Aggies’ season-opening game versus Notre Dame is a “must-win.”
Gigem 247’s Jeff Tarpley is a believer in the notion that the Aggies’ trip to South Bend, Indiana, is a “must-win” as he believes it is time the athletic department and its donors see a return on investment.
“I talked about this last year a little bit in terms of the fact that that if they gave your predecessor 76 million to go away and you come a lot cheaper than that, there’s going to be more pressure on you to perform right away,” Tarpley said during a recent appearance on ESPN Central Texas radio. “It didn’t help that it was Elko’s first game ever and so A&M didn’t have the benefit of either him or his players learning on the job in preseason. But there is going to be even more pressure now since they lost to this same Notre Dame last year to open the season, and they went one and four down the stretch this year.”
Tarpley even went as far as to compare Elko’s situation heading into this coming season to Marcus Freeman’s last year with Notre Dame. The 39-year-old head coach inherited the program from Brian Kelly, who took the Irish as far as an appearance in a national championship game over his 11-year tenure.
Although Freeman got off to a solid start as he won 19 games in his first two seasons with the Irish, there was pressure building for him to take them to that next level of making the College Football Playoff.
However, there is a key difference between the two. According to Tarpley, Elko is now facing similar pressure heading into just his second season in charge of the Aggies. No, it is not job pressure, rather just competitive pressure, as the Aggies are still paying Jimbo Fisher to not be on the sidelines on top of the cost it takes to build a talented roster.
Opening a season on the road is never easy, especially when having to make the trip a potentially hostile enviroment like South Bend. But it is those type of games, where Texas A&M is facing another top-25 ranked team that Elko will be expected to deliver wins against.
Especially so if the goal is make the College Football Playoff, then a season-opening win over the Irish could be an early showcase win for the Aggies on their path to securing a top-12 seed.
Texas
Michigan softball mercy-ruled by Texas in College World Series, but not eliminated yet
Michigan basketball coach Dusty May swings for the fences
Michigan basketball coach Dusty May swings for the fences in U-M softball’s charity fundraiser
Michigan softball’s perfect start to the Women’s College World Series came to an end Saturday afternoon, with the Wolverines lasting just five innings due to the run-ahead rule, losing 16-4 vs. Austin regional host Texas at McCombs Field.
Michigan will face the winner of UCF-Eastern Illinois at 6 p.m. in an elimination game.
On a scolding hot day with temperatures on the field reaching 110 degrees, according to the ESPN broadcast, the Wolverines were the first to get on the board when Lilly Vallimont singled to left to drive in Indiana Langford for a 1-0 lead.
It took the Longhorns almost no time to respond. In the top of the second inning, Katie Stewart led things off for Texas by slugging a home run to tie the game at 1-1.
Then in the third inning, the game got really crazy. Texas’ Reese Atwood smashed a three-run home run to take a 4-1 lead before Stewart hit her second home run of the game on the very next pitch to put the Longhorns firmly in control. But that was just the top of the inning.
In what will surely be one of the more unlikely plays of the whole College World Series, Langford laid down a bunt to start the inning that miraculously turned into a Little League home run when Texas launched the throw all the way into the right-field corner. Langford turned on the jets and just kept running before eventually sliding into home for a relatively easy score to make it 5-2. Three pitches later, Jenissa Conway blasted a home run to cut further into the lead, 5-3.
However, it was all Texas after that point. The Longhorns blew the game open in the fourth, hitting three more home runs to help them score nine runs in the top of the inning and jump out to a 14-3 lead.
Michigan added a run in the bottom half of the fourth inning, but Texas made it 16-4 in the top of the fifth and the Wolverines couldn’t get the game within seven runs by the fifth inning, so the game ended due to the mercy rule.
Since the regionals in the CWS are double elimination, the Wolverines are not out of the tournament, needing a win later Saturday evening.
Andrew Birkle is the assistant sports editor at the Free Press. Contact him at andrew_birkle on “X” or via email at abirkle@freepress.com.
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