Romance Package
Romance Package

The shape alone stops you. Rising from the grounds of a working farm, the Silo at Morning Glory Farm is exactly what its name suggests: a grain silo, carefully converted into a singular place to sleep, wake, and simply be. It is a structure born from agricultural utility, now holding something gentler within its curved walls. The conversion honors the original form rather than disguising it. You arrive not to a lobby or a foyer but to a building that still belongs to the land around it, its cylindrical silhouette an honest reminder of where you are and what this place has always been.
Inside, the silo unfolds vertically across multiple levels, each one shaped by the building's round footprint. The living space feels intimate by nature, with the curved walls creating a sense of enclosure that is warm rather than confining. A kitchen allows for simple meal preparation, and the bedroom occupies its own level, offering the kind of privacy that comes from sleeping inside a structure no one else shares. Furnishings are considered and comfortable, chosen to complement the industrial character of the silo rather than compete with it. Natural light enters through thoughtfully placed windows, and the overall aesthetic leans toward rustic simplicity with modern comforts woven in where they matter most. The result is a home that feels handmade and unhurried, a space where every design decision seems to have been made slowly and with intention.
Morning Glory Farm itself is the broader context, and it shapes the rhythm of a stay here. The property is a working farm, which means the landscape around the silo is alive with purpose. Depending on the season, you may find gardens in various stages of growth, open pastures, and the kind of wide, uninterrupted quiet that only agricultural land can offer. There is no curated programming or scheduled itinerary. Instead, the experience is defined by proximity to the land and the freedom to move through it at your own pace. Step outside and the farm surrounds you. The air, the light, the horizon line all belong to this particular piece of earth.
What stays with you after a night in the Silo at Morning Glory Farm is the rare satisfaction of sleeping inside a building that was never designed for comfort and yet now delivers it completely. There is a particular pleasure in occupying a structure that has been reimagined without being erased, where the bones of its former life remain visible and the new life built within them feels honest and unforced. You leave not with the memory of luxury but with something harder to name: the feeling of having been held, briefly, inside a form that belongs to the land.
The shape alone stops you. Rising from the grounds of a working farm, the Silo at Morning Glory Farm is exactly what its name suggests: a grain silo, carefully converted into a singular place to sleep, wake, and simply be. It is a structure born from agricultural utility, now holding something gentler within its curved walls. The conversion honors the original form rather than disguising it. You arrive not to a lobby or a foyer but to a building that still belongs to the land around it, its cylindrical silhouette an honest reminder of where you are and what this place has always been.
Inside, the silo unfolds vertically across multiple levels, each one shaped by the building's round footprint. The living space feels intimate by nature, with the curved walls creating a sense of enclosure that is warm rather than confining. A kitchen allows for simple meal preparation, and the bedroom occupies its own level, offering the kind of privacy that comes from sleeping inside a structure no one else shares. Furnishings are considered and comfortable, chosen to complement the industrial character of the silo rather than compete with it. Natural light enters through thoughtfully placed windows, and the overall aesthetic leans toward rustic simplicity with modern comforts woven in where they matter most. The result is a home that feels handmade and unhurried, a space where every design decision seems to have been made slowly and with intention.
Morning Glory Farm itself is the broader context, and it shapes the rhythm of a stay here. The property is a working farm, which means the landscape around the silo is alive with purpose. Depending on the season, you may find gardens in various stages of growth, open pastures, and the kind of wide, uninterrupted quiet that only agricultural land can offer. There is no curated programming or scheduled itinerary. Instead, the experience is defined by proximity to the land and the freedom to move through it at your own pace. Step outside and the farm surrounds you. The air, the light, the horizon line all belong to this particular piece of earth.

There's something quietly thrilling about sleeping inside a restored silo — the circularity of it, the way every window offers a slightly different frame of Idaho's rolling farmland and hills. This isn't a property that tries to impress with scale; it earns your attention through an unusual architectural premise executed with genuine care. The open living space at the top feels both intimate and expansive, with soaring ceilings and light that moves through the room in ways a conventional structure simply can't replicate. It's a place that rewards stillness. The nearby Pie Safe Bakery adds a welcome, unpretentious rhythm to mornings, and the surrounding landscape invites wandering without agenda. What lingers most is the specificity of it — this isn't rustic luxury you could find elsewhere, it's a singular structure on a working farm in the Idaho panhandle, and that irreplicability is exactly the point.
Get notified when this stay runs special offers or becomes available during your preferred travel dates. We'll also connect you to the property so you can be eligible for insider rewards and premium experiences.
Follow Silo at Morning Glory Farm
Follow our social media to gain instant access to all things Silo at Morning Glory Farm: discounts, photos, updates and giveaways!
From Instagram