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Wednesday, May 29, 2019

Condoing in Seeley Lake, MT

The week before we started our volunteer jobs at the Museum at the Brig, we planned a one week condo trip in Seeley Lake, Montana. This is an area of Montana, northeast of Missoula and about 130 miles south of Glacier National Park, that we had not explored.
 
ARROWHEAD CONDOMINIUMS
The condominium complex has only 8 time share units. We felt very fortunate to be able to confirm this trade for a week before the busy summer season. We had a one bedroom unit that sleeps six. There was a full kitchen, master bedroom and a loft with two twin beds, laundry and a second bathroom. It was extremely clean and well appointed and we enjoyed a very comfortable week.
The deck off the living area overlooked the Swan Valley.
The Condo was located at an elevation of over 4,000 feet.
The condo provided cut and split wood for the fireplace insert.
We used it every evening, because the temperature dipped into the upper 30's.
 
HOLLAND FALLS HIKE
The three mile Holland Falls hike was well worth it.
Holland Lake had thawed out, but snow still covered the mountain tops.
Holland Lake
Holland Falls
 
GARNET GHOST TOWN
Garnet Ghost Town is located high in the Garnet Range. It was 35 degrees when we arrived. This was the seasonal opening day for this interesting BLM site. In addition to the ghost town, we followed the half mile Sierra Mine Trail to see remnants of mining operations along the hillsides bordering the town. We learned about "Placer" vs. "Load" mining and the brutal living and working conditions endured by the miners.
Gold was discovered here along Bear Gulch in 1865.
The town grew and prospered until about 1900.
Inside one of the 13 saloons. You could either mine the gold or mine the miners.
The last residents left Garnet in 1947.
This is one of the best preserved and top rated mining ghost towns in Montana.
 
LEE METCALF NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE
We took off for a day trip south of Missoula. Our first stop was Lee Metcalf NWR. This 2800 acre NWR is cradled between the Bitterroot and Sapphire Mountain Ranges next to the Bitterroot River.
We took a couple of bird walks and stopped at the Visitor's Center, where there is a good collection of bird and mammal mounts.
 
FORT OWEN STATE PARK
This was the first permanent white settlement in Montana. It is also the location of the first Catholic Church, founded in Montana in 1841.
 
TRAVELERS' REST STATE PARK
This is the only site on the Lewis and Clark Trail where archaeological evidence has been pieced together confirming the Corp of Discovery encampment. The Corp's established this campsite in September 1805 on their way to the Pacific and camped here again on their return journey in 1806. 

At this point, on July 3, 1806, the Lewis and Clark Expedition left Travelers' Rest for the last time. Meriwether Lewis and nine men went north and east along the Blackfoot Valley to the plains and Missouri River. William Clark and the rest of the Corp set out to the south up the Bitterroot Valley and east exploring the Yellowstone River. After six weeks separation, both parties reunited on August 12 in North Dakota.
 
GUS, THE HUGE WESTERN LARCH
The world's largest Western Larch (aka Tamarack) tree is located in the Girard Grove, on the shores of Seeley Lake. This sixty acre natural grove of Western Larch was set aside by the Department of Forestry in 1953 in order to protect these large old trees. 
The Girard Grove
The Western larch is a large conifer. Unlike most conifers, it is deciduous. The needles turn golden in the fall and drop off.
The bark is thick and furrowed into flat ridges with overlapping plates.
The U.S. Champion Western Larch, named Gus, is over 1,000 years old.
The base measures 22 feet, 9 inch around.
The diameter is 7 feet, 3 inches at the base.
Gus is 153 feet tall. That's 2 feet taller than the Statue of Liberty.
 
THE MULLAN ROAD
At the top of 4th of July Pass along I-90 in Idaho is an interpretive trail commemorating the Mullan Road. We have driven past it many times and this time we stopped to check it out. This section of the Mullan Road is just a remnant of the 624 mile road designed to connect the head of the navigation on the Missouri River (Fort Benton) with the Columbia River (Fort Walla Walla). The 25 foot wide road was constructed between 1859 and 1862 at a cost of $400 per mile. This was a very important route until the railroad was constructed 1882. Much of the Mullan Road is now under the interstate highway.
A fond farewell to Seeley Lake as we passed this beautiful view of nearby Salmon Lake.

2 comments:

Teri said...

That looks like a beautiful area. It also looks a little chilly!

Virginia said...

It was down right cold. Beautiful area though.