"With Montana it is love..."
May. 26th, 2011 09:55 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
The only time John Steinbeck ever said anything I really cared for. I love Montana.
I know the winters are brutal, and I know I hate winter. But if I ever manage to become a full-time writer, I am picking up and moving to Montana. And it doesn't even have to be the resorty Flathead Lake area. I would be happy living around Missoula or Bozeman or Great Falls or Billings.
We spent two nights at the Lodge at Whitefish Lake, which is hands down the most expensive and ritzy place I've ever stayed in my life. We had a balcony and fireplace in our room. It was gorgeous and wonderful, but I'll tell you, Comfort Inn is WAAAAY more my speed. LOL
Yesterday we were up at Glacier National Park. Going-to-the-Sun Highway is still closed 14 miles in from Apgar Village, but we still managed to see grizzlies way up on the mountain (a mama and two cubs), a herd of bighorn sheep, half a dozen mountain goats, a moose, and a loon. Also several bald eagles in the past three days. I think I've seen more bald eagles in three days in Montana than I have seen in three years in Indiana. It's very exciting to me, though the best friend isn't impressed with anything except the moose. (She loves mooses and collects them, but had never seen one in person.)
Today we drove down 93 from Whitefish to Missoula, where we caught I-90 over to Bozeman. I was very impressed with the smokestack from the old copper smelting works at Anaconda. It's very difficult being a history & nature nut traveling with someone who is neither a history nor a nature nut. She always hates it when I chat with store clerks back home, so it's got to be killing her how we nature nuts at Glacier share binoculars and spotting scopes to watch grizzlies graze the hillside, or how everyone asks where we're from and where we're headed. Though I was proud of her, she did chat with the front desk clerk at our hotel here in Bozeman. I've never stayed in any brand of Hilton before either, so this is very nice, if again a bit rich for my pocketbook. Thank God we're here in the off season!
For a lot of reasons, actually. I love having Glacier just to ourselves and a few other nutty nature types. The first time I was there, Going-to-the-Sun was bumper to bumper with cars and RVs both, and while we didn't get all the way to Logan Pass, it was still beautiful and impressive, and it was a lot nicer without someone on my butt the whole time. We got to see Many Glacier too, though it was very cloudy, and only Grinnell Glacier was at all visible. Didn't matter much, because the best friend was totally unimpressed with glaciers. She didn't realize they are just huge chunks of compacted ice that hardly melt. Me, I was impressed with the snowdrifts as tall as our rental car in the Many Glacier parking lot, let alone glaciers! :D And Lake St. Mary was still mostly ice, which I found gorgeous.
Tomorrow we are booking it down to Yellowstone, where I am hoping (but not holding my breath) to see wolves (PLEASE GOD PLEASE) and some more grizzlies. I'd also like her to see bison, even though she doesn't seem to care about that either. I'm also hoping for golden eagles on this trip, but two previous trips to Montana haven't yielded goldens, so I'm not holding my breath there either. We're staying in Jackson, which I am afraid will kill me with its trendy resortiness, but she should love it, so there you go.
Someday I want to bring my dad out here. He has never been to Montana, and he would LOVE Glacier and the Little Bighorn. And I've never yet seen Wounded Knee out here either, and I know Dad would like the Anaconda and Butte history. Oh well. For now I'll soak up as much as I can.
I know the winters are brutal, and I know I hate winter. But if I ever manage to become a full-time writer, I am picking up and moving to Montana. And it doesn't even have to be the resorty Flathead Lake area. I would be happy living around Missoula or Bozeman or Great Falls or Billings.
We spent two nights at the Lodge at Whitefish Lake, which is hands down the most expensive and ritzy place I've ever stayed in my life. We had a balcony and fireplace in our room. It was gorgeous and wonderful, but I'll tell you, Comfort Inn is WAAAAY more my speed. LOL
Yesterday we were up at Glacier National Park. Going-to-the-Sun Highway is still closed 14 miles in from Apgar Village, but we still managed to see grizzlies way up on the mountain (a mama and two cubs), a herd of bighorn sheep, half a dozen mountain goats, a moose, and a loon. Also several bald eagles in the past three days. I think I've seen more bald eagles in three days in Montana than I have seen in three years in Indiana. It's very exciting to me, though the best friend isn't impressed with anything except the moose. (She loves mooses and collects them, but had never seen one in person.)
Today we drove down 93 from Whitefish to Missoula, where we caught I-90 over to Bozeman. I was very impressed with the smokestack from the old copper smelting works at Anaconda. It's very difficult being a history & nature nut traveling with someone who is neither a history nor a nature nut. She always hates it when I chat with store clerks back home, so it's got to be killing her how we nature nuts at Glacier share binoculars and spotting scopes to watch grizzlies graze the hillside, or how everyone asks where we're from and where we're headed. Though I was proud of her, she did chat with the front desk clerk at our hotel here in Bozeman. I've never stayed in any brand of Hilton before either, so this is very nice, if again a bit rich for my pocketbook. Thank God we're here in the off season!
For a lot of reasons, actually. I love having Glacier just to ourselves and a few other nutty nature types. The first time I was there, Going-to-the-Sun was bumper to bumper with cars and RVs both, and while we didn't get all the way to Logan Pass, it was still beautiful and impressive, and it was a lot nicer without someone on my butt the whole time. We got to see Many Glacier too, though it was very cloudy, and only Grinnell Glacier was at all visible. Didn't matter much, because the best friend was totally unimpressed with glaciers. She didn't realize they are just huge chunks of compacted ice that hardly melt. Me, I was impressed with the snowdrifts as tall as our rental car in the Many Glacier parking lot, let alone glaciers! :D And Lake St. Mary was still mostly ice, which I found gorgeous.
Tomorrow we are booking it down to Yellowstone, where I am hoping (but not holding my breath) to see wolves (PLEASE GOD PLEASE) and some more grizzlies. I'd also like her to see bison, even though she doesn't seem to care about that either. I'm also hoping for golden eagles on this trip, but two previous trips to Montana haven't yielded goldens, so I'm not holding my breath there either. We're staying in Jackson, which I am afraid will kill me with its trendy resortiness, but she should love it, so there you go.
Someday I want to bring my dad out here. He has never been to Montana, and he would LOVE Glacier and the Little Bighorn. And I've never yet seen Wounded Knee out here either, and I know Dad would like the Anaconda and Butte history. Oh well. For now I'll soak up as much as I can.
no subject
Date: 2011-05-27 11:07 am (UTC)Montana is beautiful, definitely. Now I kinda miss the place!
no subject
Date: 2011-06-01 02:52 am (UTC)Next time, though, I will totally stay at your cousins' way!
no subject
Date: 2011-06-04 11:42 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-06-06 01:45 am (UTC)