Summer's End

By Doug Stevens

Summer’s End – The “Last Best” Weeks

   ~Doug Stevens; The Graytrekker

 

Please excuse the obvious reference to “Montana – The Last Best Place”, but it is how I feel about the last two weeks of summer.  While astronomically speaking, summers ends with the fall equinox, on or about September 21st, culturally, it seems to end with the Labor Day holiday weekend.  The kids go back to school, the boat gets covered and put away until next year, football starts, etc. However, there are still about 2 weeks of actual summer left between when people have switched into a fall frame of mind and when fall actually starts.  For most years, no-one has told Mother Nature this.  Those last 2 weeks of summer, “Summer’s End”, can be some of the best days of the year to get out. The heat of August has cooled off, the days are a bit shorter, the nights a bit cooler and longer (better for star-gazing), the bugs are now gone, but the days can still be sunny and quite warm.  With the full array of fall splendor is still 2 weeks away, you can already see first intimations of the fall colors in the mountains, hinting at what is to come.  While most plants have gone to seed, there are still some flowering at this time of year, such as the bluebells and the fleabane – purple colored daisies.  The fruit on the mountain ash has become a deep orange/red and the huckleberry bushes are taking on their deep brick red colors.  Up high, if you look carefully, you can still find some huckleberries that the bears missed.  Other green foliage, such as the mountain willows, thimbleberries and some cottonwoods begin to display a yellowish hue.  If there has been some rain at the end of August/beginning of September (and there usually has been), the mushrooms are beginning to emerge.  To top it off, all this is happening under (usually) blue, warm skies.

 

If it has been a smokey summer, by summer’s end the skies are usually a lot clearer due to that late summer rain, [see Smoked Out of Glacier Again – https://www.distinctlymontana.com/node/40298].  OK - so that wasn’t an issue this year, but in years past it certainly has.  The wildlife is a bit more active than before Labor Day.  Now you can hear the first bugling of the elk heading into their rut.  Perhaps a word of caution is warranted here.  If you are heading out into bear habitat, know that this is a very active period for them, too.  Known as “hyperphagia”, they are hungry and putting down as many calories as they can before the onset of winter and hibernation.  Please carry bear spray and be prudent!

 

The added benefit of this time is there are usually far fewer people in the mountains, without having to sacrifice decent weather  - a definite “win-win” situation.  There is greater availability of campsites, fewer people on the trails – more alone time.  An exception would be the Bob Marshall Wilderness Area.  Here there is an early opening to the rifle season (generally Sept 15) and there is a lot of activity at the trailheads and along the main corridors with many trucks and horse trailers coming and going and large pack trains packing in supplies for the hunting camps there.  But get off the main thoroughfares, and The Bob is big enough to absorb quite a large number of people before you notice them. 

 

If, instead, you head to the parks, state or national, where hunting is not allowed, that will thin the numbers out a bit, as well.  It is true, though, that visitation rates to our parks has been growing steadily over the last several years, with even September numbers up.  However, there are significantly fewer people than during the pre-Labor Day summer.  If one avoids the main areas where these visitors generally go (like the Many Glacier area of Glacier National Park), one can more easily find that soul-restoring solitude many of us need. Indeed, I have recently returned from a 10 hour, 14 mile day hike in Glacier to a backcountry lake and saw no-one all day except around one of the backcountry campsites and the trailhead.  It was sunny and warm, the scenery was absolutely fantastic and I was totally alone!

 

Montana is blessed with such incredible, diverse physical majesty.  Summer’s End is a perfect time to get out and really explore and appreciate what we have here at home – so put down that remote and get out there!

 

Happy Trails – Doug Stevens – “The Graytrekker”.

 

Granite Ghost Town

By Montana State Parks

Granite Ghost Town

     ~Montana State Parks

Once a thriving 1890s silver boomtown, Granite Ghost Town State Park, is exactly what its name suggests, the remains of a mining town from the 1800s. In 1865, Hector Horton discovered silver in the area and in the autumn of 1872, the Granite mine was discovered by a prospector named Holland. The mine was relocated in 1875.

This is one of the best ghost camps in all of Montana. At one point the Granite mine was the richest silver mine on the earth, and it might never have been discovered if a telegram from the east hadn't been delayed. The mine's backers thought the venture was hopeless and ordered an end to its operation, but the last blast, on the last shift uncovered a bonanza, which yielded $40,000,000 in silver.

In the silver panic of 1893, word came to shut the mine down. The mine was deserted for three years, never again would it reach the population it once had of over 3,000 miners.

Today there is no one living in the camp. The shell of the Miners' Union Hall still stands. The roof supports have caved to the bottom floor, the third-floor dance hall, second-floor union offices, and ground-floor saloon/cafe are about to collapse together. The company hospital still stands.

Permits are required for some activities.  View Map HERE

Prepare for a steep and windy drive to Granite from Phillipsburg. The road gains 1,280 feet in elevation and you may need to pull over for oncoming traffic, but you’ll have a beautiful view!

Only a few buildings still remain, but the main street of Granite was once bustling with saloons, a newspaper office, rooming houses, and restaurants. The state park preserves the Granite Mine Superintendent’s house and the ruins of the old miners’ Union Hall, both of which are included in the Historic American Buildings Survey. 

Be sure to take some time to hike the web of trails that lead to old homes and other ruins in the area while you’re here!

Did you know?

At its peak, Granite had a both a Chinatown and a red light district. 

Activities at Granite Ghost Town include:

✅ History

✅ Photography

✅ Wildlife Viewing 

✅ Plus more!