24 Ounce Beer Stolen; Porcupines and Puppies; G.I. Joe Theft; Mountain Lion Stalking Horse

12:15 p.m. Two people in Columbia Falls are involved in a heated battle over custody of their dog.

12:55 p.m. A 24-ounce can of beer was stolen from an Evergreen gas station.

1:53 p.m. Three down-and-out puppies with porcupine quills stuck in their hide were found on the side of Steel Bridge Road. They were taken to the vet and then the shelter.

5:52 p.m. Someone called in because they saw a bunch of cars pull into a residence on Shady Lane and assumed it was drug related. The Drug Task Force is looking into it.

7:10 p.m. A Kalispell man broke stuff during a quarrel with his lover. The two were separated for the night.

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Montana Braces for August Snow

Montana WinterWhile much of the U.S. will swelter in heat and humidity this weekend, it will feel more like fall, or even winter, for much of Montana and Wyoming. 

An unseasonably cold low pressure system is expected to bring below-average temperatures to the northern Rockies through early next week. Temperatures will be up to 35 degrees below average in some locations this weekend. Glacier National Park may not even reach 50 degrees for a high on Saturday.

In fact, low temperatures will drop below freezing in the higher elevations, leading to the chance for the first snow of the season to fall. In West Glacier, Montana, the average date for the first temperature below 32 degrees is Sept. 13, so the cold conditions are about three weeks ahead of schedule.

MORE>>>Weather.com

Good News for Grayling

The fish's population was previously critically low in the Upper Missouri River Distinct Population Segment. The Upper Missouri River runs through the state of Montana. After the past eight years of significant conservation efforts, aided by private landowners who cooperated on a volunteer basis, the federal organization has ruled today, August 18, that the efforts of conservation agencies and others to help the Arctic grayling population thrive have been enough to bring the fish significantly out of danger, enough that it no longer needs the protection of the ESA for the present time. The fish will no longer be classified as endangered under the ESA.

Private owners of land voluntarily worked with federal agencies through a Candidate Conservation Agreement with Assurances to improve conditions for the Arctic grayling. The CCAA has helped start over 250 conservation projects to protect the grayling in the past eight years. They have done things like improving irrigation techniques that affect waters where the fish live to improve the grayling's habitat. The grayling's population has at least doubled since 2006 because of the CCAA's efforts.

"This is a prime example of what a CCAA can do, not only for wildlife, but also for sustaining the way of life in rural ranching community," said Service Director Dan Ashe in a USDA press release. "The conservation progress for Arctic grayling would not have been possible without the amazing support we have received from willing landowners and other partners in the Big Hole River and Centennial valleys."

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Fall Driving in Yellowstone Not to be Fun

Yellowstone road constructionYellowstone National Park is giving visitors to the park this fall a heads up on some significant road construction work that will result in long detours.

The National Park Service says the road work involves two sections of Yellowstone's Grand Loop Road that will be closed due to construction after the Labor Day holiday weekend.

The road linking Old Faithful with West Thumb and Grant Village will be closed for the season starting on Sept. 2.

In addition, the road from Mammoth Hot Springs to Norris will be closed starting Sept. 14.

The road construction will cause detours that will add up to two hours or more along parts of the route.

Googling Montana

By Bill Muhlenfeld

Bill MuhlenfeldBill Muhlenfeld is owner and publisher of Distinctly Montana magazine and other publications. He lives in Bozeman with his partner, Anthea, and always finds time to enjoy the great outdoors, when he is not writing about it....

What's in a name? 

Well, if the name is Montana, quite a bit.  While googling "Montana" does bring up the Treasure State first in its search, more casual searches often overturn other cyber-rocks uncovering Joe Montana, Hannah Montana (sans twerking) and French Montana (who is he, anyway?).  This is especially true if the search involves news, videos or images, where Google seems a bit mnemonically challenged.

It seems that Montana could really never be called something else, though names were floated before statehood--"Shoshone," "Lincoln"--and there was a even move in the 1930's to lop off a piece of the state along with parts of Wyoming and South Dakota, to create a new state-"Absaroka."

For me, as likely for you, this annoyance is tolerable. Let's face it, Joe, Hannah and French are temporary obfuscations. The word "Montana" mostly conjures searches that relate to the Distinctly Montana masthead--Adventure.  Inspiration. Spirit.

That's enough for me.

Chokecherries Charm Montana's Big Bears

Grizzly bearThe Montana Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks reports that several grizzly bears have been seen along rivers and streams east of the Rocky Mountain Front, and they asks residents to keep bear attractants contained.

"The bears are in the river bottoms following the chokecherry crop," Mike Madel, a bear-management specialist with FWP, said in a press release. "There have not been any reports of bear-human conflicts."

But bears could be drawn to populated areas by unsecured garbage cans, the smell of pet food, bird feeders, and even dirty barbecue grills.

"When bears encounter human-supplied food sources, they often have a hard time returning to natural food," Madel said. "Then, a conditioned bear will travel miles to get to a garbage can."

In June, three young grizzly bears attacked and killed two calves at the Schuler ranch along the Teton River north of Carter, about 30 miles north of Great Falls.

One of the bears was captured and relocated west of the Continental Divide. The other two bears were last seen moving west on the Teton River.

MORE>>>KTVQ