The Biggest Lake Island West of Minnesota

Wild Horse IslandDon’t be fooled by the scale of your map Wild Horse Island is massive.

The forested isle off the west shore of Flathead Lake is home to 2,160 acres of old growth Ponderosa pine, trail labyrinths and families of bighorn sheep, mule deer and, yes, wild horses.

It’s the largest island in the biggest freshwater lake west of Minnesota and one of 10 primitive state parks in Montana, meaning almost all 2,100 acres of habitat are open to the public but sustained like a wilderness.

A year-round day-use state park is on site and visitors are welcome to take part in bird watching and other wildlife viewing as well as hiking, fishing and swimming.

The hermetic isle remains an historic landmark for the Salish-Kootenai Indians, who once pastured their horses on site.

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Before I Die...in Missoula

Missoula artIt’s not every day that you get to announce your most intimate life goals to the community on a public art installation. But for the next month Missoulians are encouraged to write what they want to do before they die on a giant 24-by-7-foot chalkboard hanging on the west side of the Central Park parking garage on West Main Street downtown.

Part art installation and part community activity, the board was officially unveiled to the public Friday afternoon by Mayor John Engen and Syann Stevens, co-founder of TrickleTrade.com, a community bartering website.

“At first I wanted to write, ‘I want to eat mayonnaise with a spoon,’ ” Engen joked as he walked up to the installation, self-conscious about his penmanship.

Instead, his vision was a tasteful “Before I die, I want to leave this place a little better than when I entered it, like so many before me have done.”

MORE>>>The Missoulian

Roving Tires, Skateboard Roofers, Toothpaste Bombs, Miniature Donkey At Large (?)... and a Black Pillow

Montana police reports Flathead County Sheriff's and Kalispell Police Reports

just another day....


09-06-13 Tuesday 9/3/2013

10:30 a.m. A stray husky with a “yellow head” was captured on Three Mile Drive.

10:32 a.m. Another loose husky was stirring up trouble in a Martin City trailer park.

12:47 p.m. A Kalispell man found a bag of pot in his house.

1:20 p.m. A camper on the North Fork reported that someone stole his flashlight and sleeping bag out of his tent.

1:43 p.m. Reportedly, someone in Evergreen rolled a couple of tires down a hill into the highway, nailing a blue truck and narrowly missing another vehicle.

2:04 p.m. County inmates were caught constructing “toothpaste bombs.”

2:45 p.m. A local man reported that he had been pushed and shoved. When a deputy contacted him, he was too busy to talk.

2:52 p.m. A Bigfork woman reported that the neighbor kids frequently skateboard on her roof.

3:44 p.m. Someone spotted a dog on the side of the highway. A deputy found a black pillow.

7:31 p.m . Three burros and a miniature donkey were at large on Demersville Road.

8:30 p.m. A local man claimed that the mother of one of his children was stationed in the back of his truck, refusing to move.

MORE>>>Flathead Beacon

Photographing Fire

By Jenna Caplette
Jenna Caplette migrated from California to Montana in the early 1970s, first living on the Crow Indian reservation, then moving to Bozeman where she owned a downtown retail anchor for eighteen years. These days she owns Bozeman BodyTalk & Energetic Healthcare, hosts a monthly movie night, teaches and writes about many topics. 

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I just returned from a few days in Red Lodge, where the Rock Creek Fire burns just north of the scars from the Willie Fire. My daughter and I attended the Willie Nelson concert in August, 2000 and watched that fire blow up. Seems like most years since, fire has been a staple late-summer presence in Montana and the Rocky Mountain West.  
 
Fire makes a compelling photographic subject, one of eerie beauty.  To photograph wildfire:
 
  • Photograph at a distance. You’ll need to because fire zones are protected both because you need to stay out of the way of fire fighters and because your safety is essential.
  • Use the sports mode or a similar setting that uses a fast shutter speed to produce sharp, detailed images. Slow speeds give softer looking images. Experiment.
  • Fire is particularly dramatic contrasted against an evening or night sky.  Avoid distracting artificial lights like yard lights and headlights.
  • To help get clear, sharp photographs, use a tripod to stabilize your camera. Or hand-hold using a lens with built-in vibration control. Why? Vibration kills sharpness as surely as a bad lens or bad focusing. If you plan to take long exposures, be sure to use your tripod and turn off your vibration control.
 
To photograph smoke, isolate a particular cloud of smoke, thinking of it as if you were photographing a person. Frame the photograph to best express the smoke plume’s presence. To create an effective image of a wider smoke pattern, consider what you should exclude from it rather than what to include. Taking several photographs may be the best way to train your eye. Study each to learn what you do or don’t like about your results. Make notes. Try again.
 
Perhaps the safest and best way to practice photographing fire is with your safely-contained backyard campfire. And you’ll still get some dramatic results. 
 
By the way, where are most of your photos right now? Stockpiled on your camera’s memory card? Stored in a box or boxes stacked in a closet? Any emergency, flood or fire, reminds you to consider where and how to safely store your photographs.
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