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Cowboy Heaven Consulting, LLC
6116 Walker Road
Bozeman, MT 59715
406-587-9563
1-877-613-0404
info@cowboyhvn.com

  Past Month's Moccasin Telegraph

July 2001

7/23/01 Here's an itinerary for a fun little road-trip in southwest Montana, courtesy of Montana Fish, Wildlife, and Parks.  The attractions are all state parks, and this looks like a good way to spend a few days.  We've hit all these attractions many times, although must admit, not in one trip.  Anyway, they're highly recommended.

Variety is the watchword in southwest Montana when it comes to
Montana State Parks, lookouts and buffalo jumps, limestone caverns
and ghost towns. We'll visit them all on a weekend motor tour of FWP
Region Three parks soaked in Montana history.

Our first stop on a state parks tour of southwestern Montana is
Missouri Headwaters State Park near Three Forks where the Gallatin,
Madison and Jefferson rivers converge to form the upper Missouri.
Watch for the sign along the old highway, take highway 286 for two
miles and you'll arrive at the Park. Don't miss the fine
interpretative display. You'll learn that Lewis & Clark camped here
July 25-27, 1805 and that Lewis climbed the high bluff to the east of
the river to get his bearings. You'll read about John Potts, John
Coulter and George Drouillard, early trappers who helped build a fort
here during the first decade of the 1800s, and Potts and Drouillard
meeting their ends at the hands of the Blackfeet at this location in
1810.

Next we'll travel south, under I-90 and onto the graveled road that
takes us to Madison Buffalo Jump State Park. For thousands of years,
Native Americans chased American bison off the cliffs of the bluffs,
also called "pishkuns" and to their deaths in procuring meat and
buffalo hides for clothing and tipis.

Retrace your route to the Interstate, then take Montana Route 2
westerly out of Three Forks. Watch the signs, for within a few miles
you will see Parker Homestead on the right side of the road. This
site was homesteaded in about 1910 by the Ambrose Parker family and
is representative of the many homesteads in western Montana.

Continue on for 15 miles, and above the Jefferson River we will
arrive at Lewis & Clark Caverns, first discovered in 1892 by a pair
of local ranchers while on a hunting trip. The Caverns showcase one
of the most highly decorated limestone formations in the Northwest.
Theodore Roosevelt named it a national monument in 1903, and in 1937
an Act of Congress transferred Lewis and Clark Caverns to the people
of the State of Montana, when it became Montana's first state park.

Plan to spend a minimum of two hours to hike two miles on a guided
tour through the Caverns, viewing stalagmites, stalactites, columns
and flowstone. The park also provides hiking trials, a visitor
center, an amphitheater with regular summer programs, several picnic
areas, a large campground, showers, RV dump facilities, and three
rental cabins. Lewis and Clark Caverns could be regarded as the
"flagship" of southwestern Montana state parks. With its location,
you can use this park as "base camp" while you enjoy the other state
parks and the Jefferson River.

Continuing on to Cardwell, we will get back onto I-90, take it a
short distance to Whitehall, then travel on Montana highways 55 and
41 toward Dillon. The Jefferson River flows on our left, and at Twin
Bridges we cross the Beaverhead River. A dozen miles down the road,
notice the prominent outcrop called Beaverhead Rock. It was mentioned
in the Lewis and Clark journals when the expedition passed this way
in 1805. The Highway Department maintains an interpretive sign along
Highway 41 south of the Rock.

After spending the night in Dillon, we will take I-15 a few miles
south before turning west on 278. Watch for the Bannack StateBannack.jpg (18944 bytes) Park
sign near the base of the big hill about 22 miles off the interstate.

Once at Bannack, you will want to visit the old pioneer graveyards.
The larger of the two is located on your left before you even enter
the park; the older and smaller of the two is on top of the hill
above Bannack's main street. See the Hotel Meade, drop in to the
visitor center, wander Bannack's streets and examine the old
buildings that have been preserved by Parks employees from FWP.
Bannack, now a ghost town, once was a thriving mining community and
Montana's first territorial capital.

 

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