Off the Beaten Path: 14 Montana B&Bs

By Visit MT

14 Montana B&Bs Off the Beaten Path

by Visit Mt

The road less traveled takes on a whole new meaning when it comes to bed and breakfasts. Staying in an intimate setting, starting the day with a delicious breakfast and setting out on a Yellowstone Country adventure is the perfect getaway. We’ve selected some of our favorite B&Bs, each with its own character, and all worth the trip.

The Magpie’s Nest
Absarokee, Montana
Located on the Stillwater River—a favorite fishing spot—you can step right outside and cast your line. A secluded setting affords plenty of privacy, but it’s an easy jaunt to Red Lodge. Skiers should be sure to check out Red Lodge Mountain. Whitewater rafting and horseback riding can be arranged for summer visitors.

Beartooth Basin Bunkhouse
Belfry, Montana
Centered between two entrances to Yellowstone National Park and the Beartooth Mountains, and with the Clark’s Fork of the Yellowstone River just outside your door, this location is perfectly located for a variety of adventures. The lodge is a beautiful setting for retreats and weddings. Be sure to stop by Bear Creek Saloon and Steakhouse for a juicy steak and the famous pig races!

Artful Lodger Bed and Breakfast
Belgrade, Montana
Nestled at the base of the Bridger Mountains and sitting on Ross Creek, you’ll feel as though you’re truly secluded. However, with Bozeman just sixteen miles away, you can easily enjoy restaurants, shopping and theater. Or, for couples looking for a getaway, you’re just 12 miles from Bozeman Yellowstone International Airport. Book the small cabin, (complete with a Jacuzzi bath) and get away from the bustle!

A Gallatin River Guest Cabin
Big Sky, Montana
“A River Runs Through It” was filmed in the breathtaking Gallatin Canyon, the location of this special log cabin. Private river access on the Gallatin River is an unusual perk. The house is stocked with basic provisions you’ll need for your stay, but Big Sky is just 8 miles down the road if you’re in the mood to get out on the town. Horse rentals and guide services are available.

The Grand Bed and Breakfast
Big Timber, Montana
Built in 1890, The Grand is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The Boulder River Valley is perfect for hiking, Nordic skiing and snowmobiling. An award winning restaurant and wine list provide a perfect ending to your excursions. The lounge often hosts live music and Sunday brunch is not to be missed!

Howlers Inn Bed and Breakfast and Wolf Sanctuary
Bozeman, Montana
Yes, you read that correctly, this bed and breakfast doubles as a wolf sanctuary. Enjoy time on the deck watching these amazing animals. The property is located up Jackson Creek, between Bridger Bowl ski area and the town of Bozeman. This is truly a one-of-a-kind experience.

Skyline Guest Ranch
Cooke City, Montana
For an authentic western stay, this guest ranch offers horseback riding, pack trips, guided hunting and fishing. Cooke City is known for having some of the best snowmobiling in the country, with trails starting right outside the door!

Paradise Gateway Bed and Breakfast
Emigrant, Montana
Just a stone’s throw from Yellowstone National Park and just a few feet from the Yellowstone River, visitors are perfectly positioned to explore all corners of the park. For those aspiring cowboys and cowgirls, sign up for roping lessons! End the day soaking at Chico Hot Springs, or enjoy a burger and libation at The Old Saloon.


Yellowstone Basin Inn
Gardiner, Montana
Located just 5 miles from the north entrance of Yellowstone National Park, the Yellowstone Basin Inn offers spectacular views of Electric Peak (coming in at 11,000 feet,) Devil's Slide and the Yellowstone River. The quaint town of Gardiner is the perfect place to stop for a bite or to browse gift shops on your way in or out of the park.

Nelson’s Spring Creek Lodge
Livingston, Montana
Originally built for anglers coming to fish their famous spring creek, it has now become a renowned fishing destination. Sitting on one of the oldest operating cattle ranches in the area, you’ll see firsthand what goes into running a ranch. Bonus; the 2-acre lake is stocked full of trophy trout!

V Lazy B Bed and Breakfast and Horse Motel
Molt, Montana
This remote, 45-acre property caters to horse lovers. Overnight horse boarding is available along with a turnout area and a small riding arena. Rise early and catch the sunrise; breakfast times are flexible!

Inn on the Beartooth
Red Lodge, Montana
Just outside of Red Lodge, this lovely property sits across form the Silver Run Elk Refuge. Late winter and early spring the elk migrate down to the refuge. Watching these majestic animals can be mesmerizing. Winter visitors are just a jaunt from Red Lodge Mountain and in the summer, the Beartooth Highway is a must-do scenic drive!

Yellowstone Under Canvas: Glamping
West Yellowstone, Montana
Yes, glamping is a real thing. Or rather, it’s the most glamorous camping you will ever do. From simple tipis to deluxe tents, you’ll experience sleeping in the fresh mountain air in the luxury of a cozy bed. The on-site, casual dining is perfect before heading out on a unique adventure…helicopter tour, anyone?

Root to Rise Gardens
Wilsall, Montana
It’s rare to find a location so perfectly situated in the Shields River Valley between the spectacular Crazy Mountains and the Bridger Mountain Range. The garden is central to their locally sourced, organic and delicious meals. To really relax and reconnect, watch for their day-long, farm-to-yoga retreats!

 

Moving, Booking and Playing: A Musician's Life

Moving, Booking, and Playing: A Life of Larry Hirshberg

By Brian D’Ambrosio

On his worst days, singer-songwriter Larry Hirshberg may feel like he lives in an unjustly repressive world, an endless incursion of small, noisy crowds. On his best ones, he marvels at how much freedom and satisfaction he really does have.

“I’m super lucky to be doing it (gigging) as much as I have,” said Missoula essential Larry Hirshberg, who averages approximately 100 live events in and around the city yearly.

Hirshberg was about age 20 when he first moved to Montana from Massachusetts in the late 1970s and he hadn’t played live music until he tied to the scene in Missoula sometime around 1978. He’d been jotting down poems and writing creatively since age 10 and eventually enrolled in writing classes at the University of Montana.

“I randomly ended up living in a house with a bluegrass band and with one of the guys who was originally the bassist for Pinegrass in Missoula. I was a Deadhead, and I was inspired being around people who were making music. He’d lend me a guitar and show me a few chords, and I dropped out of college. I committed myself to a life of crappy, non-music jobs until I had the time to play. Playing guitar was the first thing that nobody told me to do, and it was something where every minute I was improving, and I was super motivated to get after it on my own. It wasn’t a job – at first.”  

Hirshberg, 60, is deeply keyed in to songwriter’s stories and the artist’s sense of swinging and shifting with the mood. He has also been personally impelled by the gnawing sense to roam. He dropped out of college and then lived in Santa Fe, New Mexico, and Eugene, Oregon, and also his hometown of Boston, and even Whitefish, MT., before finally returning to Missoula permanently in 1994. Music has since become a life of necessity.

“I would not like to live anywhere else other than Missoula,” said Hirshberg, who enables most of his catalog to be downloaded and share for free online. “I was tired of coming and going and just happy to get back. I reached the point where I needed to make it in music. I’ve had no day job since 2012 and I can’t afford the band, to split it with everybody else. Having a family, there is not a lot of time to rehearse with other people.”

The songwriter in Hirshberg is critical about his own lyrics and he’s extra vigilant about avoiding repetition, choosing to be patient in his craft rather than prolific. He can be found most nights with his guitar strumming, anecdotes firing, pedal board looper intermittently running, entertaining others, and perhaps most importantly, entertaining himself.  

Given his songwriting fluency, it may take time for audiences in buzzing venues to grasp the depth of Hirshberg’s devotion to big ideas. Original material is at the center of Hirshberg’s heart. Party music he isn’t. Though he sounds solid acoustically in the background at the brewery, he’s most potent if you can break free of the clink and clamor to listen.

“It is (original material) everything to me,” said Hirschberg. “It’s why I started and why I continue, and why I’ve given up covers. I’ve dealt with a variety of issues (in my songs) and said a lot of what I’ve wanted to say. I’ve never been an interpreter of other people’s music. My energy and my time are limited and I spend them wisely, and focused on making my own music.”

In recent months, Hirshberg has primarily played in a number of areas between Spokane, Washington, and Livingston, Montana, including as far south as Dillon, and frequent stops in Bozeman, Libby, Butte, Helena, and even Anaconda, where he’s played at least nine times. His mantra is told through personal narrative, his most effective means of establishing imaginative kinship with the world.

“I am a much happier and more useful person when I’m able to play,” said Hirshberg, who is busier now than he has ever been thanks to a steady stream of gigs at breweries and wineries. “I’m completely non-commercial, not pop or anything like that. I’m at the mercy of the people who own or hire at a place where I play, and hopefully it’s a patron of the arts. My music is not easy to assimilate or describe. Outwardly, my music seems pleasant but dig in and focus in on the lyrics and it is a challenge to figure out what’s going on. I’m at a comfortable place, art wise, content to  do what I do without worrying about who has access to it or not. The musician and writer in me can’t criticize or even review my own stuff.”

How far can I go? What do I want? The eternal asking of those questions, frustrating as they can be, is their own answer. He measures himself by having others take the measure of him. Indeed, music appeals to Hirshberg’s earnest desire to be liked, listened to, and, above all, respected as an artist, and his naked sincerity elevates him to exactly where he needs to be. He says that it took him a while to figure out that fame doesn’t make you successful. Not as a human being, not in any real way. He’s spent ample time adjusting his aspirations to reality. It helps him to see himself. It also helps him see beyond himself. Learn how to forget himself.

“It’s always been those five or ten people here and there who appreciate what my deal is and it’s consistent enough to keep going. I prefer to be real than anything else. I’m a better guitar player now and I’ve got a lifetime of songs to be drawing from. I can pull out a song I wrote at 25 and back it up with song I wrote a couple of months ago, and everything in-between.

“The making of songs is an amazing thing to me and when the song starts to come, I’m happy to be alive, and it justifies everything for me. More shows, the better you are at the psychological game. You’ve got a room full of people and sometimes nobody cares and there is a certain acceptance that it’s hard to get to the place where you have an audience digging what you are doing.”

Staunch and dogged, Hirshberg seems intent on satisfying and spreading his horizons. At a recent performance at the Symes Hot Springs Hotel, Hirshberg said that he played without a set list and that the watchful crowd appreciated the sound of his long, bold jams, and that the warm responsive feeling in the room was exactly the kind that he’d been craving as a performer. 

“That was the show I’ve been waiting for. It all came together and I was filled up with the joy of doing a solo show. Keep moving, keep booking, and keep playing, and you do it to randomly arrive at the room where it’s going to happen like it did that night.”

6 Ways Seniors Can Save Money Traveling

By Sharon Wagner

6 Ways Seniors Can Save Money Traveling

         ~by Sharon Wagner

 

The senior years are an ideal time to travel. With empty nests and flexible schedules, older adults can travel more easily and affordably than ever. However, fixed incomes mean sticking to a budget is especially important for senior travelers. Here are six ways seniors can save money on their next trip.

Time Your Travel

Traveling in peak season means paying peak prices. To save on flights and lodging, schedule travel during the shoulder season. Not only do travelers enjoy lower prices during this time of year, popular attractions are also less crowded.

 

Shoulder season is the period right before or right after peak tourism season. It's different than the off-season when the weather is poor for travel. Shoulder season timing varies by destination. TripSavvy explains how to time travel during the shoulder season for any destination.

Look for Senior Travel Discounts

Many companies offer discounts to senior travelers. One way to land travel discounts is to purchase an AARP membership. AARP members can book flights, hotels, car rentals, cruises, and more through the AARP travel portal to take advantage of exclusive discounts. Even without an AARP membership, seniors can receive discounted prices with many travel companies. Check The Senior List to learn which companies offer discounted prices to senior travelers.

Prepare Your Home

Not all costs are incurred on the road. Unplugging appliances and electronics and turning down the thermostat reduces electricity costs while a house is empty. Seniors should also avoid purchasing perishable food before a trip, as it's likely to spoil before they return home. In addition to these cost-saving measures, travelers should secure their home against intruders and weather events before departing on a trip.

Book Connecting Flights

Direct flights offer shorter travel times, but they're not always the best choice for senior travelers. Not only are connecting flights—that is, flights with a layover—cheaper on average, but layovers give travelers an opportunity to leave cramped airline seats and stretch their legs.

Travel Domestically

Travelers don't need to go abroad for a memorable vacation. There's a lot to do and see right here in the United States! The National Parks are one great option for senior travelers. For only $80, seniors can purchase an America the Beautiful pass that gains them access to all U.S. National Parks for the rest of their lifetime. Annual senior passes are also available for $20.

Rethink the Hotel

Hotels are convenient and predictable, but they're rarely the most cost-effective choice. For better prices and a more authentic experience, consider alternative lodging options. Seniors can rent a room or a whole home through services such as Airbnb and VRBO, stay in a cozy cabin, or book a stay at a locally owned bed-and-breakfast.

 

Traveling doesn't have to break the bank. For seniors who value travel but don't have a lot to spend—or seniors who want to squeeze the most travel possible out of their budget—there are plenty of ways to save money and see the world. Set a budget, plan ahead, and follow these tips to save money on your next vacation.

Hunting for Color

By Doug Stevens

Hunting Color

 

~Doug Stevens

 

For 30-some years, I was an avid bowhunter.  The whole year revolved around September.  All the summer’s hiking, backpacking and fishing were geared towards getting in shape for the hunting season and scouting new or familiar hunting areas.  I found bowhunting a way of extending the summer wilderness experiences through September, but with a different, more intense focus now – elk. 

 

The routine my partner and I followed is probably not uncommon among bowhunters.  We would backpack into an area that we previously scouted and set up a base camp.  In the morning we would get up early (in the dark) and hike to where we were going to hunt.  We would hunt from daybreak until mid morning (10 or 11-ish), then head back to camp for a rest/nap/eat.  Around mid-afternoon, we would head out again to be hunting in late afternoon until around sunset.  These are the times we found the elk to be the most active.  We would typically cover a lot of territory during a given day of hunting.  It was tiring, but fun – even if we came up empty.  If and when we did get lucky, there was a lot of work after the kill, too – dressing out the animal, packing it out and processing it at home ourselves.

 

However, a few years ago I hung up my bow for the last time.  Near the end, I was just not getting the same “kick” out of it as I did when I started.  I guess it was because more and more people are taking up the sport and it was becoming less of a wilderness experience for me.  Our hunting areas began to feel “crowded”.  Additionally, my long time hunting partner moved away and hunting alone was just not the same.

 

Now, when September rolls around, I reach for my camera and pack it into the backcountry, instead of my bow.  I get to take a lot more “shots” with my camera than I ever did with my bow and it doesn’t require a partner.  More territory is open to explore with a camera, such as national parks, which are, of course, off limits to hunting.  Also, if there are other people on the trail, it doesn’t scare off the photographic “game”, i.e., our spectacular Montana landscapes. 

 

One of the reasons I had enjoyed bowhunting so much was to be out in September.  It really is the most fantastic month of the year.  The weather, for my liking, is the best!  Cool nights and sunny warm days (with the possibility of the odd snow storm).  As the month wears on, the progression of fall colors are simply stunning.  Its not just about the golden aspens and cottonwoods. Further up, above most aspens, where we would typically hunt, the changing colors of the high elevation brush paints their own palette. From the bright yellows of the ceanothus and columbines through the burnt orange of the changing mountain ashes with their bright red berries, to the brick red of huckleberry, fireweed and grouse whortleberry bushes.  It all adds up to a veritable profusion of colors.  Now mix in a dusting of snow on the higher peaks to really enhance their grandeur -  and the stage is set – and all this to the soundtrack of elk in rut with the bulls bugling at each other - wow!  It’s a month I wish I could just freeze in time.  It comes and goes for too quickly.

 

Recently, I was in Glacier National Park to try to capture some of those fall colors.  I had targeted a couple of specific areas and knew what times to be there.  As I was hiking in early one morning (serenaded by several bugling bulls), it struck me how similar my approach to fall photography is to the bowhunting I used to do.  In effect, bowhunting prepared me for fall photography.  Let me explain. 

 

Photographers often talk about “golden hour”.  That is the time just after sunrise, and again, a little before sunset, when the sun is low, has a more yellow hue and casts longer shadows.  It saturates the colors, accentuates the textures and makes photos much more pleasing (of course, it does actually last longer than an hour).  Most photographers, especially landscape photographers, always aim for this time, as well as try to catch the colors of a sunrise or a sunset. Timing is everything. 

 

Since I like to photograph areas that are often in the backcountry and require a hike to get to, it is necessary to do some planning ahead of time.  That means first scouting them out (would it make a better early morning or late afternoon photo?), getting up in the dark to hike in so as to be there at or near sunrise, staying until the sun is too high for the better light (say around 10 or 11-ish), then heading back to camp or the truck for a rest/nap/eat.  By mid-afternoon, I am heading out again to be at the next location by late afternoon and maybe staying on to catch a great mountain sunset, then hiking out.  I tend to cover a lot of territory to get the photos I want.  When I get home, there is always a lot of work to do processing the photos.  Hmmm, sounds familiar, doesn’t it? Just like my bowhunting routine!

 

So now, when September rolls around, I grab my camera, not my bow, because I’m not hunting elk, I’m hunting color!

 

Happy Trails!

 

Mickey and The Bear

Anaconda in the Essence: On Location with “Mickey and the Bear”

~Brian D’Ambrosio

When Annabelle Attanasio,  a student at the Gallatin School of Individualized Study at New York University, secured a grant to write a script for her next film project she chose an unlikely starting place: Anaconda, Montana.  

Yet from the time of her first visit there in the summer of 2014 to the wrap of production of the filming of “Mickey and the Bear” this week, Anaconda felt avant-garde to the director because it is so decidedly behind the times in so many ways. Charmed by the town’s cultural quirks and its unique perspective of analyzing the world, she adeptly co-wrote Anaconda into the script.

“I fell in love with the daily rhythms of life there,” said Annabelle Attanasio, 25. “The town grew to become a family and I grew up along the drafts of the scripts and the different iterations of the scripts. The town influenced the best elements of the script. I hope the process of highlighting and dramatizing real-life characters of Anaconda and weaving their stories into a fictional narrative will give the film a lived-in, authentic overall feel."

Anaconda resident MacGregor Anderson was working at his family’s bakery a couple of summers ago when one afternoon he spotted a throng of unfamiliar faces scouting out potential filming locations. “There were a bunch of young people out there, smiling and looking around, and that made me curious,” said MacGregor Anderson. “When you live in Anaconda, you know every young person for 100 miles. I got to know them, and we went swimming and bowling, and they had about 10 million questions about me growing up in Anaconda.”

Anderson served as a supportive local contact for the crew which included producer Lizzie Shapiro, who first visited Anaconda in the winter of 2017, and who said that finding unique locations wasn’t difficult in the southwestern city of approximately 9,000.

“We were able to secure several locations to film at that were specifically written into the script,” said Lizzie Shapiro. “Places that capture the spirit of Anaconda, like the fight scene under the neon at Club Moderne, and the dad character works at the Washoe Theater. We even set up an additional Alive After Five event with all the vendors and one grandpa said that he hadn’t seen that many people in the streets since the smelter was running.”

The filmmakers even wrote Capp’s Taxidermy studio on Park Avenue into the script and also found a treasure trove of interior furnishings for the main set piece – a trailer located off Cable Road overlooking the imposing presence of Mount Haggin – at local shops such as Anaconda Thrift. The trailer was purchased in Billings, then gutted, remodeled, and smartly furnished with the kind of décor that would make it believable.  

The plot of “Mickey and the Bear” involves “a strong-willed teenage girl (Mickey) who navigates a loving but volatile relationship with her veteran father (Hank). In a desperate search for independence and her own identity, she risks family, heartbreak, and her standing in the only place she can call home.”

“Mickey and the Bear” is told from the perspective of Mickey as she emancipates herself from the heavy responsibilities imposed upon her by her father.

“There is a larger thematic resonance with the vet-daughter stories of PTSD and trauma,” said Attanasio. “I was drawn to Montana with its high-veteran population, its scenery, and there is the mystery element of the culture there. I wanted the story of a town that had a strong presence and personality but was not as big or well-known as, say, Bozeman…Mickey is not victimized by her circumstances, and like the teenage girls I met in Anaconda, she’s decisive and self-confident, and I admired that in them.”

Montana native Dan Molloy, the film’s “second second,” or second assistant director, said that the time he has spent filming in Anaconda has managed to change his perspective about the town.

“Coming from Montana, I realize that Anaconda is not exactly what you would think,” said Molloy. “But the people are incredible, and some of them look at it (the film) as the biggest thing since the smokestack. There is not as much of a rush filming here as there would be in Missoula. We filmed at the track and field and in the high school and we’ve been embraced with open arms and great locations.”

Molloy, who can still remember catching his initial glimpse of Montana movie magic as a kid while witnessing production scenes of “Far and Away (1992),” said that part of the excitement of this film production is not only being able to see such a synergistic artistic energy come to fruition but also that it could inspire the younger generation of locals to pursue possibilities in the arts.

“I think it’d be cool if the production inspired the high schoolers or the other kids in Anaconda to see things differently,” said Molloy.

What makes Anaconda different from the majority of filming locations anywhere is unassuming living, anonymity, and its residents’ low susceptibility to trends and fads. Plus its exterior and interior locations aren’t too shabby either.

“We built places into the script that could only be here,” said director Annabelle Attanasio. “The Copperheads mascot, Peppermint Patty’s pork chop sandwich joint, Donivan’s restaurant, and then there is the American Legion which is named Grumpy Old Men. It’s (the movie is) a love letter to all that’s wonderful about the town.”

Another gem used in the film is the Washoe Theater, a luxuriant movie palace built in 1936 with Art Deco murals and ornamentation in silver, copper and gold leaf. It was designed by theater architect B. Marcus Priteca whose credits include Pantages Theaters in California, the Seattle Coliseum, and Orpheum, Palomar and Paramount theaters in Seattle.

“I’ve never seen a movie palace like that before,” said producer Lizzie Shapiro. “It’s the gem of the town.”

‘They still do intermissions at the Washoe,” marveled Molloy.

Another landmark on the National Register of Historic Places that made its way into the film includes the Club Moderne bar, a rebuilt circa-1930s bar designed in a “Streamline Moderne style,” a derivative of Art Deco.

“The Club Moderne is a preexisting film location just waiting,” said Molloy. “I mean, those neon lights! That’s a set you would have had to have built elsewhere. Why wouldn’t you want to shoot there?”

Approximately half of the film was shot over five weeks at the principal location of the Cable Road trailer while the remaining half was filmed across various parts of Anaconda and even as far west as the Missoula area, including Johnsrud,  a state fishing access site located on the Blackfoot River. It was there that out-of-state cast and crew members, many of whom had never been on a river before, were treated to a genuine slice of Montana excitement.

“Filming Johnsrud was really difficult,” said Molloy. “We were loading in with rafts and setting up equipment when someone shouted that there was a bear. I thought it was cool, but I just continued working. But the largely New York and California crew stopped production for about 15 minutes to take photos. One of the crew came up to me afterwards and asked, “How much did you pay to get a bear that close to the set?”

Visiting crew members basked in those special, cherished moments that Montanans are familiarly acquainted. When the camera crew spotted a moose on Georgetown Lake, it was the talk of the set.

Yet it is the town’s history – and its indebtedness to it – that most impressed all of those involved. That history is intimately linked with the Anaconda Company and copper king Marcus Daly, who in 1883 obtained land and water rights on Warm Springs Creek for a new smelter for his Anaconda Company. Named for the company, the city of Anaconda sprang up around the smelter and was incorporated in 1887.)

“The movie is timeless in a sense because Anaconda has remained unchanged in many ways,” said Molloy. “It could have taken place in the 70s, the 80s, or the 90s. There are no Ferraris or no Porsches.”

Locals have embraced the project and familiarized themselves with all of the different elements which need to converge and commingle to make a production thrive.

“There is more to a film production than just the artistic process of making the movie,” said Molloy. “There are drivers, there are set builders, and there is a lot of blue collar work to be done that speaks to a lot of Montanans.”

Ultimately, the film has the walloping power to adjust, alter and re-appraise the town’s image and to humanize a part of the world that is enigmatic to even its closest neighbors. (Post-production will start immediately.) 

MacGregor Anderson, a third-generation Anacondan, said that the town depicted in the script closely resembles the same insular, tight-knit community in which he was born and raised. “I think it’s a story that really resonates with a lot of people in the middle class everywhere,” said Anderson. “I think it’ll particularly be of interest to single family people who grew up in rural areas, but it’s also about growing up before your time and being young and in love.”

Anderson, 25, who moved to Seattle after his parents’ bakery closed but plans to return again in the near future, said that he applauds the filmmakers for elaborating on the state’s beauty as well as their resolute belief and trust in producing the site-specific film in Anaconda.

“I figured that there interest in Anaconda would wear off eventually, but it didn’t,” said Anderson. “And now it’s got me thinking, ‘what the heck am I missing?’ It has helped me realize the treasure that I have back in Anaconda with my family and culture.”

Getting to Montana This Winter

By Visit MT

Getting to Montana This Winter

~Visit Mt.

Dreaming of a winter getaway to Montana? A haven of powder and untouched snow, Montana is the perfect place for winter lovers. Boasting some of the best snow in North America, winter transforms Montana into a magical winter destination. Are you thinking “Is it easy to travel to Montana?” The answer: Yes, Montana is closer than you think. Plus, once you arrive, leaving is the hardest part.
 
Imagine having breakfast at home and being in Montana by lunchtime for an epic day of powder play and jaw-dropping winter views. With airports in seven of Montana’s major cities-Bozeman, Billings, Butte, Great Falls, Helena, Missoula and Kalispell-options for flying to a snow-covered paradise are endless.
 
Direct flights arrive daily from Denver, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Dallas/Fort Worth, Minneapolis/St. Paul, Phoenix/Mesa, Salt Lake City, Portland and Seattle. During winter, flights from Atlanta and San Francisco are also available. Airlines flying to these airports include Delta/Sky-West, American Airlines, Alaska/Horizon Air, Frontier, United and Allegiant Air.
 
Once you land, breathe in the fresh mountain air and get ready for adventure. Fly into Bozeman and spend the afternoon on the slopes at Big Sky Resort. Arrive at Glacier Park International Airport and end the day refreshed after snowshoeing in Glacier National Park. Land in Billings and relax with a craft beer after cross-country skiing in the shadow of the Beartooth Mountains.Winter memories filled with breathtaking scenery are just around the corner. Explore Montana’s charming small townsski areas, trail adventures and national parks (which are open year-round.) We promise you won’t be disappointed.
 
No matter your interests, we're here to assist with this or other Montana travel story media needs. Contact us for any of your photo or story needs. We can be reached via email at[email protected], in the Montana pressroom, or on Twitter.