Only in Montana : 100 Mile Yard Sale

By Vince Devlin

THOMPSON FALLS – There are two things that make the annual Sanders County Yard Sale-ing Event work.

One is luring lots of treasure hunters to the county on the last weekend of June to pick through the tens of thousands of items at dozens upon dozens of yard sales, most of them along a 100-mile-plus stretch of Montana Highway 200.

The other is lining up the yard sales.

That effort is on right now, as organizers prepare for the eighth annual countywide yard sale.

MORE >>>http://missoulian.com/news/state-and-regional/organizers-prepare-for-massive-logistics-of-sanders-county-yard-sale/article_9448c7fe-c368-11e3-b45a-001a4bcf887a.html

The M.

By Angela Jamison

 

Angela Jamison is a native Montanan and she grew up in beautiful Bozeman.  I'm the mother of two girls and write a blog about our life here and taking in the simple pleasures of family and food.  http://www.rdeliciouslife.blogspot.com/

The M.

As winter begins to melt into spring, I begin to get the itch.  Green and brown is starting to replace the white on the Bridgers and the "M" is starting to make its appearance.  This means hiking season is upon us.  Every year the itch begins around April…the desire to throw on my hiking boots and get lost in my thoughts on the trail.  This year the desire has heightened for me as I just finished reading "Wild" by Cheryl Strayed.  It's an amazing memoir about a woman who hikes the Pacific Crest Trail from California to Washington.  Reading her adventures has amped up my longing for hiking.  It got me thinking about one of my favorite, simple hikes right here in town….

The M trailhead. Easily one of the most popular in the Bozeman area.  From people who hike it everyday as a part of their workout routine to tourists who have never climbed a hill…all make their way to this visible landmark.  It sits on the side of Baldy for all to see.  People push their way up the steep trail or go the more leisurely route.  It means a lot to many.  Last summer at the top I met an old man sitting on the bench.  It was his 90th time hiking the M.  His friend, who usually hikes with him, couldn't make it that day so now he had one day on him.  You could see it was an ongoing competition.  I never hiked it as a kid.  Hiking wasn't my families thing.  Hiking came to me when friends introduced it to me as a teenager.  I had grown up surrounded by these mountains, but never much ventured in them.  The M was my first hike.  It was this hike that got me hooked.

Hiking can be very social.    Going with friends and chatting your way up the mountain.  Soaking up the fresh air and having the type of conversations where everyone can talk freely.  Something about getting your heart pumping with miles ahead of you and nothing to do but talk opens the lines of communication.  This is why I have been trying to instill a love of hiking into my daughters.  As they grow my hopes are it becomes the perfect setting for those tough conversations.  The kind where not sitting face to face can make it easier and more honest.  Right now these conversations consist of 6 and 8 year old talk- who is their current BFF and why does the dog pant while we hike.  It doesn't matter what the conversation is right now, it's that we are talking.  The person I have put the most miles on with would be my husband.  A city boy through and through, he came to Montana aching to play in the mountains and this only added to my new found love of hiking.  He pushed me to try harder and steeper trails.  To do them with a pack filled with sleeping bags, tents and food so once at the top we could camp.  Together we saw amazing places and grew closer with each conversation on the trail.  Back then we talked about our hopes and dreams, where we would go in life, what we wanted out of it.  To this day when it's just the two of us on a hike we have these same conversations.  Being in our mid-thirties with two kids and careers you would think we were in the middle of doing those things we talked about years ago.  We certainly are, but there are new hopes and dreams that come out on the mountains. 

Hiking can also be very personal.  I have had many a solo hike.  The M being one of the most popular for me.  It's close, easy to get to and because of the amount of traffic it gets it feels safe to be on alone.  On your own the only conversation you can have is with yourself.  Alone, scrambling up the mountain with your thoughts.  I find this a meditative time.  To notice any thoughts that are bothering me, things going on in my life.  I notice them, think them through and leave them on the trail.  I notice thoughts that are making me happy, take in a breath, soak up the view and feel peaceful.  I notice what I'm capable of, pushing myself to the top even when feeling tired.  The feeling of accomplishment, looking down and feeling strong.  The hike down is always the best.  You breathe a little easier.  Your mind cleared.  The mountain air, the quiet of the nature surrounding you, it adds to my ability to slow down and be present. 

The M trail offers so much.  I know some feel it is too busy, but if you take the time you can meet someone new.  Someone who may be seeing it for the first time.  When I sit at the top and overlook our Bozeman, I love to listen to those visiting talk about our town.  Hearing others in awe of it makes you realize how very lucky we are to live here.  You never know who you will see or meet on the trail.  An old friend you haven't seen for years. A family visiting from Australia asking you to take their photo because they're in Montana for the first time.  A group of strangers coming together to sit with a girl who fell on her run down.   Seeing the look of pride in my daughters eyes when they made it to the top for the first time, hiking the whole way on their own.  Yes, the M may get busy and I've never been on it without seeing another hiker, but this is okay.  It is there for all of us to enjoy.  A place to socialize, exercise, meditate…all right in our very own backyard.  

Where the Locals Go

By Jason Bacaj

Montana has become the first state featured on National Geographic's “Where the Locals Go” website as part of a new $4 million advertising campaign.

It's the most recent of a series of highly visible marketing campaigns the state has launched, including a promotional trip former Gov. Brian Schweitzer took to New York City and a $1 million marketing push in Chicago that was the state's first crowd-sourced social media campaign.

But the “Where the Locals Go” campaign might attract the most eyes yet. The website attracts 26 million unique visitors each month — a level of “unprecedented exposure for Montana,” said Dan Iverson, spokesman for the state tourism office.

Big Blow in Glacier

By Vince Devlin

 

WEST GLACIER – That the wind blew Wednesday morning at Logan Pass in Glacier National Park wouldn’t normally be newsworthy, except for one thing.

The biggest gust, recorded between 5 a.m. and 6 a.m., got up to a record 139 mph.

That’s whipping along pretty good – a speed the equivalent of an EF-3 tornado; faster than the winds generated by Typhoon Usagi last year that killed 35 people in China; faster than the winds Hurricane Katrina brought when it made landfall in Louisiana in 2005 and killed more than 1,800.

Of course, those were sustained winds coming off oceans, and this was just a gust – a spike in the wind speed lasting less than 20 seconds – through a mountain pass.

And, of course, no one was injured at Logan Pass, because no one was there. It will be well over two months before snow is cleared from Going-to-the-Sun Road, and anyone can access the pass.

Still, gusts over 100 mph are rare for Montana. Among the top 10 20th century weather events in the state, as compiled by the National Weather Service, is an Arctic storm in 1989 that brought downslope winds off the Eastern Front of the Rocky Mountains. Those winds gusted up to 124 mph in Choteau.

 


Read more: http://billingsgazette.com/news/state-and-regional/montana/record-mph-wind-recorded-at-logan-pass-in-glacier-park/article_e6e0fa47-08e4-5b20-a9b7-170553f57f93.html#ixzz2yj14Xah8

Mr. T-Rex Goes to Washington

t rex in boxesThe Wankel T-Rex at the Museum of the Rockies in Bozeman is being packed up to be loaded into a truck for a trip to the Smithsonian Museum in Washington, D.C.

The 65 million year old bones are being individually wrapped and crates to protect them on the long trip.

The T-rex will be the *centerpiece* of a new fossil hall in the National Museum of Natural History, but visitors won't get a chance to see it until 2019. The museum is set to close at the end of April, to undergo a major, five year renovation.

The Wankel is one of the most complete T.rex specimens ever discovered, and a spokesperson said the dinosaur's arrival will mark the most significant addition to the museum since the Hope Diamond was donated in 1958.

The skeleton will be on loan to the Smithsonian for 50 years.

MORE>>>KPAX

My Mis-matched Genetics

By Lacey Middlestead

Lacey MiddlesteadLacey Middlestead is a Montana native and freelance writer currently living in Helena, Mont. She loves meeting new people and helping share their stories. When she’s not busy writing articles for newspapers like the Independent Record and Helena Vigilante, she can usually be found indulging in her second greatest passion–playing in the Montana wilderness. She loves skiing and snowmobiling in the winter and four wheeling, hiking, boating, and riding dirt bikes in the summer.

 ***************

In getting ready for the onset of summer, I purchased a new dirt bike a few weeks ago. Much to my father’s reluctance, as he was a Kawasaki and Suzuki dealer for over 30 years, he instructed me to buy a Honda CRF 230 as the next best step up from my KLX 140. And boy, oh boy did I take some serious heat for the purchase. Because my dad was a dealer all those years, I have only ever rode brands that he sold. And through his business I became well acquainted with a lot of MX racers in town. As soon as pictures of my new bike hit Facebook, so did the sarcastic comments and suggestions of disloyalty from all of these guys. It was all in good fun and I laughed it off saying that I was simply doing what I had to do to improve as a rider.

What I wanted to say was “shouldn’t the fact that I’m a girl and I ride be all that matters?” I mean how awesome and unconventional is that?

It has been my great privilege in the past few years to share in the company of several other ladies, such as myself, who aren’t afraid to do the same extreme sports as guys. We are certainly a rare breed….but one which is incredibly strong.

During my first few off-road races on my bike last summer, I lined up at the start alongside only a handful of other girls. I was scared as hell to say the least, but I took some comfort in looking on either side of me and knowing that I wasn’t in it alone. During one of my first races out at the track I witnessed something that made me incredibly proud to be a lady rider. I rode up on another girl trying to unwedge her bike from a giant muddy rut gouged into the track. Another girl was next to her helping push the bike while she gave it throttle. Like me, they were outnumbered in a male dominated event and struggling just to finish. But they were determined to take that checkered flag, and unlike the guys with trophy envy, they wanted to make sure that their fellow ladies finished as well. That takes some serious guts to pause and help another rider out and put their needs ahead of your desire to place.

When I started my second season of hockey this last fall, I was relieved to see there were two other girls joining me. On a novice league of over 20 guys, we were again outnumbered, but still ever determined to get out and play. I watched both girls take some nasty falls and crash into the boards trying to beat the guys to the puck. But they got right back up each time and kept skating …..and with a beaming smile on their face to boot! Even though they both played on the opposing team, I was never so happy as when I saw one of them score a goal or assist on one. I always tried to make sure I went out and gave them a fist pound afterwards, and they always did the same for me. It takes great courage to step out onto the ice and play in such a vicious sport, especially when the guys don’t hold back any just because you’re a girl.

A few weeks ago, I missed our game and the inaugural game for a new girl. I was shocked and saddened to later hear that she fell during the game and suffered a concussion. She will be out for the rest of the season. It was an unfortunate accident, but according to her boyfriend who plays with us, she’ll be back next year. See that’s the thing about these types of women…..even when they get knocked out cold, they’re ready to go right back in again once revived.

My all ladies sled clinic with Dan Adams in February was another time of revelation for me on just how many strong women there are out there -----ready and willing to push themselves to the limit. Snowmobiling is a hard sport…..being a girl makes it even harder. I watched girls fall off and roll their sleds dozens of times. And each time they got back on their sleds, more pissed off and ready to try harder the next time. One of the girls’ sleds completely rolled over the top of her one time, but she still stuck the weekend out and managed to do an awesome sidehill maneuver the following day that I completely failed at. The amount of support and encouragement I found in that group of lady riders that weekend was overwhelming. And the best part was, we had all hauled our sleds to the middle of nowhere to ride with one of the top riders because we are that committed to the sport and to showing the men in our lives that we can ride just as well as them.

I was told once that I have “mismatched genetics” because I do so many activities that are non-traditional for girls. There was a time when I felt like that made me a bit of a freak. But the thing is, there are a lot of girls out there like me. I have rode and played beside them and they are by far the toughest chicks I know. They motivate me to keep going when I want to give up on something and they are changing the world as we know it by raising the bar for what women are capable of.

They are strong women…..and I am proud to be one of them.

“Strong women: May we know them. May we raise them. May we be them.”

 

 

When Financial Advisors Talk...I'm Not Listening

By Kathleen Clary Miller

Kathleen Clary MillerKathleen Clary Miller has written 300+ columns and stories for periodicals both local and national, and has authored three books (www.amazon.com/author/millerkathleenclary). She lives in the woods of the Ninemile Valley, thirty miles west of Missoula. 

A wise old saying dictates something about staying way from politics and religion in a friendly conversation.  But if you want to be my friend, never talk about finance.  Like the three-year-old who bolts from his mother’s slippery grasp when she attempts to corral him, I run from investment discussion and 1040-form forums like I long ago bolted from a heaping spoonful of yucky cough medicine. When the words “Fed” or “capital gains” slide into any verbal exchange, a solid brick wall crashes down in my brain. An otherwise intelligent, capable person, if the talk turns to interest rates, I revert to the bimbo who is looking right at you but wondering which strappy sandals go with that new black skirt I shouldn’t have bought until my dividend check arrived.

What is the matter with me? If I am willing to increase my earning potential by systematically organizing a numbers strategy before purchasing a lottery ticket, why can’t I do it with finances?

Because it isn’t like my childhood Monopoly game, where it all came down to a roll of the dice. You’d collect and you were finished—no forms, no interest rates, and no plan for the future. Based on my competitors’ visible capital as well as my own cold, hard cash, I could purchase property, charge rent, and collect earnings with as much chance of winning as anyone else. No one was at my side analyzing the viability of the B&O Railroad or the Electric Company as it applied to possible tax exemptions.

Today experts and pundits would find it necessary to predict the future of the hotel industry on a failing Baltic Avenue or an over priced Park Place. Their advice would cloud my former confidence with doubt and fear: Should I short the Short Line Railroad? I would leave the room indecisive and unsure, remembering longingly the good old days when, based solely on instinct, I boldly made my move.

My kind, generous father purchased some stocks for me years ago, and I am forever grateful for the boost in my income as a result of his careful money management. Of course, he loved to sit at the breakfast table and remind us that had he not opted to sell his Sysco stock—the truckload of shares he had been granted in return for the sale of his own company when I was in college—we would have been strutting around with billions in our wallets.

Except for that one teensy misjudgment on his part, you’d think I could have risen above my handicap long enough to listen to his wise counsel. Instead, whenever I lit upon a kitchen chair to grab a sandwich and he began talking about the market (and I don’t mean grocery store), I suddenly had to make a phone call. When he patiently explained to me for the fourth time since Saturday why my mutual fund needed tweaking to avoid substantial capital gains tax, he recognized the familiar change in my weather as a thickening cloud washed across my gaze and I bobbed my head for the third time, in desperate need of a nap. The how-to book he had advocated I read years ago is, of course, on the shelf, untouched.

My aversion is not entirely my fault. What began as ownership of simple shares in recognizable company names has uncontrollably multiplied into monstrous transactions with untenable things like REITS, royalties, and K-1s. I could follow along, if, like Jed Clampett, a forty-foot geyser spewed gallons of oil per minute out of my own front lawn, but I can’t visualize any of these intangibles. This kind of exchange is all on paper. Monthly statements that rival any mathematics Master’s thesis arrive in envelopes or emails I open just long enough to read the bottom line. What’s my balance? I quickly three-hole punch all sixteen pages and store them in my “Stocks” binder (who said I couldn’t manage my portfolio?) then return to my real goal for the day: completing the Times crossword puzzle.

            I am terrible; I am bad. I am a wicked, spoiled daughter who wants to have money in my account but doesn’t want to hear a word about how it gets there. I am the darling who resided in South Orange County spending my income on manicures and trips to Nordstrom, wondering could the boob job in return for my own children’s inheritance be far behind? I was able to retire comfortably to a simpler life in Montana (no boob jobs necessary here), and despite such good fortune (literally), after all, am no better than those Pasadena trust-fund babies I trashed while growing up.

            Still, I would rather have a root canal than read the annual reports that clog my mailbox, and I turn my taxes over to a professional as fast as I can get the check written. Meanwhile, the battle continues. When proxy ballots surface on the kitchen counter, I don’t even open the envelope, and I recall my disparaging father shaking his head as I deftly tossed expensive glossy tabloids detailing corporate meetings and year-end goals into the recycling bin while I poured instead over retail store catalogs. If I invest in The Sundance Company, would I be invited to the stockholders’ meeting hosted by Robert Redford?

            As my dear, departed father tried to discuss real estate ups and downs, current banking trends or his frustration over the power of analyst predictions, I started to hum softly. Then I was guilt-ridden and momentarily determined to be the Wall-Street-wizard daughter of his dreams. But my mother’s words, the ones I used to think were so unkind and intolerant, echoed in my ears: “Do you always have to talk about something so boring?” This outburst resulted from his desire to share with his beloved wife his latest triumph in a series of many that had brought her a life of contentment and designer shoes.

Bright and conversational in many other areas, now that my father has passed away and my husband takes care of our money matters (he knows better than to try to discuss it) when the broker calls our house and asks for me, I still cut him off in mid-sentence and now hand the phone to the man I married so I won’t have to face finances.

“Sorry, Tod. I have to go try on some sandals.”